Television in the Olympics

Television in the Olympics
Author: Miquel de Moragas Spa
Publisher: James F. Larson
Total Pages: 300
Release: 1995
Genre: Olympics
ISBN: 9780861965380

This book explores the Olympics as a communications event. In particular, it investigates the role of television in shaping the Games into a global media event. It deals with crucial issues related to media technology.

Olympic Television

Olympic Television
Author: Andrew C. Billings
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 387
Release: 2017-07-31
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1317397673

As the Olympic spectacle grows, broadcast coverage becomes bigger, more complex, and more sophisticated. Part sporting event, part reality show, and part global festival, the Olympics can be seen as both intensely nationalistic and a celebration of a shared sense of international community. This book sheds new light on how the Olympic experience has been shaped by television and expanded across multiple platforms and formats. Combining a multitude of approaches ranging from interviews to content analyses to audience surveys, the book explores the production, influence, and significance of Olympic media in contemporary society. Built on a central case study of NBC’s coverage of the Rio Games in 2016, which is then placed within 20 years of content analyses, the book focuses on the entire Olympic television process from production to content to effects. Touching on key themes such as race, gender, history, consumerism, identity, nationalism, and storytelling, Olympic Television: Broadcasting the Biggest Show on Earth is fascinating reading for any student or scholar with an interest in sport, media, and the global impact of mega-events.

TV Guide

TV Guide
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1046
Release: 2004
Genre: Television programs
ISBN:

American Sportswriters and Writers on Sport

American Sportswriters and Writers on Sport
Author: Richard Orodenker
Publisher: Dictionary of Literary Biograp
Total Pages: 460
Release: 2001
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

Focuses on nineteenth-century sportswriters and certain writers born after 1930. Discusses the styles of sportswriting employed in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Includes information on twentieth-century authors who crossed over from "serious" literature to sportswriting, as well as the history of sportswriting.

From Networks to Netflix

From Networks to Netflix
Author: Derek Johnson
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 458
Release: 2022-07-26
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 100061364X

Now in a second edition, this textbook surveys the channels, platforms, and programming through which television distribution operates, with a diverse selection of contributors providing thorough explorations of global media industries in flux. Even as legacy media industries experience significant disruption in the face of streaming and online delivery, the power of the television channel persists. Far from disappearing, television channels have multiplied and adapted to meet the needs of old and new industry players alike. Television viewers now navigate complex choices among broadcast, cable, and streaming services across a host of different devices. From Networks to Netflix guides students, instructors, and scholars through that complex and transformed channel landscape to reveal how these industry changes unfold and why they matter. This second edition features new players like Disney+, HBO Max, Crunchyroll, Hotstar, and more, increasing attention to TV services across the world. An ideal resource for students and scholars of media criticism, media theory, and media industries, this book continues to offer a concrete, tangible way to grasp the foundations of television—and television studies—even as they continue to be rewritten.