Description
How the internet transformed television
Before HBO's hit show Insecure, Issa Rae's comedy about being a nerdy black woman debuted as a YouTube web series The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl, her response to the absence of diverse black characters on the small screen. Broad City, a feminist sitcom now on Comedy Central, originated as a web series on YouTube, developed directly out of funny women Ilana Glazer and Abbi Jacobson's real-life friendship. These unconventional stories took advantage of the freedom afforded outside the traditional television system: online.
Open TV shows how we have left "the network era" far behind and entered the networked era, with the web opening up new possibilities for independent producers, entrepreneurs, and media audiences. Based on interviews with writers, producers, show-runners, and network executives, visits to festivals and award shows, and the experience of producing his own series, Aymar Jean Christian argues that the web brought innovation to television by opening up series development to new producers, fans, and sponsors that had previously been excluded. Online access to distribution provides creative freedom for indie producers, allows for more diverse storytelling from marginalized communities, and introduces new ways of releasing and awarding shows.
Open TV is essential reading for anyone interested in the changing environment of television and how the internet can inspire alternatives to what's on TV tonight.
About the Author
Aymar Jean "AJ" Christian is Associate Professor of Communication Studies and Director of the Media and Data Equity Lab at Northwestern University. His research focuses on the political economy of legacy and new media, cultural studies and community-based research. He is the author of Open TV: Innovation Beyond Hollywood and the Rise of Web Television (2018), and has been published in numerous academic journals, including the International Journal of Communication, Television & New Media, Social Media & Society, Journal of Cinema and Media Studies, among other journals and edited collections.
Reviews
Christians account of networked television is thrilling, current, and deep. He narrates a period when the story is up for grabs and even the 'postnetwork' era as we know it is on its way to becoming something else through the creativity and vitality of people old TV has left behind. Using stories full of driven energy yet equally steeped in a scholars recognition of the nature of the industry, this is one of the most remarkable books in television studies in quite some time. -- Lisa Henderson,author of Love and Money: Queers, Class, and Cultural Production
Aymar Jean Christian shows us the need to reinvent television, a medium, he says, that has never fully represented the United States. Deeply engaged in the most pressing debates about the future of televisual and web culture, and written in sparkling prose, this book is chock full of inspiring stories of those working to make & open TV, this time, online, for all Americans. -- Stuart Cunningham,author of Hidden Innovation: Industry, Policy and the Creative Sector
Media historian Michele Hilmes referred to the challenges with writing media histories as comparable to 'nailing mercury.' In that sense, Christian nailed it. InOpen TV, Christian has articulated a history of scripted web series, a phenomenon that has advanced at a pace never witnessed in prior media history or, for that matter, media historiographies....Christians research yields great merit in capturing how web series producers operate and have the agency to engage in more diverse representational strategies. This is a phenomena that marginalized audiences and critical scholars have been eager to witness. * Journal of Communication *
The focus ofOpen TVgoes beyond the network era and examines the 'networked era' (open TV) and media distribution over the internet and other web protocols. * Choice *
Book Information
ISBN 9781479815975
Author Aymar Jean Christian
Format Paperback
Page Count 320
Imprint New York University Press
Publisher New York University Press
Series Postmillennial Pop
Weight(grams) 499g