Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Group 1 Amanda, Terry, and Kelsey

            Lentz introduces the idea of “quality” television and “relevant” television which grew out the 1970’s industrial changes occurring in the television industry. With the rise of independent production studios,  the fall of this “network hegemony” where the network would control the messages output by the television shows, and narrow casting and segmentation first showing up, these two ways of looking at television began to be discussed in literature about television. Often times, they would discuss “quality” and “relevant” television together and discuss their similarities, but Lentz’s argument is focusing on the differences between the two discourses. Mary Tyler Moore and the production company behind the show was seen as “quality” television and focused on feminism and improving images of females on television, but delivered this through a self-reflexive critique of the medium of television. As Lentz discusses in her article, the most apparent critique of this is the fact that Mary was an associate producer of a news station that always seemed to have something going wrong. While the production company for the MTM show wanted to present a more “modern” show of womanhood on television, they also wanted present television as a more “modern” medium and leave behind the old scandals of the 60’s. Mary works for an old-style news program that often has a bumbling man in front of the camera, making mistakes. As Mary advances through the television industry, she is putting a female face in power and creating something “new” and “modern” which is exactly the image of television that Mary Tyler Moore was trying to advance.
            “Relevant” on the other hand, wanted to ground its portrayal in the actual. Rather than a critique of the medium, shows like All in the Family paid more attention to racial issues situated in actual situations. But shows like All in the Family didn’t handle them quite as sensitively, and often showed controversial issues. Relevant shows weren’t as high quality, often grainy, but attempted to treat other issues rather than the hegemonic viewpoint on race, but too often divided these issues into the “right” and “wrong.”

For our clips, they are the more contemporary representation of “quality” television, like the Mary Tyler Moore Show. Liz Lemon also is single and works in the television industry, much like Mary. But 30 Rock has more of a normalization that a single woman in her 30’s has a job of power and also explores her dating life more than the MTM show. It’s not weird that a woman is single on this show because of the different time frames and different context around feminist issues. In the longer clip, Liz Lemon brings up the idea of women dressing a certain way in order to make others feel comfortable and being uncomfortable with  the way a woman dresses and how that impacts her image, which is a very debated topic among feminists today.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O4ZFv6jsUMg

Monday, October 28, 2013

Blue Skies and Relevant Quality(?) - Section Prompt Oct. 30

Hello section!

For this Wednesday, please prepare to discuss the following:

1) What is Streeter's argument in "Blue Skies and Strange Bedfellows," especially regarding the discourse around cable television in the late 60's and early 70's? How does his piece fit into the history of cable/CATV that Dr. Moore discussed in lecture last week? How does Streeter deploy discourse analysis to make his case?

2) What is Lentz's argument about quality vs. relevant TV? How does it connect to the larger issues about the representation of race, gender, and sexuality that we have been discussing throughout the term? How do our screenings of All in the Family, The Mary Tyler Moore ShowMaude, and Good Times explain, explore, or contend with the arguments of this essay?

3) Come prepared with a YouTube/internet-accessible video 2-4 minutes in length that relates to one or both of the questions above from our contemporary moment and be ready to explain why you think it is relevant to our discussion.

Also, please note, we will be doing group work that requires that each group have a laptop, so please bring yours along if it is convenient.

See you Wednesday!
Josh

Monday, October 21, 2013

Midterm Pre-party: Section Prompt Oct. 23

And by pre-party, I mean review session! Huzzah!

This Wednesday we will spend about 40 minutes of section reviewing for the mid-term exam on Thursday.

This review session will not involve me lecturing you on the material, or me answering every question. It will be run as a group review session where you bring both your notes on the review material and your questions. Then you ask your questions, and your peers answer them. Then, when your peers ask questions, you can answer them from your work. As such, I am expecting to see written study notes and for everyone to participate.

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Responses to Julia

Discuss the range of viewer responses to Julia described by Bodrohkozy's article.  Based on your viewing of the pilot and our discussion of television and race in the 1960s, why do you think the show was interpreted so many different ways? Why, for example, would some critics refer to the show or the character Julia as “white?”

Blue Skies

Why do you think that Thomas Streeter titles his essay the way he does?  What do “blue skies” and “strange bedfellows” have to do with 1960s discussions about the possibilities of cable television?  Does the language used around cable at that time sound similar to the way new media technologies are discussed today? Explain. 

Monday, October 14, 2013

Stuff I Play Before Section: Contemporary Engagements with Race in the US

Hello sections,

Last week I had a fair amount of interest in the videos I was playing before class. I chose them when thinking about the role of TV in portraying race relations and tensions in American society for our discussion of Crisis etc., and how they evoke the ways that things (haven't) changed since then. Also, they're great music.

Kanye West, "Love Lockdown." I am not a huge Kanye fan, but this video, apparently his response to the book/film American Psycho, is extremely complicated in how it deals with black subjectivity/identity, the sexualization and fetishization of black (female) sexuality, and stereotypes of savagery in conflict with class aspirations and negative racial stereotypes. This video defies straightforward interpretation and analysis, and for that alone is worth watching with a critical eye.

Janelle Monae, "Cold War."

Janelle Monae, "Tightrope."

Janelle Monae feat. Erykah Badu, "Q.U.E.E.N."

Janelle Monae, "Dance Apocalyptic."

This suite of videos by Janelle Monae (who everyone should know) represent an overview of the story she has been telling across her three albums about race in our increasingly cybernetic society. Monae's videos explore contemporary cultures of attrition and resilience, and how racial resistance is tied to madness and social stereotyping, while also promoting the continued expression of minority cultures in art and an artistic form of (perhaps) nonviolent resistance that resonates with what we've been learning about Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the civil rights movement.

Persia "Google Google Apps Apps" This song explores the relationship between race, gentrification, and queerness in contemporary San Francisco. Blatantly political, it make an unapologetic critique of the ways that queer of colour neighbourhoods are being systematically destroyed in modern urban centres.

Have Analysis, Will Think - Section Prompt October 16, 2013

Get out yer critical thinkin’ skills gunslingers, this week is the Western!

(It's film, I know, but this is my favourite western theme out there, and truly a classic.)

For the Newcomb piece and our screening of Have Gun, Will Travel:

  1. Newcomb outlines the conventional argument about Westerns, then proposes a counter argument about its social significance. What are these two arguments? Do you buy his use of Have Gun to support his position? 
  2. How does Newcomb position the TV western as engaging with social issues of its time? How do the generic and medium specific differences between TV and film westerns support the TV western making a different kind of social commentary than filmic westerns?
  3. How does Newcomb construct and support his argument? (hint: you should address his method, evidence, and strategies of argumentation)
  4. What problems did you see in Newcomb’s argument, analysis, or writing? How would you have improved them? 

See you Wednesday. Cowboy boots and hats strongly encouraged. 


Josh

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Stuff I Play Before Section

For those of you who wonder how/why I choose the videos I play before section, or are interested in seeing them again, I'm starting this thread for you. I usually choose things to play that relate to what we're discussing, but in a more contemporary context, so on this thread I will give you an idea of why I chose what I did. Feel free to respond, and we can have a conversation about what themes from TV history we see playing out in these clips. (Though please note that this thread is not one for credit/blog post grades -it's a space for exploration if you get excited about something and want to talk about it in a broader context.)

Sunday, October 6, 2013

Terrifying and Totalizing TV: Section Prompt Oct. 9

Hello Section,

Thanks for all your hard work on your papers; I am looking forward to reading them!

For section this week I’d like you to think about what connections you can draw between Sconce’s piece on The Outer Limits and Spigel’s essay “White Flight.” Themes you might consider include: difference and alienation, the politics and allegories of outer space, surveillance culture, the changing family and social structure of the 1960’s, or the fear and uncertainty of the in-between. 

Please come to section prepared to talk about these two pieces and their connections. There’s more linking them together than you might expect. 

Cheers,

Josh

'Low Brow' Genres

How does Horace Newcomb's essay complicate Newton Minow’s assessment of television as a “vast wasteland”? Why does he believe that 'low brow' genres such as the western can be more complicated than they seem?  Do you agree?  Perhaps give an example of a contemporary 'low brow' show and explain why it might or might not have social relevance. 

Socially Relevant Coverage in the 1960s

Why did the networks begin to lengthen their news coverage, broadcast presidential debates, and program more socially-relevant documentaries like Crisis during the 1960s?  How did this material illuminate civil rights issues and inflect the way that people understood national politics? 

Saturday, October 5, 2013

The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis


We can see subculture beginning to be featured in Dobie Gillis. How was this evidenced in the episode we viewed?
  How might either Dobie's or Maynard's masculinities be considered non-normative? Feel free to compare the two characters.