Media Experiences: Engaging with Drama and Reality Television travels across people and popular culture, exploring the pathways to engagement and the various ways in which we shape and are shaped by the media landscapes in which we move. This exploration includes the voices and bodies, sights and sounds of audiences as they experience entertainment through television drama, reality TV, at live events, and within digital television itself as actors, participants and producers. It is about the people who create the drama, live events and reality entertainment that we experience. This book traverses the relationships between producers and audiences in shared places of a media imagination. Annette Hill’s research draws on interviews and observations with over 500 producers and audience members to explore cultures of viewing across different genres, such as Nordic noir crime drama The Bridge, cult conspiracy thriller Utopia, and reality television audiences and participants in global formats MasterChef and Got to Dance. The research highlights how trends such as multi-screening, catch up viewing, amateur media and piracy work alongside counter-trends in retro television viewing where people relish the social ritual of watching live television, or create a social media blackout for immersive viewing. Media Experiences bridges the divide between industry and academia, highlighting how producers and audiences co-create, shape and limit experiences within emerging mediascapes.
Author(s): Annette Hill
Publisher: Routledge/Taylor Francis Group
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: xi, 223
City: London, New York
Tags: Television Viewers: Attitudes, Television Series: Social Aspects, Television Programs: Social Aspects, Reality Television Programs: Social Aspects
List of figures viii
Acknowledgements x
1 Pathways to engagement 1
2 An analytic dialogue 15
3 Roaming audiences: The Bridge 30
4 Spectrum of engagement: Got to Dance 53
5 The cool heart of Nordic noir 72
6 Illegal audiences: Utopia 94
7 Embedded engagement: Reality talent shows 121
8 Authentic reality TV: The case of MasterChef 138
9 Warm up acts 163
10 Audiences as pathfinders 184
Appendices 193
References 209
Index 219