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[Commlist] Call for abstracts: Publishing Strategies in Online Television
Mon Jun 17 15:54:04 GMT 2024
Call for abstracts: Publishing Strategies in Online Television (special
issue of MedieKultur)*
*
Theme editor: Hanne Bruun
Issue editor: Mads Møller Tommerup Andersen
Deadline for abstracts: July 1st 2024
Link to website: https://tidsskrift.dk/index.php/mediekultur
<https://tidsskrift.dk/index.php/mediekultur>
Transnational streaming services’ growing proliferation and continued
success within a larger on-demand-driven media culture is currently
changing the television industry at a high speed. The transnational
competition is being addressed by the legacy television industry in
different ways, and a common denominator is the companies’ strategic use
of in-house video-on-demand services. This focus involves a
transformation from broadcasters to online television companies (Johnson
2019), and this shift changes the working conditions and practices in
the industry. It has an impact on the publishing strategies and
practices (Bruun 2019, 2023) known from a multi-channel portfolio, and
consequently the production cultures of different genres and subject
areas are changing, as well as the content commissioning and creative
processes and practices.
A key issue in these processes is that the new publishing strategies in
an emerging online television industry has an impact on the future of
public-service television (Donders 2021). The cultural-political role of
television in society is therefore at the core of the concerns about the
present development of the industry in Europe. This calls for an
investigation of how public-service television companies address the
present development and how different strategies and adaptations fuel
and shape changing viewer habits in today’s media culture.
Following these changes in the industry and in the position of public
service, the key questions to be addressed in this special issue of
MedieKultur on publishing strategies are:
• How do the new space and time structures in online television
publishing influence the planning, commissioning, and production processes?
• How do the changes support, secure, or work against the
discoverability of the content produced under a commercial as well as a
public-service mandate?
• How do the changes to publishing influence the commissioning of
specific genres of television?
• How is the need for experiments with formats and content being
secured or restricted?
• How are key public-service values such as universality and
diversity at stake in different organizational and national contexts?
• How is the cultural-political role of television and of public
service developed, disrupted, or stimulated in this transformation process?
• How do these developments create methodological challenges around
getting access to data, collecting, archiving, and analyzing data that
call for the development of new skills in media studies?
A particular issue in these processes is also that a new relationship
must be considered by the legacy television industry between the
editorial priorities on the one hand and AI-supported personalization on
the other hand. In many countries, the use of AI-supported
personalization is on the agenda in public-service television’s
adaptions to the competition in the industry, and lessons are being
learned. Furthermore, the competition from transnational streaming
services also calls for a reconsideration of the kind of content
produced by the industry to compete in the market. All in all, it is
safe to say that the integration of in-house video-on-demand-services
requires new practices to attract and retain viewers/users, and this
kind of professional work is still under development.
To address these developments, this special issue on publishing
strategies in online television is looking for contributions from
different research perspectives and approaches, e.g., comparative, and
the topics are as follows, but not limited to:
• Specific strategies of television companies addressing the issue of
personalization and editorial priorities
• The strategic use of new time and space structures of television as
a medium and its influence on the planning, production, and publication
strategies of commercial and/or public-service television
• The online transformation and its impact on the creative processes,
the use of specific genres, strategic genre profiles, and organizational
structures of the companies
• The role of business and funding models and their influence on the
strategies of the companies, including companies with public-service
obligations
• The efforts to support and secure the discoverability of the local
content produced, for example under the public-service brand, by state
regulation and policy
• The adaption and/or erosion of key public-service values like
universality and diversity in different national contexts
• The methodological challenges and/or solutions to media studies
involved in the developments in the television industry
• The influence of the on-demand-services on the cooperation between
broadcasters and external/independent productions companies
• The organizational and managerial changes to the television
companies to meet new publishing needs
• Interface and catalogue analysis of commercial and/or
public-service television
• New practices in the professional and creative work of schedulers
• Comparative analysis of publishing practices across countries
/Practical info and timeline:/
Please submit an extended abstract of 800-1000 words (not counting
references) no later than July 1st 2024 via MedieKultur’s online
platform under the section called “abstracts”:
https://tidsskrift.dk/mediekultur <https://tidsskrift.dk/mediekultur>
Subsequently, we will send out decisions to accept or reject abstracts
by 1st September 2024.
If accepted, the deadline to submit the full article of 5000-8000 words
will be January 1st 2025 where all manuscripts must adhere to
MedieKultur’s editorial guidelines.
These articles will go through double-blind peer-review in January-April
2025 where we ask authors to be prepared to make all necessary revisions
and proofs. We expect to publish this special issue in June 2025.
MedieKultur is an open-access journal and no payment from authors is
required.
Questions about the call should be sent to: (hbruun /at/ cc.au.dk)
<mailto:(hbruun /at/ cc.au.dk)>/ (mtommerup /at/ hum.ku.dk) <mailto:(mtommerup /at/ hum.ku.dk)>.
/References:/
BRUUN, H. (2020). Re-scheduling Television in the Digital Era. Routledge.
BRUUN, H. (2023). The Changing role of a video-on-demand service in the
strategies of public service media. A production study of Danish TV 2
Play and its impact on the production culture of the schedulers,
2016-2022. Nordicom Review 44(2), 235-252.
DONDERS, K. (2021). Public Service Media in Europe. Law, Theory and
Practice. Routledge.
JOHNSON, C. (2019). Online TV. Routledge.
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