9/7 Course Introduction

 

9/11 Introduction: What is “Media Industry Studies”?

READ: Havens & Lotz, “Chapter 1: Understanding Media Industries.”

 

9/14 Introduction: The Industrialization of Culture

READ: Havens & Lotz, “Chapter 2: The Industrialization of Culture Framework and Key Economic Concepts.”

DISCUSS: Writing Assignment #1 & Media Companies

 

9/18 Introduction: Industrial Identity & Corporate Image

READ: Brookey, “The Digital Auteur: Branding Identity on the Monsters, Inc. DVD.

 

9/21 Discussion: Industrial Identity & Corporate Image

DUE: Writing Assignment #1

 

9/25 Media Industry Mandates

READ: Havens & Lotz, “Chapter 3: Media Industry Mandates.”

 

9/28 Economic Conditions in Media Industries

READ: Havens & Lotz, “Chapter 5: Economic Conditions in Media Production.”

 

10/2 What are “New Media Industries?”

READ: Smith & Hendricks, “New Media: New Technology, New Ideas or New Headaches” in Hendricks, The Twenty-First-Century Media Industry: Economic and Managerial Implications in the Age of New Media (Lanham: Lexington Books, 2010), 3-22.

 

10/5 Technological Conditions in (New) Media Industries

READ: Havens & Lotz, “Chapter 6: Technological Conditions of the Media Industries.”

 

10/9 Digitization in (New) Media Industries

READ: Havens & Lotz, “Chapter 9: “Digitization.”

DUE: Writing Assignment #2

 

10/12 Print Media Industry: Are eBooks Just Kindle for the Fire?

READ:

 

10/16 Regulatory Conditions in Media Industries

READ: Havens & Lotz, “Chapter 4: Regulation of the Media Industries.”

 

10/19 Radio & Recorded Music Industries

READ: Blacc, Manta, & Olson, “A Sustainable Music Industry for the 21st Century,” Cornell Law Review Online 101: 39-50.

DUE: Reading Reflection 1 on (Digital) Music Industries: Read one blog post or trade journal article on contemporary conditions/practices in music/radio industries (e.g. reflections on streaming/subscription services; analysis on the “Orrin G. Hatch–Bob Goodlatte Music Modernization Act”; etc). Write a 150-200 word critical summary to connect the post/article with course readings, and be sure to include a citation for the post-article you read within your reflection. Upload a copy of your reflection to Blackboard and bring a copy to class for our discussion.

 

10/23 Perceptions of Industrial Impacts from Piracy

READ: Patrick Vonderau, “Beyond Piracy: Understanding Digital Media Markets.”

 

10/26 Film & Television Industries: Distribution & Aggregation

READ: Havens & Lotz, “Chapter 8: Media Distribution and Aggregation Practices.”

  • (background) Owen, “The tragedy of broadcast regulation,” in The Internet Challenge to Television. (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1999), reprinted in Hassan, The New Media Theory Reader.

DUE: Writing Assignment #3

 

10/30 Technological Change: Film, TV, & Digital Streaming

READ:

 

11/2 Technological Change: Digital Streaming & Consumption Patterns

READ: Chuck Tryon, “TV Got Better: Netflix’s Original Programming Strategies and Binge Viewing,” Media Industries Journal, 2.2: 104-116.

DUE: Reading Reflection 2 on Digital TV/Video Services: Read one blog post or trade journal article on industry conditions/practices that pertain to television or video streaming services (e.g. licensing conditions and content availability; perceptions of “quality” or “prestige”; forms of user consumption, like bingeing; video platforms and accessibility; etc). Write a 150-200 word critical summary to connect the post/article with course readings, and be sure to include a citation for the post/article you read within your reflection. Upload a copy of your reflection to Blackboard and bring a copy to class for our discussion.

 

11/6 Computers, Interactivity, & Interfaces: Digital Consumption

READ: Janet Wasko and Mary Erickson, “The Political Economy of YouTube,” in Snickers & Vonderau (Eds.) The YouTube Reader.

 

11/9 Spreadable/Sticky Media

READ: Jenkins, Ford, and Green, “Introduction: Why Media Spreads,” from Spreadable Media: Creating Value and Meaning in a Networked Culture (New York: New York University Press, 2013)

DUE: Writing Assignment #4

 

11/13 Spreadable/Sticky Media: Social Industries & Algorithmic Power

READ: Qualman, “Chapter 1: Word of Mouth Goes World of Mouth,” from Socialnomics.

 

11/16 Spreadable/Sticky Media: Social Industries & Algorithmic Power

READ: Taina Bucher, “Want to be on the Top? Algorithmic Power and the Threat of Invisibility on Facebook.”

DUE: Reading Reflection 3 on Algorithms/Social Media: Read one blog post or trade journal article that addresses contemporary uses of algorithms (e.g. how algorithms are used to determine networks of relation on social media; how algorithms are used to predict media preferences on streaming sites; how algorithms are used to determine shopping preferences on e-commerce sites; etc). Write a brief 150-200 word critical summary to connect the post/article with course readings, and be sure to include a citation for the post/article you read within your reflection. Upload a copy of your reflection to Blackboard and bring a copy to class for our discussion.

 

11/20 Spreadable/Sticky Media

Class will not be held today. Instead, you can e-mail me to schedule a time to meet and discuss any questions you may have about your research paper proposal (Writing Assignment 5).

 

DUE 11/21 (by 11:59pm): Writing Assignment #5

 

11/23 THANKSGIVING RECESS, no classes

 

11/27 Video Games Industries

READ:

 

11/30 Mobile Technologies: Personalized & Portable Digital Economies

READ:

DUE: Reading Reflection 4 on Mobile Economies: Read one blog post or trade journal article that addresses how the media industry you are writing about in your research paper has been affected by mobile/app economies. This reflection aims to aid you in the continuation of research for your final paper by allowing you to

  1. read additional source material about a product or company that primarily operates within an app economy (e.g. this pertains people writing about streaming services or video games);
  2. examine economic and technological conditions you may still need to address in your research (e.g. the influence of pricing structures on consumer app purchases/engagement or how companies determine (min/max) technological requirements for applications they develop); or
  3. consider if/how traditional industries are acclimating to changing industrial practices and consumer demands that emerge in conjunction with digital/mobile economies (e.g. if/when companies agree to offer/license digital content, or how companies aim to secure intellectual property they make available online or in apps.

Write a brief 150-200 word critical summary to connect the post/article with course readings, and be sure to include a citation (Chicago Manual of Style) for the post/article you read for your reflection. Upload a copy of your reflection to Blackboard and bring a copy to class for our discussion.

 

12/4 Mobile Technologies: Spreadable & Sticky Digital Technologies

READ: Cannon & Barker, “Hard Candy,” in Snickars & Vonderau, Moving Data: The iPhone and the Future of Media.

 

12/7 Final Paper Due (submitted on Blackboard by 5:00pm)