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This book situates binge watching as one of several new television viewing behaviors which collectively contribute to a fundamental change in the way we view television today. Simply put, binge watching changes, or has the potential to change, everything: Engagement, immersion, attention to content and other devices, identification with characters and social engagement with fellow viewers, as well as content choices, and cable and over-the-top (OTT) subscription rates. Binge watching has quickly become a new norm in television viewing across audiences. Binge Watching reviews historically…mehr
This book situates binge watching as one of several new television viewing behaviors which collectively contribute to a fundamental change in the way we view television today. Simply put, binge watching changes, or has the potential to change, everything: Engagement, immersion, attention to content and other devices, identification with characters and social engagement with fellow viewers, as well as content choices, and cable and over-the-top (OTT) subscription rates. Binge watching has quickly become a new norm in television viewing across audiences.
Binge Watching reviews historically significant advancements in the television industry and in technology that better enable binge watching, such as timeshifting, increasing quantity and (sometimes) quality of content, as well as distribution strategies and suggestions algorithms employed by OTT providers. We situate binge watching as human-centered, that is, driven by innate human needs and wants, such as a desire to consume well-constructed stories and to connect with others. We also review the current state of academic binge watching research-from motives and habituation to the (over-pathologizing) addiction-based studies. This text concludes with a synopsis of the central arguments made and identifies several areas for future research.
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Autorenporträt
Bridget Rubenking (Ph.D., Indiana University) is an associate professor of film and mass media at the University of Central Florida. She has published in the Journal of Communication and Computers in Human Behavior.
Cheryl Campanella Bracken (Ph.D., Temple University) is a professor in the School of Communication at Cleveland State University. She has published in Media Psychology and Human Communication Research. She co-edited Immersed in Media: Telepresence in Everyday Life.
Inhaltsangabe
List of Tables - Introduction: A Look at Binge Watching - A Historical Perspective: The Evolution of Television Viewing and Audience Research - An Industry Perspective: Changing Competitors, Content, and Content Curation - A Social Perspective: Family Viewing, Co-Viewing, and Social TV - Motivations to Binge Watch - Implications of Binge Watching - Conclusion: Where We Go from Here - Index.
List of Tables - Introduction: A Look at Binge Watching - A Historical Perspective: The Evolution of Television Viewing and Audience Research - An Industry Perspective: Changing Competitors, Content, and Content Curation - A Social Perspective: Family Viewing, Co-Viewing, and Social TV - Motivations to Binge Watch - Implications of Binge Watching - Conclusion: Where We Go from Here - Index.
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