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Book
Digital renaissance : what data and economics tell us about the future of popular culture
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ISBN: 0691185433 Year: 2018 Publisher: Princeton, New Jersey : Princeton University Press,

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Abstract

How digital technology is upending the traditional creative industries-and why that might be a good thingThe digital revolution poses a mortal threat to the major creative industries-music, publishing, television, and the movies. The ease with which digital files can be copied and distributed has unleashed a wave of piracy with disastrous effects on revenue. Cheap, easy self-publishing is eroding the position of these gatekeepers and guardians of culture. Does this revolution herald the collapse of culture, as some commentators claim? Far from it. In Digital Renaissance, Joel Waldfogel argues that digital technology is enabling a new golden age of popular culture, a veritable digital renaissance.By reducing the costs of production, distribution, and promotion, digital technology is democratizing access to the cultural marketplace. More books, songs, television shows, and movies are being produced than ever before. Nor does this mean a tidal wave of derivative, poorly produced kitsch; analyzing decades of production and sales data, as well as bestseller and best-of lists, Waldfogel finds that the new digital model is just as successful at producing high-quality, successful work as the old industry model, and in many cases more so. The vaunted gatekeeper role of the creative industries proves to have been largely mythical. The high costs of production have stifled creativity in industries that require ever-bigger blockbusters to cover the losses on ever-more-expensive failures.Are we drowning in a tide of cultural silt, or living in a golden age for culture? The answers in Digital Renaissance may surprise you.

Keywords

Cultural industries --- Cultural property --- Popular culture. --- Technological innovations. --- Protection. --- Airplay. --- Asher. --- Author. --- Availability. --- Billboard 200. --- Bollywood. --- Book. --- Box office. --- Bruce Springsteen. --- Calculation. --- Career. --- Charles Dickens. --- Cinema of the United States. --- Cinemax. --- Clive Davis. --- Copy protection. --- Copyright. --- Cost reduction. --- Creative industries. --- Creative work. --- Cultural industry. --- Customer. --- DVD. --- Digital camera. --- E-book. --- Economist. --- Episode. --- File sharing. --- Film industry. --- Filmmaking. --- Fraud. --- HarperCollins. --- Hemlock Grove (TV series). --- Home appliance. --- Home video. --- Hulu. --- IMDb. --- ITunes Store. --- ITunes. --- Income. --- Independent record label. --- Intellectual property. --- Internet. --- Justin Bieber. --- Kindle Direct Publishing. --- Long tail. --- Low-budget film. --- Major film studio. --- Make Money. --- Marginal cost. --- Marketing. --- Metacritic. --- Music Is. --- Music industry. --- MusicBrainz. --- Myspace. --- Napster. --- Narcos. --- Netflix. --- Network effect. --- Newspaper. --- Nielsen SoundScan. --- Novelist. --- OR Books. --- Payment. --- Payola. --- Percentage. --- Photographer. --- Photography. --- Piracy. --- Policy. --- Popular music. --- Production budget. --- Publication. --- Publicity. --- Publishing. --- Quantity. --- Record label. --- Recording Industry Association of America. --- Retail. --- Rotten Tomatoes. --- Self-publishing. --- Sibling. --- Songwriter. --- Spotify. --- Streaming media. --- Subscription business model. --- TV listings (UK). --- Technological change. --- Technology. --- Telecommunication. --- Television channel. --- Television program. --- Television. --- The New York Times. --- Theft. --- Website. --- Wide Variety. --- Year. --- YouTube.


Book
Channeling Violence : The Economic Market for Violent Television Programming
Author:
ISBN: 0691228310 Year: 2000 Publisher: Princeton : Princeton University Press,

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Abstract

"If it bleeds, it leads." The phrase captures television news directors' famed preference for opening newscasts with the most violent stories they can find. And what is true for news is often true for entertainment programming, where violence is used as a product to attract both viewers and sponsors. In this book, James Hamilton presents the first major theoretical and empirical examination of the market for television violence. Hamilton approaches television violence in the same way that other economists approach the problem of pollution: that is, as an example of market failure. He argues that television violence, like pollution, generates negative externalities, defined as costs borne by others than those involved in the production activity. Broadcasters seeking to attract viewers may not fully bear the costs to society of their violent programming, if those costs include such factors as increased levels of aggression and crime in society. Hamilton goes on to say that the comparison to pollution remains relevant when considering how to deal with the problem. Approaches devised to control violent programming, such as restricting it to certain times and rating programs according to the violence they contain, have parallels in zoning and education policies designed to protect the environment. Hamilton examines in detail the microstructure of incentives that operate at every level of television broadcasting, from programming and advertising to viewer behavior, so that remedies can be devised to reduce violent programming without restricting broadcasters' right to compete.

Keywords

Nasilje. --- Televizija. --- Action film. --- Adult. --- Advertising. --- Aggression. --- American Family Association. --- Auction. --- Audience measurement. --- Beakman's World. --- Brand. --- Broadcast network. --- Broadcast programming. --- Broadcast syndication. --- Cable television. --- Calculation. --- Chairman. --- Chapter 2. --- Chapter 6. --- Children's Television Act. --- Cinemax. --- Competition. --- Consideration. --- Consumer. --- Content analysis. --- Cost–benefit analysis. --- Crime Story (TV series). --- Crime statistics. --- Criticism. --- Customer. --- Demography. --- Dummy variable (statistics). --- Economics. --- Episode. --- Estimation. --- Externality. --- Federal Communications Commission. --- Footage. --- Graphic violence. --- Household. --- Incentive. --- Income. --- Independent station (North America). --- Indication (medicine). --- Journalism. --- Legislation. --- Local news. --- Market failure. --- Market segmentation. --- Marketing. --- Motion Picture Association of America film rating system. --- Network affiliate. --- News program. --- News. --- Newspaper. --- Nielsen ratings. --- Nudity. --- Opportunity cost. --- Parent company. --- Parental Advisory. --- Parents Television Council. --- Pay television. --- Percentage. --- Politician. --- Politics. --- Pollution. --- Pornography. --- Prediction. --- Probability. --- Product differentiation. --- Public broadcasting. --- Public interest. --- Public policy. --- Requirement. --- Respondent. --- Schindler's List. --- Spitzer (bullet). --- Standard deviation. --- Standard error. --- Statistical significance. --- TV Guide. --- TV Parental Guidelines. --- Target audience. --- Tax. --- Ted Turner. --- Television channel. --- Television consumption. --- Television content rating systems. --- Television in the United States. --- Television network. --- Television program. --- Television. --- Terrestrial television. --- The Logic of Collective Action. --- This TV. --- Trade-off. --- V-chip. --- Viewing (funeral). --- Violent crime. --- Voting. --- WGN (AM). --- Warning label.

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