Videó: Regionális hírek, események:“TV Shows in the Age of Streaming” – Roundtable discussion - ANGOL nyelvű beszélgetés
The rapid expansion of streaming platforms has fundamentally reshaped the television ecosystem, reconfiguring long-established norms of production, distribution, and reception. Streaming has accelerated the convergence of television and digital media, transforming serialized storytelling through innovations such as algorithmically informed commissioning, flexible season lengths, and the normalization of both binge-viewing and fragmented, on-demand consumption. These industrial and formal shifts are intertwined with broader cultural and economic dynamics, including platform consolidation, transnational content strategies, and evolving labor relations that have recently culminated in high-profile strikes involving writers, actors, and below-the-line workers. At the same time, streaming platforms have cultivated unprecedented forms of global distribution, enabling regional series to circulate widely and disrupt U.S.-centric assumptions about audience taste and cultural hierarchy. While streaming has fostered media convergence and enhanced the centrality of transmediality where global brands produce global audiences, it also brought about processes of decentralization and the fragmentation of both content and audience practices.
This roundtable interrogates how the age of streaming redefines what television is and what the cultural, aesthetic, commercial etc. consequences are. The roundtable seeks answers to the following questions among many others: How do platforms exert narrative and aesthetic influence through data-driven development and recommendation algorithms? How are authorship and creative labor influenced by the streaming platforms in which the relationship between creators and viewers is based on data? In what ways do streaming technologies reshape the social experience of watching television—moving from a synchronous viewing to individualized, dispersed, and asynchronous forms of engagement? How do global markets and localization practices affect representation, translation, and cultural specificity? How are these questions reflected in the wide range of available TV shows? How do streaming platforms reshape popular culture?
Invited speakers:
László Sári B. (PTE)
Vera Benczik (ELTE)
Dávid Palatinus (Technical University of Liberec)
Norbert Gyuris (PTE/EKKE)
Honlap: http://www.liceumtv.hu
LTV Anno - https://youtube.com/ltvanno
EKKE, Eszterházy Károly Katolikus Egyetem, www.uni-eszterhazy.huAz objektív tájékozódás érdekében javasoljuk, hogy a híreknek / eseményeknek több külön forrásnál is nézz utána!