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Push the button : interactive television and collaborative journalism in Japan

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In Push the Button, Elizabeth Rodwell follows a battle over what interactivity will mean for Japanese television, as major media conglomerates took on independent media professionals developing interactive forms from new media.

Rodwell argues that at the dawn of a potentially transformative moment in television history, content conservatism has triumphed over technological innovation.

Despite the ambition and idealism of Japanese TV professionals and independent journalists, corporate media worked to squelch interactive broadcast projects such as smartphone-playable television and live-streamed and open press conferences before they caught on.

Instead, interactive programming in the hands of major TV networks retained the structure and qualities of most other television and maintained conventional barriers between audiences and the actual space of broadcast.

Despite their lack of success, the innovators behind these experiments nonetheless sought to expand the possibilities for mass media, national identity, and open journalism.

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Product Details
Duke University Press
147802576X / 9781478025764
Paperback / softback
16/02/2024
United States
English
200 pages : illustrations