224 Pages
by Routledge

216 Pages
by Routledge

224 Pages
by Routledge

Branding Television examines why and how the UK and US television industries have turned towards branding as a strategy in response to the rise of satellite, cable and digital television, and new media, such as the internet and mobile phone. This is the first book to offer a sustained critical analysis of this new cultural development. Branding Television examines the industrial,... Read more

Introduction: ‘But Television’s Not Soap!’: Theories and histories of branding and television  Part I: Branding and the US Television Industry  Chapter 1. The Age of Brand Marketing: US network television enters the digital era  Chapter 2. It’s Not TV, It’s HBO!’: Branding US pay-TV  Chapter 3. The End of Public Service Broadcasting?: Branding and UK television in the digital era  Part II: Branding and the UK Television Industry  Chapter 4. All the 4s: Branding Commercial UK Public Service Broadcasting  Chapter 5. Of Logos and Idents: Branding interstitial space  Part III: The Texts and Intertexts of Branding  Chapter 6. Programme Brands  Chapter 7. Negotiating, Contesting and Managing the Brand

Biography

Catherine Johnson lectures in Film and Television Studies at the University of Nottingham. Her research examines the Western television industries and the impact of industrial shifts on the cultural artefacts they produce. She is the author of Telefantasy (2005) and co-editor of ITV Cultures (2005).

'Much more than joining a conversation, Johnson's (2001) research is starting it, making a case for a field of scholarly inquiry largely ignored thus far by television studies. Branding Television provides a solid theoretical foundation for further research, and one that fills in a gap within the breadth of work on television's industrial and economic development over the past several decades.' Darcey West Morris, Critical Studies in Television

'Catherine Johnson's book Branding Television contributes to television studies by describing, explaining, and illustrating why and how television industries have turned to branding as a response to changes in technology....The book draws on a rich and detailed knowledge of both British and American television industries during this period.....' Alison Payne, NECSUS: European Journal of Media Studies 

'Branding Television analyzes different strategies from channel branding to quality schedule branding, from relationship branding to service branding and to programme branding in the UK and US landscape...a value of this present book is the plenitude of case studies: from different broadcasts of two different nations and addressing both commercial and public services...to compare corporate, channel/service and a program's brand as interrelated elements allows [us] to consider television as a cultural form and to understand its evolution from a different perspective.' Deborah Toschi, Cinema&Cie