The End of Television—Again! How TV Is Still Influenced by Cultural Factors in the Age of Digital Intermediaries

This article discusses the impact of convergence and digital intermediaries for television as a medium, industry and political and cultural institution. There is currently widespread debate about the future of television and the impact of technological and market changes. Our argument is that the an...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gunn Enli, Trine Syvertsen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2016-07-01
Series:Media and Communication
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/mediaandcommunication/article/view/547
id doaj-7f474ab9117248e5aaa8c5d04c0ff6ba
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7f474ab9117248e5aaa8c5d04c0ff6ba2020-11-24T21:14:22ZengCogitatioMedia and Communication2183-24392016-07-014314215310.17645/mac.v4i3.547349The End of Television—Again! How TV Is Still Influenced by Cultural Factors in the Age of Digital IntermediariesGunn Enli0Trine Syvertsen1Department of Media and Communication, University of Oslo, NorwayDepartment of Media and Communication, University of Oslo, NorwayThis article discusses the impact of convergence and digital intermediaries for television as a medium, industry and political and cultural institution. There is currently widespread debate about the future of television and the impact of technological and market changes. Our argument is that the answer to what is happening to television cannot be adequately addressed on a general level; local and contextual factors are still important, and so is the position and strategic response of existing television institutions in each national context. Based on analyses of political documents, statistics, audience research and media coverage, as well as secondary literature, the article explores the current situation for Norwegian television and point to four contexts that each plays a part in constraining and enabling existing television operators: the European context, the public service context, the welfare state context and the media ecosystem context.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/mediaandcommunication/article/view/547convergenceNorwaypublic service broadcastingtelevision
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gunn Enli
Trine Syvertsen
spellingShingle Gunn Enli
Trine Syvertsen
The End of Television—Again! How TV Is Still Influenced by Cultural Factors in the Age of Digital Intermediaries
Media and Communication
convergence
Norway
public service broadcasting
television
author_facet Gunn Enli
Trine Syvertsen
author_sort Gunn Enli
title The End of Television—Again! How TV Is Still Influenced by Cultural Factors in the Age of Digital Intermediaries
title_short The End of Television—Again! How TV Is Still Influenced by Cultural Factors in the Age of Digital Intermediaries
title_full The End of Television—Again! How TV Is Still Influenced by Cultural Factors in the Age of Digital Intermediaries
title_fullStr The End of Television—Again! How TV Is Still Influenced by Cultural Factors in the Age of Digital Intermediaries
title_full_unstemmed The End of Television—Again! How TV Is Still Influenced by Cultural Factors in the Age of Digital Intermediaries
title_sort end of television—again! how tv is still influenced by cultural factors in the age of digital intermediaries
publisher Cogitatio
series Media and Communication
issn 2183-2439
publishDate 2016-07-01
description This article discusses the impact of convergence and digital intermediaries for television as a medium, industry and political and cultural institution. There is currently widespread debate about the future of television and the impact of technological and market changes. Our argument is that the answer to what is happening to television cannot be adequately addressed on a general level; local and contextual factors are still important, and so is the position and strategic response of existing television institutions in each national context. Based on analyses of political documents, statistics, audience research and media coverage, as well as secondary literature, the article explores the current situation for Norwegian television and point to four contexts that each plays a part in constraining and enabling existing television operators: the European context, the public service context, the welfare state context and the media ecosystem context.
topic convergence
Norway
public service broadcasting
television
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/mediaandcommunication/article/view/547
work_keys_str_mv AT gunnenli theendoftelevisionagainhowtvisstillinfluencedbyculturalfactorsintheageofdigitalintermediaries
AT trinesyvertsen theendoftelevisionagainhowtvisstillinfluencedbyculturalfactorsintheageofdigitalintermediaries
AT gunnenli endoftelevisionagainhowtvisstillinfluencedbyculturalfactorsintheageofdigitalintermediaries
AT trinesyvertsen endoftelevisionagainhowtvisstillinfluencedbyculturalfactorsintheageofdigitalintermediaries
_version_ 1716747541260795904