The Golden Ratio of Algorithms to Artists? Streaming Services and the Platformization of Creativity in American Television Production

In this article, I examine how and why “platformization” was initially made sense of by writers in the American television industry. As streaming platforms entered the production space and became important homes for the commissioning of longform television content, they sought to build brand images...

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Main Author: Annemarie Navar-Gill
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-07-01
Series:Social Media + Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305120940701
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spelling doaj-c8f9ab98bcde4442b0abcd4ec957c0be2020-11-25T03:19:33ZengSAGE PublishingSocial Media + Society2056-30512020-07-01610.1177/2056305120940701The Golden Ratio of Algorithms to Artists? Streaming Services and the Platformization of Creativity in American Television ProductionAnnemarie Navar-GillIn this article, I examine how and why “platformization” was initially made sense of by writers in the American television industry. As streaming platforms entered the production space and became important homes for the commissioning of longform television content, they sought to build brand images as places that were both “data-driven” and characterized by work cultures of “creative freedom.” At least for a time in the mid-2010s, they succeeded in selling this conceptual link to the professional culture of Hollywood television screenwriters. Drawing on fieldwork and interviews from 2017 as well as a longer ranging analysis of trade press, I identify those features of the production culture established at major streaming platforms that forged the somewhat counterintuitive notion that “being data-driven” created an environment of greater “creative freedom” in the mid-2010s. However, these were the very early days of streaming platform production cultures, and norms began to crystallize, it was these very same features that began to undermine creative comfort with streaming platforms.https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305120940701
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Annemarie Navar-Gill
spellingShingle Annemarie Navar-Gill
The Golden Ratio of Algorithms to Artists? Streaming Services and the Platformization of Creativity in American Television Production
Social Media + Society
author_facet Annemarie Navar-Gill
author_sort Annemarie Navar-Gill
title The Golden Ratio of Algorithms to Artists? Streaming Services and the Platformization of Creativity in American Television Production
title_short The Golden Ratio of Algorithms to Artists? Streaming Services and the Platformization of Creativity in American Television Production
title_full The Golden Ratio of Algorithms to Artists? Streaming Services and the Platformization of Creativity in American Television Production
title_fullStr The Golden Ratio of Algorithms to Artists? Streaming Services and the Platformization of Creativity in American Television Production
title_full_unstemmed The Golden Ratio of Algorithms to Artists? Streaming Services and the Platformization of Creativity in American Television Production
title_sort golden ratio of algorithms to artists? streaming services and the platformization of creativity in american television production
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Social Media + Society
issn 2056-3051
publishDate 2020-07-01
description In this article, I examine how and why “platformization” was initially made sense of by writers in the American television industry. As streaming platforms entered the production space and became important homes for the commissioning of longform television content, they sought to build brand images as places that were both “data-driven” and characterized by work cultures of “creative freedom.” At least for a time in the mid-2010s, they succeeded in selling this conceptual link to the professional culture of Hollywood television screenwriters. Drawing on fieldwork and interviews from 2017 as well as a longer ranging analysis of trade press, I identify those features of the production culture established at major streaming platforms that forged the somewhat counterintuitive notion that “being data-driven” created an environment of greater “creative freedom” in the mid-2010s. However, these were the very early days of streaming platform production cultures, and norms began to crystallize, it was these very same features that began to undermine creative comfort with streaming platforms.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305120940701
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