101 |
Creative Commons |
Soft News, Hard Sell: Journalism in Neo-Liberal India |
Daya Thussu, Professor of International Communication and Co-Director of India Media Centre, University of Westminster, gives a talk for the Reuters Institute of Journalism on 9th March, 2011. |
Daya Thussu |
19 Apr 2011 |
102 |
Creative Commons |
You are the Earth, You are the Sky; How one man become the dominant force in the British media's coverage of sport. Does that mean he controls sport itself? |
Final lecture of the 2011 News International Professorship of Broadcast Media lecture series on Sport and Broadcast Media. |
Matthew Engel |
19 Apr 2011 |
103 |
Creative Commons |
From Reith to wreath; The Great Days of Sport on BBC TV and how they ended |
Matthew Engel, the journalist and sports writer and 2011 New International Professor of Broadcast Media gives his third lecture in the 2011 series entitled; Please, mister, can we have our ball back? Sport, the media, and the people. |
Matthew Engel |
19 Apr 2011 |
104 |
Creative Commons |
It's the Cat's Whisker: How Sport and the Media developed together, from Mesopotamia to John Logie Baird |
Matthew Engel, the journalist and sports writer and 2011 News International Broadcast Media Professor gives his second lecture in the 2011 series entitled 'Please, mister, can we have our ball back? Sport, the media, and the people. |
Matthew Engel |
19 Apr 2011 |
105 |
Creative Commons |
Life and death? No, Much more Important than that; How Sport turned into Big Business and a Global Obsession |
Matthew Engel, Journalist and Sports Writer and 2011 News International Visiting Professor of Broadcast Media gives the first of the 2011 series on Broadcast media, entitled; Please, mister, can we have our ball back? Sport, the media, and the people. |
Matthew Engel |
19 Apr 2011 |
106 |
|
The crisis facing the business models of print media around the world |
Robert Picard, Professor of Media Economics, Jönköping University and Director of Research, RISJ, gives a talk for the 2011 Hilary term Seminar series. |
Robert Picard |
11 Apr 2011 |
107 |
Creative Commons |
World Wide Research |
William Dutton, Oxford Internet Institute, gives a talk on the fourth estate, media research, and the globalised news world on the 4th November 2010. |
William Dutton |
05 Apr 2011 |
108 |
|
Trusting the News |
This lecture series seeks to explore and explain the sources and forms of uncertainty in key aspects of contemporary life. |
Stephen Coleman |
24 Mar 2010 |
109 |
Creative Commons |
The Reconstruction of American Journalism |
A lecture delivered by Michael Schudson, author of the 2009 report of the same title, on the state of American journalism, The report proposes new steps to support quality public affairs reporting. |
Michael Schudson, Nicholas Lemann, David Levy, Paul Starr |
02 Mar 2010 |
110 |
|
From Weblogs to Twitter: How Did We Get Where We Are Today and What Are the Main Impacts To Date? |
What are the most important milestones in the evolution of social media? What factors have shaped their successes and limitations? |
Kathryn Corrick, Dave Sifry, Bill Thompson, William Dutton |
13 Nov 2009 |
111 |
|
Breaking News: The Changing Relationship Between Blogs and Mainstream Media |
Panel discussion during the Oxford Social Media Convention 2008 on whether social media necessarily threaten traditional news media, and what, if anything they may have to offer in return. |
David Levy, Richard Sambrook, John Kelly, Jonathan Ford |
30 Oct 2009 |
112 |
|
Breaking News: The Changing Relationship Between Blogs and Mainstream Media |
Among the traditional media, blogs and other contributions to citizen journalism have for a long time been regarded as posing a significant threat to 'quality' news reporting ... is this a valid view? What (if anything) can social media offer? |
David Levy, Richard Sambrook, John Kelly, Jonathan Ford |
07 Oct 2009 |
113 |
|
The More Things Change, the More They Stay the Same: Online Audiences and the Paradox of Web Traffic |
Using three years of daily Web traffic data, and new models adapted from financial mathematics, this talk examines large-scale variation in Web traffic. |
Matthew Hindman |
06 Mar 2009 |