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Informationen zum Autor Edited by Alison F. Slade; Amber J. Narro and Dedria Givens-Carroll - Contributions by Benjamin Brojakowski; Jason Roy Burnett; Ryan Cassella; Garret Castleberry; Matthew Collins; Ted M. Dickinson; Marsha Ducey; Dan Faltesek; Krystal Fogle; Brian Geltzeil Klappentext Social media has brought about a revolution in fan culture, from fan uprisings to save programs to groups and pages dedicated to mourning lost programs and characters. This edited collection examines how fans use social media in regard to television programming, characters, narrative, and various types of interactions, as well as how television uses social media to engage fan cultures. Zusammenfassung Social media has brought about a revolution in fan culture, from fan uprisings to save programs to groups and pages dedicated to mourning lost programs and characters. This edited collection examines how fans use social media in regard to television programming, characters, narrative, and various types of interactions, as well as how television uses social media to engage fan cultures. Inhaltsverzeichnis Chapter 1: The New Network: How Social Media is Changing-and Saving-Television Ryan CassellaChapter 2: Spoiler Alert: Understanding Television Enjoyment in the Social Media Era Benjamin BrojakowskiChapter 3: Rhetorical Strengths & Limitations of Interactivity for Activism in the Stewart and Colbert UniverseChristopher A. MedjeskyChapter 4: Fandom Communication in a Mediated Age: The Use of Twitter and Blogs for Dissent Practices Among National Basketball Association (NBA) FansCorey Jay Liberman, Michael Plugh and Brian Geltzeiler Chapter 5: What Types of #SportsFans use Social Media? The Role of Team Identity Formation and Spectatorship Motivation on Self-Disclosure during a Live Sport Broadcast Shaughan A. Keaton, Nicholas M. Watanabe & Brody J. Ruihley Chapter 6: The Online Community: Fan response of Community's Unlikely Fifth Season Matthew Collins and Danielle M. SternChapter 7: Game(s) of Fandom: The Hyperlink Labyrinths that Paratextualize Game of Thrones FandomGarret CastleberryChapter 8: Be Original: Examining Fan Comments on A&E's Duck Dynasty Facebook Page After the Robertson Suspension Michel M. HaighChapter 9: "The Parents Have the Dream, but the Kids are in the Nightmare": Digital Interactivity, Toddlers & Tiaras Viewers, and Social Networking SitesLeandra H. HernandezChapter 10: Zombie Fans, Second Screen, and Television Audiences: Redefining Parasociality as Technoprosociality in AMC's #TalkingDeadSabrina Pasztor and Jenny Ungbha KornChapter 11: Memes, Tweets, and Props: How Fans Cope When Shows Go Off the AirAlane Presswood and Steve GranelliChapter 12: So Are the Days of Our Tweets: An Examination of Twitter Use By American Daytime Serials and Their FansMarsha DuceyChapter 13: Army Wives Connect: Lifetime Viewers' Everyday Lives and Fandom Converge in Online CommunitiesDarcey MorrisChapter 14: "Butter," Facebook, and Paula Deen: Examining Fans Use of Social Media in CrisisMichel M. Haigh & Shelley WigleyChapter 15: Fans Can Be Journalists Too: A Look at Fan Interaction with HBO's The NewsroomJulia E. Largent & Jason Roy BurnettChapter 16: It's Bigger on the Inside: Fandom, Social Media, and Doctor WhoKrystal FogleChapter 17: Television-inspired Cosplay and Social MediaLaura Kane and William E. LogesChapter 18: Who Killed @TheLauraPalmer? Twitter as a Performance Space for Twin Peaks Fan FictionKathryn L. Lookadoo and Ted M. DickinsonChapter 19: Fifty Years of "The Man From U.N.C.L.E.": How the Ever-Changing Media Sustained and Shaped One of the Oldest Fan Communities Cynthia W. WalkerChapter 20: Managing MultiscreenDaniel Faltesek...