TV’s New Economics

MIT Media Lab, Bartos Theater 20 Ames Street, Cambridge, MA

Examining the changing economic base of American television, the role of audiences and audience-measurement, the broader role of consumption and advertising in the evolution of American television.

TV News in Transition

MIT Media Lab, Bartos Theater 20 Ames Street, Cambridge, MA

No aspect of television has changed more decisively in recent years than its news programming.

David Milch, TV’s Great Writer

MIT Media Lab, Bartos Theater 20 Ames Street, Cambridge, MA

David Milch will discuss his career as a writer and creator, including of Hill Street Blues, NYPD Blue (co-created with Steven Bochco), and the pioneering HBO series Deadwood.

The Emergence of Citizens’ Media

MIT Media Lab, Bartos Theater 20 Ames Street, Cambridge, MA

The aging of the newspaper reader, the emergence of citizens' media and the blogosphere, the fate of local news and the local newspaper, news and information in the networked future.

News, Information and the Wealth of Networks

MIT Building 3, Room 270 33 Massachusetts Ave (Rear), Cambridge, MA

An MIT Communications Forum featuring speakers Yochai Benkler, Henry Jenkins , and William Uricchio.

New Media and Art

MIT Building 2, Room 105 182 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, MA

This roundtable is made up of leading figures in the field of media art curators, authors, network directors, and innovative developers who will address the current issues on art in the age of digital reproduction.

Remixing Shakespeare

MIT Building 3, Room 270 33 Massachusetts Ave (Rear), Cambridge, MA

New technologies are enabling forms of borrowing, appropriation and "remixing" of media materials in exciting, provocative ways.

Evangelicals and the Media

MIT Building 3, Room 270 33 Massachusetts Ave (Rear), Cambridge, MA

Today evangelical groups are active in all media, from the Internet and cellular telephones to print journalism, broadcasting, film, and multi-media entertainment

Communications Forum: “The Campaign and the Media 1

MIT Media Lab, Bartos Theater 20 Ames Street, Cambridge, MA

Is it true, as many have suggested, that the influence of newspapers and television has declined in the digital era? Have the media become more partisan and polarized?

Books and Libraries in the Digital Age with Robert Darnton

MIT Media Lab, Bartos Theater 20 Ames Street, Cambridge, MA

Robert Darnton on the history of the book, the future of books and reading, and his vision of how new and old media can reinforce each other.

Politics and Popular Culture

MIT Media Lab, Bartos Theater 20 Ames Street, Cambridge, MA

With Johanna Blakley, deputy director of the Norman Lear Center at USC; David Carr, media and culture writer for the New York Times; and Stephen Duncombe, associate professor at NYU.

Race, Politics and American Media

MIT Media Lab, Bartos Theater 20 Ames Street, Cambridge, MA

The election of an African-American president in Nov. 2008 has been hailed as a transforming event. But has Obama's ascension transformed anything?

Government Transparency and Collaborative Journalism

MIT Stata Center, Room 155 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA

Minnesota Public Radio's Linda Fantin and Sunlight Foundation's Ellen Miller discuss how new ways of gathering and presenting information are evolving from a nexus of government openness and digital connectedness.

Jenkins’ Farewell

MIT Media Lab, Bartos Theater 20 Ames Street, Cambridge, MA

Henry Jenkins returns to talk about his scholarship on digital culture, founding Comparative Media Studies, and experiences as a teacher and housemaster.