New Television Handbook

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A01=Jeremy Orlebar
A01=Jonathan Bignell
A01=Patricia Holland
Anniversary
Audio Space
audiovisual editing techniques
Author_Jeremy Orlebar
Author_Jonathan Bignell
Author_Patricia Holland
BAME
broadcast regulation UK
broadcast training
Category=ATJ
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Channel Controllers
Clapper Board
Clips
Community Programme Unit
current affairs tv
digital media landscape
diversity in broadcasting
documentary
DVD
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everyday television
Factual Entertainment
factual tv
Follow
future of TV
ITV Company
jeremey orlebar
Makeup
Mama
media power theory
media production skills
Mobile Phone Footage
narative television
new televison handbook
new TV genres
Pact
patricia holland
Public Service Broadcasting
second screen
Sianel Pedwar Cymru
Smart Phone
Southampton
television handbook
television industry
television industry entry pathways
television structure
television studies
the future of television
tv book
tv education
tv genres
tv handbook
TV industry
tv news
tv post-production
tv production
tv production management
tv programming
tv programs
tv sound
UK Broadcaster
UK Identity
UK Region
UK Television
Vice Versa
visual dimension
Visual Effects Supervisor

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138833500
  • Weight: 839g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 19 Dec 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The New Television Handbook provides an exploration of the theory and practice of television at a time when the medium is undergoing radical changes. The book looks at television from the perspective of someone new to the industry, and explores the place of the medium within a constantly changing digital landscape.

This title discusses key skills involved in television production, including: producing, production management, directing, camera, sound, editing and visual effects. Each of these activities is placed within a wider context as it traces the production process from commissioning to post-production.

The book outlines the broad political and economic context of the television industry. It gives an account of television genres, in particular narrative, factual programmes and news, and it considers the academic discipline of media studies and the ways in which theorists have analysed and tried to understand the medium. It points to the interplay of theory and practice as it draws on the history of the medium and observes the ways in which the past continues to influence and invigorate the present.

The New Television Handbook includes:

  • contributions from practitioners ranging from established producers to new entrants;
  • a comprehensive list of key texts and television programmes;
  • a revised glossary of specialist terms;
  • a section on training and ways of getting into the industry.

By combining theory, real-world advice and a detailed overview of the industry and its history, The New Television Handbook is an ideal guide for students of media and television studies and young professionals entering the television industry.

Patricia Holland has worked as an independent filmmaker, a television editor and a freelance journalist. She is currently a writer and researcher specialising in television history, and lectures at Bournemouth University, UK. Her most recent book is Broadcasting and the NHS in the Thatcherite 1980s (2013). She is the author of the first and second editions of The Television Handbook.

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