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Baym, Nancy – Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, 1995
Argues that humor can be accomplished in computer-mediated communication and can be critical to creating social meaning online. Analyzes the humor of the USENET news group rec.arts.tv.soaps (r.a.t.s.), which discusses soap operas. Combines user surveys with message analysis to show the prevalence and importance of humor in r.a.t.s. (RS)
Descriptors: Audience Analysis, Communication Research, Computer Mediated Communication, Computer Networks
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Mayer, Vicki – Journal of Communication, 2003
Examines the local reception of global Spanish-language soap operas, or telenovelas. Explores how young people talked about Mexican telenovelas in daily life. Concludes that the telenovela, within certain limits, reflected some of the national, ethnic, gender, and class tensions that defined the viewers' identities as working-class, Mexican…
Descriptors: Females, Mass Media Role, Media Research, Mexican Americans
Kielwasser, Alfred P.; Wolf, Michelle A. – 1988
This paper provides a framework for developing an approach to understanding soap opera's appeal as a direct function of both the genre's form and of its fans' viewing behavior. The paper suggests that while this analysis is largely critical, other studies from both critical and social scientific approaches can be based upon the framework and…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Audience Participation, Audience Response, Mass Media Use
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Weyers, Joseph – IALL Journal, 1997
Discusses use of Spanish-language "telenovelas," serialized television programs broadcast daily and containing stories that are resolved in two to six months, as instructional material for Spanish second-language teaching. The telenovela contains authentic, comprehensible language and lends itself to an ongoing, long-term classroom activity.…
Descriptors: Audiovisual Aids, Broadcast Television, Copyrights, Curriculum Development