Hollywood survival strategies in the post-COVID 19 era

被引:0
|
作者
Michael Johnson
机构
[1] California State University,
来源
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications | / 8卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Since the arrival of the Coronavirus in the United States, Americans have been forced to quarantine themselves at home in dramatic fashion, unlike almost any other time in the nation’s history. Moreover, the American workforce has been equally impacted by virtue of state-imposed shutdowns that have affected innumerable businesses, including the Hollywood entertainment industry, which is the subject of this research. I examine how commercial entertainment conglomerates like AT&T, Comcast, Disney, ViacomCBS, and Fox have responded to mandatory closures for businesses that employ a human workforce upon whom they rely for their labor, and to human consumers they seek to distribute their film and television commodities to for profit. Using historical and discourse analyses in a political economic theoretical framework, I review contemporary reports about the economic conditions which have influenced the industry’s technological adaptation and innovation and argue that the Hollywood television and film industries will capitalize upon this current public health crisis as a motivator to adopt streaming platforms as the new preferred distribution mechanism of entertainment long after COVID 19 is a memory. This qualitative research examines the technological adaptations employed by these entertainment conglomerates to analyze (1) how the transition to streaming video on demand has occurred, and evaluates (2) what the adoption of these survival strategies mean for Hollywood’s long-term economic future and survival in a “digitally competitive” (Smith and Telang, 2017) marketplace.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Paving the post-covid Rhinology era with ERS!
    Hellings, Peter
    RHINOLOGY, 2021, 59 (03) : 225 - 225
  • [42] Teaching, learning, and caring in the post-COVID era
    Berry, Barnett
    PHI DELTA KAPPAN, 2020, 102 (01) : 14 - 17
  • [43] Ophthalmic Workplace Modifications for the Post-COVID Era
    Naveed, Hasan
    Leung, Victor
    Zarei-Ghanavati, Mehran
    Leak, Christopher
    Liu, Christopher
    JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMIC & VISION RESEARCH, 2020, 15 (03) : 400 - 407
  • [44] Financing the SDGs: How Bangladesh May Reshape Its Strategies in the Post-COVID Era?
    Kazi Arif Uz Zaman
    The European Journal of Development Research, 2023, 35 : 51 - 84
  • [45] Financing the SDGs: How Bangladesh May Reshape Its Strategies in the Post-COVID Era?
    Zaman, Kazi Arif Uz
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH, 2023, 35 (01): : 51 - 84
  • [46] The changing face of family medicine in the COVID and post-COVID era
    Grattagliano, Ignazio
    Rossi, Alessandro
    Cricelli, Iacopo
    Cricelli, Claudio
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION, 2020, 50 (07)
  • [47] Suicide. The post-COVID era: A time for action
    Padron-Monedero, Alicia
    Noguer-Zambano, Isabel
    Gomez Garcia, Teresa
    Sarmiento Suarez, Rodrigo
    Bobes, Julio
    Gili, Margalida
    Perez, Victor
    Roca, Miguel
    Saiz-Ruiz, Jeronimo
    REVISTA DE PSIQUIATRIA Y SALUD MENTAL, 2020, 13 (04): : 229 - 231
  • [48] Medical education in the post-COVID era: Challenges and opportunities
    Tan, L. T.
    RADIOTHERAPY AND ONCOLOGY, 2023, 182 : S136 - S136
  • [49] MENTAL HEALTH OF ROMA WOMEN IN POST-COVID ERA
    Cintulova, Lucia Ludvigh
    Radkova, Libusa
    Budayova, Zuzana
    ACTA MISSIOLOGICA, 2022, 16 (02): : 116 - 129
  • [50] The patients' perspective of bedside teaching in the post-Covid era
    Kearns, Angela
    Lennon, James
    Hurley, Lucy
    IRISH JOURNAL OF MEDICAL SCIENCE, 2025, : 657 - 661