View the Table of Contents.
Read the Introduction.
aThe phenomenal success of Nickelodeon reveals a great deal
about the changing nature of the modern media, and about changing
conceptions of childhood. Nickelodeon Nation offers a comprehensive
account of the channelas evolution, providing fascinating insights
into production and programming, and the responses of children
themselves.a
--David Buckingham, Institute of Education, University of
London
aWith both dispassionate market analyses and insidersa personal
accounts, Nickelodeon Nation covers the channelas history and
evolving philosophies thoroughly--like a bucket of Nick's signature
green slime! Even aNickspertsa will find new insights and
understanding.a
--David W. Kleeman, Executive Director, American Center for
Children and Media
Nickelodeon is the highest rated daytime channel in the country,
and its cultural influence has grown at an astounding pace. Why are
Nickelodeon shows so popular? How are they developed and marketed?
And where do they fit in the economic picture of the children's
media industry? Nickelodeon Nation, the first major study of the
only TV channel just for children, investigates these
questions.
Intended for a wide range of readers and illustrated thorughout,
the essays in Nickelodeon Nation are grouped into four sections:
economics and marketing; the production process; programs and
politics; and viewers. The contributors--who include a former
employee in Nick's animation department, an investigative
journalist, a developmental pyschologist who helped develop "Blue's
Clues," and television and cultural studies scholors--show how
Nickelodeon succeeds, in large part, by simultaneouslysatisfying
both children and adults. For kids, Nick offers gross-out jokes and
no-holds-barred goofiness, while for adults it offers a
violence-free world, ethnic and racial diversity, and gender
parity. Nick gives kids the fun they want by gently violating adult
ideas of propriety, and satisfies adults by conforming to their
vision of "quality" children's programming.
Nickelodeon Nation shows how, in only twenty years, Nickelodeon
has transformed itself from the "green vegetable
network"--distasteful for kids but "good for them," according to
parents--into a super-cool network with some of the most successful
shows on the air. This ground-breaking collection fills a major gap
in our understanding of both contemporary children's culture and
the television industry.
Contributors include: Daniel R. Anderson, Sarah Banet-Weiser,
Henry Jenkins, Mark Langer, Vicki Mayer, Susan Murray, Heather
Hendershot, Norma Pecora, Kevin S. Sandler, Ellen Seiter, Linda
Simensky, and Mimi Swartz.
General
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