This article investigates the experiential affordances of watching online TV as outcomes of the material underpinnings of online TV and the actions taken by viewers. Potential experiential changes derive from how online TV services can be considered libraries of content affording self-scheduling action possibilities. Such changes need to be situated in the slow-to-change conditions of television viewing. We draw on a qualitative study of how viewers respond to the action possibilities and constraints of online TV services. We argue that potentials for individualized viewing are counterbalanced by television viewing as a social activity. Next, self-scheduling ties in with viewing as a deliberate action, appropriated to create experiences where attentiveness is tailored to what is narratively required. Finally, flow schedules are replaced with programed paths constraining the agency of viewers.
CITATION STYLE
Lüders, M., & Sundet, V. S. (2022). Conceptualizing the Experiential Affordances of Watching Online TV. Television and New Media, 23(4), 335–351. https://doi.org/10.1177/15274764211010943
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.