This dissertation examines the process of commodifying television formats (e.g., Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?, Survivor, Big Brother, and Idol) from television show ideas into global commodities. Instead of assuming that a format has always been a commodity, this dissertation seeks to understand the historical process of the transformation from a concept into a commodity. Specifically, it answers three questions: a) What is the process whereby a format obtains property status and becomes a copyrighted work? b) Who enables the transnational movement of a format, and how does that happen? and c) How do people recognize which formats are more valuable than others? To answer these questions, by articulating the distribution of value as a theoretical framework, this dissertation closely examines institutions of format distributions: legal frameworks for copyright, multinational corporations, and global television markets. Through historical analyses, this dissertation reveals that institutions of distribution gave rise to three aspects of the commodity form of formats: legality, functionality, and materiality. The development of these three aspects shows that a format became a commodity, rather than simply a method of copying television programs, only after 2004. This dissertation contends that the long history of copying television show ideas was punctuated by the emergence of the commodity form of formats, distinguishing the present state of global format trade from the previous one.
The commodification of television formats: the role of distribution in the emergence of the commodity form
Abstract
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- The commodification of television formats: the role of distribution in the emergence of the commodity form
- Creators
- Joonseok Choi - University of Iowa
- Contributors
- Rita Zajacz (Advisor)Tim Havens (Committee Member)David Hingstman (Committee Member)Kembrew McLeod (Committee Member)Sujatha Sosale (Committee Member)
- Resource Type
- Dissertation
- Degree Awarded
- Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), University of Iowa
- Degree in
- Communication Studies
- Date degree season
- Summer 2019
- DOI
- 10.17077/etd.u8xu-wtw6
- Publisher
- University of Iowa
- Number of pages
- viii, 233 pages
- Copyright
- Copyright © 2019 Joonseok Choi
- Language
- English
- Description illustrations
- illustrations (some color), map
- Description bibliographic
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 201-233).
- Public Abstract (ETD)
This dissertation examines the process of transforming television formats (e.g., Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?, Survivor, Big Brother, and Idol) from television show ideas into global commodities. Instead of assuming that a format has always been a commodity, this dissertation seeks to understand the historical process of the transformation from a concept into a commodity. Specifically, it answers three questions: a) What is the process whereby a format obtains property status and becomes a copyrighted work? b) Who enables the transnational movement of a format, and how does that happen? and c) How do people recognize which formats are more valuable than others? To answer these questions, this dissertation closely examines institutions of format distributions: legal frameworks for copyright, multinational corporations, and global television markets. Through historical analyses, this dissertation reveals that institutions of distribution gave rise to three aspects of the commodity form of formats: legality, functionality, and materiality. The development of these three aspects shows that a format became a commodity, rather than simply a method of copying television programs, only after 2004. This dissertation contends that the long history of copying television show ideas was punctuated by the emergence of the commodity form of formats, distinguishing the present state of global format trade from the previous one.
Keywords: television formats, commodification, commodity form, distribution of value, format copyright, super-indie, MIPFormats
- Academic Unit
- Communication Studies
- Record Identifier
- 9983776811302771