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SAGE Communication & Media Studies

English, Technology, 1 season, 70 episodes, 17 hours, 8 minutes
About
Welcome to the official free Podcast site from SAGE for Communication & Media Studies. SAGE is a leading international publisher of journals, books, and electronic media for academic, educational, and professional markets with principal offices in Los Angeles, London, New Delhi, and Singapore.
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Deciding What’s News: News-ness As an Audience Concept for the Hybrid Media Environment

Authors Emily K. Vraga and Stephanie Edgerly discuss their article “Deciding What’s News: News-ness As an Audience Concept for the Hybrid Media Environment.” Vraga and Edgerly elaborate on their work on the modern hybrid media environment and audience perceptions of “newsness.”
11/3/202214 minutes, 5 seconds
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Spatial proximity as a behavioral marker of relationship dynamics in older adult couples

Dr. Brian G. Ogolsky, University of Illinois, USA discusses relationship dynamics in older adults.
8/29/202216 minutes, 47 seconds
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Relationship Matters Podcast 112

Dr. Kathryn D. Coduto, South Dakota State University discusses importance of listenting and affection exchange in a marital relationship
8/29/202215 minutes, 51 seconds
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JMQ - Can an Algorithm Reduce the Perceived Bias of News?

Join us for a JMCQ podcast with author T. Franklin Waddell to discuss the article entitled "Can an Algorithm Reduce the Perceived Bias of News? Testing the Effect of Machine Attribution on News Readers’ Evaluations of Bias, Anthropomorphism, and Credibility." You can find the article here: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1077699018815891
2/5/20217 minutes, 39 seconds
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TVN - Data Colonialism: Rethinking Big Data’s Relation to the Contemporary Subject

In this Television & New Media podcast, editor Jonathan Corpus Ong interviews author Nick Couldry on his and co-author Ulises A. Mejias article entitled "Data Colonialism: Rethinking Big Data’s Relation to the Contemporary Subject."
12/14/201825 minutes, 10 seconds
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WCX - How Do Online News Genres Take Up Knowledge Claims

Written Communication Editor Chad Wickman speaks with Dr. Nancy Bray, author of “How do online news genres take up knowledge claims from a scientific research article on climate change?” featured in the January 2019 special issue on Writing and Science. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0741088318804822
12/13/201822 minutes, 27 seconds
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WCX - Writing and Conceptual Learning in Science

Written Communication Editor Chad Wickman speaks with Dr. Anne Ruggles Gere, Emily Wilson, and Naitnaphit Limlamai, co-authors of “Writing and conceptual learning in science: An analysis of assignments,” featured in the January 2019 special issue on Writing and Science. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0741088318804820
12/13/201822 minutes, 43 seconds
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WCX - Compressing, Expanding, and Attending to Scientific Meaning

Written Communication Editor Chad Wickman speaks with Dr. Gwendolynne Reid, author of “Compressing, expanding, and attending to scientific meaning: Writing the semiotic hybrid of science for professional and citizen scientists,” featured in the January 2019 special issue on Writing and Science. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0741088318809361
12/13/201825 minutes, 49 seconds
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WCX - Genre Evolution and the Research Article

Written Communication Editor Chad Wickman speaks with Dr. Ashley Rose Mehlenbacher, author of “Registered reports: Genre evolution and the research article,” featured in the January 2019 special issue on Writing and Science. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0741088318804534
12/13/201820 minutes, 24 seconds
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WCX - “I Think When I Speak, I Don’t Sound Like That”

Written Communication Editor Chad Wickman speaks with Dr. Heather M. Falconer, author of “‘I think when I speak, I don’t sound like that’: The influence of social positioning on rhetorical skill development in science,” featured in the January 2019 special issue on Writing and Science. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0741088318804819
12/13/201822 minutes, 40 seconds
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Justice, subalternism, and literary justice: Aravind Adiga’s The White Tiger

JCL – “Justice, subalternism, and literary justice: Aravind Adiga’s The White Tiger": Manav Ratti discusses his recent article. Music by AShamaluevMusic. Song: Emotional Background Music/Cinematic Music Instrumental. Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tchRllLUxmg. Posted August 2018.
8/29/201810 minutes, 54 seconds
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SCX: "Using Expert Sources to Correct Health Misinformation in Social Media"

Kelsey Berish interviews author Emily Vraga about her and co-author Leticia Bode's 2017 Science Communication article, entitled, "Using Expert Sources to Correct Helth Misinformation in Scoial Media."
6/8/201811 minutes, 50 seconds
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SCX: Citizen Science as a Mean for Increasing Public Engagement in Science: Presumption or Possibility?

Kelsey Berish interviews Victoria Martin on her Science Communication article, Citizen Science as a Mean for Increasing Public Engagement in Science: Presumption or Possibility?, first published in February 2017. 
5/9/201815 minutes, 10 seconds
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TVN: "Classroom Instruments and Carpool Karaoke: Ritual and Collaboration in Late Night's YouTube Era"

SAGE Editor, Martha Avtandilian, interviews Dr. Myles McNutt, assistant professor at Old Dominion University, on his Television & New Media article entitled "Classroom Instruments and Carpool Karaoke: Ritual and Collaboration in Late Night's YouTube Era."
4/10/201836 minutes, 38 seconds
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Out in the Country

Article: Out in the Country: not just somewhere in the Midwest Category: Communication and Media Studies Keywords: youth, media, queer visibility, rural America, America, LGBT, transgender, gay marriage, sexuality Blurb on the Website: Lucy Martirosyan, Avalon Lustick and Alyson Durlin discuss Mary L. Gray’s book, Out in the Country: Youth, Media and Queer Visibility in Rural America (2009). Podcast length: 8:59 Number of speakers: 4 Quality of podcast: Near broadcast quality Any Accents: No Labelling: SMS Podcast
5/30/20179 minutes
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WCX: Creating a Unique Transnational Place: Deterritorialized Discourse and the Blending of Time and Space in Online Social Media

Written Communication Editor Christina Haas talks to M. Sidury Christiansen about her article from the April 2017 issue, 'Creating a Unique Transnational Place: Deterritorialized Discourse and the Blending of Time and Space in Online Social Media.'
4/14/201721 minutes, 23 seconds
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Index on Censorship Podcast number 3 "Winter 2016 magazine"

1/18/20170
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NMS PODCAST 5

A podcast from Julian Schaap on his co-authored article: ‘Gods in World of Warcraft exist’: Religious reflexivity and the quest for meaning in online computer games
7/12/201620 minutes, 44 seconds
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BPCQ: March 2016 Special Issue: Flipped Classrooms

BPCQ Editor, Melinda Knight, discusses the March 2016 special issue entitled, "Flipped Classrooms."
5/24/201615 minutes, 22 seconds
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WCX: Variation in Citational Practice in a Corpus of Student Biology Papers: From Parenthetical Plonking to Intertextual Storytelling

Written Communication Editorial Assistant Abigail Bakke talks to John Swales about his article from the January 2014 issue, 'Variation in Citational Practice in a Corpus of Student Biology Papers: From Parenthetical Plonking to Intertextual Storytelling'.
5/24/201617 minutes, 50 seconds
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WCX: The Case of the Missing Childhoods: Methodological Notes for Composing Children in Writing Studies

Author Anne Haas Dyson discusses her article for the October 2013 issue, "The Case of the Missing Childhoods: Methodological Notes for Composing Children in Writing Studies."
5/24/201621 minutes, 56 seconds
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TVNM: A Conversation with danah boyd, Microsoft Research

New media historian Fred Turner interviewed Microsoft Research Senior Researcher danah boyd to discuss her current work.
5/24/20168 minutes, 54 seconds
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TVNM: My Media Studies: Cultivation to Participation

Toby Miller interviews an all-star cast of TVNM contributors, including Rick Maxwell, Vicki Mayer, Doug Thomas, Sarah Banet-Weiser and Larry Gross.
5/24/201634 minutes, 41 seconds
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TVNM: Treme for Tourists: The Music of the City without the Power

TVNM Editor Vicki Mayer interviews Wade Rathke about his article, which contrasts the caricature of HBO's "Treme" with the unique culture and people of New Orleans.
5/24/20165 minutes, 33 seconds
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TVNM: An Introduction to Informal Media Economies

TVNM Editor Vicki Mayer interviews special guest editors Ramon Lobato and Julian Thomas about their special issue focused on Informal Media Economies.
5/24/20167 minutes, 23 seconds
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NLF: Election 2012: Is a Second Term a Second Chance for Labor?

Gordon Lafer discusses his article from the Jan/Feb 2013 issue, "Election 2012: Is a Second Term a Second Chance for Labor?"
5/23/201612 minutes
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JOB: Philanthropic Identity at Work: Employer Influences on the Charitable Giving Attitudes and Behaviors of Employees

JBC media manager Daylanne Markwardt talks with Jennifer Mize Smith of Western Kentucky University about her paper on work identity and charitable giving, published in the April 2013 issue.
5/23/201617 minutes, 38 seconds
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JOB: Introduction to Special Issue Crossing Boundaries: Working and Communicating in East Asia

An introduction to the January JBC Special Issue: "Crossing Boundaries: Working and Communicating in East Asia."
5/23/20168 minutes, 48 seconds
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SCX: Aesthetics and Astronomy: Studying the Public’s Perception and Understanding of Imagery From Space

Authors Lisa Smith and Jeffrey Smith discuss their article, "Aesthetics and Astronomy: Studying the Public's Perception and Understanding of Imagery From Space," from the June 2011 issue of Science Communication.
5/23/20168 minutes, 13 seconds
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MCQ: Advancing Research in Organizational Communication Through Quantitative Methodology

Vernon D. Miller kicks off the Thought Leadership podcast series with MCQ editor James Barker.
5/23/20166 minutes, 46 seconds
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MCQ: How Institutions Communicate: Institutional Messages, Institutional Logics, and Organizational Communication

John C. Lammers discusses Institutional Theory with MCQ editor James Barker in this third installment of the Thought Leadership podcast series.
5/23/20164 minutes, 56 seconds
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MCQ: Negotiating the Micro-Macro Divide: Thought Leadership From Organizational Communication for Theorizing Organization

Timothy Kuhn discusses Organizational Communication with MCQ editor James Barker in this sixth installment of the Thought Leadership podcast series.
5/23/201611 minutes, 33 seconds
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MCQ: Thoughts About Management Communication Quarterly From the Next Generation: Forum Introduction

MCQ editor James Barker reflects on his six-year term as editor and the future direction of MCQ for the journal's 25th anniversary.
5/23/201617 minutes, 7 seconds
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JCI: Man Tears and Masculinities News Coverage of John Boehner’s Tearful Episodes

Author Maxine Gesualdi discusses her article from the October 2013 issue, "Man Tears and Masculinities: News Coverage of John Boehner’s Tearful Episodes."
5/23/20169 minutes, 12 seconds
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IJPP: Social Media and the Arab Spring

IJPP Editor Silvio Waisbord talks to Gadi Wolfsfeld about his article, co-authored with Elad Segev and Tamir Sheafer, 'Social Media and the Arab Spring: Politics Comes First', published in the April 2013 issue of the journal.
5/23/201617 minutes, 44 seconds
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ENX: The Future of TV News: Is Technology Outpacing Journalistic Standards?

Produced by Dr. Terry Likes, Ph.D. This audio commentary explores the article, "The Future of TV News: Is Technology Outpacing Journalistic Standards?," which appears in the December 2010 issue of Electronic News.
5/17/201610 minutes, 40 seconds
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ENX: Walter Cronkite: History, Wisdom, and Guidance for the Future of Journalism

Produced by Dr. Terry Likes, Ph.D. This audio commentary explores the article, "Walter Cronkite: History, Wisdom, and Guidance for the Future of Journalism," which appears in the June 2011 issue of Electronic News.
5/17/201610 minutes, 31 seconds
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ENX: Reporting by TV Docs in Haiti Raises Ethical Issues

Dave Cupp sits down with Tom Linden, M.D. to discuss his article "Reporting by TV Docs in Haiti Raises Ethical Issues," in the June 2010 issue of Electronic News.
5/17/20166 minutes, 22 seconds
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ENX: Hey NBC, You Need to Use MPC in Your Olympics Coverage

Dave Cupp sits down with Charlie Tuggle to discuss his article "Hey NBC, You Need to Use MPC In Your Olymipic Coverage," in the June 2010 issue of Electronic News.
5/17/20169 minutes, 59 seconds
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ENX: The Uneasy Intersection of Politics and Journalism

This video commentary explores the article, “The Uneasy Intersection of Politics and Journalism,” which appears in the March 2011 issue of Electronic News.
5/17/20166 minutes, 44 seconds
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C&S: "It's Dude Time!": A Quarter Century of Excluding Women's Sports in Televised News and Highlight Shows

Author Cheryl Cooky discusses her co-authored article from the September 2015 issue, "Women, Sports, and Journalism: Examining the Limited Role of Women in Student Newspaper Sports Reporting."
5/10/201622 minutes, 34 seconds
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JMCQ: Under Surveillance: Examining Facebook's Spiral of Silence Effects

Author Elizabeth Stoycheff discusses her article "Under Surveillance: Examining Facebook's Spiral of Silence Effects in the Wake of NSA Internet Monitoring." Stoycheff elaborates on her findings of perceptions and justification of surveillance practices and the effects on the expression of minority political views. 
5/9/201611 minutes, 21 seconds
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WCX: Iqra: African American Muslim Girls Reading and Writing for Social Change

Author Gholnecsar Muhammad speaks with editorial assistant Kira Dreher about her article, "Iqra: African American Muslim Girls Reading and Writing for Social Change," which is published in the July 2015 issue of Written Communication. 
12/21/201521 minutes, 53 seconds
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WCX: Writing in Museums: Toward a Rhetoric of Participation

Author Chaim Noy talks with editorial assistant Kira Dreher about his article, "Writing in Museums: Toward a Rhetoric of Participation," which is published in the April 2015 issue of Written Communication.  
12/1/201519 minutes, 52 seconds
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MCQ: Bringing Hidden Organizations Out of the Shadows:

Guest editor Craig Scott talks with MCQ Editor-in-Chief, Ling Chen, about the special issue on Hidden Organizations that is published in the November 2015 issue of Management Communication Quarterly. 
10/29/20156 minutes, 21 seconds
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TVNM Podcast 6: Modi & The Media

Special issue editors Srirupa Roy and Paula Chakravartty discuss their special issue, entitled, "Modi and the Media: Indian Politics and the Electroral Aftermath." Abstract: While elections across the globe today are mediated in the sense of being pervaded by the ambient presence and explicit deployments of varied media, the Indian national elections of 2014 showcase a specific logic of mediated populism that has become globally influential of late. To understand this logic, we examine the contexts and lineages of the present moment of mediated populism, i.e. the wider political-economic dynamics and contexts that shape and embed the Modi phenomenon. We focus on the changing relationship between privatized media across platforms, political elites and conceptions/productions of “the people” that these particular political historical dynamics have effected and enabled.    
6/10/201515 minutes, 32 seconds
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WCX: Three Types of Memory in Emergency Medical Services Communication

Former Written Communication editorial assistant Abigail Bakke interviews Dr. Elizabeth Angeli, author of "Three Types of Memory in Emergency Medical Services Communication," featured in the January 2015 issue of the journal.   ABSTRACT: This article examines memory and distributed cognition involved in the writing practices of emergency medical services (EMS) professionals. Results from a 16-month study indicate that EMS professionals rely on distributed cognition and three kinds of memory: individual, collaborative, and professional. Distributed cognition and the three types of memory reduce cognitive workload during a 911 response, and they help evoke information as an EMS professional composes the legally binding patient care report. In addition to presenting results, the article details the author’s interaction with two institutional review boards, which influenced the study’s methods. The article argues that scholars should conduct more research on the collaborative and distributed nature of memory as it relates to workplace writing practices. Furthermore, the article calls for developing writing research methods that involve participant recollection.
3/9/201518 minutes, 26 seconds
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Scholarly publishing and the internet: A roundtable discussion

A roundtable discussion on the future of scholarly publishing in a digital age, chaired by Steve Jones. Read the associated issue here.
3/2/20151 hour, 3 minutes, 28 seconds
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JLSP: The Lie's The Limit: On Deception Theory

Journal of Language and Social Psychology special issue editors Drs. Steven McCornack and Timothy Levine discuss research featured in their issue, "Advances in Deception Theory." The issue focuses on two new theories of deception: Information Manipulation Theory 2 (IMT2; McCornack, Morrison, Paik, Wisner, & Zhu, 2014) and Truth Default Theory (TDT; Levine, 2014). These focal works are followed by peer reviewed, expert commentaries by Cole (2014), Greene (2014), Harwood (2014), Walczyk (2014), Van Swol (2014), and Verschuere and Shalvi (2014), and a look at the future of deception theory. 
2/5/201526 minutes, 6 seconds
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From echo chamber to persuasive device? Rethinking the role of the Internet in campaigns. An interview with Christian Vaccarcari

Christian Vaccarcari from University of Bologna talks to Maurice Vergeer, about his paper, From echo chamber to persuasive device? Rethinking the role of the Internet in campaigns. Read the associated articlehere.
12/22/201416 minutes, 29 seconds
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Social networks in political campaigns: An interview with Christine Williams

Christine Williams from Bentley University talks to Maurice Vergeer, about her paper, Social networks in political campaigns: Facebook and the congressional elections of 2006 and 2008. Read the associated articlehere.
12/22/20148 minutes, 15 seconds
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The state of online campaigning in politics

Podcast 1: Maurice Vergeer  from Radboud University Nijmegen, talks about web campaigning in the 2009 European Parliamentary elections. Read the associated articlehere.
12/18/20149 minutes, 22 seconds
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SCX: Framing Synthetic Biology: Evolutionary Distance, Conceptions of Nature, and the Unnaturalness Objection

Author Nick Dragojlovic discusses his article for the October 2013 issue, "Framing Synthetic Biology: Evolutionary Distance, Conceptions of Nature, and the Unnaturalness Objection."
12/3/201310 minutes, 2 seconds
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ENX: Cultivating Political Incivility: Cable News, Network News, and Public Perceptions

Author Chance York discusses his article from the September 2013 issue, "Cultivating Political Incivility: Cable News, Network News, and Public Perceptions."
11/15/201311 minutes, 35 seconds
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C&S: Women, Sports, and Journalism: Examining the Limited Role of Women in Student Newspaper Sports Reporting

Author Hans Schmidt discusses his article from the September 2013 issue, "Women, Sports, and Journalism: Examining the Limited Role of Women in Student Newspaper Sports Reporting."
10/28/20139 minutes, 44 seconds
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ENX: An Examination of Job Skills Required by Top U.S. Broadcast News Companies and Potential Impact on Journalism Curricula

Author Debora Wenger discusses her article from the March 2013 issue, "An Examination of Job Skills Required by Top U.S. Broadcast News Companies and Potential Impact on Journalism Curricula."
8/16/201310 minutes, 55 seconds
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JCI: A Different Kind of Man: Mediated Transgendered Subjectivity, Chaz Bono on Dancing with the Stars

Author Richard Mocarski discusses his article from the July 2013 issue, "A Different Kind of Man: Mediated Transgendered Subjectivity, Chaz Bono on Dancing with the Stars."
8/15/201313 minutes, 24 seconds
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WCX: Discourse-Based Methods Across Texts and Semiotic Modes: Three Tools for Micro-Rhetorical Analysis

Written Communication Editor Christina Haas talks to John Oddo about his article from the July 2013 special issue, 'Discourse-Based Methods Across Texts and Semiotic Modes: Three Tools for Micro-Rhetorical Analysis.'
7/2/201317 minutes, 41 seconds
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TVNM: New Media Geographies and the Middle East

TVNM Editor Vicki Mayer talks to Guest Editor Miyase Christensen about the special issue on New Media Geographies and the Middle East.
7/2/20135 minutes, 41 seconds
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IJPP: Social Media and the Arab Spring: Politics Comes First

IJPP Editor Silvio Waisbord talks to Gadi Wolfsfeld about his article, co-authored with Elad Segev and Tamir Sheafer, 'Social Media and the Arab Spring: Politics Comes First', published in the April 2013 issue of the journal.
5/13/20130
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SCX: What, Me Worry? The Role of Affect in Information Seeking and Avoidance

Author Janet Yang discusses her article, co-authored with LeeAnn Kahlor, "What, Me Worry? The Role of Affect in Information Seeking and Avoidance" from the April 2013 issue of Science Communication.
5/13/20138 minutes, 22 seconds
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WCX: Modeling and Remodeling Writing

Joseph Bartolotta, Editorial Assistant for Written Communication, interviews John R. Hayes, Carnegie Mellon University, about his article "Modeling and Remodeling Writing" published in the July 2012 special issue in his honor.
1/22/201311 minutes, 57 seconds
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MCQ: Answering Five Key Questions About Workplace Bullying: How Communication Scholarship Provides Thought Leadership for Transforming Abuse at Work

Pamela Lutgen-Sandvik discusses Workplace Bullying with MCQ editor James Barker in this seventh installment of the Thought Leadership podcast series.
12/17/201217 minutes, 10 seconds
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MCQ: Increasing the Impact of Thought Leadership in Crisis Communication

Robert R. Ulmer discusses Crisis Communication with MCQ editor James Barker in this fifth installment of the Thought Leadership podcast series.
12/4/20128 minutes, 33 seconds
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JBTC: Introduction: Race, Ethnicity, and Technical Communication

Special editors, Miriam Williams and Octavio Pimentel, discuss the July 2012 special issue of JBTC focused on race, ethnicity, and technical communication.
7/16/20128 minutes, 32 seconds
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MCQ: External Organizational Rhetoric: Bridging Management and Sociopolitical Discourse

Professor Robert Heath talks with MCQ Editor-in-Chief James Barker about the special MCQ issue on External Organizational Rhetoric
5/4/201220 minutes, 12 seconds
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WCX: Undocumented in a Documentary Society: Textual Borders and Transnational Religious Literacies

Author Kate Vieira discusses her article, "Undocumented in a Documentary Society: Textual Borders and Transnational Religious Literacies," WRITTEN COMMUNICATION, Vol. 28, No. 4, 436-461 (2011).
11/18/201110 minutes, 11 seconds
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MCQ: Bridging Corporate and Organizational Communication: Review, Development and a Look to the Future

Lars Thoger Christensen discusses Organizational Communication with MCQ editor James Barker in the fourth Thought Leadership podcast.
10/26/20119 minutes, 16 seconds
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WCX: The Cherokee Syllabary: A Writing System In Its Own Right

Author Ellen Cushman discusses her article, "The Cherokee Syllabary: A Writing System in Its Own Right," WRITTEN COMMUNICATION, Vol. 28, No. 3, 255-281 (2011).
10/14/201110 minutes, 51 seconds
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MCQ: Research Methods for Studying Evolutionary and Ecological Processes in Organizational Communication

Peter Monge discusses his work in this second installment of the Thought Leadership podcast series with MCQ editor James Barker.
6/22/201115 minutes, 11 seconds