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Parrot Analytics Partners With University Of Chicago, McGill University, And Duke University

20 Dec 2022 5:28 PM | Mike Hearn (Administrator)

Parrot Analytics Partners With University Of Chicago, McGill University, And Duke University To Study Local Community Impact Of Hit Global Series

Los Angeles, CA – December 19, 2023 – Parrot Analytics has joined the University of Chicago, McGill University and Duke University to study the impact of OTT platforms and streaming services in shaping communities of taste around the globe and the dynamics between local audiences and the global accessibility of content.

The collaboration is between the University of Chicago’s departments of East Asian Languages and Civilizations (EALC) and Cinema and Media Studies, Duke University’s department of English and McGill University’s department of English. It is funded by the Franke Institute for the Humanities at the University of Chicago.

Parrot Analytics’ suite of global audience demand data measurement will help the universities’ collaboration, which aims to understand how global shows achieve cross-regional success and the role played by distribution platforms in influencing audience tastes and consumption patterns.

“Our initial case study will investigate Squid Game to better understand the dynamics of its viral success,” said Hoyt Long, professor of Japanese literature, from the University of Chicago. “We propose to do this by collecting digital trace data from three different regions (US, Japan, and South Korea) to analyze audience response patterns in each region and the kinds of discussions it triggered.”

“What kinds of shows achieve cross-regional success? What is the relation of these shows to local production and consumption markets? What can more fine-grained analysis of demand signals tell us about these larger dynamics?” said Professor Richard Jean So from McGill University. “For all of these questions, we need Parrot Analytics’ robust global audience demand data to understand how new distribution platforms are influencing taste and consumption patterns.”

"Scholars have long been interested in the cultural reception of books, film, and television, but we haven’t had access to extensive audience data across nations and languages. Approaches such as ours aim to unite quantitative methods of cultural study with qualitative understandings of the meaning and impact of television shows in different communities around the world," says Aarthi Vadde, Professor of English at Duke University.

“We are thrilled to be a part of this study to help academia understand the factors that go into making a local piece of content an international success, impacting communities and audiences across the globe”, said Alejandro Rojas, VP of Applied Analytics at Parrot Analytics. “What made Squid Game such a hit, and what can we learn about the global attention economy by carefully reconstructing one of its recent media successes? Through comparison with this larger background and other high demand shows, we hope to explain the distinctiveness of its viral success and what it says about the potential of SVOD services like Netflix to capture global media attention.”

About the University of Chicago department of Cinema and Media Studies:

Since its founding in 1995, the academic program in Cinema and Media Studies has assembled a group of leading scholars in the field and developed a world-wide reputation for original, rigorous, and influential scholarship. This scholarship spans the historical and theoretical understanding of motion pictures as a mass phenomenon whose scale, reach, and cultural implications are bound up with the historical experience of modernity and globalization.

About the University of Chicago department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations:

The Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations (EALC) is at the forefront of innovative humanistic approaches to the study of China, Japan, and Korea, past and present. Faculty specializations range from ancient palaeography to contemporary cinema and digital studies, but interdisciplinary and interregional paths of inquiry are also a core component of faculty research.

About the Duke University department of English:

The Department of English at Duke is a top-ranked program for the study of English-language literature across multiple continents and through a range of representational forms including novels, poetry, film, and new media. Expertise in the department ranges in time, from the earliest Medieval written manuscripts to the most recent 21st century developments in digital culture. Duke is widely known for its commitment to interdisciplinary research, including programs like Data+, which bring the resources of data science to bear on the study of history and culture.

About the McGill University department of English:

The McGill English Department is a globally top-ranked English department which specializes in the research and teaching of English-language literature, as well as film and other forms of culture, such as television and digital culture.

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