CICANT - Artigos de Revistas Internacionais com Arbitragem Científica
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Item Audiences, content diversity and streaming platforms in small European countries : Engagement, interaction with catalogues, and choice(SAGE Publications Inc., 2025-07-31) Damásio, Manuel José; Helen Bengesser, Cathrin; Graça, André Rui; Primorac, Jaka; Grácio, Rita; Kauber, Sten; Pernin, Judith; Hammoud, Paul; Materska-Samek, Marta; Kotlinska, Malgorzata; CICANT - Centre for Research in Applied Communication, Culture, and New TechnologiesThe rapid growth of streaming platforms and their catalogues has transformed the way audiences engage with content, offering unprecedented content choices. This article delves into the presence of content from small countries on VoDs in Europe and explores how users engage with such content on different types of VoD services. Based on a literature review, an analysis of content availability in European VoD catalogues and the results of qualitative media diaries and interviews carried out in seven small European markets, the ultimate goal is to provide insight into how users engage with streaming platforms and other intermediaries to discover content, to highlight key trends regarding this matter and to discuss what these findings mean for the availability, discoverability and consumption of films from small markets.Item Offshoring & leaking: Cristiano Ronaldo’s tax evasion, and celebrity in neoliberal times(2021) Jorge, Ana Margarida Ferreira Rato; Oliva, Mercè; Aguiar, Luis L M.; CICANT - Centre for Research in Applied Communication, Culture, and New TechnologiesThis article examines how the news media framed the allegations made in 2016 against Cristiano Ronaldo for evading taxes through offshores, and how audiences discussed this online, in Portugal, where he is originally from, and Spain, where he played football at the time. These countries were amidst an “austerity culture” justifying welfare cuts, promoting entrepreneurialism as “success”, and presenting neoliberal policies as “common sense”. Our analysis reveals Ronaldo portrayed as a member of the economic elite criticized for the high earnings of football players and celebrity tax privileges; as an ungrateful immigrant who does not contribute enough to society; and as “one like us” maneuvering to evade taxes. The comparative analysis shows audiences had double standards based on their feelings toward the celebrity, and they interpreted this case positively or negatively in relation to the inefficiency of the fiscal and justice systems in Southern Europe.