College student television binge watching: Conceptualization, gratifications, and perceived consequences

Publication date: Available online 25 October 2018Source: The Social Science JournalAuthor(s): J. Mitchell Vaterlaus, Lori Andersen Spruance, Kala Frantz, Jessica Sloan KrugerAbstractLargely facilitated by technological convergence, television binge watching is a newer media phenomenon. The current exploratory study recruited a random sample of college students (18–25 years old; N = 406) from a university in the western United States. Using a Uses and Gratifications framework, qualitative methods were implemented to better understand how college students conceptualize binge watching, their motivations for engaging in binge watching, and any potential perceived consequences. College students’ definitions of binge watching included the key components of quantity of time, consecutive viewing, and number of episodes. The college context was perceived to facilitate the practice of binge watching. Participants perceived that binge watching could have adverse physical and mental health consequences. In the social realm, some participants indicated that binge watching was a social activity and could lead to making new friends, but some cautioned that binge watching could be socially isolating.
Source: The Social Science Journal - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Source Type: research