# | Title | Journal | Year | Citations |
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1 | Visibility labour: Engaging with Influencers’ fashion brands and #OOTD advertorial campaigns on Instagram | Media International Australia | 2016 | 327 |
2 | Social Media Ethnography: The Digital Researcher in a Messy Web | Media International Australia | 2012 | 320 |
3 | A Manifesto for Performative Research | Media International Australia | 2006 | 222 |
4 | From Cultural to Creative Industries: Theory, Industry and Policy Implications | Media International Australia | 2002 | 172 |
5 | Discourse, Deficit and Identity: Aboriginality, the Race Paradigm and the Language of Representation in Contemporary Australia | Media International Australia | 2013 | 162 |
6 | ‘Corona? 5G? or both?’: the dynamics of COVID-19/5G conspiracy theories on Facebook | Media International Australia | 2020 | 159 |
7 | Who's Driving the Asylum Debate? Newspaper and Government Representations of Asylum Seekers | Media International Australia | 2003 | 144 |
8 | Being ‘really real’ on YouTube: authenticity, community and brand culture in social media entertainment | Media International Australia | 2017 | 103 |
9 | Creative Clusters: Towards the Governance of the Creative Industries Production System? | Media International Australia | 2004 | 92 |
10 | Social Media Use during Japan's 2011 Earthquake: How Twitter Transforms the Locus of Crisis Communication | Media International Australia | 2013 | 92 |
11 | Gatewatching, Not Gatekeeping: Collaborative Online News | Media International Australia | 2003 | 90 |
12 | Empathy machines | Media International Australia | 2017 | 78 |
13 | Enacting intimacy and sociality at a distance in the COVID-19 crisis: the sociomaterialities of home-based communication technologies | Media International Australia | 2021 | 75 |
14 | Journalists and Twitter: How Australian News Organisations Adapt to a New Medium | Media International Australia | 2012 | 73 |
15 | COVID-19 apps in Singapore and Australia: reimagining healthy nations with digital technology | Media International Australia | 2020 | 72 |
16 | Mother, baby and Facebook makes three: does social media provide social support for new mothers? | Media International Australia | 2018 | 66 |
17 | A Partial Promise of Voice: Digital Storytelling and the Limits of Listening | Media International Australia | 2012 | 64 |
18 | ‘A Special Kind of City Knowledge’: Innovative Clusters, Tacit Knowledge and the ‘Creative City’ | Media International Australia | 2004 | 61 |
19 | Aesthetic pleasures and gendered tech-work in the 21st-century smart home | Media International Australia | 2018 | 60 |
20 | Emplaced Cartographies: Reconceptualising Camera Phone Practices in an Age of Locative Media | Media International Australia | 2012 | 57 |
21 | Media coverage of refugees and asylum seekers in regional Australia: a critical discourse analysis | Media International Australia | 2017 | 56 |
22 | The impact of COVID-19 on cultural tourism: art, culture and communication in four regional sites of Queensland, Australia | Media International Australia | 2021 | 53 |
23 | Toy unboxing: living in a(n unregulated) material world | Media International Australia | 2017 | 52 |
24 | Dimensions of Digital Media Literacy and the Relationship with Social Exclusion | Media International Australia | 2012 | 51 |
25 | ‘It’s made me a lot more aware’: a new materialist analysis of health self-tracking | Media International Australia | 2019 | 50 |
26 | Reframing Surfing: Physical Culture in Online Spaces | Media International Australia | 2015 | 48 |
27 | Regulation of COVID-19 fake news infodemic in China and India | Media International Australia | 2020 | 47 |
28 | A necessary evil? The rise of online exam proctoring in Australian universities | Media International Australia | 2023 | 47 |
29 | ‘I Certainly Don't Want People like That Here’: The Discursive Construction of ‘Asylum Seekers’ | Media International Australia | 2003 | 45 |
30 | COVID-19, 5G conspiracies and infrastructural futures | Media International Australia | 2020 | 45 |
31 | Crippling Paralympics? Media, Disability and Olympism | Media International Australia | 2000 | 44 |
32 | E-Electioneering 2010: Trends in Social Media Use in Australian Political Communication | Media International Australia | 2011 | 43 |
33 | The Innocence Fetish: The Commodification and Sexualisation of Children in the Media and Popular Culture | Media International Australia | 2010 | 39 |
34 | Influencers and COVID-19: reviewing key issues in press coverage across Australia, China, Japan, and South Korea | Media International Australia | 2021 | 39 |
35 | ‘Networks that work too well’: intervening in algorithmic connections | Media International Australia | 2018 | 38 |
36 | How influencer ‘mumpreneur’ bloggers and ‘everyday’ mums frame presenting their children online | Media International Australia | 2019 | 38 |
37 | Tracing surveillance and auto-regulation in Singapore: ‘smart’ responses to COVID-19 | Media International Australia | 2020 | 38 |
38 | ‘Dog-Whistle’ Journalism and Muslim Australians since 2001 | Media International Australia | 2003 | 37 |
39 | Sexting, Selfies and Self-Harm: Young People, Social Media and the Performance of Self-Development | Media International Australia | 2014 | 37 |
40 | The Politics of Blogs: Theories of Discursive Activism Online | Media International Australia | 2012 | 35 |
41 | Words, Ontologies and Aboriginal Databases | Media International Australia | 2005 | 34 |
42 | Show me the money: how bloggers as stakeholders are challenging theories of relationship building in public relations | Media International Australia | 2016 | 34 |
43 | Crisis and extended realities: remote presence in the time of COVID-19 | Media International Australia | 2021 | 34 |
44 | @Indigenousx: A Case Study of Community-Led Innovation in Digital Media | Media International Australia | 2013 | 33 |
45 | Beyond Broadcast Yourself™: The Future of Youtube | Media International Australia | 2008 | 32 |
46 | Reconfiguring Television for a Networked, Produsage Context | Media International Australia | 2008 | 32 |
47 | ‘Take it down!’: Estonian parents’ and pre-teens’ opinions and experiences with sharenting | Media International Australia | 2019 | 32 |
48 | Too Much? Too Young? The Sexualisation of Children Debate in Australia | Media International Australia | 2010 | 31 |
49 | What League? The Representation of Female Athletes in Australian Television Sports Coverage | Media International Australia | 2011 | 31 |
50 | Comparative analysis of China’s Health Code, Australia’s COVIDSafe and New Zealand’s COVID Tracer Surveillance Apps: a new corona of public health governmentality? | Media International Australia | 2021 | 31 |