AcknowledgementList of Figures and TablesNotes on Contributors1 Introduction Media Narratives of Contemporary Mythologies Christiana Constantopoulou2 The New Criminal News Narrative Modalities on Fear of Crime in Newscasts of the City of Buenos Aires, 2015–2019 Mercedes Calzado, Mariana Fernández, Yamila Gómez, and Vanesa Lio3 ‘Sex, Drugs and Communism’ Far-Right Narratives about Universities in Brazil Gabriela Villen, Graziela Ares, Leda Maria Caira Gitahy, and Leandro R. Tessler4 The Business Elite and Media Worked Together? Analyzing Both Narratives in the Brazilian 2016 Impeachment Process Humberto Fernandes and Eduardo Barbabela5 Crime or Commiseration The Contingent Framing of Homelessness on Brazilian Television Pedro Paulo Martins Serra6 Immortal and Happy! Myths about Vulnerability in the Press José A. Ruiz San Román, Enrique García Romero, Jaqueline García Cordero, Lucía Acuña-Pedro, and Miranda Claudio Cornejo7 Blogging National Identity Hara Stratoudaki8 Contemporary Mythologies of Television’s Fictional Institutions in the United States Melina Meimaridis9 Mexican Drug Dealers in tv Series Symbols of New Heroism or the Adulation of Bandits? Omar Cerrillo Garnica10 Mythic Representations of Heterosexual Relations in Popular Serials Romantic Love against “Hyper Realistic” Porn Christiana Constantopoulou11 Concluding Remarks Consumer Storytelling in Advanced-Modern Societies Christiana ConstantopoulouIndex