1. A2 Media Evaluation
Q1: In what ways does your media product use, develop or challenge forms
and conventions of real media products?
The A2 Media brief was for us to produce the opening five minutes of a television
documentary, as well as complete two ancillary tasks of creating a radio trailer and
double page spread for a listings magazine to accompany the main task. In order to
establish the type of codes and conventions that we would have to be including in
our documentary, called The Pros and Cons of Technology in Sport, we had to carry
out extensive research into other existing documentaries. This allowed us to make
our documentary appear as professional and credible as possible.
Documentary
There are five different documentary types: fully narrated, mixed, fly-on-the-wall, self-
reflective and docudrama. From the outset, we wanted to pursue the mixed type
which encompasses interviews, narration, observation, archival footage and real
footage recorded by ourselves. This included a lot of useful elements listed above
that many other documentaries use, such as Living With Michael Jackson. Watching
that documentary on Jacksonâs life story inspired us to follow and conform to the
convention of a mixed documentary type. In this example, the presenter Martin
Bashir was given unprecedented access into the life of Jackson and explored his
character by using archival footage (old tape of Jackson performing on stage when
younger) and personally taken footage (one-on-one interviews, rare clips of
Neverland where Jackson resided). Similarly, we used archival footage to document
Frank Lampardâs ânon-goalâ for England at the 2006 FIFA World Cup and Michael
Johnsonâs world record breaking achievements at the 1996 Atlanta Games.
Above: Archival footage of Lampardâs ânon-goalâ, clearly showing the ball over the
line. Below: Archival footage of Jackson singing as a child in Living With Michael
Jackson.
2. We used this to create a contrast between the old and modern footage by
highlighting the development of Technology in Sport. For example, since Lampardâs
ânon-goalâ incident five years ago, football now has goal-line technology to offer
clarity on similar situations that arise. Indeed, at the beginning of the production
process, we sat down as a group and agreed that we should open our short film with
the Lampard clip because we felt this had a strong and clear connection with our
chosen topic. It also immediately suggested that goal-line technology in football is a
pro, because with it that goal would have stood and England would have probably
beaten Germany.
Having studied one of David Attenboroughâs fully narrated documentaries on wildlife,
we thought it was best not to go with this type. We didnât intend to overwhelm or
overload the audience with information by constantly talking at them, but instead
insert mini breaks from narration. Self-reflective focuses too much on the film-maker
and their opinions and input, as we discovered by viewing Ross Kemp On Gangs.
We wanted to avoid this and ensure the presenter remained impartial throughout.
Meanwhile, fly-on-the-wall and docudrama were simply not the right fit for our
documentary. We intended on analysing the issues and getting real insight into our
topic and thus fly-on-the-wall (eg Big Brother) would have been totally inappropriate,
as it would have restricted us from doing that. Docudrama (eg Crimewatch) consists
of reconstructing real life events and that was not something we wanted to do, but
instead use actual footage and not people pretending to carry out those actions.
We looked at Bill Nichollsâ documentary modes to try and work out which mode our
documentary would fit into. The six modes are: poetic, expository, participatory,
observational, reflexive and performative. Our documentary fitted into the
participatory mode because the film-maker (Nathan) was seen on screen, involved
with the subjects by interacting with them and asking questions. We took inspiration
from Supersize Me which has Morgan Spurlock presenting and narrating and
Technology in Sport â Is It Cheating?, a short six minute documentary covering a
similar topic to ourselves, which has Professor Steve Haake appearing on screen
and talking to the audience. In both of these examples the participatory mode
seemed to be effective in engaging the audience and making them feel like they
were on a journey with the film-maker, instead of just simply watching it. That sense
of journey was crucial to us â given the investigative nature of our topic it was
important that we talked to people involved in Technology and Sport. We wanted the
3. audience to hear what they had to say and then get them thinking about the pros and
cons. We were cautious of not straying into the performative mode, however, as this
mode is entirely about the film-maker and accounts their experiences and nothing
else. We wanted to have a presenter and narrator partaking but without
overwhelming the audience and imposing the presenterâs views upon them,
therefore enabling other voices to be heard.
The expository mode applied to our documentary as the narrator explained and
described the events on screen to the audience, this was through a voice-over. A
voice-over is a classic convention of documentaries and this was especially
important for the opening five minutes, to clearly and concisely explain to the
audience what our documentary entails. As well as having narration through the form
of a voice-over, we also played background music called Huma Huma by Crimson
Fly throughout our documentary. Having listened to all three of Supersize Me, Living
With Michael Jackson and Technology in Sport â Is It Cheating?, it was apparent
that background music was a convention and that weâd need to use it.
Huma Huma â Crimson Fly was our choice of background music.
Ideally we would have liked to find some ambient sound that has a really strong
connection with our chosen topic. Like in Living With Michael Jackson, there was a
playlist of Jacksonâs songs from over the years, but that proved difficult. We did want
something fast-paced, catchy and memorable, though, and the Huma Huma track
sounded good when we initially tested it in the background. For the opening
sequence of our documentary, however, we didnât use that track. We had the idea of
finding some slow-paced, sad piano music to play over the top of Lampardâs ânon-
goalâ clip, and for that we used âAt The Ivy Gateâ by Brian Crain. Then we wanted to
create uplift in mood and switch to a more positive, upbeat piano sound in the next
scene to be played over Franceâs given goal at the 2014 World Cup. âUplifting Music
â Realâ starting from minute 1:47 was what we opted for, and listening back it worked
very well indeed in terms of creating that uplift that we were looking for. So all-in-all
4. we used three different types of copyright-free music in our documentary, with the
Huma Huma track the most heard out of them.
The final mode our documentary fitted into is reflexive because the subjects are
aware that theyâre being filmed and are allowed to react and respond to causes
made by the film-maker, adding an element of realism and representation. An
example is when Nathan asked questions to people in the interviews and VoxPops
and, consciously aware that theyâre on camera, the respondents delivered answers
in accordance with what was said. This mode is typically associated with
experimental documentaries which ours is, when the audience is just as interested in
the documentaryâs construction as they are the actual content. An example of a
reflexive mode in practice in a real media product is Louis Theroux who produces
and presents 30 minute documentaries for BBC Panorama. He is often in front of the
camera yet still remains slightly detached and impartial, which was what we aimed to
replicate for our documentary and we feel that was the case.
Interviews and VoxPops are documentary conventions and we decided to use them
because this allowed us an insight into expertsâ thoughts and what the everyday
person thought. We deliberately asked young people â college students - as our
VoxPop because they are representative of our target audience. For our experts we
sat down with Media teacher Nick Waring to give us a technological perspective, PE
teacher Gavin Shephard to give us a sporting perspective and PE student and
Rugby player Matt Hind to give us a student perspective. When interviewing Gavin
Shephard we followed the rule of thirds convention, ensuring our camera shot was
medium close up to get his head and shoulders on screen. The medium close up
shot is nearly always used when interviews are conducted, as seen in Supersize Me
when Spurlock talks to Health experts he follows that camera shot. In Living With
Michael Jackson, the pop icon is interviewed with a medium close up shot. We
followed exactly the same camera shot technique for our VoxPops.
Above: A medium close up shot when interviewing expert and PE teacher Gavin
Shephard. Below: Following the same camera shot in Living With Michael Jackson.
5. This is so the interviewee makes eye contact with the interviewer and not directly at
the camera, which is a convention that we replicated in our documentary. However,
we wanted to add variety to the way in which we conducted our interviews to keep
the audience engaged and interested. When watching an episode of Ross Kemp On
Gangs on teenage gangs in South London, we noticed the over-the-shoulder shot
was being used, as Kemp met up with a parent of one of the gang members. So we
employed an over-the-shoulder shot when interviewing Matt Hind in order to include
the presenter Nathan on screen and show him listening to answers and nodding
along. This helps make the interview feel more intimate and personal, too, therefore
it is likely to get the audience more involved.
Above: Over-the-shoulder shot as the presenter Nathan chats to expert and PE
student/Rugby player Matt Hind. Below: The same type of shot seen in Ross Kemp
On Gangs.
6. Mise-en-scene plays an important part in the interview process, as well, as we
consciously made sure in each three of our expert interviews that the backdrop was
appropriate. As Gavin Shephard is a PE teacher we interviewed him in the Sports
Hall while a Basketball match was going on at the same time. Nick Waring is a
Media teacher so we deliberately included the Mac behind him with a picture of
Manuel Neuer, who was in goal for that England â Germany game at the World Cup.
The picture showed the ball crossing the line and made a link to our documentary
topic.
Above: Interviewing expert and Media teacher Nick Waring with the Mac PC and
image of the football crossing the line in the background. Below: Books seen in
background to help interviewee come across as credible and intelligent in Supersize
Me.
7. For Matt Hindâs interview, meanwhile, we filmed in the Sports Hallâs changing rooms
with lockers in the background to signify that the interviewee is a PE student and
spends time in the Sports Hall. We did exactly the same for our VoxPops, filming in
the Internet CafĂŠ, Corridor and Canteen on the College premises to make it clear to
the audience that these are students. Seeing as our target audience is from all
ethnicities and backgrounds, we ensured one of our VoxPop was an ethnic minority.
Moreover, our target audience is predominantly male â as males stereotypically like
Technology and Sport more than females â so we had two male VoxPop and the
other female. In Supersize Me the mise-en-scene is also carefully considered, when
Spurlock talks to the Big Mac enthusiast in McDonalds, from where he buys all that
food from. He talks to a person from the Centre for Science in the Public Interest with
books seen in the background to create the impression that this interviewee is
important and intelligent, adding credibility and trustworthiness to the documentary.
This deliberate employment of mise-en-scene made our interviews with experts and
VoxPops look a lot more professional and legitimate.
Above: Our documentary title to the left of presenter Nathan Carr, with the font
colour white to make it stand out on the light green background. Below: The
8. documentary title in Technology in Sport â Is It Cheating?, shortened to âEngineering
Sportâ, with a background image of presenter Steve Haake running up a hill.
We also made use of text and titles. Right at the very beginning of our documentary,
there are credits which is a classic convention, including the title âThe Pros and
ConsâŚâ and our names. After showing the introductory archival footage, the
presenter Nathan appears on screen to introduce and explain to the audience what
theyâll be watching. The picture of Neuer is in the background, again making a link
with mise-en-scene, while our documentary title is slipped in towards the end of what
Nathan is saying. This reminds the audience of what the documentary is about and
acts as an official indicator that itâs about to begin. In Technology in Sport â Is It
Cheating? they also have a set title appear on screen on roughly 40 seconds after
some introductory footage. The font is clear and bold, and coloured white in order for
it to stand out from the brown background. We used a very similar font style and
positioned the text to the left of Nathan; our colour was also white to make it visible
on the light green background. We developed this convention by adding an effect
onto the title, by moving it in from the left onto screen. We did this to accompany
Nathan speaking and keep the audience interested early on. Steve Haakeâs
documentary title was stationary the whole time.
9. Above: The text positioned bottom left, just like in Supersize Me, identifies the
intervieweeâs name and occupation. Below: The text positioned bottom left identifies
the intervieweeâs name and occupation in Supersize Me.
On our interviews we also employed titles on screen to identify the names of the
experts and their position. For example, we had âMatt Hind, PE Student and Rugby
Playerâ on the bottom right of that interview and âGavin Shephard, PE Teacherâ on
the bottom left of that interview. This is helpful to the audience in case they want to
know about the expertsâ background or read up on them.
10. We cut to a picture of Third Umpire in Cricket when expert Gavin Shephard touched
on it in his interview, depicting what was being said.
We had cutaways when Gavin Shephard spoke, too, as he mentioned TMO in
Rugby and Third Umpire in Cricket. We showed brief images of those two things
depicting what was being talked about to offer clarity to the audience. This offers a
break from just watching Gavin Shephard throughout, which some members of the
audience might find a little tedious, and freshens up the variety of scenes. We used
the dip-to-black effect to fade back out and return to Gavin Shephard speaking.
Above: An establishing shot of the Sixth Form College, Solihull. Below: The same
type of shot of Neverland at the beginning of Living With Michael Jackson.
11. We also included an establishing panning shot of the Sixth Form College, Solihull
early on in our documentary to give an idea of location. Establishing shots are really
useful because they make transitions a lot easier and smoother. For example,
straight after the shot of the Sixth Form, we moved into VoxPops. As weâd explained
the location of our filming, interviewing students in that kind of environment made
perfect sense. In Living With Michael Jackson, an establishing shot is also used but
itâs not panning. They start out and then gradually zoom in on the Neverland
entrance, which is the mansion that Jackson lived in. Interestingly we challenged that
zoom camera shot convention â instead of zooming in; we started with a close up
and then gradually zoomed out to give the wider picture. We did this to incorporate
all of the Collegeâs entrance including the Hampton building, car park and grass.
There are seven narrative structures: circular, linear, non-linear, open, closed,
single-strand and multi-strand. We wanted to adhere to at least one of these
structures to make our documentary as professional and conventionally realistic as
possible. We adhered to the open structure convention of leaving the ending on
edge, allowing the audience to make their own minds up, which was what the viewer
had to do in the aforementioned Technology in Sport â Is It Cheating? documentary.
This was exploring a question and weighing up the factors but at the end of the six
minutes, no definitive conclusion had been reached. Professor Haake had wrapped
things up not by giving his own opinion on the matter but by encouraging the
audience to ponder technologyâs potential impact on cheating in sport, and what the
future might bring. This was a similar case in our documentary â we began by saying
weâd explore the pros and cons and at the end of the five minutes, we had done that.
But at no stage did we show bias or lean further toward one of the pros or the cons.
Instead we simply went through both sides of the argument, listing the advantages
and disadvantages, before saying goodbye and heading to the advert break. The
audience gets to digest the information that we have presented to them, and make
their own minds up relative to their stance on the matter. We favoured the non-linear
approach of having scenes jumping about in random fashion and not in chronological
order, because our footage was taken on various days at various times for several
12. weeks. Finally, we favoured the single-strand structure because we had just one
presenter and one narrative. More than one narrative makes it harder for the
audience to keep up with what is going on and they could lose concentration which
we wanted to avoid.
Radio Trailer
We carried out research into existing radio trailers off BBC 5 Live, Radio 1 and
Talksport, as well as ones that previous College students have produced, to gauge
an understanding of the codes and conventions to apply to our own. Seeing as our
documentary is about Technology in Sport, we deemed the worldâs largest sports
radio station Talksport the best fit, as their audience was most similar to ours.
GarageBand is the software that we used to create our radio trailer.
The background music we used for our radio trailer was the same as our
documentary â the Huma Huma track. This was to maintain consistency and
familiarity as the audience would recognise the tune. We also had a voice-over as
each member of the group contributed in some capacity. Nathan opened the trailer
by asking a rhetorical question âWhat effect does Technology have in Sport?â which
makes the audience immediately think about our chosen topic. Marcus closed the
trailer out by saying the time and channel of our documentary: 8pm on BBC 1. All
radio trailers have this to let the audience know the core details so they know when
and where to tune in. We incorporated clips of audio from our documentary into the
trailer, including expert and Media teacher Nick Waring talking about the uneven
distribution of Technology in Sport and a VoxPop too. This gives the audience a
taste and flavour of what the documentary is like, and they can form a judgement on
whether to watch it or not based on what they hear.
Above: An example of our sound level editing within the opening 10 seconds of our
radio trailer, attempting to lower the volume to create a balance. Below: Another
example at the end of the trailer when Marcus closes it out, with a significant
decrease in level of noise.
13. There are no awkward silences between each person speaking because the
transitions are efficient and the background music is always playing. Having listened
to various radio trailers, it was apparent that the convention was for them to be under
a minute in length. Bearing that in mind, we made ours 58 seconds long so the
audience wouldnât become bored or restless. Finally, having balanced sound levels
on a radio trailer is extremely important and all the ones we listened to had this. We
did our best to even the levels out and not have any one person speaking much
louder than another, but on reflection with a little more time we probably could have
done a better job.
Magazine Article
We produced our magazine double page spread for Radio Times, a magazine which
has the latest TV and radio programme listings for the UK. We studied various
magazines, both general (sport, music) and strictly Radio Times, to learn the codes
and conventions and apply them to our own. I took a Radio Times article promoting
the new series of Doctor Who, analysed its features and conventions, and then
discussed with my group how best to incorporate those into our own magazine
double page spread.
14. âOver the line or notâŚâ is our masthead. It makes a
link to goal-line technology in football and was
inspired by the commentary from Lampardâs ânon-
goalâ in 2010.It is a question that creates intrigue and
gets the audience immediately interested and
thinking. The use of ellipsis is effective in helping lead
the reader onto the bit of text below.
Double page spreads nearly always have images to
accompany the text. These are stills from our
documentary to give the audience a taste of what to
expect in advance.All the images have borders, a
convention, as well as captions underneath them to
inform the audience what the picture is about. Our
main image is US athlete Michael Johnson wearing
his 85g golden spikes at the 1996 Atlanta Games,
which we discussed as a pro in our documentary.
We used a drop cap to signal
the beginning of our magazine
article, which is a classic
convention.
Here is a pull quote, highlighting the most
significant bit of our article. We decided to
use this quote from expert and Media teacher
Nick Waring as it really ties in with our
chosen topic, and acts as a con of Technology
in Sport. It touches on the disparity between
the top clubs and lower clubs in football and
their varied access to goal-line technology.
The speech marks in black make it a quote.
We used columns tomake our magazine
look conventionally realistic, ensuring the
text is organised neatly and tidily. All
Radio Times articles employ the same
convention.
A stand firstconcisely explains what the
documentary is about, including key
details like time and channel.
Page numbers are
another classic convention
so the audience knows
where to find certain
content that they want to
read.Radio Times is in
bold as this is the name of
the magazine that weâre
featuring on.