The document discusses various techniques used in broadcasting news and their impact on audiences, including:
- Studio newsreaders who dress formally and maintain serious facial expressions impact audiences by appearing authoritative.
- Field reporters and presenters should dress professionally but more casually than newsreaders.
- Interviews provide different perspectives beyond just the media's view and can feature victims or perpetrators.
- Experts and witnesses increase believability, with witnesses providing first-hand accounts and experts validating topics.
- Using facts, statistics, and public opinions ensures the documentary is supported and viewers can form their own conclusions.
2. STUDIO NEWSREADERS
Web definitions: someone who reads out broadcast news bulletin.
How does a studio newsreader impact the Audience?
Their facial expression always looks very serious this makes audience feel like the
stories are very serious and may worry them more then needed.
The news readers are dressed formal and this impacts the audience because if they
were wearing jogging bottoms and a hoodie you may not be as interested and not
take it seriously
Although we won’t have any news readers in our documentary we will
have a presenter and he will need to look and act the same.
Studio newsreaders use serious faces but still slightly
smile. Their eyes don’t look around all that much either.
They dress
smartly
and formal.
News readers don’t just read the text they scan the wording.
3. FIELD REPORTERS
Yahoo answers: Field Reporter is as an analyst or a side line reporter. They
just provide additional coverage.
How does a Field reporter impact the Audience?
Although field reporters don’t dress as formal as studio newsreaders they still need
to dress formal to a curtain level so they don’t give the wrong impression.
Again we won’t use a field reporter as such but our presenter will be as
casual smart as field reporters.
They don’t usually dress as formal as studio
newsreaders but they still dress formal.
Depending on how heart breaking the story
is field reporters are usually very smiley.
4. LINKS TO STUDIO
Web definitions: They send a radio station's or television station's audio
and video from the broadcast studio to a transmitter in another location.
How does links to studio impact the audience?
As you get it from the people who are there, so you may get a different
prospective from the people who are nearing to home.
Our documentary won’t be using links to the studio as It doesn’t go
with the style of documentary we have the idea of but it will be a
good idea for another time.
5. INTERVIEWING
Web definitions: A conversation between a journalist or radio or
television presenter and a person of public interest, used as the basis of
a broadcast or publication.
How do interviews impact the audience?
Interviews usually ask the public their opinion on an issue or problem so this
would give the viewers a different side of the story and not only the media’s
side.
Interviews also can be with a victim or perpetrator so this would give the
viewers different prospective.
Our documentary will contain a lot of interviews from different
people asking there opinions.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Hzh1jZPOkU
Youtube Example
6. EXPERTS AND WITNESSES
Witness – Someone who observes what happened or occurred.
Expert – An expert knows the probable causation of what occurred.
How do experts and witnesses impact the audience?
Witnesses have actually seen what happened and as they’re real people they
are more believable.
Using an expert in our documentary will be really effective as it would
back up what we were talking about and the viewers may believe
them more than us and the public we are interviewing.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BnmAbHSxnus Witness YouTube example
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Q8tA2iqaXo Experts YouTube example
7. REPORT STRUCTURE
Web definitions: Report structure is a structure containing a reporting
clause and a reported clause or a quote.
How does report structure impact the audience?
As soon as they start watching they can see the most dramatic news which
would keep them watching.
8. EXPOSITORY
Web definition: Intended to explain or describe something: "expository
prose".
How does this impact the audience?
They know more detail – this could effect their emotion towards the story.
9. OBSERVATIONAL
Web definition: Experimental: relying on observation or experiment;
"experimental results that supported the hypothesis".
How does this impact the audience?
They have seen proof this again would effect there emotions.
We would be using information and statistics from the internet and
newspapers and this would support what we say and what the public
say.
10. INTERACTIVE
Web definition: Acting one upon or with the other.
How does this impact the audience?
Having more than one opinion in documentary’s is an effective way for the
audience to make there own decision on the subject.
Our documentary will be asking the public how they feel the media
portrays young people – this will make sure the viewers have there own
opinion on it.
11. REFLEXIVE
Web definition: Denoting a pronoun that refers back to the subject of the
clause in which it is used, e.g., myself, themselves.
How does this impact the audience?
They don’t loose track of what they are listening/watching to – this would mean
they wouldn’t get bored and loose track of thought.
In our documentary we will make sure that we either have a
presenter or voice-overs that refers back to the subject of it.
12. PER FORMATIVE
Web definitions: Relating to or denoting an utterance by means of which
the speaker performs a particular act (e.g., I bet, I apologize, I promise).
How does this impact the audience?
By speaking in a per formative way it would sound more reliable and the viewer
would more likely believe what the presenter was saying.
In our documentary we can’t take sides – this would mean that
making promises would be very difficult!
13. REALISM
Web definition: An inclination toward literal truth and pragmatism.
How does realism impact the audience?
Because it’s real and believable.
Our documentary has to be believable otherwise our viewers will not
follow what we are talking about, our documentary also has to be
real as we’re interviewing the public and we need the internet to back
up our findings!
14. DRAMATISATION
Web definition: A prose or verse composition, especially one telling a
serious story, that is intended for representation by actors
impersonating the characters and performing the dialogue and action.
How does dramatisation impact the audience?
As it’s a serious story the audience would listen and understand, but as it’s
represented by actors this would make it more interesting for them.
We will not be having any drama/actors in our documentary but we
may need one of our crew to step in and get interviewed.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HKIA30mny9U
Youtube example
15. NARRATIVISATION
Web definitions: To make into a narrated account or story; to make into
the form of a narrative.
How does narrativisation impact the audience?
This would again make it more interesting for the viewer as they can imagine it
themselves and make their own characters instead of the actors in
dramatisation.
Although we won’t be using narrated stories we will be including
voice-overs that would keep track of what is going on in the
documentary.