A short article discusses three topics: cute expressions of love, a story titled "Luckiest Girl", and an event described as "A Proper Match From Above!".
Suzanne Naeem is a 19-year-old actress who studies computer science at Forman Christian College. She believes she is talented and can prove herself in videos. Suzanne enjoys romantic music videos, listens to soft and seducing rock music, and thinks the song's lyrics and music were lovely and made for a special person. She provides feedback that the video director is doing great but can still improve.
Music magazine audience research (questionnaire results)elliereedx
- The questionnaire results showed that 60% of respondents were male and the most popular music genres were punk rock (50%) and rock (40%).
- 40% of respondents purchased music magazines weekly and 40% purchased monthly, showing regular spending on magazines. Most would pay between £1-£2 for a fortnightly magazine.
- Reviews of albums/downloads and interviews with artists (both at 40%) most encouraged reading the magazine. Kerrang! was the most popular magazine at 50%. Having a male group on the cover would encourage 60% to buy the magazine.
The document lists 12 different font styles with the same phrases "Luckiest Girl" and "A Proper Match From Above!" repeated under each font. It appears to be providing options for font styles that could be used for planning or writing about love and relationships.
This document discusses potential design choices for a magazine, including three font options and three color options. The first font has curved and straight edges that appeal to both males and the idea of movement. The second font is bold with strong edges to stand out and appeal to males, while being different from another magazine. The third font has an urban style fitting modern youth but the title may be hard to read from a distance. For colors, the first blue is rich and reminiscent of the sea while having a clean, premium look fitting the target audience. The second lighter blue allows clear text but seems too "baby blue." The third dark, masculine blue has an affluent look but may make text hard to read. The first red works
Suzanne Naeem is a 19-year-old actress who studies computer science at Forman Christian College. She believes she is talented and can prove herself in videos. Suzanne enjoys romantic music videos, listens to soft and seducing rock music, and thinks the song's lyrics and music were lovely and made for a special person. She provides casual feedback on how the video maker can continue improving.
Suzanne Naeem is a 19-year-old actress who studies computer science at Forman Christian College. She believes she is talented and can prove herself in videos. Suzanne enjoys romantic music videos, listens to soft and seducing rock music, and thinks the song's lyrics and music were lovely and made for a special person. She provides casual feedback on how the video maker can continue improving.
This 1 sentence document does not provide enough context or information to generate a meaningful 3 sentence summary. The document contains no text other than the title "Different Fonts For Planning".
The document discusses audience research and targeting audiences for media products. It defines primary and secondary research methods. It also discusses theories of how to identify and group target audiences, including by social factors, media habits, motivations and how different groups may respond to different message strategies. Key aspects covered include Burton's social and media audience groupings, Hartley's seven subjective categories to further define audiences, Dyer's theory of offering solutions to inadequacies, and how motives and delivery methods should be tailored to different audience groups.
Suzanne Naeem is a 19-year-old actress who studies computer science at Forman Christian College. She believes she is talented and can prove herself in videos. Suzanne enjoys romantic music videos, listens to soft and seducing rock music, and thinks the song's lyrics and music were lovely and made for a special person. She provides feedback that the video director is doing great but can still improve.
Music magazine audience research (questionnaire results)elliereedx
- The questionnaire results showed that 60% of respondents were male and the most popular music genres were punk rock (50%) and rock (40%).
- 40% of respondents purchased music magazines weekly and 40% purchased monthly, showing regular spending on magazines. Most would pay between £1-£2 for a fortnightly magazine.
- Reviews of albums/downloads and interviews with artists (both at 40%) most encouraged reading the magazine. Kerrang! was the most popular magazine at 50%. Having a male group on the cover would encourage 60% to buy the magazine.
The document lists 12 different font styles with the same phrases "Luckiest Girl" and "A Proper Match From Above!" repeated under each font. It appears to be providing options for font styles that could be used for planning or writing about love and relationships.
This document discusses potential design choices for a magazine, including three font options and three color options. The first font has curved and straight edges that appeal to both males and the idea of movement. The second font is bold with strong edges to stand out and appeal to males, while being different from another magazine. The third font has an urban style fitting modern youth but the title may be hard to read from a distance. For colors, the first blue is rich and reminiscent of the sea while having a clean, premium look fitting the target audience. The second lighter blue allows clear text but seems too "baby blue." The third dark, masculine blue has an affluent look but may make text hard to read. The first red works
Suzanne Naeem is a 19-year-old actress who studies computer science at Forman Christian College. She believes she is talented and can prove herself in videos. Suzanne enjoys romantic music videos, listens to soft and seducing rock music, and thinks the song's lyrics and music were lovely and made for a special person. She provides casual feedback on how the video maker can continue improving.
Suzanne Naeem is a 19-year-old actress who studies computer science at Forman Christian College. She believes she is talented and can prove herself in videos. Suzanne enjoys romantic music videos, listens to soft and seducing rock music, and thinks the song's lyrics and music were lovely and made for a special person. She provides casual feedback on how the video maker can continue improving.
This 1 sentence document does not provide enough context or information to generate a meaningful 3 sentence summary. The document contains no text other than the title "Different Fonts For Planning".
The document discusses audience research and targeting audiences for media products. It defines primary and secondary research methods. It also discusses theories of how to identify and group target audiences, including by social factors, media habits, motivations and how different groups may respond to different message strategies. Key aspects covered include Burton's social and media audience groupings, Hartley's seven subjective categories to further define audiences, Dyer's theory of offering solutions to inadequacies, and how motives and delivery methods should be tailored to different audience groups.
This document discusses the use of color in communication. It covers several key points:
- Color perception is influenced by both physical light wavelengths and psychological/cultural factors. Color has different meanings to different people and cultures.
- There are three main dimensions of color: hue (wavelength), brightness (intensity), and saturation (spectral purity). Objects appear a certain color because they absorb and reflect different light wavelengths.
- Theories of color vision include the trichromatic receptor theory that the eye contains three types of color receptors sensitive to different wavelengths, and the opponent-process theory of color perception.
- Communicators use color as a tool for communication because its impact is direct and emotional, unlike written
The document lists 12 different font styles with the same phrases "Luckiest Girl" and "A Proper Match From Above!" repeated under each font. It appears to be providing options for font styles that could be used for planning or documenting a romance with the consistent romantic messaging under each font option.
The document discusses different target audiences for music, including metalheads, punks, goths, emos, teenage girls, and teenage couples. It describes their associated music genres, fashion styles, and cultures. Metalheads listen to classic rock, blues rock, and classical music and have political lyrics. Punk music is loud and aggressive, played by small bands. Goths have dark styles and listen to gothic rock and darkwave. Emos represent sadness and listen to punk-influenced indie rock. Teenage girls like romance genres and breakup songs, while teenage couples prefer happy music and movies.
The document appears to be research conducted to help plan a music video and related marketing materials. Key findings from the research include:
- Pop and indie music were the most popular genres, especially among females, so the video will target a female audience.
- Respondents preferred music videos that told emotional stories connected to the song lyrics and featured the artist. Therefore, the planned video will include a performance and narrative storyline linked to the lyrics.
- More females were already familiar with the original song, further indicating females as the target audience. Most respondents, including more females, said they liked the song.
- Pictures of the artist and images from the planned video should be featured prominently on the digipak cover
The document discusses using questionnaires and research to identify a target audience for a new music magazine. It analyzes questionnaire responses about things like age, music preferences, and spending habits to determine that the target audience is 13-15 year olds who enjoy R&B music. While the ethnicity of respondents was mixed, this age group and music preference provides clarity on who the magazine aims to reach. Feedback on an early version of the magazine was also positive from the target demographic.
Target audience research - Analysis of resultshannah
The document summarizes the results of a survey conducted to learn about the target audience for an indie music project. The survey received 46 responses and provided insights into the audience's interests, music preferences and platforms used, fashion brands liked, social media habits, clothing styles, views on how music shapes identity, what music means to them, and future plans and dreams. Most of the audience enjoys live music, uses various platforms to listen including online, associates with certain fashion brands, prefers Instagram and Tumblr, has an alternative or minimal style, sees music as a form of expression, listens to lyrics, and dreams of traveling or pursuing art-related careers or education.
The document discusses four potential color schemes for a digipak:
1) Gold, white, red. Gold represents luxury but red may be too dominant.
2) Black, gold, white. Bold but black and dark blue may be too dark for the album's mood.
3) Navy, gold, black. Neutral colors but too dark.
4) Black, white, red. Complimentary colors that stand out but could incorporate gold through the artist's logo.
The document also discusses font ideas, selecting one that is bold and evokes mystery fitting the artist.
The document discusses several factors to consider when defining a target audience, including stereotypes, age, and gender. It notes that stereotypes like "emo" and "chav" influence music preferences. Younger audiences prefer upbeat music and artists they can relate to, while teenagers like attractive musicians. Middle-aged people listen to music from their youth or current hits. The target audience is defined as ages 15-40, primarily female, students or career-focused with an active lifestyle, interested in music, sports and travel, from a middle-class background. An example profile named Tom and Bronte fits this target audience.
This document discusses audience research methods used to better understand target audiences. It describes conducting research on audience segments based on demographics like age, income and education to learn their attitudes and behaviors related to issues. Audience measurement panels track online and mobile media usage. Television audience measurement provides reliable viewership data. Nielsen measures global TV viewing and accounts for viewers engaging with multiple platforms. Research methods discussed include surveys, interviews and analyzing ratings, psychographics and demographics to classify audiences.
Reaching New Audiences - Connecting to Your Audience OnlineJonathan Coffman
This is a presentation given to CapitolBeat attendees, members of the Association of Capitol Reporters and Editors in Raleigh, NC in November 2008. It covers parts of my social media 101 teachings with a small amount of strategy tips for more advanced users.
This document provides instructions for a lesson that will analyze how antiperspirant and deodorant advertisements target men and women differently. Students are asked to consider print ads, taking note of slogans, brands, copy, products, and images. They will then complete a table explaining the codes and conventions used to market these products to each gender.
The document discusses various methods used for audience research and measurement. It describes diary and electronic methods, such as Nielsen boxes, for measuring television viewership. It also discusses ratings points, face-to-face interviews, focus groups, questionnaires, the Broadcasters Audience Research Board (BARB), advertising agencies, primary and secondary research, quantitative and qualitative research, rates cards, and advertisers information packs. All of these methods are used to gather data on audiences in order to help broadcasters, advertisers and other companies better understand their target demographics.
Target Audience of Indie Rock music magazinesjonese3
The document profiles the target audience for an indie rock music magazine. It finds that the stereotypical audience is 16-24 year old, white, working/middle class males who enjoy indie rock music. They like attending festivals and concerts of local bands. They have interests in music, photography, and fashion. They prefer magazines like NME and Q that focus on current indie artists and include interviews, photos, and tour dates.
Primary research involves collecting your own data through methods like interviews and questionnaires. It allows you to get specific information but takes more time. Secondary research analyzes existing materials, allowing you to access a wide range of existing information but it may not fully suit your needs. A combination of primary and secondary research is recommended to efficiently gather both broad and specific insights into your target audience.
This document outlines a lesson on target audience research for a media studies class. It introduces the topic and explains why audience research is an important part of production planning. It provides learning outcomes for students to carry out basic audience research, consider their questions and presentation of findings. The document describes different research methods like questionnaires and vox pops students can use to collect both qualitative and quantitative data. It also explains how to analyze the results, create target audience profiles, and use this research to inform their media production portfolio.
The document discusses the various media technologies used at different stages of the author's media project, which included creating a music video, magazine ad, and digipak. The author used technologies like Total Video Converter, Blogger, a PTCL EVO USB, keyboards, mobile phones, an HP computer, Adobe software, Corel Draw, Windows Movie Maker, an HP laptop, Microsoft PowerPoint, Windows Media Player, YouTube, MixPad, Microsoft Word, Google, Mozilla Firefox, Dailymotion, Vimeo, ProShow Producer, Windows Photo Viewer, and professional cameras. These technologies helped with tasks like video editing, data collection, internet access, audio/video production, presentation creation, and viewing/
The document discusses the feedback the creator received from an audience throughout the process of creating a music video and related tasks. They conducted interviews early on to determine the genre of song, with most favoring a romantic genre. Feedback helped determine the story, lyrics, and tune of the song. Test screenings of early cuts of the video identified issues with acting and pacing. Additional feedback improved the video editing and effects. The final digipak and magazine ad designs also received positive feedback, confirming the success of the projects due to incorporating audience perspectives at each stage.
The document discusses how the creator effectively combined their main music video product with two ancillary texts: a magazine advertisement and digipak. For the magazine ad, the creator used similar colors to the video and featured the singer holding a guitar. In the digipak, the outside uses darker colors from the video while the inside uses lighter shades, and screenshots from the video provide context for the lyrics. Overall, the creator aimed to tie the products together through shared visual elements and clues to promote interest in exploring the music video further.
The document discusses how the media producer's music video both uses and challenges conventions of real pop music videos. It uses conventions such as portraying the artist, having lyrics and visuals relate to the music, filming in happy locations, targeting teenagers, and having catchy lyrics in a verse-chorus structure. However, it also challenges conventions by having simpler costumes to feel more realistic, not including sexuality which goes against the culture, and using some effects in editing not typically seen in romantic pop videos. The producer aimed to both capture realism while still exciting the teenage audience.
This document discusses the use of color in communication. It covers several key points:
- Color perception is influenced by both physical light wavelengths and psychological/cultural factors. Color has different meanings to different people and cultures.
- There are three main dimensions of color: hue (wavelength), brightness (intensity), and saturation (spectral purity). Objects appear a certain color because they absorb and reflect different light wavelengths.
- Theories of color vision include the trichromatic receptor theory that the eye contains three types of color receptors sensitive to different wavelengths, and the opponent-process theory of color perception.
- Communicators use color as a tool for communication because its impact is direct and emotional, unlike written
The document lists 12 different font styles with the same phrases "Luckiest Girl" and "A Proper Match From Above!" repeated under each font. It appears to be providing options for font styles that could be used for planning or documenting a romance with the consistent romantic messaging under each font option.
The document discusses different target audiences for music, including metalheads, punks, goths, emos, teenage girls, and teenage couples. It describes their associated music genres, fashion styles, and cultures. Metalheads listen to classic rock, blues rock, and classical music and have political lyrics. Punk music is loud and aggressive, played by small bands. Goths have dark styles and listen to gothic rock and darkwave. Emos represent sadness and listen to punk-influenced indie rock. Teenage girls like romance genres and breakup songs, while teenage couples prefer happy music and movies.
The document appears to be research conducted to help plan a music video and related marketing materials. Key findings from the research include:
- Pop and indie music were the most popular genres, especially among females, so the video will target a female audience.
- Respondents preferred music videos that told emotional stories connected to the song lyrics and featured the artist. Therefore, the planned video will include a performance and narrative storyline linked to the lyrics.
- More females were already familiar with the original song, further indicating females as the target audience. Most respondents, including more females, said they liked the song.
- Pictures of the artist and images from the planned video should be featured prominently on the digipak cover
The document discusses using questionnaires and research to identify a target audience for a new music magazine. It analyzes questionnaire responses about things like age, music preferences, and spending habits to determine that the target audience is 13-15 year olds who enjoy R&B music. While the ethnicity of respondents was mixed, this age group and music preference provides clarity on who the magazine aims to reach. Feedback on an early version of the magazine was also positive from the target demographic.
Target audience research - Analysis of resultshannah
The document summarizes the results of a survey conducted to learn about the target audience for an indie music project. The survey received 46 responses and provided insights into the audience's interests, music preferences and platforms used, fashion brands liked, social media habits, clothing styles, views on how music shapes identity, what music means to them, and future plans and dreams. Most of the audience enjoys live music, uses various platforms to listen including online, associates with certain fashion brands, prefers Instagram and Tumblr, has an alternative or minimal style, sees music as a form of expression, listens to lyrics, and dreams of traveling or pursuing art-related careers or education.
The document discusses four potential color schemes for a digipak:
1) Gold, white, red. Gold represents luxury but red may be too dominant.
2) Black, gold, white. Bold but black and dark blue may be too dark for the album's mood.
3) Navy, gold, black. Neutral colors but too dark.
4) Black, white, red. Complimentary colors that stand out but could incorporate gold through the artist's logo.
The document also discusses font ideas, selecting one that is bold and evokes mystery fitting the artist.
The document discusses several factors to consider when defining a target audience, including stereotypes, age, and gender. It notes that stereotypes like "emo" and "chav" influence music preferences. Younger audiences prefer upbeat music and artists they can relate to, while teenagers like attractive musicians. Middle-aged people listen to music from their youth or current hits. The target audience is defined as ages 15-40, primarily female, students or career-focused with an active lifestyle, interested in music, sports and travel, from a middle-class background. An example profile named Tom and Bronte fits this target audience.
This document discusses audience research methods used to better understand target audiences. It describes conducting research on audience segments based on demographics like age, income and education to learn their attitudes and behaviors related to issues. Audience measurement panels track online and mobile media usage. Television audience measurement provides reliable viewership data. Nielsen measures global TV viewing and accounts for viewers engaging with multiple platforms. Research methods discussed include surveys, interviews and analyzing ratings, psychographics and demographics to classify audiences.
Reaching New Audiences - Connecting to Your Audience OnlineJonathan Coffman
This is a presentation given to CapitolBeat attendees, members of the Association of Capitol Reporters and Editors in Raleigh, NC in November 2008. It covers parts of my social media 101 teachings with a small amount of strategy tips for more advanced users.
This document provides instructions for a lesson that will analyze how antiperspirant and deodorant advertisements target men and women differently. Students are asked to consider print ads, taking note of slogans, brands, copy, products, and images. They will then complete a table explaining the codes and conventions used to market these products to each gender.
The document discusses various methods used for audience research and measurement. It describes diary and electronic methods, such as Nielsen boxes, for measuring television viewership. It also discusses ratings points, face-to-face interviews, focus groups, questionnaires, the Broadcasters Audience Research Board (BARB), advertising agencies, primary and secondary research, quantitative and qualitative research, rates cards, and advertisers information packs. All of these methods are used to gather data on audiences in order to help broadcasters, advertisers and other companies better understand their target demographics.
Target Audience of Indie Rock music magazinesjonese3
The document profiles the target audience for an indie rock music magazine. It finds that the stereotypical audience is 16-24 year old, white, working/middle class males who enjoy indie rock music. They like attending festivals and concerts of local bands. They have interests in music, photography, and fashion. They prefer magazines like NME and Q that focus on current indie artists and include interviews, photos, and tour dates.
Primary research involves collecting your own data through methods like interviews and questionnaires. It allows you to get specific information but takes more time. Secondary research analyzes existing materials, allowing you to access a wide range of existing information but it may not fully suit your needs. A combination of primary and secondary research is recommended to efficiently gather both broad and specific insights into your target audience.
This document outlines a lesson on target audience research for a media studies class. It introduces the topic and explains why audience research is an important part of production planning. It provides learning outcomes for students to carry out basic audience research, consider their questions and presentation of findings. The document describes different research methods like questionnaires and vox pops students can use to collect both qualitative and quantitative data. It also explains how to analyze the results, create target audience profiles, and use this research to inform their media production portfolio.
The document discusses the various media technologies used at different stages of the author's media project, which included creating a music video, magazine ad, and digipak. The author used technologies like Total Video Converter, Blogger, a PTCL EVO USB, keyboards, mobile phones, an HP computer, Adobe software, Corel Draw, Windows Movie Maker, an HP laptop, Microsoft PowerPoint, Windows Media Player, YouTube, MixPad, Microsoft Word, Google, Mozilla Firefox, Dailymotion, Vimeo, ProShow Producer, Windows Photo Viewer, and professional cameras. These technologies helped with tasks like video editing, data collection, internet access, audio/video production, presentation creation, and viewing/
The document discusses the feedback the creator received from an audience throughout the process of creating a music video and related tasks. They conducted interviews early on to determine the genre of song, with most favoring a romantic genre. Feedback helped determine the story, lyrics, and tune of the song. Test screenings of early cuts of the video identified issues with acting and pacing. Additional feedback improved the video editing and effects. The final digipak and magazine ad designs also received positive feedback, confirming the success of the projects due to incorporating audience perspectives at each stage.
The document discusses how the creator effectively combined their main music video product with two ancillary texts: a magazine advertisement and digipak. For the magazine ad, the creator used similar colors to the video and featured the singer holding a guitar. In the digipak, the outside uses darker colors from the video while the inside uses lighter shades, and screenshots from the video provide context for the lyrics. Overall, the creator aimed to tie the products together through shared visual elements and clues to promote interest in exploring the music video further.
The document discusses how the media producer's music video both uses and challenges conventions of real pop music videos. It uses conventions such as portraying the artist, having lyrics and visuals relate to the music, filming in happy locations, targeting teenagers, and having catchy lyrics in a verse-chorus structure. However, it also challenges conventions by having simpler costumes to feel more realistic, not including sexuality which goes against the culture, and using some effects in editing not typically seen in romantic pop videos. The producer aimed to both capture realism while still exciting the teenage audience.
The document discusses how the media producer's music video does and does not follow conventions of real pop music videos. It uses conventions like portraying the artist, having lyrics and visuals relate, filming in happy locations, targeting teenagers, and having catchy lyrics and upbeat tempo. However, it challenges conventions by having simpler outfits to seem more realistic, not including sexuality, and using some effects in editing not usually seen in romantic pop videos. Overall, it aims to balance conventions with original elements to tell a real story.
Anwais Arif is a 22-year-old actor who believes he is qualified to act in a video. He has been acting in plays and mimes for a long time and considers himself a great actor. He studies economics and business subjects at the National College of Business Administration. After listening to a song, he thought the music and lyrics were awesome but suggested the filmmaker take help from experts to continue improving future videos.
Pop music utilizes certain codes and conventions to appeal to its target teenage audience. It typically has danceable beats, lyrics about partying and enjoyment, and sexually suggestive imagery. Pop songs have a verse-chorus structure, are 3-5 minutes long, and follow current trends. Videos portray the artist's life as happy through fashionable outfits, expensive settings like beaches and boats, and fast-paced camera work to keep the visuals upbeat and exciting. Hairstyles, makeup, and clothing in videos are beautiful, bright, trendy looks intended to represent an ideal lifestyle.
The document discusses 5 music TV channels: MTV, 4music, ARY Musik, 8XM, and B4U Music. It provides details on their origins, ownership, programming, and target audiences. MTV was one of the first and most popular music video channels. 4Music plays both music videos and entertainment content. ARY Musik and 8XM are Pakistan-based channels that play Pakistani, Indian, and international songs. B4U Music broadcasts Bollywood, Indian pop, and international music worldwide.
Research on dvd covers of music videosRohamaWaseem
Most music video DVD covers contain the following elements: the name and picture of the singer on the front, spine, and back; the album name; a barcode on the back; a song list; and logos for the DVD, ratings, and production studios. The front cover focuses on attracting the viewer with the singer's picture and name, while the back provides more text describing the music video and listing songs. The spine prominently displays the singer and album for easy identification on store shelves.
This document profiles 5 famous music directors and their genres. "Weird Al" Yankovic directs parody, comedy and polka music videos. Alicia Keys focuses on R&B, pop and soul genres in her music video direction. Anton Corbijn's music videos are romantic genres. Brett Ratner's music video genres are mainly action and thriller. Britney Spears' music video direction focuses on pop, dance pop and electro pop genres.
Music videos have evolved from early promotional films set to music in the 1930s-1950s. Early forms included illustrated songs in the 1890s, Soundies musical films of the 1940s, and musical shorts that filled time between films. In the 1960s, Scopitones and early music videos known as "lip dubs" emerged. Video Concert Hall in 1979 was one of the first TV networks to feature music videos. Finally, MTV launched in 1981 and became the first channel dedicated solely to music videos, popularizing the format.
These magazine ads promote upcoming music album releases from various singers by including the singer's name, a picture, and key details about the album such as release date and theme song. The ads aim to generate interest in the new albums by highlighting the singer and selected songs or themes.
The document discusses signed contracts. It likely contains information about contracts that have been signed, such as details of the agreements, parties involved, dates, and terms. The main topic covered is binding legal agreements that have been formally accepted by both parties through signatures.
This document expresses an actor's interest in playing a role in a music video. The actor agrees to make themselves available whenever needed during production and will do their best. Their participation is subject to availability and agreeing to future terms of employment with the producer.
The speaker considers herself the luckiest girl in the world because everything she needs, every happiness and joy comes from her lover. She worries that if she ever lost her lover, she would cry, die, search the moon and sky, and do anything at all to get them back close to her again.
This document analyzes the common codes and conventions used on digipack music videos. It identifies elements that typically appear on the front, back, and sides of digipacks such as the singer's name, album name, song list, barcode, rating information, and pictures related to the music or videos. These elements are consistently featured across digipacks in order to clearly identify the artist, album, and contents for consumers.
The document discusses the design elements of several DVD covers and how they are used to attract different audiences. It describes the fonts, colors, images and text used on the covers. Elements like prominent text, images of main actors and actresses, and brief descriptions of the plot are discussed as ways to engage customers. The gender and age of intended audiences are also considered through techniques like feminine colors and a style that may appeal to boys.
The document is a media questionnaire asking respondents for information about the types of videos they watch, their preferences for romantic music video endings, how often they like to watch romantic videos, their suggestions for naming a music video about a happy engaged couple, the type of music suited for a happy music video, and where to upload the completed music video for advertising. It contains 6 multiple choice questions and requests explanations for responses selecting "other" or providing suggestions.
The document is a media questionnaire for a music video about a happy engaged couple. It asks respondents about the types of videos they normally watch, what type of ending they'd like in a romantic music video, how often they watch romantic videos, what the name of the music video should be, what kind of music is liked in happy music videos, and where the video should be uploaded to advertise it. The questionnaire collects preferences through multiple choice questions and notes that respondents should specify their answer for options like "other" or "suggestions".