This document contains the results of a 17 question questionnaire about a documentary on sweets. The questions covered demographics of respondents, their opinions on different aspects of the documentary such as entertainment value and technical quality, and their views on promotional materials for the documentary including a radio advertisement and print advertisement. The vast majority of respondents found the documentary interesting and entertaining and thought the promotional materials were effective at generating interest in the documentary.
This document outlines the planned content for a rock music magazine. The front cover will feature an "edgy and aggressive" image to set the mood. The contents page lists various sections - interviews, reviews of upcoming gigs and albums, quizzes, news, posters, and band interviews. The main article will profile the local unsigned band Merger, focusing on its two members and some of their songs. Sketches are included for the front cover and contents page.
The document discusses the types of documentaries analyzed at the start of the course to understand codes and conventions. It then describes the type of documentary created, which used a mix of interviews, observations, archive footage and graphics. Interviews were observational with the interviewee looking at the questioner. Archive footage from "Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory" was included to add variety. A narrator provided explanation as an unseen "voice of God." The documentary's main theme was confectionary but it also included conflict to show sweets' different effects, similar to how a documentary examined Marilyn Manson's influence on teenagers.
The group took pictures while filming an interview to showcase their ability to set up equipment correctly. They focused on framing the camera shot appropriately using a medium close-up, properly positioning the microphone out of view, and ensuring the interviewee looked at the interviewer rather than the camera. They also ran through questions beforehand to plan the interview's flow.
This document summarizes the process of designing a double page spread (DPS) for a magazine article about a band. The designer chose colors like green, black, red, and yellow that matched the tones and themes of the band's music. Images of the band were added to make the spread more appealing. Feedback noted the spread used too many colors, so the designer simplified it to yellow, red, and white to be more consistent with the front cover and contents.
The document summarizes the results of a survey conducted to gather feedback on a magazine prototype. Key findings include:
- The target audience is 15-20 year olds who are interested in rock and indie music.
- Respondents generally felt the cover, contents page, and double page spread were well organized and looked professional.
- Colors schemes, images, and article content received positive feedback, while some suggested minor changes to layouts and fonts.
- The magazine seems most likely to appeal to punk music fans but could interest anyone into rock music. Constructive criticism was provided to further improve the magazine.
- The document discusses how the author addressed their target audience of 15-20 year old males and females interested in rock music for their rock music magazine.
- They conducted a questionnaire to understand what their audience wanted from a magazine in terms of content, colors, bands, etc. This informed the magazine's design.
- The front cover uses a model with an "edgy and angry" look, rock-inspired clothing, and colors like red, black, yellow, and blue that were preferred by respondents.
- The contents page continues the color scheme and includes images of rock musicians to appeal to the audience while also promoting content and a subscription.
- A double-page spread article profiles an up-and
The group took pictures while filming an interview to showcase their ability to set up equipment correctly. They focused on framing the camera at the right angle and using a medium close-up shot. They also ensured the microphone was turned on and positioned out of view while practicing their interview questions to get a sense of timing.
This document contains the results of a 17 question questionnaire about a documentary on sweets. The questions covered demographics of respondents, their opinions on different aspects of the documentary such as entertainment value and technical quality, and their views on promotional materials for the documentary including a radio advertisement and print advertisement. The vast majority of respondents found the documentary interesting and entertaining and thought the promotional materials were effective at generating interest in the documentary.
This document outlines the planned content for a rock music magazine. The front cover will feature an "edgy and aggressive" image to set the mood. The contents page lists various sections - interviews, reviews of upcoming gigs and albums, quizzes, news, posters, and band interviews. The main article will profile the local unsigned band Merger, focusing on its two members and some of their songs. Sketches are included for the front cover and contents page.
The document discusses the types of documentaries analyzed at the start of the course to understand codes and conventions. It then describes the type of documentary created, which used a mix of interviews, observations, archive footage and graphics. Interviews were observational with the interviewee looking at the questioner. Archive footage from "Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory" was included to add variety. A narrator provided explanation as an unseen "voice of God." The documentary's main theme was confectionary but it also included conflict to show sweets' different effects, similar to how a documentary examined Marilyn Manson's influence on teenagers.
The group took pictures while filming an interview to showcase their ability to set up equipment correctly. They focused on framing the camera shot appropriately using a medium close-up, properly positioning the microphone out of view, and ensuring the interviewee looked at the interviewer rather than the camera. They also ran through questions beforehand to plan the interview's flow.
This document summarizes the process of designing a double page spread (DPS) for a magazine article about a band. The designer chose colors like green, black, red, and yellow that matched the tones and themes of the band's music. Images of the band were added to make the spread more appealing. Feedback noted the spread used too many colors, so the designer simplified it to yellow, red, and white to be more consistent with the front cover and contents.
The document summarizes the results of a survey conducted to gather feedback on a magazine prototype. Key findings include:
- The target audience is 15-20 year olds who are interested in rock and indie music.
- Respondents generally felt the cover, contents page, and double page spread were well organized and looked professional.
- Colors schemes, images, and article content received positive feedback, while some suggested minor changes to layouts and fonts.
- The magazine seems most likely to appeal to punk music fans but could interest anyone into rock music. Constructive criticism was provided to further improve the magazine.
- The document discusses how the author addressed their target audience of 15-20 year old males and females interested in rock music for their rock music magazine.
- They conducted a questionnaire to understand what their audience wanted from a magazine in terms of content, colors, bands, etc. This informed the magazine's design.
- The front cover uses a model with an "edgy and angry" look, rock-inspired clothing, and colors like red, black, yellow, and blue that were preferred by respondents.
- The contents page continues the color scheme and includes images of rock musicians to appeal to the audience while also promoting content and a subscription.
- A double-page spread article profiles an up-and
The group took pictures while filming an interview to showcase their ability to set up equipment correctly. They focused on framing the camera at the right angle and using a medium close-up shot. They also ensured the microphone was turned on and positioned out of view while practicing their interview questions to get a sense of timing.
The respondent analyzed the results of a questionnaire about music magazine preferences. Most respondents were female aged 15-19 who liked rock and R&B music. They preferred a monthly magazine that costs £2.50 and includes posters, interviews, and CD reviews. The most popular suggested magazine name was "MONSTER" and preferred colors were red, black, and dark blue. The top 5 recommended rock bands were Muse, Paramore, Kings of Leon, Green Day, and Linkin Park.
- The document discusses how the magazine addressed its target audience of 15-20 year old males and females interested in rock music.
- A questionnaire was used to determine the audience's favorite bands, interests, and preferences for magazine design aspects like color.
- The front cover uses a model with direct eye contact and rock-inspired clothing in red, yellow, black, and blue colors preferred by the audience.
- The contents page also uses these colors along with images that create an edgy vibe while still making the audience feel welcomed. It promotes subscriber discounts and highlights various article headings.
- A double page spread article about an up-and-coming band is presented in the audience's preferred colors with a
The document contains the results of a questionnaire about a documentary on sweets. It includes graphs and charts showing the responses to various multiple choice and rating scale questions about topics like demographics, enjoyment of the documentary, quality ratings of different elements, and evaluations of advertising materials. Overall the feedback was positive with most respondents finding the documentary and advertisements interesting, high production quality, and cohesive.
The document discusses the design choices made for a magazine article layout, including using black as the background color to make images and text stand out, adding multiple images to make the article more appealing, and experimenting with different fonts, colors, images and headings to emphasize key information and create a professional look.
The document contains the results of a survey about people's consumption and views of sweets. It includes data on respondents' ages, gender, whether they buy and spend on sweets, favorite sweets, and songs and movies associated with sweets. The majority said they would watch a documentary about sweets and that the film Willy Wonka had an impact on their liking of sweets as children. Most also go to the dentist every 6 months or once a year.
- The document discusses how the author addressed their target audience of 15-20 year old rock music fans for their rock music magazine.
- They conducted a questionnaire to understand what their audience wanted from a magazine in terms of content, colors, and bands.
- On the front cover, they used a model with an edgy look making direct eye contact to catch attention, using colors like red, yellow, black, and blue that were preferred by respondents and signify passion for music.
- The contents page continues the color scheme and includes diverse content and images to attract readers as well as a subscription offer modeled after other successful magazines.
The document summarizes the process of designing the contents page for a magazine mock-up. Key design elements included organizing the contents in a single column with bold headlines, using red, yellow, and black colors to match the cover, and including a top bar with the date, issue number, and magazine name. Advertisements and photos were added to make the contents more eye-catching for the target audience. The layout was refined through multiple iterations, adjusting colors, images and other elements to improve the professional look of the magazine contents page.
The document provides a list of 12 different photo shots or angles for capturing images, including high and low angle close-ups, an extreme close-up of a time display, a close-up of someone on a mobile phone, someone in nature, two-shot medium-long shots, an over-the-shoulder shot of someone writing, a long shot conveying isolation, medium close-ups, long shots, a two-shot medium close-up suggesting friendship, and a close-up implying stress.
The document discusses various technologies used during the construction, planning, and evaluation stages of projects. Adobe Premier was used to edit video footage and audio for a documentary and radio advertisement by cutting clips and adding text and graphics. Photoshop allowed for precise image editing for a print advertisement through tools like the cut tool and changing opacity. A radio studio provided professional quality audio recording. A video camera, tripod, and DSLR camera captured high-quality footage, and different microphones ensured clear audio quality. Xtranormal software created animated movies by turning text into animations that could be customized.
The document contains a 17 question survey about people's consumption and views of sweets. It asks respondents for their age, gender, whether they buy and consume sweets, how regularly and much they spend on sweets. It also asks if sweets have changed over time, what their favorite sweet is, what colors and music they associate with sweets. Additional questions cover preferences for a documentary about sweets and viewing habits for documentaries and the film Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory.
This document contains the results of a 17 question questionnaire about a documentary on sweets. The questions covered demographics of respondents, their opinions on different aspects of the documentary such as entertainment value and technical quality, reactions to advertising for the documentary, and evaluation of marketing materials. The data is presented primarily in bar graphs that show the distribution of answers for closed-ended questions.
The document summarizes feedback received from audiences on a documentary and print advertisement. It discusses responses to questions about whether the documentary was entertaining, had good quality, was eye-catching, seemed professional, and whether people would watch it on TV. The feedback was overwhelmingly positive, with some suggestions for improvements. It also summarizes feedback on questions about whether the print ad was eye-catching, matched the theme, would influence viewing, and what looked most professional. Again, the feedback was mostly positive with minor suggested changes.
The document analyzes the student's media documentary project on confectionaries and how it develops conventions of real documentaries. It discusses how they studied professional documentaries to understand codes and conventions. Their documentary uses a mix of interviews, footage and graphics. Interviews are framed similarly to documentaries like "The Devil Made Me Do It". Achieved footage from "Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory" adds depth. Sound and editing techniques also follow conventions by using music appropriately and including cutaways to break up long interviews. Overall the documentary challenges conventions by applying them to the lighthearted topic of sweets.
The document analyzes the filmmaker's documentary on confectionary and how it develops conventions of the genre. It uses interviews, archive footage from Willy Wonka and observational filming like in "The Devil Made Me Do It". Graphics are included to introduce interviewees professionally. Sound incorporates music and voiceover. Editing includes cutaways to break up long interviews and connect them to the topic. Overall the documentary aims to look professional by adopting techniques seen in documentaries analyzed at the start of the course.
We edited a documentary about smartphones using Adobe Premiere Pro. We imported photos and video clips, overlapped them with the interview footage by dragging them above the interview in the timeline. We added an opening title in big white letters on a black background. The timeline shows the interview, cutaways, and music we used, which we had to move around to fit without blanks. We cut out questions from the interview footage and downloaded and cut the song "Telephone" to fit. We also practiced adding graphics by typing text and dragging it above video clips.
A documentary was edited using cut-aways of mobile phones imported into the tool bar to overlap an interview at specific times. An opening title with big bold white letters on a black background was added. A more creative opening will be needed for the real documentary to boost marks.
This documentary focused on modern relationships and explored themes of love, sex, and the differences between being single and in a relationship. Cherry Healey guided both single and coupled individuals through discussions of their experiences and perspectives. Through a variety of camera shots and editing techniques, the documentary followed a narrative structure - beginning with Healey's life as a married woman, then introducing singles looking to change their relationship status, and ending by reaffirming that one can find freedom within a relationship.
- The document discusses how the magazine addressed its target audience of 15-20 year old males and females interested in rock music.
- A questionnaire was used to understand the audience's preferences in terms of colors, bands, and content. This informed the magazine's design.
- The front cover uses a model with an "edgy and angry" look, rock-inspired clothing, and the colors red, yellow, black and blue that were preferred by the audience.
- The contents page continues the color scheme and includes images that create an "edgy vibe" to appeal to the rock music audience. It promotes a subscription.
- A double-page spread article is about an up-and-coming band
The document describes the process of designing a magazine cover in Photoshop. Key details include:
- A bold font and red color were used to give an "edgy atmosphere" appealing to the target audience.
- An image showing aggression was used as the central image.
- Photoshop was used to create graphics and adjust elements like coverlines and positioning statements.
- Colors, fonts, sizing and positioning of elements were adjusted throughout the process to make information more clear and appealing. The final design included graphics, coverlines about artists and music, and identifying information.
The document discusses various technologies the student used to create their product and what they learned from using each one. For Photoshop, the student learned how to insert and edit images, add text, and use tools like the lasso tool and opacity tool. For Quark, the student struggled at first but learned to import images and add text. Slideshare allowed the student to upload PowerPoint presentations to their blog. The student's camera took good quality photos and they were familiar with how to use it. A voice recorder let the student record and replay their evaluation. Prezi was useful for creating presentations. Xtranormal let the student create animated videos. Zoomerang created graphs from an online questionnaire the student used for
The document describes the process of designing a magazine cover in Photoshop. Key details include:
- A bold font and red color were used to give an "edgy" feel appealing to the target rock music audience.
- Feedback on an early draft suggested making changes to improve professionalism, such as adjusting colors, images, and formatting of cover text.
- Revisions included making graphics black for a darker tone, changing the central image, and altering coverline colors, sizes, and positioning to make content more noticeable and energetic.
This document summarizes the process of designing a double page spread (DPS) for a magazine article about a band. The designer chose green and black colors to match the tone of the exciting concert photo and used guidelines in Quark to help layout the text. Feedback suggested reducing the number of colors, so the designer switched to yellow, red, and white to tie it to the cover and contents page. The final DPS replaced a blurry band photo with a collage of cards and photos to fit the article.
The respondent analyzed the results of a questionnaire about music magazine preferences. Most respondents were female aged 15-19 who liked rock and R&B music. They preferred a monthly magazine that costs £2.50 and includes posters, interviews, and CD reviews. The most popular suggested magazine name was "MONSTER" and preferred colors were red, black, and dark blue. The top 5 recommended rock bands were Muse, Paramore, Kings of Leon, Green Day, and Linkin Park.
- The document discusses how the magazine addressed its target audience of 15-20 year old males and females interested in rock music.
- A questionnaire was used to determine the audience's favorite bands, interests, and preferences for magazine design aspects like color.
- The front cover uses a model with direct eye contact and rock-inspired clothing in red, yellow, black, and blue colors preferred by the audience.
- The contents page also uses these colors along with images that create an edgy vibe while still making the audience feel welcomed. It promotes subscriber discounts and highlights various article headings.
- A double page spread article about an up-and-coming band is presented in the audience's preferred colors with a
The document contains the results of a questionnaire about a documentary on sweets. It includes graphs and charts showing the responses to various multiple choice and rating scale questions about topics like demographics, enjoyment of the documentary, quality ratings of different elements, and evaluations of advertising materials. Overall the feedback was positive with most respondents finding the documentary and advertisements interesting, high production quality, and cohesive.
The document discusses the design choices made for a magazine article layout, including using black as the background color to make images and text stand out, adding multiple images to make the article more appealing, and experimenting with different fonts, colors, images and headings to emphasize key information and create a professional look.
The document contains the results of a survey about people's consumption and views of sweets. It includes data on respondents' ages, gender, whether they buy and spend on sweets, favorite sweets, and songs and movies associated with sweets. The majority said they would watch a documentary about sweets and that the film Willy Wonka had an impact on their liking of sweets as children. Most also go to the dentist every 6 months or once a year.
- The document discusses how the author addressed their target audience of 15-20 year old rock music fans for their rock music magazine.
- They conducted a questionnaire to understand what their audience wanted from a magazine in terms of content, colors, and bands.
- On the front cover, they used a model with an edgy look making direct eye contact to catch attention, using colors like red, yellow, black, and blue that were preferred by respondents and signify passion for music.
- The contents page continues the color scheme and includes diverse content and images to attract readers as well as a subscription offer modeled after other successful magazines.
The document summarizes the process of designing the contents page for a magazine mock-up. Key design elements included organizing the contents in a single column with bold headlines, using red, yellow, and black colors to match the cover, and including a top bar with the date, issue number, and magazine name. Advertisements and photos were added to make the contents more eye-catching for the target audience. The layout was refined through multiple iterations, adjusting colors, images and other elements to improve the professional look of the magazine contents page.
The document provides a list of 12 different photo shots or angles for capturing images, including high and low angle close-ups, an extreme close-up of a time display, a close-up of someone on a mobile phone, someone in nature, two-shot medium-long shots, an over-the-shoulder shot of someone writing, a long shot conveying isolation, medium close-ups, long shots, a two-shot medium close-up suggesting friendship, and a close-up implying stress.
The document discusses various technologies used during the construction, planning, and evaluation stages of projects. Adobe Premier was used to edit video footage and audio for a documentary and radio advertisement by cutting clips and adding text and graphics. Photoshop allowed for precise image editing for a print advertisement through tools like the cut tool and changing opacity. A radio studio provided professional quality audio recording. A video camera, tripod, and DSLR camera captured high-quality footage, and different microphones ensured clear audio quality. Xtranormal software created animated movies by turning text into animations that could be customized.
The document contains a 17 question survey about people's consumption and views of sweets. It asks respondents for their age, gender, whether they buy and consume sweets, how regularly and much they spend on sweets. It also asks if sweets have changed over time, what their favorite sweet is, what colors and music they associate with sweets. Additional questions cover preferences for a documentary about sweets and viewing habits for documentaries and the film Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory.
This document contains the results of a 17 question questionnaire about a documentary on sweets. The questions covered demographics of respondents, their opinions on different aspects of the documentary such as entertainment value and technical quality, reactions to advertising for the documentary, and evaluation of marketing materials. The data is presented primarily in bar graphs that show the distribution of answers for closed-ended questions.
The document summarizes feedback received from audiences on a documentary and print advertisement. It discusses responses to questions about whether the documentary was entertaining, had good quality, was eye-catching, seemed professional, and whether people would watch it on TV. The feedback was overwhelmingly positive, with some suggestions for improvements. It also summarizes feedback on questions about whether the print ad was eye-catching, matched the theme, would influence viewing, and what looked most professional. Again, the feedback was mostly positive with minor suggested changes.
The document analyzes the student's media documentary project on confectionaries and how it develops conventions of real documentaries. It discusses how they studied professional documentaries to understand codes and conventions. Their documentary uses a mix of interviews, footage and graphics. Interviews are framed similarly to documentaries like "The Devil Made Me Do It". Achieved footage from "Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory" adds depth. Sound and editing techniques also follow conventions by using music appropriately and including cutaways to break up long interviews. Overall the documentary challenges conventions by applying them to the lighthearted topic of sweets.
The document analyzes the filmmaker's documentary on confectionary and how it develops conventions of the genre. It uses interviews, archive footage from Willy Wonka and observational filming like in "The Devil Made Me Do It". Graphics are included to introduce interviewees professionally. Sound incorporates music and voiceover. Editing includes cutaways to break up long interviews and connect them to the topic. Overall the documentary aims to look professional by adopting techniques seen in documentaries analyzed at the start of the course.
We edited a documentary about smartphones using Adobe Premiere Pro. We imported photos and video clips, overlapped them with the interview footage by dragging them above the interview in the timeline. We added an opening title in big white letters on a black background. The timeline shows the interview, cutaways, and music we used, which we had to move around to fit without blanks. We cut out questions from the interview footage and downloaded and cut the song "Telephone" to fit. We also practiced adding graphics by typing text and dragging it above video clips.
A documentary was edited using cut-aways of mobile phones imported into the tool bar to overlap an interview at specific times. An opening title with big bold white letters on a black background was added. A more creative opening will be needed for the real documentary to boost marks.
This documentary focused on modern relationships and explored themes of love, sex, and the differences between being single and in a relationship. Cherry Healey guided both single and coupled individuals through discussions of their experiences and perspectives. Through a variety of camera shots and editing techniques, the documentary followed a narrative structure - beginning with Healey's life as a married woman, then introducing singles looking to change their relationship status, and ending by reaffirming that one can find freedom within a relationship.
- The document discusses how the magazine addressed its target audience of 15-20 year old males and females interested in rock music.
- A questionnaire was used to understand the audience's preferences in terms of colors, bands, and content. This informed the magazine's design.
- The front cover uses a model with an "edgy and angry" look, rock-inspired clothing, and the colors red, yellow, black and blue that were preferred by the audience.
- The contents page continues the color scheme and includes images that create an "edgy vibe" to appeal to the rock music audience. It promotes a subscription.
- A double-page spread article is about an up-and-coming band
The document describes the process of designing a magazine cover in Photoshop. Key details include:
- A bold font and red color were used to give an "edgy atmosphere" appealing to the target audience.
- An image showing aggression was used as the central image.
- Photoshop was used to create graphics and adjust elements like coverlines and positioning statements.
- Colors, fonts, sizing and positioning of elements were adjusted throughout the process to make information more clear and appealing. The final design included graphics, coverlines about artists and music, and identifying information.
The document discusses various technologies the student used to create their product and what they learned from using each one. For Photoshop, the student learned how to insert and edit images, add text, and use tools like the lasso tool and opacity tool. For Quark, the student struggled at first but learned to import images and add text. Slideshare allowed the student to upload PowerPoint presentations to their blog. The student's camera took good quality photos and they were familiar with how to use it. A voice recorder let the student record and replay their evaluation. Prezi was useful for creating presentations. Xtranormal let the student create animated videos. Zoomerang created graphs from an online questionnaire the student used for
The document describes the process of designing a magazine cover in Photoshop. Key details include:
- A bold font and red color were used to give an "edgy" feel appealing to the target rock music audience.
- Feedback on an early draft suggested making changes to improve professionalism, such as adjusting colors, images, and formatting of cover text.
- Revisions included making graphics black for a darker tone, changing the central image, and altering coverline colors, sizes, and positioning to make content more noticeable and energetic.
This document summarizes the process of designing a double page spread (DPS) for a magazine article about a band. The designer chose green and black colors to match the tone of the exciting concert photo and used guidelines in Quark to help layout the text. Feedback suggested reducing the number of colors, so the designer switched to yellow, red, and white to tie it to the cover and contents page. The final DPS replaced a blurry band photo with a collage of cards and photos to fit the article.
This document summarizes the process of designing a double page spread (DPS) for a magazine article about a band. The designer chose green and black colors to match the mood of a concert photo and emphasize the band's rock attitude. Feedback suggested reducing the number of colors, so the designer settled on yellow, red, and white which linked to the front cover and represented energy, attention, and loyalty to music. The final DPS replaced a blurry band photo with a collage of cards and photos to create a new fitting image.
The document describes the process of designing a magazine cover in Photoshop for a rock music genre magazine. Key details include:
- Using a bold stencil font and red color to give an "edgy" feel and attract the target audience of rock music fans.
- Choosing an image showing aggression and attitude to represent the genre.
- Adding graphics, cover lines, artist names and information about interior stories using colors like red, yellow and blue chosen in a questionnaire.
- Refining the design based on feedback, changing colors, images and layout to make the cover more professional, attractive and representative of rock magazine styles.