The document provides information about the target audience, layout, and availability of a newspaper. It targets a female audience interested in celebrities and television shows. The newspaper is organized with sections for full news, celebrity news, sports, television and more. It is available in several countries including the UK, US, and others.
The advertisement promotes a new documentary series airing on BBC One. It features simple text and animation centered on a red background to clearly stand out. It provides the air time, title "BBC One", and informs viewers there is not much additional content beyond the animation and text. The font, graphics, and organization of information are straightforward and commonly seen on BBC advertisements to be recognizable to viewers.
The document provides an analysis of effective Channel 5 TV advertisement designs. It examines the layout, content, font style, graphics, photo manipulation, and organization of information in sample Channel 5 ads. Key design elements highlighted include centering bold text to stand out, using recognizable colors and fonts, including program details, and featuring transitional graphics consistent with the channel's style. The document aims to identify design strategies that catch viewers' attention and clearly communicate a show's information.
The document discusses conventions of real film magazines and how the author's mock magazine both uses, develops, and challenges some of those conventions. It provides examples of how the author's magazine uses conventions like color schemes and banner placement. It also notes ways it develops conventions, such as adding a QR code. And it challenges conventions by placing the main image at an angle and mixing stylistic elements from different magazines.
The magazine reviewed provides listings of events in London including restaurants, clubs, venues, films, music, and shopping. The target audience is socially active people aged 21-35 who live in London. The magazine is organised with entertainment at the front, then ads, and event listings at the back. Most pages advertise upcoming events and shows. Ads can feature anything from airlines and tech companies to concerts. The magazine is available worldwide and a double page spread costs £8,400.
The document summarizes the key design elements of a music magazine cover and contents page. The cover features a large masthead, full bleed cover image, cover lines in red to grab attention, and main cover line also in red. The contents page has a balance of half images and half text, images have captions, and contents are presented numerically. Overall there is an even balance of imagery and text throughout the magazine.
The document describes conventions for film magazine covers. It provides examples from Empire and Total Film magazines, analyzing similarities and differences in their layouts. These include using prominent images and mastheads, color schemes to indicate genre, and placement of key cover text and promotional lines. It then shows an example cover design for "My Film Magazine" that borrows, develops, and challenges some conventions by combining elements from Empire and Total Film in its layout and design.
The document describes conventions for film magazine covers. It provides examples from Empire and Total Film magazines, analyzing similarities and differences in their layouts. These include placement of the masthead, cover lines, images, and color schemes. It then shows an example cover for a fictional "My Film Magazine," applying conventions from real magazines while also developing and challenging some conventions.
The document summarizes the layout and design of a magazine. It uses various techniques to attract and engage audiences such as placing the masthead prominently, using bold headings and varying font sizes. Color contrasts and close-up images of famous stars are used to draw the reader's eye. The layout aims to create a sense of quality while remaining affordable and accessible to a wide audience through both print and online content. Key details such as air times and program information are presented clearly.
The advertisement promotes a new documentary series airing on BBC One. It features simple text and animation centered on a red background to clearly stand out. It provides the air time, title "BBC One", and informs viewers there is not much additional content beyond the animation and text. The font, graphics, and organization of information are straightforward and commonly seen on BBC advertisements to be recognizable to viewers.
The document provides an analysis of effective Channel 5 TV advertisement designs. It examines the layout, content, font style, graphics, photo manipulation, and organization of information in sample Channel 5 ads. Key design elements highlighted include centering bold text to stand out, using recognizable colors and fonts, including program details, and featuring transitional graphics consistent with the channel's style. The document aims to identify design strategies that catch viewers' attention and clearly communicate a show's information.
The document discusses conventions of real film magazines and how the author's mock magazine both uses, develops, and challenges some of those conventions. It provides examples of how the author's magazine uses conventions like color schemes and banner placement. It also notes ways it develops conventions, such as adding a QR code. And it challenges conventions by placing the main image at an angle and mixing stylistic elements from different magazines.
The magazine reviewed provides listings of events in London including restaurants, clubs, venues, films, music, and shopping. The target audience is socially active people aged 21-35 who live in London. The magazine is organised with entertainment at the front, then ads, and event listings at the back. Most pages advertise upcoming events and shows. Ads can feature anything from airlines and tech companies to concerts. The magazine is available worldwide and a double page spread costs £8,400.
The document summarizes the key design elements of a music magazine cover and contents page. The cover features a large masthead, full bleed cover image, cover lines in red to grab attention, and main cover line also in red. The contents page has a balance of half images and half text, images have captions, and contents are presented numerically. Overall there is an even balance of imagery and text throughout the magazine.
The document describes conventions for film magazine covers. It provides examples from Empire and Total Film magazines, analyzing similarities and differences in their layouts. These include using prominent images and mastheads, color schemes to indicate genre, and placement of key cover text and promotional lines. It then shows an example cover design for "My Film Magazine" that borrows, develops, and challenges some conventions by combining elements from Empire and Total Film in its layout and design.
The document describes conventions for film magazine covers. It provides examples from Empire and Total Film magazines, analyzing similarities and differences in their layouts. These include placement of the masthead, cover lines, images, and color schemes. It then shows an example cover for a fictional "My Film Magazine," applying conventions from real magazines while also developing and challenging some conventions.
The document summarizes the layout and design of a magazine. It uses various techniques to attract and engage audiences such as placing the masthead prominently, using bold headings and varying font sizes. Color contrasts and close-up images of famous stars are used to draw the reader's eye. The layout aims to create a sense of quality while remaining affordable and accessible to a wide audience through both print and online content. Key details such as air times and program information are presented clearly.
The document provides examples of magazine covers and discusses design elements used to attract readers' attention and emphasize important information. Key elements highlighted include using:
1. Bright colors, bold text, and overlapping images to draw the eye to the main feature story.
2. Anchoring text to photos to clearly link the story being told.
3. Layering of stars or characters to build narrative interest and indicate importance.
4. Short, attention-grabbing captions to entice reading the full story.
The magazine uses a bright color scheme and prominent masthead to attract older, loyal viewers interested in weekly television programs. It encourages brand loyalty through its website listed in the masthead and provides value with multiple television program features and images. The largest headline teases a mystery to engage readers in learning more about the main story.
Analysis of Double Page Articles for TV Showsa2columne12
This document analyzes the conventions used in double page spreads for TV show articles. It examines two examples in detail, noting elements like the large headline, prominent central image, secondary imagery, body text formatted in columns, and inclusion of show details. Overall, it finds that both spreads effectively employ common conventions to attract readers' attention and encourage them to watch the shows. The analysis concludes that the spreads demonstrate stylistic choices worth drawing inspiration from for similar promotional articles.
The document describes conventions for film magazine posters and layouts. It analyzes examples from Empire and Total Film magazines, noting similarities and differences in their mastheads, images, color schemes, text placement and overall structures. It then provides an example layout for a fictional film magazine called "My Film Magazine", explaining how it uses, develops and challenges conventions from real magazines like Empire and Total Film.
This document discusses conventions for film magazine covers. It provides examples from Empire and Total Film magazines and analyzes their similarities and differences. These include placement of mastheads, cover lines, images, and color schemes. It then shows an example cover design for "My Film Magazine" that uses conventions from Empire and Total Film but also develops and challenges some conventions.
The document provides an overview of the FSV vehicle, including its market positioning, target consumers, and key design features. It aims the FSV at young middle-class consumers seeking an affordable family sedan that exceeds basic models with its spacious interior and emphasis on comfort, safety, and fuel efficiency. The design discussion covers exterior elements like the headlights and grille that project a powerful yet friendly image, as well as interior aspects such as the central console's elegant two-tone styling. Comparisons are made to the vehicle's FRV predecessor and competitors.
The document discusses television idents for different channels and their design and purpose. It analyzes idents for BBC1, BBC2, ITV, Channel 4, and Channel 5. For BBC1 and BBC2, it notes their simple, calm designs reflect their universal audiences. ITV idents link to shows or time of day. Channel 4 idents are abstract and engaging to match their diverse shows. Channel 5 idents lack a clear identity. It compares opportunities and challenges for BBC1, which must be inclusive, versus Channel 4 appealing to younger audiences. The document evaluates Channel 4 as having the better, more unique idents.
The Centerpointe Church style guide outlines branding elements including:
- The Centerpointe Red color that symbolizes Jesus' blood
- The Centerpointe Church logo that can be one or two colors
- Placement guidelines for the logo in the top or side of materials
- Allowed uses of the logo on apparel, mugs, hats and collateral
- Secondary colors, typefaces and the Centerpointe petal element to maintain branding consistency.
1) The document provides an analysis of the covers of several music magazines, noting design elements like use of color, images, fonts, and organization.
2) Key likes mentioned include the use of celebs to boost interest, eye-catching images, bold fonts, and sub-images with contrasting borders to show organization.
3) Dislikes mentioned include designs that are too complex, reveal too much information, or have too much empty space. Organization and highlighting the most important information is emphasized.
This document discusses and analyzes television idents from different channels in the UK, including BBC1, BBC2, ITV, Channel 4, and Channel 5. It outlines the core purposes of idents, such as branding, identity, and informing viewers. Developments in broadcasting that led to modern channel branding are also examined. The document then analyzes the design, visual elements, intended audiences, and opportunities/limitations of idents from several channels. Specific idents from BBC1, CITV, and BBC4 are compared in more depth.
This magazine cover uses bright colors, multiple images, and dramatic headlines and punctuation to attract readers. It implies value for money with its low price point and promises of multiple stories. The disorganized layout with overlapping images and text creates an "organized chaos" that draws in the eye. In contrast, the other magazine uses a simple color scheme, bold masthead, and sophisticated single starring image to appeal to an older, more loyal audience.
The document provides an evaluation of exam numbers for a storyboard and opening sequence clips, summarizing conventions used and challenged, inspirational films, similarities and differences to real films, representation of stereotypes, and research into film distribution companies. Research showed that Lionsgate owns Mandate Pictures which owns Ghost House Pictures, an appealing option known for thriller and horror films similar to the proposed film.
This document describes the steps taken to recreate a magazine layout in InDesign. It outlines inserting guides and aligning boxes, adding drop caps and text boxes, changing fonts and colors to match the original, and adjusting images and boxes to achieve a final product that closely mirrors the original layout. The process involved setting guides, aligning and sizing boxes, inserting text and images, and fine-tuning spacing and formatting to reconstruct the magazine spread.
This document analyzes and compares two documentaries: "The Right To Be Colourful" by Alexa Ranussi and "The Food Cycle" by Nkechi Chukuwumnawa. For "The Right To Be Colourful", the analysis notes its effective use of visually appealing footage, clever editing, good animation, and interviews. Suggestions for improvement include providing more background on interviewees and including actual public interviews. For "The Food Cycle", inconsistent sound quality and short, awkwardly framed interviews are noted, while transitions could be more creative. Overall, "The Right To Be Colourful" is deemed more clear and effective in its message and production quality.
The document analyzes and provides feedback on two students' opening video sequences for a Year 12 coursework assignment. For Michelle Asafu-Adjaye's sequence, the reviewer notes the effective angle changes and filming style. For Dafne Caldatto's black and white sequence, the reviewer praises the lighting, classic feel from the effect, and how the music matched the theme. Some suggested improvements are reducing background noise in one and better balancing music and dialogue volume in the other.
The document outlines ideas for shooting a scene between two characters discussing an incomplete student work, which leads to a conflict. It considers using techniques like the 180 degree rule, match on action editing, and over the shoulder shots during a conversation at a desk. A breakdown is provided listing 12 shots needed along with the type of shot and description, as well as any props or costumes required.
Assignment 10 group coursework presentation of research draft 2 part 2Abc Abc
The document discusses different types of hegemony including cultural, institutional, and strength hegemony. It then analyzes how hegemony is exercised through various forms of media like television ads, shows, and magazines. The use of stereotypes, unrealistic standards, and lack of audience input and control are some ways hegemony is maintained through different forms of mass media.
Assignment #13 (p4): Group Ancillary Research And Analysismedia_jojo
The advertisement promotes a BBC One channel identity with simple and clear design elements. In three sentences, it summarizes the font, graphics, and organization of information used across BBC One advertisements to create a consistent brand identity and draw viewer attention through minimalist design.
The document provides information on the layout, content, style, graphics, and organization of an effective television channel advertisement. It analyzes advertisements from Channel 4 and ITV, noting design elements like centered bold text to grab attention, recognizable logos and color schemes, manipulation of images and fonts to emphasize key details, and clear organization of time/date/title information. The purpose is to understand best practices for crafting advertisements that are eye-catching and informative to viewers.
Assignment #5 Research Of Newspaper Advertsmedia_jojo
This document provides information about the content and layout of advertisements for BBC One, Channel 4, and Channel 5 television channels. For BBC One ads, the summary is simple with minimal content, a prominent red background, and animation to draw attention. Channel 4 ads feature a different color each time for the most important information, with the logo and show airing time prominently displayed. Channel 5 ads show happy people and a title in large, capitalized font on a bright background to attract viewers' attention.
The magazine reviewed is a London listings magazine called Time Out. It is targeted towards socially active people aged 21-35 living in London. The magazine is organised with entertainment and culture sections upfront, followed by commercial advertisements, and event and show listings at the back. Most pages advertise local events, shows, concerts, films, restaurants and other happenings in London. A full double page advertisement in the magazine costs £8,400.
This print advert was created in Adobe Photoshop to promote the Channel 4 documentary series "Shameless". The background is plain with the Channel 4 logo on the right side of the bold, uncomplicated main image, which is meant to clearly convey the theme of the documentary to potential audiences. Text using conventional sans-serif fonts includes the title, slogan, and scheduling information on a contrasting background to make it noticeable and easy to read.
The document provides examples of magazine covers and discusses design elements used to attract readers' attention and emphasize important information. Key elements highlighted include using:
1. Bright colors, bold text, and overlapping images to draw the eye to the main feature story.
2. Anchoring text to photos to clearly link the story being told.
3. Layering of stars or characters to build narrative interest and indicate importance.
4. Short, attention-grabbing captions to entice reading the full story.
The magazine uses a bright color scheme and prominent masthead to attract older, loyal viewers interested in weekly television programs. It encourages brand loyalty through its website listed in the masthead and provides value with multiple television program features and images. The largest headline teases a mystery to engage readers in learning more about the main story.
Analysis of Double Page Articles for TV Showsa2columne12
This document analyzes the conventions used in double page spreads for TV show articles. It examines two examples in detail, noting elements like the large headline, prominent central image, secondary imagery, body text formatted in columns, and inclusion of show details. Overall, it finds that both spreads effectively employ common conventions to attract readers' attention and encourage them to watch the shows. The analysis concludes that the spreads demonstrate stylistic choices worth drawing inspiration from for similar promotional articles.
The document describes conventions for film magazine posters and layouts. It analyzes examples from Empire and Total Film magazines, noting similarities and differences in their mastheads, images, color schemes, text placement and overall structures. It then provides an example layout for a fictional film magazine called "My Film Magazine", explaining how it uses, develops and challenges conventions from real magazines like Empire and Total Film.
This document discusses conventions for film magazine covers. It provides examples from Empire and Total Film magazines and analyzes their similarities and differences. These include placement of mastheads, cover lines, images, and color schemes. It then shows an example cover design for "My Film Magazine" that uses conventions from Empire and Total Film but also develops and challenges some conventions.
The document provides an overview of the FSV vehicle, including its market positioning, target consumers, and key design features. It aims the FSV at young middle-class consumers seeking an affordable family sedan that exceeds basic models with its spacious interior and emphasis on comfort, safety, and fuel efficiency. The design discussion covers exterior elements like the headlights and grille that project a powerful yet friendly image, as well as interior aspects such as the central console's elegant two-tone styling. Comparisons are made to the vehicle's FRV predecessor and competitors.
The document discusses television idents for different channels and their design and purpose. It analyzes idents for BBC1, BBC2, ITV, Channel 4, and Channel 5. For BBC1 and BBC2, it notes their simple, calm designs reflect their universal audiences. ITV idents link to shows or time of day. Channel 4 idents are abstract and engaging to match their diverse shows. Channel 5 idents lack a clear identity. It compares opportunities and challenges for BBC1, which must be inclusive, versus Channel 4 appealing to younger audiences. The document evaluates Channel 4 as having the better, more unique idents.
The Centerpointe Church style guide outlines branding elements including:
- The Centerpointe Red color that symbolizes Jesus' blood
- The Centerpointe Church logo that can be one or two colors
- Placement guidelines for the logo in the top or side of materials
- Allowed uses of the logo on apparel, mugs, hats and collateral
- Secondary colors, typefaces and the Centerpointe petal element to maintain branding consistency.
1) The document provides an analysis of the covers of several music magazines, noting design elements like use of color, images, fonts, and organization.
2) Key likes mentioned include the use of celebs to boost interest, eye-catching images, bold fonts, and sub-images with contrasting borders to show organization.
3) Dislikes mentioned include designs that are too complex, reveal too much information, or have too much empty space. Organization and highlighting the most important information is emphasized.
This document discusses and analyzes television idents from different channels in the UK, including BBC1, BBC2, ITV, Channel 4, and Channel 5. It outlines the core purposes of idents, such as branding, identity, and informing viewers. Developments in broadcasting that led to modern channel branding are also examined. The document then analyzes the design, visual elements, intended audiences, and opportunities/limitations of idents from several channels. Specific idents from BBC1, CITV, and BBC4 are compared in more depth.
This magazine cover uses bright colors, multiple images, and dramatic headlines and punctuation to attract readers. It implies value for money with its low price point and promises of multiple stories. The disorganized layout with overlapping images and text creates an "organized chaos" that draws in the eye. In contrast, the other magazine uses a simple color scheme, bold masthead, and sophisticated single starring image to appeal to an older, more loyal audience.
The document provides an evaluation of exam numbers for a storyboard and opening sequence clips, summarizing conventions used and challenged, inspirational films, similarities and differences to real films, representation of stereotypes, and research into film distribution companies. Research showed that Lionsgate owns Mandate Pictures which owns Ghost House Pictures, an appealing option known for thriller and horror films similar to the proposed film.
This document describes the steps taken to recreate a magazine layout in InDesign. It outlines inserting guides and aligning boxes, adding drop caps and text boxes, changing fonts and colors to match the original, and adjusting images and boxes to achieve a final product that closely mirrors the original layout. The process involved setting guides, aligning and sizing boxes, inserting text and images, and fine-tuning spacing and formatting to reconstruct the magazine spread.
This document analyzes and compares two documentaries: "The Right To Be Colourful" by Alexa Ranussi and "The Food Cycle" by Nkechi Chukuwumnawa. For "The Right To Be Colourful", the analysis notes its effective use of visually appealing footage, clever editing, good animation, and interviews. Suggestions for improvement include providing more background on interviewees and including actual public interviews. For "The Food Cycle", inconsistent sound quality and short, awkwardly framed interviews are noted, while transitions could be more creative. Overall, "The Right To Be Colourful" is deemed more clear and effective in its message and production quality.
The document analyzes and provides feedback on two students' opening video sequences for a Year 12 coursework assignment. For Michelle Asafu-Adjaye's sequence, the reviewer notes the effective angle changes and filming style. For Dafne Caldatto's black and white sequence, the reviewer praises the lighting, classic feel from the effect, and how the music matched the theme. Some suggested improvements are reducing background noise in one and better balancing music and dialogue volume in the other.
The document outlines ideas for shooting a scene between two characters discussing an incomplete student work, which leads to a conflict. It considers using techniques like the 180 degree rule, match on action editing, and over the shoulder shots during a conversation at a desk. A breakdown is provided listing 12 shots needed along with the type of shot and description, as well as any props or costumes required.
Assignment 10 group coursework presentation of research draft 2 part 2Abc Abc
The document discusses different types of hegemony including cultural, institutional, and strength hegemony. It then analyzes how hegemony is exercised through various forms of media like television ads, shows, and magazines. The use of stereotypes, unrealistic standards, and lack of audience input and control are some ways hegemony is maintained through different forms of mass media.
Assignment #13 (p4): Group Ancillary Research And Analysismedia_jojo
The advertisement promotes a BBC One channel identity with simple and clear design elements. In three sentences, it summarizes the font, graphics, and organization of information used across BBC One advertisements to create a consistent brand identity and draw viewer attention through minimalist design.
The document provides information on the layout, content, style, graphics, and organization of an effective television channel advertisement. It analyzes advertisements from Channel 4 and ITV, noting design elements like centered bold text to grab attention, recognizable logos and color schemes, manipulation of images and fonts to emphasize key details, and clear organization of time/date/title information. The purpose is to understand best practices for crafting advertisements that are eye-catching and informative to viewers.
Assignment #5 Research Of Newspaper Advertsmedia_jojo
This document provides information about the content and layout of advertisements for BBC One, Channel 4, and Channel 5 television channels. For BBC One ads, the summary is simple with minimal content, a prominent red background, and animation to draw attention. Channel 4 ads feature a different color each time for the most important information, with the logo and show airing time prominently displayed. Channel 5 ads show happy people and a title in large, capitalized font on a bright background to attract viewers' attention.
The magazine reviewed is a London listings magazine called Time Out. It is targeted towards socially active people aged 21-35 living in London. The magazine is organised with entertainment and culture sections upfront, followed by commercial advertisements, and event and show listings at the back. Most pages advertise local events, shows, concerts, films, restaurants and other happenings in London. A full double page advertisement in the magazine costs £8,400.
This print advert was created in Adobe Photoshop to promote the Channel 4 documentary series "Shameless". The background is plain with the Channel 4 logo on the right side of the bold, uncomplicated main image, which is meant to clearly convey the theme of the documentary to potential audiences. Text using conventional sans-serif fonts includes the title, slogan, and scheduling information on a contrasting background to make it noticeable and easy to read.
This print advert was created in Adobe Photoshop to promote the Channel 4 documentary "Shameless". The background is plain with the Channel 4 logo on the right side of the main image, which is bold and uncomplicated to clearly convey the theme of the documentary to potential audiences. The colors and professional but dull background of the image also reflect the themes of "Shameless" while the slogan and title use the typical font and formatting conventions for Channel 4 adverts to stand out.
The document discusses evaluating the effectiveness of combining a main product with ancillary tasks. It describes choosing e4 as the broadcasting channel to target younger audiences and using the channel's style guide to create a consistent color scheme. Examples are given of billboard posters created for a fictional soap that follow the conventions of the style guide. The products and tasks are considered effective because they feature the same characters and apply the forms and conventions of existing soaps while maintaining a consistent color scheme and style.
This document provides an introduction to Channel 4's style guide for creating factual program inserts. It discusses key elements Channel 4 looks for in promotional materials like unique fonts, consistent color schemes, prominent logos and how templates can be used to follow the style guide requirements. Examples are given of how images, colors and fonts were selected from Channel 4 templates to create a factual insert that adheres to the network's branding guidelines.
This document provides an introduction to Channel 4's style guide for creating factual program inserts. It discusses key elements Channel 4 looks for in promotional materials such as unique fonts, consistent color schemes, prominent logos and positioning, and using representative imagery. The document also shows examples of how these style elements have been applied in fictional Channel 4 inserts created by the author as a template to develop their own factual insert promotional material.
The document provides an evaluation of a magazine mock-up called "Teen Buzz". It summarizes that:
1) The masthead uses eye-catching colors and typography to target young female readers and promote a theme of pop music.
2) The front page image of a young female band further targets this demographic and expands on the pop music theme.
3) Consistent colors, layout, and typography are used throughout the mock-up, including the masthead, strapline, and contents page, to clearly convey the target audience and theme.
The magazine cover uses bright, contrasting colors like red, yellow, black and white to attract a younger demographic. A fun photograph of the featured band The Wombats is used as the main image to appeal to younger/teenage readers. The magazine masthead is prominently displayed in the top left corner following the Guttenberg design principle to make the magazine instantly recognizable.
The magazine cover uses bright, contrasting colors like red, yellow, black and white to attract a younger demographic. A fun photograph of the featured band The Wombats is used as the main image to appeal to younger/teenage readers. The magazine masthead is prominently displayed in the top left corner following the Guttenberg design principle to make the magazine instantly recognizable.
This document contains drafts 1 through 5 of a double page newspaper advertisement spread. Each draft is a variation of the advertisement with the same basic elements - a double page spread for a newspaper advert.
Assignment #12 (iiiii) (p1)planning for documentaryAbc Abc
This document outlines the structure for a documentary series and individual episodes examining social media and its influence. The series introduction would discuss how social media controls information and different media platforms. Individual episodes would focus on topics like censorship, the evolution of the internet, and algorithms tailoring search results. Each episode follows a similar structure of introduction, beginning, middle, and end sections. Public interviews, animations, and expert analysis are incorporated throughout to explore how social media both promotes democracy and acts as a tool of control.
The document summarizes feedback from 4 people ages 16-24 on a documentary about social media control. They were asked about their impressions, the main message, interest in future episodes, whether sound/music fit the topic, and effectiveness of the presenter. Overall, responses were positive with the main message seen as debate around social media's influence.
The document summarizes feedback from 4 people ages 16-24 on a documentary about social media control. They were asked about their impressions, the main message, interest in future episodes, whether the sound/music fit, and effectiveness of the presenter. Overall, responses were positive with the main message seen as debate around social media's influence.
Assignment 11 similar products, conventions & channel timeAbc Abc
The document outlines the conventions and channels being explored for a documentary. It discusses exploring Channel 5, its documentaries and sister channels 5* and 5USA. Channel 5 documentaries are unique and inform audiences without trying to impress a specific group. The document also explores conventions like introducing experts and using titles/animation. It examines the channels BBC One, Channel 4 and their target audiences and popular shows.
The document summarizes feedback from 4 people ages 16-24 on a documentary about social media control. They were asked about their impressions, the main message, interest in future episodes, whether sound/music fit the topic, and effectiveness of the presenter. Overall, responses were positive with the main message seen as debate around social media's influence.
The document summarizes feedback from 4 people ages 16-24 on a documentary about social media control. They were asked about their impressions, the main message, interest in future episodes, whether sound/music fit the topic, and effectiveness of the presenter. Overall, responses were positive with the main message seen as debate around social media's influence.
The document summarizes feedback from 4 people ages 16-24 on an ancillary draft for a documentary. When asked about the documentary topic based on the image, responses included technology taking over minds, the internet controlling society, and people becoming cyborgs or consumed by computers. Regarding watching the documentary, one said yes due to the alarming image while another said no due to lack of interest in online sites. On layout, one liked the continuing mouse while another said it was dull. Regarding the image relating to the topic, one recognized the Twitter page while others said no or it was misleading regarding cyborgs.
The document summarizes feedback from 4 people ages 16-24 on an ancillary document for a documentary. They were asked questions about what they thought the documentary was about based on the image and text, if the design caught their eye, and if the image related to the topic. Responses showed they thought it was about technology/internet control or cyborgs/robots based on the image of a person with a wire attached to their head. Opinions varied on if the design caught their eye and if the image related to the topic of social media.
The document summarizes feedback from 4 people ages 16-24 on a documentary about social media control. They were asked about their impressions, the main message, interest in future episodes, relevance of sound/music, and effectiveness of the presenter. Overall, the feedback was positive with respondents finding the topic current, presentation style engaging, and interest in learning more.
The document summarizes feedback from 4 people ages 16-24 on a documentary based on ancillary texts and an image. Overall, they thought the documentary would be about technology and social media overtaking society based on the image of a person connected to a computer by wires and blood, though some felt the image was misleading. Their opinions on watching it and the design were mixed.
The document summarizes feedback from 4 people ages 16-24 on an ancillary draft for a documentary. When asked about the documentary topic based on the image, responses included technology taking over minds, the internet controlling society, and people becoming cyborgs or consumed by computers. Regarding watching it, one said yes due to the alarming image while another said no due to lack of interest in online sites. On layout, one liked the mouse continuing to the end while another said it was dull. Regarding the image relating to the topic, one recognized the Twitter page while others said no or it was misleading regarding cyborgs.
The document summarizes feedback from 4 people ages 16-24 on an ancillary draft for a documentary. When asked about the documentary topic based on the image, responses included technology taking over minds, the internet controlling society, and people becoming cyborgs or consumed by computers. Regarding watching it, one said yes due to the alarming image while another said no due to lack of interest in online sites. On layout, one liked the mouse continuing to the end while another said it was dull. Regarding the image relating to the topic, one recognized the Twitter page while others said no or it was misleading regarding cyborgs.
Assignment 4 – analysis of tv documentary 2Abc Abc
The documentaries being compared are Catfish and Lifers. Catfish documents filmmakers' online friendship that leads to unexpected discoveries, while Lifers provides insight into life sentences in prison. Both documentaries use conventions like handheld footage, titles/credits, and interviews. Catfish develops the convention of supporting images through only showing the subject through photographs. Lifers uses ominous background music to set the tone.
Target audience research for documentary topicAbc Abc
The document discusses targeting a younger audience aged 25-35 for a documentary series about a social media topic. It notes that this age group is the most active on social media based on statistics, so they would be most interested in a topic concerning social media. Additionally, the younger generation has generally embraced social networking more than older generations, so the documentary will aim to engage this key target audience.
The document discusses concepts related to social media and control. It suggests that social media breaks traditional media chains of control, but also subtly invites people in and exerts control over how they express themselves. Various visual concepts are presented, such as strings holding shadows to represent subtle control and a blue hand gripping expression to symbolize Facebook's influence over what people say.
Filming took place on location inside Westfield Shopping Centre and outside the BBC studio. The film crew shot footage of the presenter walking outside the studio and filmed presenter parts inside the shopping centre. During filming, the script holder had to help Kaya read her lines from the script as they were too long to memorize.
The group had previously chosen a park as the filming location for their documentary on social media, but realized a park did not relate well to their topic. They decided to research more effective locations. Potential locations included Camden Town, Oxford Street, Hyde Park, and Covent Garden. Camden Town and Hyde Park were narrowed down as choices because they are well-known areas frequented by youth where socializing is common. Camden Town was ultimately selected because of its urban setting and many social places popular with youth.
Filming for the final draft of a documentary took place on location. Shots were captured of the presenter Joanne establishing the context of the documentary. Additional shots were filmed of people using phones to further set the scene. Various camera angles and shots were taken to make the establishing shots more interesting and compelling.
The document discusses plans for draft 3 of a double page spread and newspaper advert exploring the subtle control of social media. For the double page spread, shadow strings will be drawn onto an image instead of using actual ropes. This is to emphasize how social media control is subtle and unseen. For the newspaper advert, the plan is to create an image of a person with a computer screen for a head. Details are also provided on editing the images, actors, costumes, props, and location.
4. Who is target audience?
The paper predominately focuses on stories largely revolving
around celebrities, sport, and news and gossip about popular
television programmes, such as soap operas and reality TV
shows.
This suggests more of a female target audience as they are
typically associated as having an interest in the lives of
celebrities and gossip.
5. How is the newspaper organised/structured?
Start
• Full News • Latest News • Celeb News • Offers & Lottery
• Sport • T.V. • Living • Reviews • Dating
Finish
6. Where is it available?
• The UK • Arizona • Lebanon • Bangladesh • Louisiana
9. Layout Design – ‘BBC One’
With clear information
Its on a simple temple with a in white to stand out
prominent red background from the background
10. Content – ‘BBC One’
Their is not a lot of content just simple text with a
background and some animation around the words
11. Style Of Font – ‘BBC One’
This font is ‘Calibri
(Headings)’ which is
clear nothing fancy
which is quite
common on The ‘One’ is also
‘Microsoft Word’ ‘Calibri
implying anyone can (Headings)’ the
watch bold reminds the
views what
channel its on as
The BBC logo is the same BBC has many
style as the rest only in sister Channels
capitals and blocks to
resemble their logo
12. Style Of Graphics – ‘BBC One’
The dark
shading in the
The animation of corners
the circle catches draw's your
you attention attention to
straight away the centre of
the ad
16. Layout Design
Text is centred
and bold in the
advert – to be
most prominent
and obvious to
viewer
Rule of Thirds used whereby
its clear at the top, the middle
is text, and the bottom is the
rose (landscape)
17. Content
Text to inform
the date, time
and series to be
on channel 5
As on all, Blurred background of Focuses shot of a
Advertises the ‘the bachelor’ trying to rose highly
channel website hold the door shut of significant in the
girls on the other side series
18. Style of Font
Colours are
white and red
conventional to
channel 5 so its
recognisable and
it’s the colour of
their logo
Faded into the Font is in capitals and bold –
background shows were conventional of Channel 5 so
you can watch it online – its recognisable
its not to visible because To grab attention and evident
series hasn’t started yet to viewers
19. Style of Graphics
From this point,
The screen does a ‘twirl’
like graphic which all
channel 5 adverts have and
changes logo to fit a rose
They do this because it’s a
recurring series on Channel 5 so
they while its long-awaited they
can great anticipation for the
series as it features between all
adverts as well – constantly
reminding of the programme
20. Photo Manipulation
The photo is
quite white –
which is
considered the
colour of
perfection –
possibly to
symbolise the
bachelor
There is deep focus on the rose while the stem
and background of ‘the bachelor’ is blurred.
Channel 5 do this on most of their adverts on the
prominent feature of the programme
21. Organisation of Information
Information is
always the same
on Channel 5
adverts
#1 – Time &
Date
#2 – Title
#3 – What it is
The Channel website
always shows on the
bottom left of the screen
22. Layout Design
Text is centred
and bold in the
advert – to be
most prominent
and obvious to
viewer
Rule of Thirds used whereby
the face takes up 2/3 of the
screen from the right
(landscape)
23. Content
Text to inform
the date, time
and series to be
on channel 5
Background is all focused so
As on all, the audience can see the
Advertises the channel detail of the fake face – so
website audience can be fascinated by
documentary’
24. Style of Font
Colours are
white and red
conventional to
channel 5 so its
recognisable and
it’s the colour of
their logo
Same font used to Font is in capitals and bold –
advertise website on conventional of Channel 5 so
bottom its recognisable
To grab attention and evident
to viewers
25. Style of Graphics
From this point,
The screen does a ‘twirl’
like graphic which all
channel 5 adverts have
Then transforms into a
channel 5 logo –
This programme doesn’t
have a tailored logo
because it’s a one-off
documentary
26. Photo Manipulation
The edged of the
screen are blurred
while the facial
features are
focused to
emphasise the
detail and quality
of ‘making faces’
The background surrounding the face is really
blue which is clinical, enforcing that scientific
element in the documentary
27. Organisation of Information
Information is
always the same
on Channel 5
adverts
#1 – Time &
Date
#2 – Title
#3 – What it is
The Channel website
always shows on the
bottom left of the screen