Monday 2 April 2012

documentary codes and convetions

Half tone mum - worlds heaviest woman
This documentary is about a woman who weighs half a tone.

codes and conventions 
  • interviews 
  • voice over
  • image or video
  • theme
  • music
  • archive material
  • narrative voice 
Interview
in the documentary there is a short interview which allows the interviewer to ask the interviewee questions about their life. the interviewee answers and tells us how she lives on a day to day basis.

voice over
The voice over/narrator informs us as an audience of factual detailed information. By using a voice over, it gives more detailed information rather than the people being interviewed explaining and giving us statistical data to back up the points that are being discussed. It is used a coherence to make the story flow and tie all the elements together, making it more interesting and having a stable storyline.





 



    Thursday 29 March 2012

    homework

    Accuracy
    When professional market researchers ask their clients how accurate any data should be, the answer is often such as very accurate or as accurate as possible. However accuracy, at least where fieldwork is involved, has a price and as a general rule, increases in accuracy not only cost more but cost disproportionately more.

    A high level of accuracy is not always needed to meet the overall research objective. If a company is entering a new market, where common sense and observation tells us the market is huge, there may be little point in spending lots of money closely measuring its size. An approximation will do and the money saved may be better spent on some other information need.

    Balance
    Companies must regularly review all principal fixed assets – tangible and intangible – to ensure that the balance sheet offers a reasonable valuation. The value of an asset may fall because of many adverse events or conditions, such as obsolescence or damage, initiatives by competitors, or significant and permanent changes in the marketplace. These are referred to as “impairment factors”. In the UK, when goodwill or any other fixed asset is being written off over more than 20 years, it must be reviewed for impairment each year. At the end of the first year following an acquisition, companies must review the associated goodwill for impairment.

    Objectivity
    objectivity and balance, disparages private ownership of media, and is fundamentally in the business of changing the political system. Because the underlying Marxist theory is based on a radical change of the entire political and information system, it is difficult to discuss empirically real – as opposed to imagined or theoretical – media effects on the individual.

    Subjectivity
    Evaluation is also connected to the notion of subjectivity (derived from Benveniste’s 1966/1971 observations on subjective features of language and introduced by Lyons 1977 into Anglo-American linguistics). Although there are now many competing views of subjectivity, broadly speaking, it is defined as being concerned with self-expression, i.e. the expression of the speaker’s attitudes, beliefs, feelings, emotions, judgement, will, personality, etc. (Lyons 1982: 103, 110). Studies of subjectivity are usually concerned with three aspects of language: (1) the speaker’s perspective as shaping linguistic expression; (2) the speaker’s expression of affect towards the propositions contained in utterances; (3) the speaker’s expression of the modality or epistemic status of the propositions contained in utterances (Finegan 1995: 4). In particular, studies of subjectivity are often concerned with ‘the notion of the “subject” from the point of view of its incarnation as self, as speaker, and as grammatical subject.


    Opinion
    News journalists are not the only members of the media who influence public opinion. For example, it has been suggested that US talk-show host Oprah Winfrey is more influential in Canada than all Canadian newscasters combined. The fact that the US Cattle Producers Association chose to sue her for comments made about beef illustrates the degree to which it respects her ability to sway the public. In Canada, media personalities such as hockey commentator Don Cherry also evoke strong opinions. Cherry


    Any number of public opinion polls have indicated that the public rely on and, more important, trust the news media to provide information on public policy issues.

    Bias
    Data is at once a ‘discovery’ and an ‘invention’. When a dichotomy is established between these facets, discovery and invention, a bias can be introduced into the construction of theory. Researchers who, in an effort to maintain absolute objectivity, decide to limit data to ‘discoveries’ can, by deliberately avoiding a part of the data they consider to be too subjective, limit the creative part of their research.

    Representation
    The significance of representation, specifically mass media representation, lies in its relationship to power, a relationship that bell hooks explores in her books Yearning: Race, Gender, and Cultural Politics, and Black Looks: Race and Representation. hooks discusses the critical role media representations play in shaping people’s perceptions of themselves and others, 5 and she ties specific representations of race to the perpetuation of unequal power relation.
    Privacy
    Privacy and human rights are now fundamental to journalistic practice. Though an individual’s right to privacy has long been enshrined in various other legal systems, it is important to note that, in English law, there is, as yet, no such right. In France – famed for its strict privacy laws – the tort of privacy was first recognised as far back as 1858 (‘Declaration of the Rights of Man’) 1 and was added to the Civil Code in 1970. 2 The United States has the ‘Bill of Rights’ and the ‘liberty’ clause of the 14th amendment, granting individuals anonymity rights in terms of ‘intimacy’ and ‘solitude’. 3 Art. 10 of the German constitution enshrines privacy in the words, ‘letters, post, and telecommunications shall be inviolable’ and, in 1983, the Federal Constitutional Court, in a case against a government census law, formally acknowledged an individual’s ‘right of informational self-determination’, which is limited by the ‘predominant public interest.

    Monday 26 March 2012

    documetary



    preps and equipment: camera, tripod, lights,  chairs and a football

    locations: office, corridor and classroom 

    camera angles: the head shot or close up (down to the shoulders)

    risk assessment: risk assessments are important because it prevents an accident or injury from happening
    in the office there are many loose items/objects for example wires. we will either record away from the objects or move them away.
    we will have to make sure that there are no wires or any unnecessary items in the way. we will need to fix up a time for the shots in the corridor otherwise we will have youngsters in the back round.

    Thursday 26 January 2012

    the documentary is about 4 guys looking to make a new film within the sports they do.
    way back hime movie: 12 million views.
    danny mckaakill

    hans rey 

    paul blue joseph

    storm volume 1, movie

    interviews: asks about how they got involved in the sports and why, ask about their childhood and what they're looking to make out if it.
    this is more of a participatory documentary and a bit of reflexive documentary because it shows the whole process of the film making and shows how they draw attention on their own constructedness 

    towards the end they all come make a collab.

    free running, skate boarding, BMX and other tipes of cycling on different types of terrains

    the director of this documentary is Stu Thomas 

    Monday 10 October 2011

    risk assessment:
    risk assessments are important because it prevents an accident or injury happening.

    One of our locations for the shoot is at a barber shop. There are many dangerous and loose wires in the barbers including dangerous equipment like blades, this could cause a serious injury. A way to prevent this from happening is by moving the wires and equipment out the way and making sure they don't interfere with the people working around the area.

    chairs and tables:
    in the barber shop, there are a few chairs and tables for those waiting to have a hair cut. These items could cause a serious injury. to prevent this from happening, there should be a safety check before the video to make sure everything is in place and not in the way of the cameraman and the rest of the crew.

    green screen and classroom:
    Another one of our locations is in a drama classroom in school. In the class there are many items in the classroom such as chairs, tables and wires that could cause injuries. A way to prevent injuries from happening is by moving all this stuff out the way and away from the crew and the recording space.

    Safety check:
    before recording there should be a safety check. a safety checks puts everything in place 

     

    Monday 3 October 2011

    We will be making a video to the tune star boy written by Mavado, Sneakbo and Chipmunk.

    this is more of a performance song:
    we will be performing this tune and we each have a part in it.


    Setting/location:
    we look to do it at a friends studio and different areas around Coventry.

    through out our video we will be having different types of shots