Monday, 25 April 2011

Evaluation

I am very happy with my result as I feel that I have worked hard to complate the tasks, before the year I ahd never even used a mac before, so a few months later to produce this kind of work is something that I am really happy about.

Genre is the placement of media texts into categorises based on their style and conventions, for example the film “Shaun of the Dead” could be classified as both a horror film and also a comedy and thus making this film a hybrid, as David Bordwell notes " any theme may appear in the genre". Genre is extremely important when producing a media text in order to make it obvious who the audience is and what the purpose of the text is for example to entertain or to provide information. I created a media text, the genre of which was a local newspaper for the people of Southend; more specifically it was about the sport in Southend. My target audience therefore was people who lived in Southend and were interested in sport and more specifically the sport in Southend, I made the lexis of the newspaper easy to read as that way the target audience can be expanded as many people would be able to read and understand what was being said. To make my newspaper successful I looked at various other newspapers such as the Sun owned by Rupert Murdoch and looked at the codes and conventions within it, such as a masthead, structured in columns and many stories per page. Codes and conventions such as these, we as an audience expect to see within the newspaper genre ad that is how we identify it with that genre.  Codes and conventions are very important to identify genre as expressed through John Fiske’s view that” there is no audience, only individuals with varying taste.

Conventions that I put into my newspaper that would be seen within a newspaper such as the Sun are; headlines, at least one image per page and a masthead. The connotations of a genre can be effective, giving the sub-culture a sense of identity, as Richard Jenkins said “with ought it (identity), social life is unimaginable”. On the front page I had two stories, one of which was about Football the other about Cricket. The clothing in both images in terms of colour are clear to the reader that these pictures are genuinely about Football and Cricket, therefore allowing consumers an easy link to which to identify the genre. Like most papers I decided that my text should be formal as that way it makes it seem more like a newspaper and the audience again can identify it to the genre. Like other newspapers my newspaper also had the characteristic of adverts, this is a commonly used characteristic within the genre as part of the purpose of a newspaper is to advertise other medias, which is where they get some of their of their financing from, a technique known as Bricolage in which that other medias such as magazines and websites use a similar technique in order to get their view or point across to the reader. David Buckingham would argue that genre is constantly developing and changing through negotiation and change. As our society changes so does genre, for example if their was a War in the country you  would see a lot more news published on that genre as it is happening now and is something that society can relate to. We can thereofre say that the popularity of a genre depends on how it relfects on society.

I feel that my newspaper does follow the conventions of its genre, as it has similar conventions to a newspaper and is structured in the same way i.e. in columns. I made my text in a serif font, which the consumer can again identify to the genre as a serif typeface is traditionally used for the main body of text whilst a sans-serif font is used of the masthead which again can be identified within my newspaper. I think that if I did it again I would put more colour within my newspaper as I feel that parts of I don’t stand out enough such as the adverts on the side, however in a typical newspaper the colour is mainly found within a large image and the name of the newspaper. However I feel that my construction of the genre is effective as when reading you can feel escapism as form of construction, and you can easily identify the genre by its layout and what its purpose is because of this I think that it represents the genre well. It is hard to find textx which are exceptions to any given definition of a particular genre. There are no "rigid rules of inclusion and exclusion" (Gledhill). Particular features which are characteristic of a genre are not normally unique to it; it is their relative prominence, combination and functions which are distinctive (Neale).

Narrative

Media texts rely on cultural experiences in order for audiences to easily make sense of narratives. I used both conventional and experimental approaches when constructing my website, by using different programmes in order to make parts of the website and get the final piece completed. My website like my newspaper is aimed at those who are interested in sport and more specifically sport in Southend.
Narrative is the story and the plot of a media text. There are many different narratives such as; open, closed, linear, non-linear, single stranded and multi stranded. The narrative of my website is fairly closed as most questions that a viewer would want answering are answered such as; who, what, when, where. This is fairly conventional of a website as a viewer or reader would look on a website for answers for example people use Google to find answers as that is Google’s purpose. Some websites however are closed, for example a travel website doesn’t have all the questions answered until someone expresses or determines where they will be travelling to, for how long, how they’ll get there etc. My website follows a linear narrative as it is structured in a specific order, for example it has a masthead, a picture and then text about the same story, this is the same structure that my website follows throughout, therefore the reader can identify the structure and can predict where certain information will be placed or what the story is about and therefore making sense to the viewer, therefore not making the website non-linear as it isn’t out of order and doesn’t have things such as flashbacks which websites for television programmes may as well as websites such as BBC Sport as they cover news that as already happened as well as the latest news. Therefore you could say that my approach was experimental but also in some website’s cases conventional. The narrative of my website is also multi-stranded as there are more than one story per page and there are several stories within one story, for example my story about Athletics involves different clubs points, who won, and an ex-professional athlete. This narrative is fairly conventional within stories in BBC Sport as well as news programmes, but may not be seen within a poster for example, this is why I think that my website develops the forms and conventions within real media products.
George Landlow in Hypertext 2.0 uses Roland Barthe’s term lexia to prose links supplemental narrative discourse. As links, they allow the readers to switch instantaneously out of any particular passage and link up with something else, perhaps more significantly they give the reader/viewer the opportunity to choose to go to any link within a website, a technique that I used several times within my newspaper, you can therefore say that is similar to real media products. I used the planning side of my newspaper which I developed into a blog to make it more easy to follow to compare and look at the different forms and conventions within a website, this way I knew what kind of things to put in, I could then choose from that list what conventions to put forward into my own website, thus making it similar to a real website whilst also making it unique as I could decide what to put on the website, where it should be placed, and distribute it to an audience. Whilst doing this I could get relevant feedback from teachers and fellow students so that both myself and the other could learn about what other people have done uniquely and what they have kept similar, this way from looking at other peoples work I can evaluate my own work and then attempt to improve it my applying similar things to my own to improve my website whilst still making it efficient. Barthes and Chatman argue for a distinction between constituent events (events that lead the story forward) and supplementary events (not neccessary for the story which is important for meaning and the imapct of the narrative such as the colour scheme for my website or the font of the headline or masthead, which often carries the "message". Through the ages a story may remain the same (Dr.Faust), but different versions although some elements persisit.
I have learnt from different people's feedback that some people like certain things wehereas others don't, you theroegfre can't plaease every kind of audence, this is why though there is a more dominant kind of newspaper or media, there will never a time where everyone likes the same films, websites, music, newspapers hence why there is more than one media. I thereofre used media technologies in the construction and research during the planning and evealuating stages to try and intertes as many people as possible to create a larger audience, one of the problems I had in doing this is that it is meant to be a local newspaper and is aimed at those in Southend, it therefore doesn't effect or really intertest anyone out of that area, people in Manchester for example wouldn't read my newspaper as what is in the newspaaper doesn't effect them. By not making my newspaper daily makes the newspaper more interesting as they have to wait for it to come out, if there has been no sport in southend on one day then there is nopthing to write or inform people about, with this happening often raders will wnat to read another newspaer which informs them every day. By researching different medias I could easily find out wat an audience expect to see in each media, in doing this I could easily identif what to put in my media to make it conventional whilst also making it unique so that it doesn't seem like a na ordinary newspaper. By doing this I feel that I made the combination of my main product and accialry textxs effectievas they are both conventional and different to other example sof media texts, they are informative, colourful, easy to understand with a simple lexis, syntax and sentence structure, they involve things like competitions and in my opinion are interesting and have information that a reader would want to know about a specific story.





Time keeping

Below is the plan I made to so that I could keep track of what work I had done and what I still had to do, in using this I managed to jeep my time effectively as I had a plan of what to do next and made it simple so that I had enough time to do each part of the work.


September 2010
Decide what genre of newspaper will be about. Basic Structure for first page of newspaper. Find images. Begin planning and researching examples of poster, newspaper and website.
September 2010
Begin putting together first page of newspaper
October 2010
Finish first page of newspaper and begin second
October 2010
Finish second page of newspaper
November 2010
Begin thinking of ideas for poster, make sure that newspaper pages 1 and 2 are completed
November 2010
Begin constructing poster
December 2010
Finish poster
December 2010
Make sure that poster is finished, begin making structure of first page of website-images
January 2011
Begin constructing first page of website
January 2011
Finish first page of website
February 2011
Begin second page of website
February 2011
Finish second page of website
March 2011
Make sure that poster newspaper and website is completed. Continue with planning and researching blog.
March 2011
Planning and Research Blog
April 2011
Finish Planning and Research for Blog and begin Evaluating
April 2011
Evaluation-Blog


Friday, 8 April 2011

Work








Website-Feedback

Good
Bad
Very clear and precise viewing
Some of the pictures are not edited properly
Good use of colour scheme (house style)
Text is quite small
Good variation of pictures i.e. different types photos, clipart
Could use more hyperlinks
Excellent proportion of text and images
Repeats a picture
Good interactive features
Background is plain



Poster-Feedback

Good
Bad
Different
unsure as to relevance of background image
attractive to reader
simple-bit boring
simple-easy to understand
Table Tennis-minority sport
shows a variety of sport-shows what the newspaper is about
use same image twice-boot
Good slogan
Make word sport stand out more-even more clear as to genre
link to Southend United’s colours-blue
Nothing about cost or how often it is distributed
link to find out more information
Small text in bottom right hand corner








Newspaper-Feedback

Good
Bad
Colourful
bit original to other newspapers
Conventions of a newspaper
Images take up a lot of space
lots of information
Some gaps where text could go
good use of layout

barely any space left

set up in columns

good images-fits with stories

easy to understand

Good masthead

Thursday, 31 March 2011

Conventions of a poster



This is a poster advertising the film Pirates Of the Caribbean- Curse Of the Black Pearl. It has s large title which is eye catching,with bold colors which stand out because of the contrast with the relatively dark background. It has an intriguing picture which attracts the viewer to the film, the poster uses persuasive language in order to persuade the audience to go and watch the film by having big hollywood Stars on the poster such as Johnny Depp. It uses the rule of thirds well as it splits the poster into three so tat the audience can look at each section bit by bit in order to gain whatever information they want and to see what the film is all about. It also splits the villains and heroes into three, the two people on the left look like heroes, and the two on the right being the man and the skeleton look evil and balances out the good vs evil situation with one man in the middle suggesting that he is neither a hero or a villain.

Newspapers- categories


All newspapaers typically meet the following four criteria:
  • Publicity- its contents are reliable and accessible to the public
  • Currency- its information is both valid and up to date
  • Periodicity- Its published at regular intervals
  • Universality- It covers a range of different and new topics e.g sport and travel


Most newspapers are aimed at a broad spectrum of readers, usually geographically defined, some focus on a certain age group or a certain group of readers as defined by what interests them. Newspapers are categorised by how often they are published, for example they could be weekly or daily.

Daily
A daily newspaper is issued every day, sometimes with the exception of national holidays or Sundays. Saturday and Sunday editions tend to be larger and include more specialised sections such as adverts or certain stories. Generally the staff of the newspaper work monday to Friday, so the paper largely depends on the news during the working days of the week as well as what the news was on the Sunday which they can then publish on a Monday for example a natural disaster or a big story within sport. Most newspapers are published in the morning, this way the public have a longer period in order to buy and read the newspaper, and may want to read it on the train to work for example. Afternoon or evening papers are aimed more at office workers and commuters.

Weekly
Weekly newspapers are fairly common and tend to be smaller newspapers, which may be a big weakness of a weekly newspaper as the daily newspaper will provide a lot more stories and information and so people would rather read a daily newspaper in order to read and find out as much information as possible as to what is happening around the world.

National
Most nations have at least one newspaper that circulates throughout the entire country, a national newspaper as contrasted to a local newspaper serving a city or region. In the UK there are numerous national newspapers including, The Independent, The Daily Telegraph, The Times and The Guardian. Large metropolitan newspapers have also expanded distribution networks and with effort can be found outside their normal area.

Thursday, 3 March 2011

Newspapers


A newspaper is a regularly scheduled publication containing information, news, gossip and advertising. By 2007 there were 6580 daily newspapers in the world selling 395 million copies a day. Newspapers generally publish stories on local and national events such as celebrities, sport events, festivals, strange happenings. Newspapers are generally structured in columns, with lots of text providing detailed reliable information as well as generally at least one image to go with the story, this is the part of the story that leaps out at the reader influencing them to read it. other features of a newspaper include; cartoons/comics, advertising, television listings and inserts from local companies and businesses trying to sell a product. Typically the main story is on the front whilst the back pages consist of sporting events that have recently taken place and sporting news. Newspapers share links with other types of media such as the internet and television, there are conventions of a website that can be found in a newspaper such as a web address, hyperlinks, similar format of information and possibly the same image, this is known as bricolage. There are lots of stories within a newspaper there could be as many as 100 stories or even more found inside, as there are generally around two or three stories on each page with around 60 pages per newspaper.

website- bbc sport

This website follows the conventions of other websites as it has the following characteristics;
  • links
  • back-links
  • uploads
  • website address
  • hyperlinks
  • a strap-line
  • a header
  • images
  • video/s
  • advertising