Monday, 27 January 2014

Task 11 Production Log Evaluation


Pre-production:

Before shooting the actual music video with my partner Damilola, i had to do something called Pre-production. this is when you plan out the storyboard, camera angles, who will be in your music video and most importantly what your music will be about.

Stages

Step 1: Choosing your track

For your final production, it can be a mistake to go for something too well known as the image of the original will always be hanging over you, particularly the image of the artist. There is plenty of material available; you can create an image from scratch with your own performers adopting the role of the band.

The other things are to choose a track which stimulates some visuals and which isn't too long. Three minutes for a music video is enough of a challenge, so don't go for some five minute epic- you'll struggle to sustain it for the viewer.

Step 2: Write a treatment

A treatment is your pitch for the track, with a suggestion of what your 'concept' might be. It needs to be clear, workable and realistic in what you aim to do. If your idea is too elaborate, more can go wrong and you'll only be disappointed! After doing so, you get feedback on this from your teacher and fellow students and then review it in the light of their comments.

Step 3: Do lots of research

You should be looking at real music videos from the same genre of music as your own, not to copy them slavishly but to get a sense of what the conventions are. look closely at them and break them down to see how they work. How do they use verse and chorus? how do they use the beat and rhythm? how do they showcase the star? How much do the visuals relate to the lyrics? what's the concept?
You should also look at student videos to identify strengths you can draw upon and weaknesses you can avoid. here are a couple- what works and what doesn't?

For this stage I researched a lot of Bruno Mars' songs


Step 4: Plan for everything

Storyboard as much of it as possible

It might be tempting not to bother with storyboards but it is a mistake if you do so. You need a visual plan for your work as it won't just happen when you have a camera in your hand! I would recommend using post-its for constructing a storyboard, as you can move the frames around and change the order easily. Once you have done the storyboard, the next step is to turn it into an animatic, which quite literally involves taking a photo of each frame (on your phones or a webcam, nothing fancy) and then dropping the frames onto the timeline of your digital editing program. You can then cut them to length, in time with your music on the audio line and then export the whole thing as an animatic- a moving storyboard. Here's one of the first thirty seconds of a video...

The other crucial aspect of planning is logistics. This involves production management skills, thinking ahead to everything that could possibly go wrong on your shoot and to every little detail of what you will need. Nothing should be left to chance- costumes, props, locations, camera equipment and people all need orgnaising. Don't have your actors just wearing any old clothes- plan what they will wear; don't rely on someone else remembering particular props, have a list of who is bringing what. For a music video, the instruments are props, so don't forget them! Don't assume everyone will simply turn up- make sure everyone has all the phone numbers and everyone knows exactly where they should be and when.

You really will need suitable places for the performances and you will need to think about variety for these. You should also aim to shoot the whole thing well in advance of deadlines, as you may end up having to shoot some of it again!

Above all else, make sure your performers have rehearsed and know the words and that they are willing to throw themselves into it. If they don't look enthusiastic and don't look as if they mean it, the video won't work!

Step 5: set up a blog

This should be the place for all your evidence, showing the journey of your project. You can use it to link to ideas and inspiration, to examples of your research into music video, the genre and your particular artist, to post recce shots and ideas for hair and costume, for your storyboards, your animatic, screengrabs of work in progress and for feedback from others.

Step 6: know your equipment

Make sure you have practised with the equipment and that you know how to set it up and how to get the best from it. Cameras, lights and the edit program are all going to be important to how your video looks, but an easy one to forget is the music- have the track, (preferably with some 'beeps' at the start so it will be easy to synch video material with the master track at the edit stage) and have it on something where it is audible. It is no use just having your singer with headphones on so the camera can't hear the music- it needs to be played out loud!

Step 7: the Shoot

Shoot the performance at least ten times with different set-ups. You may think this is excessive, but if you are going to have something to cut together with coverage of every second of the track, you need lots of material. Make sure you have plenty of cutaways as well, for interesting shots that will retain the viewer's interest. Experiment with extra angles and lighting changes and don’t forget: lots of close-ups, which is the dominant mode of music video!


Step 8: capturing

Label everything you capture and organise it so its easy to find;don’t capture stuff you don’t need, but do capture full takes of the song, as if you stack them on top of each other in the timelines, you can strip away what you don't need easily thereafter. By the way, multi-track timelines like Premiere and Final Cut are ideal for editing music video- iMovie and MovieMaker are much harder to use for lip-synch material.

Step 9: the edit

Synch up performances first and get the whole picture rather than tiny detail
Cut and cut again, aiming for a dynamic piece of work. Do any effects work last.
Upload a rough cut to your blog and get feedback, then act upon this to finesse your final version.

Music Video-Task 5

Artist: Bruno Mars

Song Title: When I Was Your Man

Produced by 'The Smeezingtons

Written By Bruno Mars, Philip Lawrence, Ari Levine and Andrew Wyatt.

Basic Information

Message: The soul and piano pop ballad finds Mars singing about a pre-fame heartbreak as he regrets a girl that he let get away. It starts with rolling piano riff and near-scat vocal cadence, "Same bed but it feels just a little bigger now / Our song on the radio but it don't sound the same."

Target Audience: The target audience for my music video is Bruno Mars. I've chosen this specific audience as it's very large and world wide. As i too am a Bruno Mars fan, i know what they like to see in his videos.

Technical Information and conventions:
In the music video i will use conventions such as cutting to the beat of the music, close ups, medium shot and many others. I intend to use close ups and medium shot because, I feel that with these type of shots you can really capture the emotions on the face.

Financial Information: In terms of the financial side of the music video, purchasing a professional camera to record the video would cost around £49, 655 and a piano with good quality sound will cost around £2, 200. Due to copyright laws, i would need clearance to use Bruno Mar's song. In one online transaction i can purchase a one-off license from just £15 pounds, or multiple licenses depending upon the number products that i'm making or distributing.


Sunday, 26 January 2014

Television Advertisement

Should Television Adverts be regulated?


Advertising plays an essential part in all market economies. It stimulates growth and innovation, encourages competition and increases consumer choice. It is a swift and efficient means of making consumers aware of product innovations and keeping them informed of the range, nature and quality of the products available to them. Advertising is an important element in maintaining or increasing market share and vital to the introduction of a new product or the improvement of an existing one.

To fulfil this important task, advertising must enjoy a high level of consumer trust and confidence; it must be legal, decent, honest and truthful. If consumers are misled by advertising, they will not buy again; if it offends them, they will not buy in the first place. Bad advertising, even though it may account for only a small percentage of the whole, will gradually undermine consumer confidence and all advertising will suffer. So it is in the interests of the advertising industry to ensure that advertising is properly regulated.

In this essay i will be exploring the reasons why i think television adverts should be regulated. I will be using both personal opinion. Advertising regulation refers to the laws and rules defining the ways in which products can be advertised in a particular region. Rules can define a wide number of different aspects, such as placement, timing and the content. In the United States, false advertising and health-related ads are regulated the most. This is due to the fact that false advertising is illegal according to the Federal Trade Commission. It is also unethical. Other kinds of unethical advertising are neither deceptive or illegeal; however, they offend moral principles. For example, an offensive advert is the "Antonio Federici" ice cream advert. It shows two males who look like they are about to kiss, wearing catholic priest robes. The reason this is offensive is about, it is two males displaying homosexual behaviour WHILST wearing clothes of a religion that frowns upon that sort of practice.

In my opinion i believe adverising should be regulated because some adverts out there which have hidden innuendos, are being shown before the 'WaterShed'. For example, the ' Flora' butter advert. In this advert we meet josh and his brother making breakfast for their parents' anniversary. They rush upstairs and burst open the door, however they instantly stop in their tracks and cover their eyes (and also the dog). Later you see the mother coming down stairs with messy hair and doing her robe. The advert doesnt say much except "She seemed quite good at it", this is the sexual innuendo which is shown/said in the advert. This advert should be regulated or changed because it is inappropriate to advertise butter in such a way. There are many other offensive adverts out there which are offensive to people, but yet the ASA miss those adverts and send them through.

In conclusion, i personally believe that adverts should be regulated because, they are meant to advertise products and there's ways to do that. You cannot have a billboard with a woman's chest wearing a bra only as an advertisement, and expect people to know what the advertisement is about. First of all it is offensive to women because their being shown as tools to use for advertising, and it is misleading because one would think that the advert is either for bras or breast implants.






Thursday, 23 January 2014

Task 4 Page Layout

Out of the magazine ideas, which would you personally buy?

Which magazine masthead would you prefer?

Which cover best suits it's masthead?

Which magazine idea is most appealing to you?

How could i make improvements to the ideas?

How much would you be willing to pay for on of my magazines?

Which cover line is the least appealing to you?

Wednesday, 22 January 2014

Magazine Ideas

Magazine 1

Idea 1: "Baka" Magazine

Genre: Lifestyle

Content: In this magazine you will find tourist attraction places e.g Tokyo Disneyland and Kiyomizu-dera (an independent Bhuddhist temple eastern Kyoto)
'Baka' ( meaning 'Idiot'  magazine is based on japanese lifestyle. The kind of topics which i will focus on are japanese fashion, japanese food, exercise and 'Fun'. By 'Fun' i mean fun things to do in Japan, for example you could go to cosplay events, go to the famous temples and things like that.

Where would you find it?
This magazine would be available in most local news agents or stores and you can also find it online. You can also make an online registration account.

Cover lines:

"Travel Japan in the turn of a page"

"Enjoy Japan at it's fullest"

"Explore"

Magazine 2

Idea 2: "A Cosplay" Magazine

Genre: Specialist

This magazine will be about anime cosplay, people who like anime or cartoons would love this sort of thing. I chose to make this magazine about cosplay because a lot of people like to dress up as their favourite characters

Where would you find it?
This magazine would be found mostly in book shops because there will be a number of issues released at once. This way it will

Cover lines: 
"Be the hero you've always wanted to be"

"Don't play the hero, be the hero"

"Make the costume, win the competition"

I've based the cover lines on the idea of of the cosplay show.


Magazine 3
Idea 3:  "Kirei na Hana" (Pretty Flower) Magazine

Genre: Specialist Magazine

Content: Fashion from all over the world, but mostly fashion from East Asia. This magazine is targeted at women in their teens.

Where would you find it?
Since this magazine is targeted specifically at female teens, it will be found in women stores and in some local stores.

Cover lines: 

"The clothes you wear define you"

"Wear the world"

"The world is your dressing room"

These cover lines are based on the different fashion you would see in the world.

Television Advert Offense

KFC Zinger Burger


  • Outline what happens in the advert
In the advert, you see some workers eating some Zingers with their mouths full. They start singing about the burgers and only at the end one of them picks up a call and it turns about to be a helpline 



  • Identify why they might be considered as misleading, offensive or harmful and to whom?
This advert is very offensive to people are being abused at their homes or wherever they may be. It shows people who operate at this helpline to be non-caring and inconsiderate.

Tuesday, 21 January 2014

Task 1 Tv Advert Analysis: Sunsilk advert





The Sunsilk advert is a retro ad from the 1960′s. The tone of the advert is calm and gentle, this is because of the use of many different techniques such as non-diagetic sound, the melody played in the background -composed by John Barry- is haunting and sets a mysterious atmosphere within the advert. The voice over also ads to this because mans voice is so calm and matter of fact.
The message of the advert is clear  Sunsilk will make your hair beautiful therefor making you look more beautiful and the tag line is ‘its part of the art of being beautiful’ implying that Sunsilk should be an essential part of a beauty regime .
The representation of the woman is important in this advert she is simply a beautiful woman with beautiful hair. Because the advert is black and white it is hard to keep the audiences attention on the woman's hair but by the way they used personal codes like the clothes she is wearing (light colours) makes her hair more noticeable. However the representation could be perceived wrongly by an audience because in the voice over the man says ‘sunny silky, sunsilk’ and the woman is blonde, in my opinion this could be taken the wrong way and an audience could think the product is just for blonde hair.
I think that the setting used in the advert is completely irrelevant although i know that the directors intentions were probably to make the woman look elegant by rowing a boat. In my opinion they could of used a simpler more relatable environment to set the advert e.g a bathroom/hair dressers.
Product placement was successful in this advert because each bottle is displayed separately at the same time as being mentioned in the voiceover this makes it easy for an audience to recognise the product they are most interested in.