Thursday, 13 December 2018
Newspaper front cover analysis
Upload your newspaper alongside a Daily Mail cover you used as your main influence.
What was the task you were assigned?
To make a daily mail front cover, from another original cover with information given and provided by our news reporter.
What programme did you use to complete your task?
I used adobe Photoshop
What tools did you use from your programme to create your task ie font websites, crop, color changes etc?
I used crop, use of layers and many different images to make everything edited.
What were the biggest obstacles to completing your task?
The biggest obstacles was finding the correct images and fitting everything in with the correct dimensions.
Describe your production and why you chose the various text headings and images?
used new roman, as the constant text, this is because it is the most similar looking font I could find. The heading was a typical daily mail heading and it fitted in well with the article.
What was your initial feedback? What did others say about your production?
They said it was accurate to a typical looking daily mail front cover.
Identify what went well and with hindsight what would you do differently?
I would have used a different background image to the one i used for ant in the jungle, this is because this image came up pix elated on the print and didn't look as clear as I would have liked.
Sunday, 2 December 2018
Ideological Discourses in newspapers
1. Crude, joke, grievance.
2. victims of feminism, big dongles, oppressed by feminism.
3. The reader wants to read the ideas that this is 'crude' and causes 'grievance', this is because the readers will agree that this is wrong and therefore they want the writer that is publicly posting this to feel the same way and have the same views as them. This will ease the reader as it makes them feel as though we are all for the ideas of fighting against out of line remarks.
1. Decline, expect, fallen.
2. sharp decline, significant fall, harder.
3. What is said corresponds to what the reader wants to see is that it is nationwide and is not singled out to one school, that is because the audience of this would be parents of a primary school, this will reassure them and put them at ease slightly.
1. lawbreaking, offences, law.
2. responsible, offences against the law.
3. This corresponds with what is want to be seen is because it here details how this is wrong and illegal, this will make someone who agrees with these laws feel abit more at ease because there is law enforcement being implemented.
Tuesday, 27 November 2018
Recent news
NHS
- Doctor strikes junior doctors went on strike to increase income.
- privatisation, hospitals went private to make more money instead of using the NHS.
- Became waiting list for surgery can be up-to 10 years.
Charlie Gard
- Taken off life support at 11 months old.
- 1.3 million to pay for it but couldn't do it.
- pro life movement, after parents took it to court.
- caused controversy because great Ormand street was in news for something negative for once.
Windrush
- People arrived in UK to fix a boat, receiving the rights to remain in the UK, they paid tax's and raised family. However, they are being deported 2 generations later, conservative papers lost and shredded therefore they were being deported and asked to leave.
Grenfell tower
- Fire broke out and spread throughout tower, killed 72 people and injuring more than 70 others.
- Highlights that maybe it wasn't built properly and if it will happen the same
- There was no housing sorted out, living on streets.
- Was unplanned by government.
Royal Wedding
- Soft news
- Guardian just interested in royals
- Daily mail more towards Harry and Megan.
Londons Crime Level
- Knife crime has increased massively, 2018 = at least 50 victims from knife crime.
- many murders are increasing from teenage knife crime.
- Doctor strikes junior doctors went on strike to increase income.
- privatisation, hospitals went private to make more money instead of using the NHS.
- Became waiting list for surgery can be up-to 10 years.
Charlie Gard
- Taken off life support at 11 months old.
- 1.3 million to pay for it but couldn't do it.
- pro life movement, after parents took it to court.
- caused controversy because great Ormand street was in news for something negative for once.
Windrush
- People arrived in UK to fix a boat, receiving the rights to remain in the UK, they paid tax's and raised family. However, they are being deported 2 generations later, conservative papers lost and shredded therefore they were being deported and asked to leave.
Grenfell tower
- Fire broke out and spread throughout tower, killed 72 people and injuring more than 70 others.
- Highlights that maybe it wasn't built properly and if it will happen the same
- There was no housing sorted out, living on streets.
- Was unplanned by government.
Royal Wedding
- Soft news
- Guardian just interested in royals
- Daily mail more towards Harry and Megan.
Londons Crime Level
- Knife crime has increased massively, 2018 = at least 50 victims from knife crime.
- many murders are increasing from teenage knife crime.
Monday, 26 November 2018
Newspaper vocabulary
Boomers - Older people traditionally watch BBC 6 o'clock news, and breaking ten
Millennials - Regularly check the news throughout the day on their phones.
Fix - access news constantly, prompted by a general need and state of distraction.
Track - Access news regularly to keep up to date with breaking news.
Fill - Access news to pass the time when moving from place to place.
Indulge - Make time to enjoy the news as a break from everything else in day.
Invest - read news regularly to get an in-depth perspective on stories.
Stories broke on social media before news
9/11
7/7
bitcoin
6ix9ine in prison
Whitney Houston dead
Arianda Grande terrorist attack
Cons
140 characters on twitter
Inaccuracy
Compromise journalistic integrity
Amateur reporters putting themselves at harm
The Guardian
2nd most popular newspaper and 4th most famous, described by fans, intelligent interesting well written and informative for politics.
Daily mail
4th most popular, in touch with ordinary people, informative, interesting and stands up for ordinary people.
The Sun
13th most popular, entertaining , great for sport and amusing.
Millennials - Regularly check the news throughout the day on their phones.
Fix - access news constantly, prompted by a general need and state of distraction.
Track - Access news regularly to keep up to date with breaking news.
Fill - Access news to pass the time when moving from place to place.
Indulge - Make time to enjoy the news as a break from everything else in day.
Invest - read news regularly to get an in-depth perspective on stories.
Stories broke on social media before news
9/11
7/7
bitcoin
6ix9ine in prison
Whitney Houston dead
Arianda Grande terrorist attack
Cons
140 characters on twitter
Inaccuracy
Compromise journalistic integrity
Amateur reporters putting themselves at harm
The Guardian
2nd most popular newspaper and 4th most famous, described by fans, intelligent interesting well written and informative for politics.
Daily mail
4th most popular, in touch with ordinary people, informative, interesting and stands up for ordinary people.
The Sun
13th most popular, entertaining , great for sport and amusing.
Friday, 23 November 2018
The Guardian
The Guardian News Values
- Honesty
- Integrity
- Courage
- Fairness
- A sense of duty to reader and community
The guardian target audience is of a middle aged 18+ audience.
- Honesty
- Integrity
- Courage
- Fairness
- A sense of duty to reader and community
The guardian target audience is of a middle aged 18+ audience.
Thursday, 22 November 2018
Stuart hall
Stereotype - Media uses a-lot to reduce a group of people to low characteristics and this is how they are portrayed. People from power is hegemonic power and these are in control of the media in the county, which are dominant groups in society controlling those less powerful.
Preferred reading - Audience reads a text in the way the media intended it.
opposition reading - When an audience reads a text in the opposite way that the media intended it.
Negative reading - When an audience is allowed to bring their experiences alongside.
Preferred reading - Audience reads a text in the way the media intended it.
opposition reading - When an audience reads a text in the opposite way that the media intended it.
Negative reading - When an audience is allowed to bring their experiences alongside.
News Homework
Why have print newspaper sales declined? 500 words
- Print
sales have declined for a number of reasons…
- Even
though there’s been a decline in print news circulation, the rise in
online technologies and accessibility has enabled newspapers to… for e.g.
- Citizen
journalism, participatory media, relationships with audiences have changed
- As
can be seen by the data…
In recent years, the
amount of print sales has massively decreased about newspapers, this is due to
the increase in electronic technology. With the use of internet news and news
applications, there is now no need to buy a paper copy. This therefore does
potentially benefit the environment because there is a much less cost on paper
therefore using less wood for paper and saving the environment/ ecosystem. As
well as this, it means that there is no need to consume these materials for these
things. Also, with the technology in phones, many people have made the conversion
to smart phones, even the older generation. Therefore, with these phones comes
the applications, which there is a news app, therefore all the news can be
collected in one area and all for free of cost. This makes people who are technologically
enhanced to have the outlook to use this instead of spending money on printed
paper copies. If some people don’t have smartphone but have laptops or
computers, they are able to access news on there for free. This is easily
accessible through the newspaper’s website will show them all the exact same
information that is also collected on the paper. Therefore, with the advancement
in technology there is little need for printed copies of the news anymore.
Citizen journalism
allows a more interactive way of reading and learning about the news on that
day. Through the power of social media there is the option to be interactive and
have your own opinion made clear through this. With social media such as
twitter, retweets and mentions are available where public replies and shares
can be made to spread one persons opinion on the news and to add your own
opinon. This ius not accessible in the traditional printed paper and many opinionated
people want to be able to access this. As well as this another collaborative
way of sharing news is with participatory media. This allows general public to report
and enlighten a reporter on events. This is usually voiced through social media,
which means that they can use this to share the information they have collected
or their personal opinion. This has therefore changed the relationships between
the reporters and the readers, with the use of interaction the audience can
voice and share their opinion just as much as the reporter can.
This has led to the decrease in paper copies because there is no
need for them if it is interactive throughout social media just as it is on the
virtual copies of the news. Making it so that there isn’t a necessity to use a
physical copy and it is always accessible with the use of smartphone, or
computers with internet access. Therefore, decreasing the use of paper prints
of the news and increasing the virtualised way of reading and using the news.
News industry
- This is because of the increase in people using internet
- Advertising over online is worth so much now than it was many years ago
- Advertising was only through commercial use for example tv. Now online can be used to easily spread advertisement throughout the internet.
- Only way to advertise in year 2007 was with cost, this has changed now.
ABC
- Who is the ABC
The American broadcasting company, their opinion is extremely strong, this is because the whole of America will learn this news. Therefore, the whole of America will have the same view, meaning it is terrible advertisement for the company that it is about. Therefore it is so valued to the citizens of America and therefore feared by the big companies that could be reported upon.
Sunday Papers
- The circulation of Sunday papers is dominated by ' the paper on Sunday, this therefore shows how popular this paper is to the general public. This could therefore symbolise that this is a broadsheet paper, as a Sunday paper is mostly focused on the older generation of the public. The least viewed paper is a tabloid, therefore showing that the Sunday papers are more focused on older generation interested in hard news, however there are some that produce soft news which have less circulation.
Leading Broadsheets:
- The Daily mail (2974)
- The Daily telegraph (1101)
- The Times (1072)
Leading Tabloids:
- The Sun (3417)
- Daily mail (2974)
- The Sun on Sunday (2942)
Daily Mail and guardians place in the market:
-The Daily Mail is a British daily middle-market tabloid newspaper owned by the Daily Mail and General Trust and published in London. Founded in 1896, it is the United Kingdom's second-biggest selling daily newspaper after The Sun.
- Although the guardian is a more serious newspaper and more focused on more serious and relevant news, it has a-lot less daily circulation than a tabloid like the daily mail. This shows how the guardian is beginning to die out because the general public are generally more interested in 'gossip' and irrelevant or ineffective news.
The guardian
-The first link states how the Guardian is vital and to be apart of it you inherit sacred facts. However, it is free of charge to become apart of it or even use and see it. It also states how honest, how much integrity, courage and fairness the Guardian provides with news for the general public completely free of charge.
- The second link states that the most important currency of the guardian is trust. The purpose of this code is to protect and foster the bond of trust between the paper and the readers of it. To protect the integrity of the paper and the content in it.
I believe that the use of mobile apps has been vital to the growth of online news, this is because with an app it is easy to find and easy to access, all your news can be stored in one place and not all separated throughout the internet. The problem with websites is for some people it can take them an extremely long time to try and find the right website up to date, to the point some people cant be bothered with it. However with an app there is no searching apart from attaching the news papers you want to view, making it easy to ready the news that you want to read and see so that more people are inclined to read news.
I believe that a lack of trust is generated in newspapers nowadays because of the information inside of it. This is because someone may share news throughout social media, making the newspaper pointless or only needed to be read by one. This is against some community for example the guardian as the news is confidential to readers only and should not be shared worldwide through social media for anyone that wants to read it, to read it.
The IPSO is the regulator for newspaper, these are regulating against stuff that should not be exposed to the public, this is because it van be offensive or not suitable. This is necessary to stop offences to be broken, and if offences are made then they will be held accountable for their actions.
The revenue chart shows that the industry is more focused on online news, the issue that this generates is that to access news online it is always free, unless donations are making. This is therefore making it difficult for some companies to survive as purchased print numbers have decreased which makes it a lot more difficult for them to make money from it or make a profit meaning it is potentially difficult for them to survive.
With people like buzz feed etc. this generates the issue that this almost replaces typical tabloids such as the sun. This information is all presented to the audience in a fun and interactive way with means that traditional tabloids May find it hard to be used anymore as many people would rather see tabloid news presented over social media.
Wednesday, 21 November 2018
Daily Mail
Daily Mail
- Came out in 1896, this often refers to tradition.
- Right wing, pro breit.
- Owned by Daily Mail and General Trust.
- 1.25 million print circulation. which is second highest circulation behind the sun.
- Paul Dacre editor for a very long period of time, he would out his opinion on everything regardless what anyone else said. Made him very powerful in the whole paper/system. Autumn 2018 he resigned and Geordie Greig took over, changed and softened a little bit on side of Brexit.
- 50 / 50 gender split.
- Average readership is age 58.
- Younger online audience
- Brexit supporters
- British institutors like the royal family.
- Came out in 1896, this often refers to tradition.
- Right wing, pro breit.
- Owned by Daily Mail and General Trust.
- 1.25 million print circulation. which is second highest circulation behind the sun.
- Paul Dacre editor for a very long period of time, he would out his opinion on everything regardless what anyone else said. Made him very powerful in the whole paper/system. Autumn 2018 he resigned and Geordie Greig took over, changed and softened a little bit on side of Brexit.
- 50 / 50 gender split.
- Average readership is age 58.
- Younger online audience
- Brexit supporters
- British institutors like the royal family.
Thursday, 15 November 2018
News analysis
Daily mail - serif font used by daily mail
sun - non serif
Types of paper
-Tabloid - sun, daily mirror, daily mail
-Broadsheet - daily telegraph, daily express
-Mid market tabloids (daily express/ daily mail)
-Local news
sun - non serif
Types of paper
-Tabloid - sun, daily mirror, daily mail
-Broadsheet - daily telegraph, daily express
-Mid market tabloids (daily express/ daily mail)
-Local news
newspaper analysis
This is presented on the daily mail front cover, showing a graphic story with videos playing of how graphic and serious the event was.
On the daily mail, this has focused on the political events of the day, this hereby shows the events of Brexit and completely different line of news to that if the daily mail.
This therefore show a comparison of the two different newspapers, this is because on the same day, the guardian are focusing on political views yet the daily mail are focusing heavily on political views which is therefore a complete contrast.
On the daily mail, this has focused on the political events of the day, this hereby shows the events of Brexit and completely different line of news to that if the daily mail.
This therefore show a comparison of the two different newspapers, this is because on the same day, the guardian are focusing on political views yet the daily mail are focusing heavily on political views which is therefore a complete contrast.
Assessment
ASSESSMENT
1A - GBHS MEDIA STUDIES A LEVEL Marksheet
Name: Thomas Snow Date: Mark: 58
AO1: Demonstrate knowledge and
understanding of the theoretical framework of media and contexts of media and
their influence
AO2 Apply knowledge and understanding of
the theoretical framework of media to:
Analyse media products/Evaluate
academic theories/ Make judgements and draw conclusions
Level
3
57+
A/B
|
·
A comprehensive response to the set question
·
Comprehensive and
accurate knowledge and understanding
·
Convincing, perceptive and accurate analysis
·
Convincing, perceptive and accurate evaluation
·
Highly developed and accomplished judgements
and conclusions
The
response demonstrates a highly developed and detailed line of reasoning which
is coherent and logically structured. The information presented is entirely
relevant and substantiated.
|
Level
2
40-56
C/D
|
·
An adequate response to the set question
·
Adequate and generally accurate knowledge and understanding
·
Adequate and generally successful analysis
·
Adequate and
generally successful evaluation
·
Adequate and
generally well-reasoned judgements and conclusions
The
response demonstrates a line of reasoning with some structure. The
information presented is in the most part relevant and supported by some
evidence.
|
Level
1
Up
to 40
D/U
|
·
A minimal response to the set question
·
Minimal application of knowledge and understanding
·
Analysis is minimal
and/or largely descriptive and may not be relevant
·
Evaluation is
minimal or brief, and is likely to be largely descriptive
·
Judgements and
conclusions, if present, are minimal with limited support
·
Information
presented is basic and may be ambiguous or unstructured. The information is
supported by limited evidence.
|
Identify a strength or strengths in your
assessment:
The strengths in my assessment was my in detailed
information, I went more into the information that I had instead of making a
vague point. This meant that my work increased in marks because I got more
marks from analysis and not just knowledge. Therefore, this is what I done
well.
What are the areas you need to improve?
I need to improve on making my points
clear, therefore highlighting and repeating what I am trying to say, this will
therefore mean that my point is highlighted and made clear for the reader.
This will add more marks as the examiner will be able to actually see and realise
what I am talking about.
What do you need to focus on for your next
assessment?
On my next assessment I need to focus in
on the evaluation and overall answering the question instead of just
presenting knowledge on it. This will therefore improve my answer and
generate more marks.
|
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Jean baudrillard
Jean baudrillard Old media was reality, real news etc. heightened reality is more intense however it still links to the original...
-
Theory meaning: The idea that colonialism from the 1500-1900 is still present in modern media. People from ethnic minorities b...
-
Jean baudrillard Old media was reality, real news etc. heightened reality is more intense however it still links to the original...
-
Question 5 Explain how the representations in magazines reflect their contexts. Refer to The Big Issue covers you have stu...