Thursday, 7 June 2018

June Mock Revision - Q3

 Component 2

Question: To what extent has sociohistorical context influenced representations in the magazines you have studied? Make reference to both Adbusters and Woman.  [30]

Structuring your answer

Step 1: Underline Key Terms
Step 2: Knee-Jerk Reaction
Step 3: Plan (in the answer box)
Step 4: Introduction

Plan
  • Lisbet Van Zoonen - Male Gaze
  • Advert for soap with sexualised women to please a man
  • Lifestyle - Woman
  • Culture Jamming - Adbusters
  • Patriarchal Hegemony
  • 'POST WEST' - Adbusters
  • Woman independance
  • Stereotypes
  • Hegemony
  • Objectification - process of dehumanizing a person
  • Barthes - Semiotics
  • Levi-Strauss - Binary Oppositions
  • Adbusters jokes at peoples expense - dark comedy - satire - satirical.
  • Alfred Hitchcock - grooms women
Structuring the Introduction
  • DAC
    • Definition
    • Argument
    • Context
  • Lifestyle - IBC Media - 19654
  • Culture Jamming - Self Published by Adbusters Foundation - 2016
Paragraph Structure
  • PEA
    • Point
    • Evidence
    • Argument



June Mock Revision - Q2

Component 1B

Question: Explore the ways in which production, distribution and circulation have shaped the newspapers you have studied. Make reference to The Daily Mirror and The Times. [15]
  • James Curran & Jean Seaton 
    • Conglomeration
      • The media is controlled by a small number of companies primarily driven by the profit and power. Media concentration limits variety, creativity and quality. More social diverse patterns of ownership can create more varied and adventurous media productions.
  • Sonia Livingstone and Peter Lunt
    • Regulation
      • The increasing power of global media corporations, together with the rise of convergent media technologies and transformations in the production, distribution and marketing of digital media, have placed traditional approaches to media regulation at risk.
  • David Hesmondhalgh
    • The Cultural Industries
      • Media producers try to minimise risk and maximise audiences through vertical and horizontal integration, and by formatting their cultural products (eg. through the use of stars, genres and serials)

Trinity Mirror owns Daily Mail and recently has been rebranded as 'Reach'.

  • Production
    • The process of making a media product. Every industry has its own forms of production.
  • Distribution
    • The process of making a media product available to audiences so that they can consume it, which includes aspects of marketing such as creating an advertising campaign.
  • Circulation
    • A count of how many copies of a media product are distributed. This can include physical distribution and subscription.
Daily Mirror is a tabloid and The Times is a broadsheet, the main difference between the two is the size of the newspapers, tabloids are more popular than broadsheets.

Broadsheets are easier to understand with middle class citizens, as the broadsheets used jargon and assumes the audience will understand the current events and the 'slang' used as it is more of a formal upper class speech.

Daily Mirror costs 50p
The Times costs £1

The price difference between the tabloid and broadsheet is double, so more middle class citizens would buy The Times due to cultural capital.

Daily Mirror is left-wing and follows the labour party.
The Times is right-wing and follows the conservative party and is owned by Rupert Murdoch.

  • Technological Change
    • Newspapers circulation is decreasing as more news is becoming available for free on websites so everyone is viewing the news for free on websites rather than going out and buying a newspaper.

Print-Based Media vs Online Media
  • Print Based Media
    • Disadvantages
      • Inconvenient, have to leave your house.
      • Generational issue (new generation isn't buying print based media)
      • Can only see one opinion
    • Advantages
      • Can be seen anywhere, no battery no wifi.
      • Employs much more people than Online Media.
  • Online Media
    • Disadvantages
      • Need internet to read.
      • People get made redundant as they dont need as many people.
    • Advantages
      • Can see many opinions in the comments section of a post.
      • Allows newspaper producers to target people who do not normally buy newspapers.
IPSO regulate the newspapers, IPSO is not fit for purpose, and they can twist the rules and get away with it especially when it comes to online media. The comment section will not be regulated as citizens will use offensive comments that are discriminating others, yet they will get away with it as it is all online.

15 MARKS

Tuesday, 5 June 2018

June Mock Revision - Q1

Component 1A

Question: In what ways do music videos encode viewpoints and ideologies? Make reference to Formation by BeyoncĂ© and Riptide by Jack Vance.  [30]


  • What is an ideology?
    • A thought or an opinion or a belief.
  • In media products what constructs ideologies?
    • Media Language.
  • Who constructs the ideologies?
    • The Producer.
  • What purpose do producers construct and encode ideologies?
    • To manipulate the audience, and to brain wash the audience.
  • Ideology of Riptide?
    • Makes the audience think, so the producer has made it purposely confusing.
  • Ideology of Formation?
    • Embracing the roots, about slavery and racism, hurricane Katrina in Louisiana the white people got treated better over the black people.


NEED TO INCLUDE MEDIA LANGUAGE - SHOT TYPES/ MISE-EN-SCENE

    NEED TO INCLUDE THEORISTS

    • hooks (Representation)
      • Feminist Theory - 
    • Gilroy (Representation)


    Theorist Part 1 - Textual Analysis
    • Barthes
      • Created Semiotic Codes - Symbolic, Proairetic, Hermeneutic.
        • Hermeneutic - Mystery
        • Symbolic - something means something else
        • Proairetic - Action
    • Claude Levi-Strauss
      • Structuralism - Binary Oppositions
        • Narrative is constructed through two ideas being in conflict with one another.
    Theorist Part 2 - Representation Theory
    • Stuart Hall
      • Representation & Stereotypes
        • Representation is a re-representation of a group in society through media codes.
    • David Gauntlet
      • Identity - Pick'n'Mix Theory
        • Audiences can pick and mix an ideology to suit them best.
    • Lisbet Van Zoonen
      • Male Gaze Theory
        • Women are used in media products to sell them to a heterosexual male audience. Example of voyeurism and objectifies the girl.
    • bell hooks
      • Feminist Theory
        • 'feminism is for everyone' - and the ways in which men are represented have negative impact on men also.
    • Gilroy
      • Post Colonialism
        • Media products still follow colonial ideologies, and enforce racial hierarchies.

    Riptide Music Video - Textual Analysis

    SHOT 1
    • The low key lighting causes us to think this looks like a horror movie and makes intertextual reference to her being in pain.
    • The on screen graphic of the wrong lyrics shows that this woman is going against the norms and she is rebellious.
    • By her makeup being smudged makes her look uncomfortable and in pain and doing something against her will.
    SHOT 2
    • A tracking shot as if we are stalking the girl and were being voyeuristic.
    • We are unsure wether this is male gaze as sometimes we are attracted them sometimes we are put off so it encodes the confusing ideologies.
    Formation Music Video - Textual Analysis

    SHOT 1
    • Independant but also isolated.
    • Gesture of her pose with her hand in the air with fists makes her look like the statue of liberty and makes her look powerful tied in with the low angle shot emphasising her importance.

    30 MARKS












    Revison - Component 2c - Online Media (2 QUESTIONS)

    Question 1 How significant is the role of individual producers in online media industries? Make reference to Zoella to support your argume...