Tuesday 8 December 2009



To help prepare for the exam make sure you know what the key terms means and you are able to provide an example. Complete the mind-map and practice writing paragraphs on each of the key concepts/terms.

Music Industry Revision - Synergy



To help prepare for the exam research another example of Sony's synergy strategy.

Saturday 5 December 2009

Highbrow TV Viewing - The Bill. Watch the opening 5/6 minutes of this extract. How do the four technical areas contribute to the construction of gender in the extract? This is an activity you can do outside of lesson time and past on to me to mark.

This clip includes the Monarch of the Glen extract that was used in the January 2009 exam and which we studied in class. On the OCR Virtual Event website there are links exemplar answers. As an additional activity have another go at discussing the representation of age in the extract. The exam extracts appears two minutes into the clip.
The below website has been set up by OCR. It contains lots of learning resources for Media Studies. In the A Level section, if you go to 'View all Key Documents' it takes you to OCR's website. Here if you scroll down to 'Support Materials' there are exemplar answers from Jan 2009 and June 2009 exams. There's stuff on the TV Drama exam extract (Monarch of the Glen), however all the Institutions and Audiences scripts seem to be on Film/Magazine/Gaming and not Music. Nevertheless this still gives you a chance to look essays of different standards:

www.virtualmediastudies.com



Tuesday 1 December 2009



How is disability represented in the extract? Remember to focus on how camera, sound, editing and mise-en-scene contribute to the representation.

Sunday 29 November 2009

INSTITUTIONS AND AUDIENCES EXAM - THE MUSIC INDUSTRY

Candidates should be prepared to understand and discuss the processes of production,
distribution, marketing and exchange as they relate to contemporary media institutions, as well as
the nature of audience consumption and the relationships between audiences and institutions. In
addition, candidates should be familiar with:
- the issues raised by media ownership in contemporary media practice;
- the importance of cross media convergence and synergy in production, distribution and
marketing;
- the technologies that have been introduced in recent years at the levels of production,
distribution, marketing and exchange;
- the significance of proliferation in hardware and content for institutions and audiences;
- the importance of technological convergence for institutions and audiences;
- the issues raised in the targeting of national and local audiences (specifically, British) by
international or global institutions;
- the ways in which the candidates’ own experiences of media consumption illustrate wider
patterns and trends of audience behaviour.

Monday 23 November 2009



Eastenders Extract
How does camerawork, sound, mise-en-scene and editing contribute to the representation of gender in the extract?


Question
How does camerawork, sound, mise-en-scene, and editing contribute to the representation of social class in the extract?


INSTITUTIONS & AUDIENCES - The Music industry
David Gauntlett's presentation on Media and Everyday Life
What's important here is understanding how audiences have become much more active, they don't just consume music/media, they make it.


A great revision aid for camera techniques.


This clip uses a variety of editing techniques that come under the heading 'continuity editing', such as matched cuts and shot/reverse shot. Mise-en-scene is also very important in disclosing key information about the setting and the characters.

Sunday 8 November 2009

CAMERA SHOTS
Aerial Shot – A camera shot taken from an overhead position. Often used as an establishing shot.
Close Up – A head and shoulders shot often used to show expressions/emotions of a character. Also can be a shot of an object, filmed from close to the object or zoomed in to it, that reveals detail.
Extreme Close Up – A shot where a part of a face or body of a character fills the whole frame/dominates the frame. Also can be a shot of an object where only a small part of it dominates the frame.
Establishing Shot – A shot that establishes a scene, often giving ther viewer information about where the scene is set. Can be a close up shot (of a sign etc) but is often a wide/long shot and usually appears at the beginning of a scene.
Medium Shot – the framing of a subject from waist up.
Two Shot – A shot of two characters, possible engaging in conversation. Usually to signify/establish some sort of relationship
Point-Of-View Shot (POV) – Shows a view from the subject’s perspective. This shot is usually edited so that the viewer is aware who’s point of view it is.
Over the Shoulder Shot – looking from behind a character’s shoulder, at a subject. The character facing the subject usually occupies 1/3 of the frame but it depends on what meaning the director wants to create (for example, if the subject is an inferior character, the character facing them may take up more of the frame to emphaise this)
Overhead Shot – a type of camera shot in which the camera is positioned above the character, action or object being filmed.
Reaction Shot – a shot that shows the reaction of a character either to another character or an event within the sequence.

CAMERA ANGLES
Camera Angle – the position of the camera in relation to the subject of a shot. The camera might be at a high angle, a low angle or at eye level with what is being filmed.
High Angle – A camera angle that looks down upon a subject or object. Often used to make the subject or object appear small or vulnerable.
Low Angle – A camera angle that looks up at a subject or object. Often used to make the subject/object appear powerful/dominant.
Canted framing (or oblique) – camera angle that makes what is shot appear to be skewed or tilted.

CAMERA MOVEMENT
Pan – Where the camera pivots horizontally, either from right to left or left to right to reveal a set or setting. This can be used to give the viewer a panoramic view. Sometimes used to establish a scene.
Track - a shot whjere the camera follows a subject/object. The tracking shot can include smooth movements forward, backward, along the side of the subject, or on a curve but cannot include complex movement around a subject. ‘Track’ refers to rails in which a wheeled platform (which has the camera on it) sits on in order to carry out smooth movement.
Crane – A crane shot is sometimes used to signify the end of a scene/ programme /film. The effect is achieved by the camera being put onto a crane that can move upward.
Stedicam - A steadicam is a stabilising mount for a camera which mechanically isolates the operator's movement from the camera, allowing a very smooth shot even when the operator is moving quickly over an uneven surface. Informally, the word may also be used to refer to the combination of the mount and camera.
Tilt - where a camera scans a set or setting vertically (otherwise similar to a pan).
Zoom – Using a zoom lens to appear to be moving closer to (zoom in) or further away from (zoom out) a subject/object when in fact the camera may not move (so, strictly not camera movement). Can be used for dramatic effect.

EDITING
Editing – the stage in the film-making process in which sound and images are organised into an overall narrative.
Continuity Editing – the most common type of editing, which aims to create a sense of reality and time moving forward. Also nick named invisible editing referring to how the technique does not draw attention to the editing process.
Jump Cut – An abrupt, disorientating transitional device in the middle of a continuos shot in which the action is noticeably advanced in time and/or cut between two similar shots, usually done to create discontinuity for artistic effect.
Credits – the information at the beginning and end of a film, which gives details of cast and crew etc.
Cross Cutting – the editing technique of alternating, interweaving, or interspersing one narrative action (scene, sequence or event) with another – usually in different locations or places, thus combining the two: this editing technique usually suggests Parallel action (that takes place simultaneously). Often used to dramatically build tension and/or suspense in chase scenes or to compare two different scenes. Also known as inter-cutting or parallel editing
Cutaways – A brief shot that momentarily interrupts continuous action by briefly inserting another related action. Object, or person (sometimes not part of the principle scene or main action), followed by a cutback to the original shot.
Freeze Frame – the effect of seemingly stopping a film in order to focus in on one event or element.
Eye-line Match – a type of edit which cuts from one character to what that character has been looking at.
Flashback – a scene or moment in a film in which the audience is shown an event that happened earlier in the film’s narrative.
Graphic Match – an edit effect in which two different objects of the same shape are dissolved from one into the other.
Juxtaposition – the placement of two (often opposed) images on either side of an edit to create an effect.
Linear Narrative – a style of storytelling in which events happen chronologically.
Montage Editing – the juxtaposition of seemingly unconnected images in order to create meaning.
Parallel Editing – a type of editing in which events in two locations are cut together, in order to imply a connection between the two sets of events.
Visual Effects - visual effects are usually used to alter previously-filmed elements by adding, removing or enhancing objects within the scene.
Match on Action - A shot that emphasises continuity of space and time by matching the action of the preceding shot with the continuation of the action. (For example a shot of a door opening after a shot of a close up of a character’s hand turning a door handle)

SOUND
Diegetic Sound – sound that can be heard by the characters within a scene/ sound part of the imaginary world.
Non-diegetic Sound – sound that the characters cannot hear and is not part of the imaginary world of the story. This includes a musical soundtrack or a voiceover (however this excludes a narration by a character within the story – referred to as an internal monologue and is diegetic).
Score – The musical component of a programme’s soundtrack, usually composed specifically for the scene.
Sound Effects – sounds that are added to a film during the post-production stage.

OTHER KEY TERMS
Artificial Light – A source of light created by lighting equipment, rather than from natural sources.
Convention – a frequently used element which becomes standard.
Disequilibrium – the period of instability and insecurity in a film’s narrative.
Enigma – the question or mystery that is posed within a film’s narrative.
Equilibrium – a state of peace and calm, which often exists at the beginning of a film’s narrative.
Framing – the selection of elements such as characters, setting and iconography that appear within a shot.
Genre – a system of film identification, in which films that have the same elements are grouped together.
Iconography – the objects within a film that are used to evoke particular meanings
Intertextuality – reference within a film to another film, media product, work of literature or piece of artwork.
Mise en scene – a French term, which literally means ‘put into the frame’. When analysing a sequence the term refers to everything you see in the frame (props, costume, lighting, colour, makeup etc.)
Narrative – a story that is created in a constructed format (eg. A programme) that describes a series of fictional or non-fictional events.

Saturday 7 November 2009



Question: Examine how the use of technical codes contribute to the representation of gender in the extract?

Examine: Camerawork
Sound
Mise-en-Scene
Editing

TV Drama

Date of Exam:
Wednesday 13th January 2010 - PM
AS Media Studies - Representation in TV Drama 
Marking Criteria for level 3 and 4. 

Level 3

 Explanation/analysis/argument  (12-15 marks)

• Shows proficient understanding of the task

• Proficient understanding of the way that technical aspects are used to

construct the extract’s representations 

• Mostly relevant to set question

 

  Use of examples  (12-15 marks)

• Offers consistent textual evidence from the extract

• Offers a range of examples (at least three technical areas covered)

• Offers examples which are mostly relevant to the set question

 

Use of terminology  (6-7 marks)

• Use of terminology is mostly accurate

 

Straightforward ideas have been expressed with some clarity and fluency.

Arguments are generally relevant, though may stray from the point of the

question. There will be some errors of spelling, punctuation and grammar,

but these are unlikely to be intrusive or obscure meaning.

 

 

Level 4

Explanation/analysis/argument  (16-20 marks)

• Shows excellent understanding of the task

• Excellent knowledge and understanding of the way that technical

aspects are used to construct the extract’s representations  

• Clearly relevant to set question

 

Use of examples  (16-20 marks)

• Offers frequent textual analysis from the extract – award marks to

reflect the range and appropriateness of examples

• Offers a full range of examples from each technical area

• Offers examples which are clearly relevant to the set question

 

Use of terminology  (8-10 marks)

• Use of terminology is relevant and accurate

 

Complex issues have been expressed clearly and fluently. Sentences and

paragraphs, consistently relevant, have been well structured, using

appropriate technical terminology. There may be few, if any, errors of

spelling, punctuation and grammar.