Jodie O'Neill - Documentary - Media Studies A2
Wednesday, 30 April 2014
Magazine Article
By Jodie O'Neill
As you can see, I have significantly improved my magazine article from the previous design, earlier on in my blog. Again, I used Publisher to create my magazine article but this time I have altered the design layout to make it look like a realistic article with clear columns for text, a suitable title layout and interesting boxes and quote-grabs to make my article more interesting.
Monday, 14 April 2014
Evaluation
In what ways does your media product use, develop or challenge forms and conventions of real media products?
Below I have created a Tagexdo. I created this by pasting all the words from the second question to see which one would appear the most. Audience and conventions tend to appear the most.
What have you learned from your audience feedback?
Results Analysis
1) Did you enjoy the radio advert and the magazine article?
Yes 95%
No 5%
This is a good result, as it shows that most of the public enjoyed both features. There is obviously room for improvement if I had an extended deadline.
2) Which task did you like the most: the radio advert of the magazine article?
Radio Advert 51%
Magazine Article 49%
Out of these results, most male participants preferred the radio advert. This is important to take on board as our advertisement campaign should appeal to everyone.
3) Who would you say that target audience is?
Children 2%
Adults 20%
Teenagers 78%
Elderly 0
Not Sure 0
This is a great result, as it highlights that my ancillary tasks meet the required target audience standard and that my products are easily identifiable with my target audience.
How did you use media technologies in the construction and research, planning and evaluation stages?
I have also included two pieces of historic research into the history of a thriller (AS) and the history of documentary (A2). The contrasting comparison in the detail and length is extremely clear and shows how I have advanced this year in terms of research, planning ad evaluation.
Prior to 1900
Documentary has advanced incredibly over the past hundred years, due to the growing developments of technology, different topics and new ordeals and the way documentary is presented. I thought it would be useful to understand the journey documentary has undertaken and to see how documentary has gone from being a few minutes long to now being a few hours long, with stylistic idea embedded, such as the new wave of Twitter hash tagging.
The length of documentary in the early days was extremely limited due to the lack of technology and film development. Documentary was produced by using photographs or short snippets of film all in one to prevail the filmmakers meaning or research results. Early films concentrated on workers and everyday events in which the public could relate to. Moving images began to gain audience attention as many individual wanted to see themselves on screen. This has now developed into sub-genre documentaries of reality documentaries, such as TOWIE. Arguably this may be part of human nature to see how we appear on film and to other individuals.
Enoch J Rector revolutionised the game of Boxing by filming the events by using film-looping technology that was responsible advance in 1897. The fight was The Corbett-Fitzsimmons Fight and lasted an hour an a half, which was an incredibly long "actuality" film prior 1900.
Professor Gheorghe Marinescu, created several early documentaries by 1901 focusing on his scientific findings of the human body, such as the issues with muscle pain. Again, film-making has been used in a specific field, revolutionising future research and the layout of results, in which Marinescu said, ""studies with the help of the cinematograph".
Below is Marinescu's work

Post 1900
Post 1900 documentaries diverted away from the topics of everyday life and moved away from moving images of people, workers and trains. The early 1900 witnessed the popularity of Travelogue films that concentrated on unusual scenes, like the arctic and locations that contrasted with working environments such as London. A well-known documentary was the Moscow in Clad in 1909.
This camera was popular amongst
early documentary makers

1920's
The 1920's witnessed the development of various topics being documented into short films. Topics had developed from everyday life, to environment locations and now to a more romantic setting which suited the literature of the time. Robert Flaherty's work of "Nanook of the North" in 1922 incorporated romantiscm within his documentary as he ensured that the indigenous people lived in the manner of generations ago, in order to create a shocking contrast between Flaherty's society and the people of the documentary. The length of the documentary is quite impressive of its time, being 1hour 18minutes long.The staged events, such as killing a walrus with a harpoon instead of gun, is relatable to today's documentary, instead the people in the documentary are staging arguments, parties and various events. This is common in reality documentaries such as Made In Chelsea but less common in documentarian, Dan Snow's work.
1930-1940
By the 1930's documentary was becoming more popular and soon enough politics grabbed hold of this new medium to display and portray their parties ordeal and beliefs. However, documentary was manipulated into propaganda opportunities to attack minority groups, for example, Adolf Hitler accepted the publishing of anti-Jewish documentaries in order to display the racist attitudes of the Nazi Party.
The British movement in documentary really became heard in the 1940's with the establishment of John Grierson's "Documentary Film Movement" which concentrated more on the poetic and expressive side of politics and beliefs.
This was one of the most popular documentary from the Documentary
Film Movement. It concentrates on the process of sending mail from London
to Scotland.
Direct Cinema 1950-1970
Documentary advanced once again during the next twenty years as many studios and documentarians wanted to move away from the staged and planned documentaries and wanted to create something more organic. The stylistics used within new documentaries included on-screen documentarians and shooting directly on set with the camera on screen to create a sense of realism, while naturally following the subject matter. This was part of the French New Wave in film-making as they incorporated synchronized sound and cameras as part of the documentary.
Nevertheless, there are variation of direct cinema, being that the French and North America's direct cinema contain different stylistic devices and methods. They disputed over whether the documentarian should be on or off screen. Documentary maker Pennebaker thought that non-involvement was best to let the situations naturally flourish, where as other documentary makers, such as Rouch, believed that on-screen presence was better and even to provoke those on screen to make matters more interesting for the target audience.
Direct Cinema documentaries tend to have moving interviews and take a direct role in present conflicts. "Salesman" is a popular direct cinema documentary made in 1969. The subject matter follows four salesman in New England USA as they try to sell Bibles.
Modern Day Documentary
Modern documentaries have done very well in cinemas and have created huge profits for film company's, especially if the documentary is a low-budget film. Al Gore' "An Inconvenient Truth" was incredibly successful as Gore sourced PowerPoint's, graphs, contemporary footage and his own opinions on his environmental beliefs, while establishing the shock factor. There has been critical disputes over the reliability of Gore's information but it cannot be taken away from the popularity and box office hits it has achieved.
Documentary's such as "Eyes on the Prize" focus on different views and opinions from the past and focus less on the on-screen and active documentarian. Also, nowadays, documentaries have become widely available due to modern technologies, such as DVD'S, Netflix and catch-up sites, such as 4oD.
New documentaries now include hash tags at the bottom of the screen in order for the topic to be discussed on Twitter, which helps to improve the popularity of the documentary. This allows the documentary, the viewer and Twitter users to debate and criticise the content. Also, modern documentaries now use 1080p quality and impressive camera definition in order to display the reality of the current location. Most modern documentaries attempt to shock the public, such as "Sun, Sex and Suspicious Parents."
Eva 1 from Jodie O'Neill
How effective is the combination of your main task and the ancillary texts?
Below I have created a Tagexdo. I created this by pasting all the words from the second question to see which one would appear the most. Audience and conventions tend to appear the most.
What have you learned from your audience feedback?
Results Analysis
1) Did you enjoy the radio advert and the magazine article?
Yes 95%
No 5%
This is a good result, as it shows that most of the public enjoyed both features. There is obviously room for improvement if I had an extended deadline.
2) Which task did you like the most: the radio advert of the magazine article?
Radio Advert 51%
Magazine Article 49%
Out of these results, most male participants preferred the radio advert. This is important to take on board as our advertisement campaign should appeal to everyone.
3) Who would you say that target audience is?
Children 2%
Adults 20%
Teenagers 78%
Elderly 0
Not Sure 0
This is a great result, as it highlights that my ancillary tasks meet the required target audience standard and that my products are easily identifiable with my target audience.
I have also included two pieces of historic research into the history of a thriller (AS) and the history of documentary (A2). The contrasting comparison in the detail and length is extremely clear and shows how I have advanced this year in terms of research, planning ad evaluation.
Prior to 1900
Documentary has advanced incredibly over the past hundred years, due to the growing developments of technology, different topics and new ordeals and the way documentary is presented. I thought it would be useful to understand the journey documentary has undertaken and to see how documentary has gone from being a few minutes long to now being a few hours long, with stylistic idea embedded, such as the new wave of Twitter hash tagging.
The length of documentary in the early days was extremely limited due to the lack of technology and film development. Documentary was produced by using photographs or short snippets of film all in one to prevail the filmmakers meaning or research results. Early films concentrated on workers and everyday events in which the public could relate to. Moving images began to gain audience attention as many individual wanted to see themselves on screen. This has now developed into sub-genre documentaries of reality documentaries, such as TOWIE. Arguably this may be part of human nature to see how we appear on film and to other individuals.
Enoch J Rector revolutionised the game of Boxing by filming the events by using film-looping technology that was responsible advance in 1897. The fight was The Corbett-Fitzsimmons Fight and lasted an hour an a half, which was an incredibly long "actuality" film prior 1900.
Professor Gheorghe Marinescu, created several early documentaries by 1901 focusing on his scientific findings of the human body, such as the issues with muscle pain. Again, film-making has been used in a specific field, revolutionising future research and the layout of results, in which Marinescu said, ""studies with the help of the cinematograph".
Below is Marinescu's work
Post 1900
Post 1900 documentaries diverted away from the topics of everyday life and moved away from moving images of people, workers and trains. The early 1900 witnessed the popularity of Travelogue films that concentrated on unusual scenes, like the arctic and locations that contrasted with working environments such as London. A well-known documentary was the Moscow in Clad in 1909.
This camera was popular amongst
early documentary makers
1920's
The 1920's witnessed the development of various topics being documented into short films. Topics had developed from everyday life, to environment locations and now to a more romantic setting which suited the literature of the time. Robert Flaherty's work of "Nanook of the North" in 1922 incorporated romantiscm within his documentary as he ensured that the indigenous people lived in the manner of generations ago, in order to create a shocking contrast between Flaherty's society and the people of the documentary. The length of the documentary is quite impressive of its time, being 1hour 18minutes long.The staged events, such as killing a walrus with a harpoon instead of gun, is relatable to today's documentary, instead the people in the documentary are staging arguments, parties and various events. This is common in reality documentaries such as Made In Chelsea but less common in documentarian, Dan Snow's work.
1930-1940
By the 1930's documentary was becoming more popular and soon enough politics grabbed hold of this new medium to display and portray their parties ordeal and beliefs. However, documentary was manipulated into propaganda opportunities to attack minority groups, for example, Adolf Hitler accepted the publishing of anti-Jewish documentaries in order to display the racist attitudes of the Nazi Party.
The British movement in documentary really became heard in the 1940's with the establishment of John Grierson's "Documentary Film Movement" which concentrated more on the poetic and expressive side of politics and beliefs.
This was one of the most popular documentary from the Documentary
Film Movement. It concentrates on the process of sending mail from London
to Scotland.
Direct Cinema 1950-1970
Documentary advanced once again during the next twenty years as many studios and documentarians wanted to move away from the staged and planned documentaries and wanted to create something more organic. The stylistics used within new documentaries included on-screen documentarians and shooting directly on set with the camera on screen to create a sense of realism, while naturally following the subject matter. This was part of the French New Wave in film-making as they incorporated synchronized sound and cameras as part of the documentary.
Nevertheless, there are variation of direct cinema, being that the French and North America's direct cinema contain different stylistic devices and methods. They disputed over whether the documentarian should be on or off screen. Documentary maker Pennebaker thought that non-involvement was best to let the situations naturally flourish, where as other documentary makers, such as Rouch, believed that on-screen presence was better and even to provoke those on screen to make matters more interesting for the target audience.
Direct Cinema documentaries tend to have moving interviews and take a direct role in present conflicts. "Salesman" is a popular direct cinema documentary made in 1969. The subject matter follows four salesman in New England USA as they try to sell Bibles.
Modern Day Documentary
Modern documentaries have done very well in cinemas and have created huge profits for film company's, especially if the documentary is a low-budget film. Al Gore' "An Inconvenient Truth" was incredibly successful as Gore sourced PowerPoint's, graphs, contemporary footage and his own opinions on his environmental beliefs, while establishing the shock factor. There has been critical disputes over the reliability of Gore's information but it cannot be taken away from the popularity and box office hits it has achieved.
Documentary's such as "Eyes on the Prize" focus on different views and opinions from the past and focus less on the on-screen and active documentarian. Also, nowadays, documentaries have become widely available due to modern technologies, such as DVD'S, Netflix and catch-up sites, such as 4oD.
New documentaries now include hash tags at the bottom of the screen in order for the topic to be discussed on Twitter, which helps to improve the popularity of the documentary. This allows the documentary, the viewer and Twitter users to debate and criticise the content. Also, modern documentaries now use 1080p quality and impressive camera definition in order to display the reality of the current location. Most modern documentaries attempt to shock the public, such as "Sun, Sex and Suspicious Parents."
Saturday, 5 April 2014
How Tumblr plays a role in every day life
Yesterday I was scrolling through Facebook and I found a status that my friend made about Tumblr and how it has been distracting him from his work. I thought it was interesting how my documentary is relevant to current events and how it affects people that I directly know.
Friday, 4 April 2014
Magazine Article & Radio Advertisment - Campaign
By Jodie O'Neill
As you can see, I have significantly improved my magazine article from the previous design, earlier on in my blog. Again, I used Publisher to create my magazine article but this time I have altered the design layout to make it look like a realistic article with clear columns for text, a suitable title layout and interesting boxes and quote-grabs to make my article more interesting.
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