Friday, 10 May 2019



Frank challenges female characters such as Vasque, this feeds into the patriarchy, as Frank is dismissive of women's achievements. Frank has monologues, which show his individualism. This also shows how he is the main narrator and protagonist of the story, as it is all focused around him. Frank is also cold, calculated and ruthless.. This also shows his individualism, as he is in it for himself. Frank also shows Consumerism, as he keeps talking about needing to wear a tuxedo to the ball.

Claire shows more masculinity than femininity, as she holds a lot of power. This links to Van Zoonen's theory. She is the opposite of what the media portrays women to be. This is obvious, as she makes Frank cry, cuts her hair a certain way to break away from her sexuality, she also degrades Zoe for using her sexuality to forward her career. Also, Claire breaks the patriarchy, as she has more power than  Frank as she is able to control him and manipulate his emotions.

Zoe uses her sexuality to forward her career, for example, wearing low cut shirts to get men's attention.

Meanwhile, Peter is irresponsible, as he lets his personal life affect his professional life. His life is driven by sexual desires. He undermines women, seeing them as only sexual objects. At his work, he is notorious for hiring younger women as his staff in order to  sleep with him at a later date.


House of Cards, how audiences consume and interpret long form dramas

Donald Trump is percieved as being manipulative and as being oversexual. Theresa is percieved as being untrustworthy.

Long Form Tv dramas' Production values are higher than TV dramas, as they are funded by subscribers. House of Cards typically costs $100 million to produce




























House of Cards, the influence of technological change

Wednesday, 8 May 2019

5.)Source B is a comment section on a Facebook page. Meanwhile, Source C is an article from the Daily Telegraph. This means that Source B is the opinion of the viewers. Meanwhile, Source C is the opinion of the Daily Telegraph. This could link to Shirky's theory, where there are no longer passive viewers, as they are all now active viewers, this is why they question the content that they are consuming.. This is why they have opinions.

Source C shows online feedback from readers provides. This reflects the conventions of Tabloid vs Broadsheet papers, as Source C is fact based, and has more writing, meanwhile Source B is opinion based, as it is a comment section. On Source B, one of the comments says "there is mutiny at the BBC its absolute chaos" suggests a criticism of the BBC following the release of pay figures.

In Source B, The Daily Mail is Right Wing, which links to the fact that the viewers are insensitive towards the pay gap between men and women. This implies that the viewers do not believe in equal pay and the line " I could not tell you who Emily Maitlis is, never heard of her." This challenges bell hooks theory, which states that feminism is a battle to fight against Patriarchy. The Telegraph is a right-wing paper, however it fact based analysis is more sympathetic to the call for equal pay.


Media Mock Exam Revision

  

Wednesday, 24 April 2019










Curran and Seaton’s theory relates to PROFIT and Power. Media theory Curran and Seaton.  Argue that media industries follow a capitalist pattern of increasing concentration of ownership in fewer and fewer hands.   
·         With the concentration of newspaper’s in fewer hands (oligarchies) enables Newspapers to increase profits through increased readership.
·         With the narrowing of choice to few Newspaper groups the owners of the Press groups the Press Barons (see below) or Elites have the opportunity to represent their political perspectives.
·         This applies to the narrow range of political opinions expressed by British Newspapers with a bias to Pro capitalism

·         The reason why Press barons own Newspapers is to achieve status and to wield political power.



Newspaper adverts:
Telegraph:
Holidays
Furniture

Daily Mail:
Tax advice
Fashion


Newspapers relied on circulation and advertising for revenue, Tabloid Newspapers had a larger circulation but their working class audiences were less attractive to advertisers so the Tabloids relied more on cover price.Broadsheet Newspapers had smaller circulations and an attractive upmarket audience and relied more on advertising. Newspapers now have a wide range of funding sources. The Daily Mail has a cover price of £ 0.65 which is relatively low in order to boost its circulation. Some Newspapers rely entirely on advertising as they are given away (to boost circulation and attract advertising) for Free such as the Metro. The Daily Telegraph retails for £1.40 and applies a Paywall £3.00 per week to generate income. The Guardian retails for £2.20 and relies on voluntary donations for online news and now has 800,000 paying supporters. Some newspapers gain revenue from advertising space where Print was traditionally more lucrative than online advertising, however with the decline in print sales online is increasingly more important especially as On-line has a global audience.

Daily Mail:
Age 65 and over- Holiday adverts, Articles on Tv
Female - Gossip stories
B, C1, C2, D, E - as political stories are also targeted

Telegraph:
Age 65 - royal family
Male - Game of Thrones advert
Female - womens clothes
C2, D, E -

S. Hall’s Reception theory
The theory suggests that: When a producer constructs a text it is encoded with a meaning or message that the producer wishes to convey to the audience
In some instances audiences will correctly decode the message or meaning and understand what the producer was trying to say
In some instances the audience will either reject or fail to correctly understand the message
media producers encode ‘preferred meanings’ into texts, but these texts may be ‘read’ by their audiences in a number of different ways:
The dominant position: a ‘preferred reading’ that accepts the text’s messages and the ideological assumptions behind the messages
The negotiated position: the reader accepts the text’s ideological assumptions, but disagrees with aspects of the messages, so negotiates the meaning to fit with their ‘lived experience’
The oppositional reading: the reader rejects both the overt message and its underlying ideological assumptions.


Task discuss the main headline opposite.  Apply Hall’s theory to discuss the three ways that the text could be interpreted
Preferred - Believe in the message, and think that 1.5 Turks are a bad thing.

Oppositional - Reject the complete message, and completely disagree that 1.5 Turks coming in doesn't exist

Negotiated - May agree that the message is real, but may want to manage the Turks coming in.