Monday, 25 February 2013
Thursday, 14 February 2013
EVALUATION
For my documentary i done the pressure to be perfect. That is peoples views and opinions on how they feel about skinny people in magazines and if they or anyone they know have been affected by it and now has an eating problem.disorder.
I made it because i know a few people who have been affected by it (unfortunately i couldn't video them but i asked others about their opinions and views on it). I have also been affected by it in the past. I lost almost three stone in a month, i wasn't eating properly and i lost weight quickly and seeing people in magazines motivated me to not eat as much as i wanted to be like them as i thought that was what people wanted to see. I was really unconfident and i used to eat as much as 2 buttered crackers, a biscuit and LOTS of liquids in one day, liquids made me feel less hungry but i was sooo caught up into being 'perfect'. But its not like that anymore.
I made it by asking a few people if they were willing to answer a few of my questions and i recorded their answers and views and opinions on my nikon camera. I used Bob Marley- Three little birds as the music background in my documentary. I also went on premier to make it black and white to make it more effective and i used the razor tool to cut bits and add them somewhere else in the documentary.
I found research on google about how many females are diagnosed with eating problems in the UK and that it can be diagnosed to those as young as 6 years old.
I think my documentary is really good as i like peoples different views on it and different feelings about it and it gets a point across about how bad magazines and the skinny people in it can really have an effect on people. Along the way i was inspired by an old friend of mine that has an eating problem and the way see seen things and her weight was soo different compared to how others seen her.
The research was useful at the end because its letting people know that there is a LOT of people out there that have been affected and it could happen to anyone, not just girls!
I am pleased with my final piece, but i would change it by asking MORE people questions as i didn't ask many people, and i would make it a bit longer but apart from that, i am happy with the result.
Next time i would improve by asking more people, more questions, and making the documentary longer than what it was now, i like everything else i had done.
I made it because i know a few people who have been affected by it (unfortunately i couldn't video them but i asked others about their opinions and views on it). I have also been affected by it in the past. I lost almost three stone in a month, i wasn't eating properly and i lost weight quickly and seeing people in magazines motivated me to not eat as much as i wanted to be like them as i thought that was what people wanted to see. I was really unconfident and i used to eat as much as 2 buttered crackers, a biscuit and LOTS of liquids in one day, liquids made me feel less hungry but i was sooo caught up into being 'perfect'. But its not like that anymore.
I made it by asking a few people if they were willing to answer a few of my questions and i recorded their answers and views and opinions on my nikon camera. I used Bob Marley- Three little birds as the music background in my documentary. I also went on premier to make it black and white to make it more effective and i used the razor tool to cut bits and add them somewhere else in the documentary.
I found research on google about how many females are diagnosed with eating problems in the UK and that it can be diagnosed to those as young as 6 years old.
I think my documentary is really good as i like peoples different views on it and different feelings about it and it gets a point across about how bad magazines and the skinny people in it can really have an effect on people. Along the way i was inspired by an old friend of mine that has an eating problem and the way see seen things and her weight was soo different compared to how others seen her.
The research was useful at the end because its letting people know that there is a LOT of people out there that have been affected and it could happen to anyone, not just girls!
I am pleased with my final piece, but i would change it by asking MORE people questions as i didn't ask many people, and i would make it a bit longer but apart from that, i am happy with the result.
Next time i would improve by asking more people, more questions, and making the documentary longer than what it was now, i like everything else i had done.
Job role - Case study.
A T.V PRESENTER. A t.v presenter makes their job look easier than what it really is, but it's not easy. They have to listen clearly to what they have to do, and they have to try their best not to mess up on live television when they're on air.
T.V presenters work closer with the production team, following detailed instructions.
The boss is the director as everyone needs to be directed and told what to do something and how to do it and when to do it, the director directs when things happen and when things are said etc.
The hosts with the largest viewing audience will make more money than those who don't get as much viewers.
(Carol Patricia Smillie is a Scottish television personality, model and actress. Smillie is known for presenting the award-winning BBC series Changing Rooms, which won her a National Television Award for Most Popular Factual Programme in 1998.- Google)
Carol earns £1.29m year. Presenters that introduce programmes earn £25,000 - £50,000.
T.V presenters work closer with the production team, following detailed instructions.
The boss is the director as everyone needs to be directed and told what to do something and how to do it and when to do it, the director directs when things happen and when things are said etc.
The hosts with the largest viewing audience will make more money than those who don't get as much viewers.
(Carol Patricia Smillie is a Scottish television personality, model and actress. Smillie is known for presenting the award-winning BBC series Changing Rooms, which won her a National Television Award for Most Popular Factual Programme in 1998.- Google)
Carol earns £1.29m year. Presenters that introduce programmes earn £25,000 - £50,000.
On average a TV presenter earns £30,000-£35,000 a year.
The BBC can employ TV presenters and put them on the right path in the industry! They have on there, under 16s presenting, Comedy presenting, interviewing, serious presenting, (talking about personal, life things) etc. There's different kinds of presenting such as radio presenting but tv presenting is what i have chosen to investigate this role.
Reason why i chose this is because i find it interesting and i thought that kind of job would be really easy but its harder than it looks and i learned about it today whilst doing research on it and the job is actually really hard to do!
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