Online Research

In order to build up my online presence to match the industry I wish to break into I had to start by researching existing media professionals in the radio industry.

For my research I started by looking on LinkedIn for people in the radio industry or had screen shot 2019-01-29 at 09.52.09radio producer as their profession on their profile. I stumbled across Warren Hayden’s profile who has 16 years’ experience at the top of the radio industry working for Heart and BBC Radio Solent. His profile was a valuable resource for me as I got to see what information he has made publicly available and how I could replicate that in my profile. His ‘activity’ tab on his page showed me that he actively likes and shares posts that he is involved in or just general radio industry posts and this will show employers he is showing an active interest in the industry he is in.

Also, through wading through smaller radio producer profiles they also include screen shot 2019-01-29 at 09.57.32recommendations from previous employers which can be really useful when trying to break into the media industry because endorsements and written recommendations will really stand out to employers.

Trainspotting (week 1)

In our first lesson of video production we were properly introduced to the assessment brief that we found out about on Tuesday afternoon for the first time. For this task we have to work in small groups of three which consists of a producer, director and camera operator. At first we struggled to cut our group down from 4 to 3 people. There were two people outside of our initial 4 person group who weren’t in the lesson but needed to be in a group, so instead of dumping one person from our group to work with the other 2 we compromised and split our 4 into 2 so each pair would get one of the two people who didn’t show up, we thought this was the most fair and professional thing to do so everyone gets a good deal.

I will be working with Tom and Bella on this task and in this first lesson me and Tom discussed some of our ideas whilst filling out this team canvas. As Bella was not there today and we needed to sort out roles we decided that Tom will be cameraman, I will be producing and Bella will be directing. Below you can see our team canvas that we filled out that discussed our values and rules amongst other things.

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I am really excited to get started with this project as I believe it presents some interesting and new challenges that I haven’t encountered up until this point in the course.

Sam

Inspiration for our radio project

In the lead up to our live show for our audio production final project I have done some research into some podcasts about media that are like ours to gain a better perspective on what makes a compelling and interesting podcast. The shows I listened to were The media show on Radio 4 which is about revolution in media, presented by Amol Rajan and also the ‘On the media’ podcast which is an American podcast about the US news cycle. The episode I decided to listen to was an interview with the CEO of Channel 4, Alex Mahon.

What I can examine from the show is that there is minimal backing music used throughout the show as it focuses mainly on Amol and the people he interviews throughout the show. This does give the show a more professional sound as the audio solely focuses on what the interviewee wishes to say. This show has inspired me because I want to emulate the same professionalism that Amol manages to achieve with his show but also not have it so professional that it’s not fun.

The second show, On the media, was similarly professionally produced but far more playful when it came to implementing more elements such as backing tracks, phone interviews and news clips, which leads me to believe it is pre-recorded and not live like the Media show is. however the ‘On the media’ podcast more accurately targets the brief that we have been set of a live show/podcast that contains, interviews, discussions and voxpops and therefore its more of a one to one comparison that we can make.

I also learnt a lot about interviewing by listening to these shows as they have similar approaches to interviewing, the interviewer is very respectful and knowledgeable on the interviewee. They also manage to ask all the appropriately revealing questions they wish to ask without offending the interviewee but also are able to force discussion on the other side of their questions which is definitely something I would like to take into our live show because its important that we can talk amongst ourselves before and after the interviews take place so that the show feels organic.

Although our show wasn’t going to be pre-recorded we’d still like it to be slickly edited together like the ‘On the media’ show and we did this by using Qcart which allowed us to queue up our interviews so that we could play them when we liked according to our script that we’ve written so that for example when I say ‘Now its time for James’ interview’ I press play and James’ interview with Ben will play and hopefully there will be little to no dead air in between which will be aided by or inclusion of an instrumental behind our discussion segments.

Sam

Reflection on my employability

Screen Shot 2018-11-15 at 15.15.50This week I filled out a questionnaire regarding my employability which questioned skills such as networking, positivity and digital literacy. Initially I felt like I answered the quiz truthfully however after reflecting on my results and where they should be by the end of the year I think I over-graded myself in several areas such as goal setting which is at 83% but I think should be around 60% at this stage.

A part of my ESE (Employability self-evaluation) I do agree with and is a strength for me is my self-efficacy because I do believe I have a future in the industry and I think joining radio sonar this year and acting professionally in this society reflects this. However, this type of positivity could just be a generational thing.

I have identified three main areas for improvement following my ESE, these are: general networks, career decision making and resilience. Firstly, I aim to improve my general networks by going to industry events and meet new people and I can use the solent media 2018 facebook page to see upcoming events to go to, and I plan to do this by the end of the calendar year. Secondly, I want to improve career decision making by going to events, gaining experience and deciding through this what thread of the industry I want to go into and then talking to lecturers and professionals about how they choose jobs, I aim to do this by the end of the academic year. Finally, I think it’s really important that I improve my resilience because the only way to improve is to fail so by getting involved with jobs I can try and fail which I will hopefully learn from, and I want to do this also by the end of the academic year.

Studio lighting

A core element of a successful photograph is effective lighting and lighting used correctly. Although it can sometimes be digitally manipulated it is often more organic if it done correctly in the studio first time. Two factors that contribute to effective lighting are the direction it is coming from and the quality of the light.

Direction of light

Firstly, direction of light. Direction is shown by shadows in a photograph and without them images can come across one dimensional and shallow (Child, 2008). So what this means is that without lighting depth is really difficult to achieve, it may be useful to some  photographs to have little to know depth however most photos, especially portraiture depth is really important because the photographer wants to immerse the viewer into the scene.

© Natasha Djurdjevic

side lighting

flat lighting

 

 

 

 

 

© Irving Penn 

The photo on the left by Irving Penn demonstrates a lot of depth due to the direction that the light is coming from, the left side of his face appears to have been sucked into the background because we see no significant detail on this side of his face, in contrast the right side of his face is highly detailed and is very pronounced in the foreground because of the light on this side of his face. On the other hand the Natasha Djurdjevic has used a light right in front of the models face so that there is limited depth to the image.

Quality of light

Secondly, quality of light, which refers to the harshness and hence the type of lighting used by a photographer and how that impact an image. Tarrant (2001, p.101) argues that the dominant light impacts how we perceive a subject or setting, for example the use of a tungsten light gives a scene a sense of warmth and homeliness, whereas if a white light is used, photographs can come across as more commercial or staged.

joel-meyerowitz-times-square

© Joel Meyerowitz

This photo by Joel Meyerowitz is taken in Times Square and is a great example of how the quality and harshness of light really matters to the mood of the scene. This photo has a dominant yellow hue coming from washed out artificial lights of Times Square.

My project

I aim to apply this to my own work by thinking carefully on how I can use the direction of light to create depth and make sure that my subject is always the main focal point. I will use quality of light to make sure that my photograph is lit well using natural lighting, because I doubt I will be using studio lighting in my project.

Bibliography

CHILD, J., 2008. Essential skills: Studio Photography. 4th ed.

TARRANT, J., 2001. The Practical Guide to Photographic Lighting 

Our radio show

As part of our audio production unit we have been instructed to create a 30 minute radio show about a chosen society here at Solent university. As half of our group members have either experience in radio or have a Radio Sonar radio show we have chosen to do our presentation based on that. Our show must include an intro, individual interviews, Voxpops and discussions between hosts of the show and an outdo.

image

In preparation for creating this show we have come up with a team name and even recorded that process so we can use that as some backing noise for our show to make it more immersive, as this is something we might have struggled with. We eventually came up with a show name of “The stereo typicals” which is both radio related and appropriate to our group. we then went on the Youtube audio library to find some backing music for us to then go onto make our  first jingle which includes myself, Tom, James and Kieran saying “We are the stereo typicals”, this will work as a reminder for the audience as well an ident (if necessary) between segments of the show. After this James got into contact with three committee members including Station manager, Ben Winter, Head of production, Jack Dyson and Head of News, Seb Zany. As well as this Gawain has found someone involved in the society to interview and I am going to interview my co-host Josh. Most recently me and Tom have gone onto conduct a practice of how our show might sound using to a script provided by John.

The next step will be to carry out our Voxpops and interviews and try and get the whole group together to have the conversation portion of the show made.

How Composition Has Inspired Me

Even before researching and learning about composition my idea was heavily reliant on it, with a moving subject and are careful consideration on rule of thirds and particular framing. However, after learning about the importance of composition I’ve realised there is lots more I must consider.

Quote 1

“In photographic composition, the eye demands there is a clear ‘winner’ – one element in the frame that clearly has more importance than the others – be conveyed. Breaking up space within the frame into any combination of thirds helps the photographer do this.”

This quote informs my work as my photos rely on the strength of the subject within the frame and the idea of a ‘clear winner’ strikes me as something that will be very important when I take my photos because I want my photo series to follow a  narrative of two people meeting, one will come from the left and the other from the right, so a clear winner won’t be possible as I will have two elements to balance. This quote also talks about the rule of thirds, which I’ve also found throughout my research is going to be important to shape my images so they don’t appear messy and are actually well-structured.
Bryan Peterson, 2003. Learning To See Creatively, Revised Edition. New York, Amphoto Books

Quote 2

“Composition is to do with the showing of things in the strongest, most effective way, whatever your subject. often this means avoiding clutter and confusion between the various elements present (unless this confusion contributes to the mood you want to create)”

This quote means a lot because one of the key choices I had to make up to this point is locations and this quote talks about ‘avoiding clutter’ in the image which means making the most out of frame and not having elements that detract from the core subject and message of the image. I would like my photos to be very clean and mainly focus on the two subjects, so that means choosing locations that don’t distract the viewers attention away from the subjects.

Mirko Saviane example© Marko Saviane

This image by Mirko Saviane is a great example of what I’d like to do with my image series as it is really well framed and is taken at the decisive moment because any earlier and the man would’ve been in the shade and any later he would’ve been out of frame. The aspect ratio is also something that really intrigues me because it’s not conventional to a camera and it’s not a 1:1 ratio, the photo is cropped to almost a  3:2 ratio which works well to use the entire frame to his advantage and have no wastage left over.

BRUCE, ANDREW . AGOSSOU MARIE, Langford’s Basic Photography. 10th ed. Page 8

Quote 3

“The frame isolates part of a larger scene. Photography is different from other visual arts in the way in which a picture is composed. A painter starts with a blank canvas and adds marks until it is complete. A photographer starts with a complete world and uses the frame of the viewfinder to select a portion of a scene so everything else is discarded. One process adds, the other subtracts.”

This quote is particularly prominent for my work as I am working to create a narrative as if people are moving towards each other and you can’t fully be engrossed in that if you don’t believe these characters are living in the same world and that means I have to create a unique aesthetic that links the image series. Also the idea of movement within the space is important as well, as there needs to be a sense of progression that the audience understands.

Shinji ichikawa example© Shinji Ichikawa

This image by Shinji Ichikawa perfectly captures what I mean when I say I want a sense of movement and progression with my images, because this photo shows a pole and a ball on the edge of a tall wall and there’s an impending doom motif that sits within this image, this is something I’d like to emulate but instead of impending doom have it as an impending union or reunion of the subjects.

London, Stone, Upton, 2008. Photography The Essential Way. New Jersey: Pearson Education

 

Role of the producer

A producer is one of the most important roles in the media and requires a lot of skills and involves a lot of roles. Networking is the backbone of the producer role because you need to be able to find the most talented people for a role as a producer and networking makes this task a lot easier. Once you’ve found the most talented people you need to be able to communicate well with them and have good team-working skills. You also need to have a strong creative mind in order to contribute to the production. I believe I am a good people person and have good leadership and team-working skills and also have a strong creative background, however this isn’t all a producer has to be good at.

A producer also need to have good business and financial sense. They also need to make sure the production is legally compliant and have good problem solving skills. I don’t believe I have fully refined these skills and that  may be due to the fact I haven’t worked in a professional media production so I haven’t had to worry about budgets or choosing a talented team of people.

A media producer who I really admire is Spike Jonze who has worked in film, TV, music videos Spike Jonzeand commercials for the past 20 years and has been really influential in the media industry. His versatility is the main thing I admire about him, in the late 90s and early 00s Spike was producing and directing music videos for Daft Punk and Fatboy Slim, from there he went on to produce many MTV shows such as Jackass and Bad Grandpa. In 2014 Jonze won an Oscar for Original screenplay for ‘Her’ and also had a producing credit on that movie. And finally in March 2018 Spike Jonze produced a visually stunning advertisement for Apple’s new HomePod. So it’s fair to say Spike Jonze has been around the block as a producer.

What I have learnt from Spike Jonze is that a producer has to be adaptable for their role because they have a lot of roles to fill, it helps that Jonze has 100 directing and 20 writer credits also to his name, so he is clearly someone who is comfortable with many aspects of media production. He is also someone who had to work very hard to get where they are, he came making small music videos to producing an Academy award-winning movie. What I can take away from this is that I need to be prepared for anything and also I need to have my own identity as a producer, just as Spike Jonze has develop his own unique style.

Sam

Bibliography

SCREEN SKILLS, Producer- ScreenSkills Available from: https://www.screenskills.com/education-training/careers-information/job-profiles/content-creation/producer/

IMDB, Spike Jonze – IMDb Available from: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0005069/

An oddly specific initial idea

Theme and Name

The idea I am leaning towards at this early stage is based around the theme of journey and progress, I have a very specific set of shots that I am working towards but I also don’t want to tunnel vision on an idea this early, however I am confident I can make these shots work and convey a meaningful message. The basic premise is a man or woman walking across frame against six different backdrops and show a change in time across the six images this could perhaps be a change in time of day or time of year or an extreme change in location. I want the framing to stay consistent across the six photos but the subject to be moving from left to right in the photo series. As for a working title on these images I was thinking ‘An Ambient Amble’.

Genre

The genre will therefore be a mixture of landscape, portraiture and street photography. My main concern at this point is a lack of technical flair that might go into making the images, as it won’t be difficult to set up a tripod and move it to different locations and have someone walk across frame each time.  My technical skills will need to be shown in my choice of lenses, choice of outfit and choice of location and how they contribute to the message that I want to put across with my six images.

Inspiration

I do have a clear inspiration for my images and this is a short film made by Casey Neistat called ‘Make it count’ . This movie was made as a sponsorship for Nike in which Neistat travels the world on the budget that he is given by Nike and explores different countries and their culture. I am particularly inspired by a set of recurring shots that he uses throughout the movie in which he runs across frame and as he does he is transported to different exotic locations. Here are just a few examples:

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Obviously, I do not have the budget to travel to locations of this exuberence but I do think I can recreate the style of the photos. What will set my images apart from Neistat’s is that my set will have more thought going into the fashion choices, my subject will walk across frame and not run and the framing will be tighter (smaller field of view) to accommodate for a slower subject.

In analysis of Neistat’s work, there is a great use of colour particularly in the first image which uses bright colours to reflect the culture of the location that he is in. depth of field is also something that is important across all six of these images because he uses a lens with a highnumber in order to make sure the entire background is in focus but his shape is not compromised at the same time. I think these photos may have been taken on a wide angle lens because he manages to get a lot into the frame. I think the main message behind these shots in context with the movie itself is that you should always be pushing yourself forward and in general have a more positive mindset. My photos however may have a darker motif highlighted by the more laborious walking, the subject maybe someone who is just getting by rather than pushing themselves, however like I said at the start I don’t want to limit my self to one specific message this early on.

Another one of my more loose inspirations is The Beatles’ 1969 album cover of ‘Abbey Road’. An iconic photo that has been parodied more times than I can count. The photographer of the image is Iain Macmillan. According to the Beatles bible website “Macmillan used a Hasselblad camera with a 50mm wide-angle lens, aperture f22, at 1/500 seconds”. A 50mm lens is just larger than the human eye’s field of view, which is around 35mm, which does give the image a grounded aesthetic whilst still managing to get all four band members comfortably in frame, this is something that I would like to emulate with my photo set.Abbey road album

In analysis, the framing is perfect, however in my images I may want to use an aspect ratio more comparable to a 16:9 like Neistat’s, rather than 1:1 that Macmillan was limited to with this album cover. There are strong structural lines in this image from the zebra crossing in the foreground to the curb either side of the road and also the tree line at the top of the image. These lines lead your eye through the photo until the road disappears, this is also due to Macmillan’s use of an f22 which gives a deeper depth of field meaning more is in focus, something which I want in my photos. The shutter speed of this image is also useful information in the lead up to me taking my own photos because the Beatles are walking which is what my model will be doing, 1/500 seconds is a relatively fast shutter speed which results in no motion blur when the subject is walking.

Intentions

My intentions for the project at this stage is to plan ahead but not get too ahead of myself. The Abbey road album cover has given me a lot of technical insight on what camera equipment I will need to pull of my photos, therefore I will need: A tripod, A 50mm lens on a camera set at a f22 aperture and 1/500 shutter speed. At the moment I want to focus on location scouting, which will be an essential backbone to my six images and will be an element that will hold a lot of meaning for the images. Therefore I have shot at the following locations as a guide for the future:

8 Initial images

These 8 initial images seem very plain on their own, however I think this is because of a lack of an interest/subject. I wanted my initial photos to be like this though because I needed to first find interesting locations and backdrops, so that when I come round to shooting with a model I am not wasting time pandering on finding locations because I have already scouted for them.

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Sam

The Habitat podcast

In this 6 episode podcast series 6 stranger volunteers live in the dome on the side of a Hawaiian volcano that is aThe habitat podcast simulation of what it might be like to live on mars for a whole year. The podcast is mostly live recorded audio from Hawaii/the dome but there is also narration over the top. The first episode is simply used as exposition for the series and a small amount of the start of the journey. I liked the overall premise of the podcast however I think at least for the first episode the content was a bit lacking although I think in later episodes it will get more interesting as more and more problems arise for the “Astronauts”.

The one female presenter provides narration as well as live commentary before the team start their journey. The podcasts does not omit the sound of footsteps on crunching rocks and loud splashing of the ocean water. There is one sound clip used of a old spaceship launch which is used while the narrator talks about one of the volunteers dreams of the becoming an astronaut. There is some background music used while adverts play at the beginning and middle of the podcast, but music is rarely used during the main body of the documentary other than for filler.

Sam