Hey guys! This is my multimedia factual story on my friend Faye who was in the Japanese earthquake last year.
Its quite eye opening. Enjoy!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dIZL9hRjj1s
Wednesday, 12 September 2012
Wednesday, 29 August 2012
I'm On A Train!
As you may have guessed by the title of the post, I am in
fact on a train at this very moment. To normal university students, or ‘day
rats’ as we know them, a train or public transport is the usual way to and from
university. They use it many times a day to get to where they want to go.
Ultimately, I am now sitting on the train before my planned train because I was so nervous about missing it that I arrived TOO early. I don’t know whether this is a triumph or defeat. I am however highly disappointed that no one is willing to speak. Every seat is full and people are standing, however no-one is opening their mouth or engaging in conversation. I miss the days when talking to strangers was a normal thing. When people couldn’t hide behind their headphones or bury their head in their IPad.
For us college kids however, public transport is still
something that we’re all getting used to. We’re trapped in this ‘St Lucia
bubble’ where everything we need is a walking distance away and the only
transport we generally use is a bus to the Royal Exchange on a Sunday night.
Thus, there is always a little bit of anxiety when it comes to venturing
outside the bubble and using these forms of transport.
Today I am going back down to my house in Byron Bay for the
weekend to see the family. It is father’s day after all, so it was a fitting
time to head back and catch up with everyone. I decided to leave my Psychology
tute just a little bit early, to ensure that I would make the bus to take me to
the train station. But as the tute went on, the anxiety built up. I ended up
leaving 15 minutes earlier than I planned to. Another contributing factor to
this may have been that the tutorial was utterly boring, but that is irrelevant.
So arriving at the train station 40 minutes before my train was supposed to
arrive, I sat myself down, mentally preparing myself for a long wait. An
announcement then was projected over the loud speaker announcing that the gold
coast express was arriving in two minutes.
Ultimately, I am now sitting on the train before my planned train because I was so nervous about missing it that I arrived TOO early. I don’t know whether this is a triumph or defeat. I am however highly disappointed that no one is willing to speak. Every seat is full and people are standing, however no-one is opening their mouth or engaging in conversation. I miss the days when talking to strangers was a normal thing. When people couldn’t hide behind their headphones or bury their head in their IPad.
Though my journey is nearly over and I am coming to the
conclusion of this blog post, I would just like to say this. Socialise. I’m
sure I’m not the only one sitting on the train hoping someone will make
contact. Maybe you might even make a friend!
Think about it.
Tuesday, 28 August 2012
MTV On A Sunday - Lecture 6
Walking into lecture six on a faithful Monday afternoon, I
was feeling pretty content about life. I’d just had an amazing Sunday planted
in front of MTV with my friends, ‘studying’ and watching the music countdown
titled: Top 400 Song of the Noughties.
You can imagine my guilt when the lecture was on commercial
media. I was ashamed to find that, yes; MTV was pay TV and thus a part of this commercialisation.
Commercial media can come in different forms such as newspapers, pay TV and
free-to-air TV, radio, magazines, and a lot of various digital media. After listening for the lecture for about
fifteen minutes, I wondered whether I should feel guilty about using commercial
media. Sure, I did waste a whole Sunday watching pointless television, but it
was worth it, right?
So todays lecture rant is about how the lack of quality in commercial
media is dumbing down society. Long were the days when documentaries played on
free TV. Gone are the days when decent radio and talkback happened without
being interrupted by hundreds of ads. Really channel Ten? The Lara Bingle Show?
Surely this will be the downfall of your station. As poor university students,
we can’t afford to have pay TV, so are we left with game and reality shows? Where
are all the programs on free-TV that have heart? Programs that enlighten us
with knowledge and educate us, challenging our thoughts and opinions! Lara’s IQ
can only be negatively affecting us!
It’s not only what they say on commercial media, it is the
time consumption that also affects us. I lost a whole Sunday of being studious
to watch a pointless music countdown. Yes, I could have turned it off, but
advertisers have spent time and effort finding the perfect way to attract the audience
and leave them hanging. All this potentially productive time spent on nothing.
So my final statement of the rant is this: Although commercialisation of media
seems to make the big dollars that everybody seems to love, it is ultimately
not challenging those who use it and thus, not allowing their minds to grow and
filling them with pointless advertisements. This may be the downfall of media
as we know it.
Think about it.
Thursday, 23 August 2012
How Selling Things Leads To Deep Thoughts About Life
Today I tried to sell things in the Great Court on the University
campus. Chocolates, to be more specific. I spent the whole morning sitting with
a friend of mine yelling at innocent people walking past, demanding that they
buy chocolates for the cause I was fundraising for. After watching many people
avoid eye contact, walk faster and try not to smile at our poor sense of humour
and marketing skills, I couldn’t help but wonder if this is what it felt like
to be a journalist. Chasing people around trying to get them listen to what you
have to say and answer the questions you yell at them. The feeling of rejection
always looming in the air, not knowing where it would strike next. I then
wondered if every stereotypical movie about a journalist living a tough life in
the big city was true. Was it really a dog eat dog world? All that I knew about
journalism before this course, I’ve learnt from ‘Confessions of a Shopaholic’
or ‘Sex and the City’.
I then thought about my future career and how a person is supposed
to decide what they want to do for their rest of their life at a mere 18. I
still don’t know what I want to be. I feel as though when I decide, I’m going
to be trapped in that field for the rest of my life. Also, with the economy the
way it is today, is it better to go for a career with job stability rather than
a job you enjoy? How do we decide to take risks or play it safe?
So many factors to take into account. It’s such a big life
decision. It makes me wish someone would just tell me what to do with my life
so the dilemma would just be over. In the end though, personally I believe passion
should win. What is life without passion and fun? At the end of your existence,
it’s not going to matter how much money you earned or how long you worked for
one company or another. All that you will think back to is everything you loved
and if you don’t love your career, then so many hours of your life would be
nothing but wasted.
Just food for thought.
I would also like you leave you with a link to a news article I
found about men stealing a penguin from Sea World.
Enjoy!
Wednesday, 22 August 2012
What You See Is What You Get - Lecture 5
I’ve
always appreciated photography. It’s ability to capture emotions draws me in.
So many various feelings can be communicated to the audience, engaging each
individual and allowing emotion to brew inside themselves. The power
photographs hold is astonishing; however people don’t seem to understand their
full potential. As you may have guessed, this week’s lecture was about picture
stories and visual media.
We
discussed early newspapers and newsletters with line drawings used as visual
aids. The evolution of photographs was then taught to us, from the first colour
picture in the newspaper to the first video uploaded to the internet (which was
highly anticlimactic). Looking at all the amazing images that were being
projected on screen, my self-esteem rates were low. I despise psychologists for
saying left-handed people are more creative and giving me false hope.
Bruce
Redman must be a mind reader, because at that point he provided the class with
factors that make a great photo such as framing, focus, angle and point of
view, exposure of light, and most importantly timing and capturing ‘the moment’.
To
me, ‘the moment’ seemed to be the key aspect in any good photograph. The one
moment that captures the raw emotion of a person. When their defences are down
and you can see true feelings written all over their faces. I believe THOSE
images are what draw in the audience. They engage them, appeal to them.
Now
I would like to leave you with my favourite image. I studied this in year 11
photography, but every time I look at the image, regardless of how many times I
have looked at it before, fresh, raw emotions flood straight back to me. The
photograph is by Phan Thi Kim Phuc and communicates young children fleeing the
attack of a napalm bomb that has been dropped in Vietnam in 1972. You can see
the pain in their face clearly, both physically and emotionally, a pain that
they did not deserve.
Thus,
my final statement of the blog post is this: a picture has no meaning at all if
it cannot tell a story.
Thursday, 16 August 2012
Media Usage/Production Diary - Assessment One
Table 1: Raw data collected
of all media use over a ten day period.
Figure 1: All recorded media
use over the 10 days.
This graph demonstrates the
various forms of media that were used over the duration as well as recording
how long each was used for. This allows for an easy comparison of which forms
of media I use the most and the least.
Figure 2: The comparison of print, visual and audio
media use over the 10 day period.
The graph and table clearly
demonstrate that audio media was used the most over the ten day period, as it
alone is greater than print and visual media usage combined (56%). This is possibly
due to the convenience of an iPod which allows me to listen to music during
other anti-social activities. Visual media such as YouTube and television were
used the least amount, a mere 13% of all media usage. Print media was
moderately used, with 31% of my media use being in the form of a website,
magazine or newspaper.
|
Table 2: The recorded minutes
in ten days of each type of media, including examples of each media type. The
table clearly shows that audio media is used the most in my daily life.
Figure 3: Comparing the average media usage on a day
that I attend university with average media use on a day when I don’t have
University.
Figure 4: The amount of time
each media was used throughout the ten days (in minutes).
The graphs from figure three
and four demonstrates that on average, I use more media on days that I go to
the university campus compared to days I stay home. This may due to the fact
that on days off, I have to ability to do recreational activities that don’t
require media, whereas on university days I am constantly using media for class
work, as well as social media.
Figure 5: Use of old media compared to new media over
the duration of ten days.
These results clearly portray
new media as my most dominant form of media use, as it is used 97% of the time,
compared to old media being used 3% of the time. This highlights my full
transition to new media, only using old media such as newspapers on rare
occasions.
Figure 6: Comparison of my
daily internet use to the average internet use of my Jour1111 class.
The results demonstrate that
my personal internet use is on average, slightly lower than that of the class.
Day 1
|
Day 2
|
Day 3
|
Day 4
|
Day 5
|
Day 6
|
Day 7
|
Day 8
|
Day 9
|
Day
10
|
|
Social
Network
|
120
|
110
|
65
|
130
|
110
|
120
|
125
|
15
|
90
|
100
|
Youtube
and online video media
|
15
|
25
|
80
|
90
|
10
|
50
|
60
|
85
|
90
|
25
|
General
Internet Use
|
15
|
30
|
40
|
0
|
10
|
65
|
35
|
50
|
10
|
15
|
Online
newspaper
|
10
|
15
|
5
|
0
|
15
|
5
|
20
|
5
|
10
|
0
|
Email
|
25
|
15
|
10
|
5
|
10
|
15
|
15
|
20
|
25
|
20
|
Table 3: Amount of Time the
Internet Is Used On A Daily Basis- Over the duration of 10 days.
FORMAL ANALYSIS:
Over the last decade the world has experienced an extreme
transformation from old media such as newspapers and magazines to new media
such as social networking and the internet. With each person having the ability
to produce and express themselves creatively online, the boom in media
throughout society is not surprising. Over the duration of the ten days, it
became evident that my use of old media is a rare occasion (3% of the time),
with my time constantly consumed with new media (97% of the time). Living in a
city and constantly being surrounded by people my own age at one of the top
institutes in Australia, it has become unavoidable and old media has been
phased out of my life.
The media diary brought to my attention that I have
unconsciously joined the social networking craze; however it seemed I was not
the only one in my journalism class. Results from a survey demonstrated that
95.8% of students have a Facebook account, and astonishingly 81.2% of those
students social network on a smartphone.
Furthermore, when analysing data it became evident that my media use was
relatively higher on days which I attended university, rather than days I did
not have class. I have concluded that this is due to the developments in
learning which allow students to read lecture notes off media devices such as
laptops and iPads, as well as download recordings and readings. A survey taken
on my journalism class shows that 24.8% of the students use the internet 3-4
hours a day, similar to my usage on days I have class. Additionally, when
returning home from university tired, watching a film or television is commonly
used as a tool for relaxing, extending my media usage.
A large majority of the media use that was recorded in the
diary surrounded audio media, possibly explained by convenience. Using an iPod
allows me to listen to music when performing anti-social activities such as
walking to class or going to the gym, thus showing that many hours are spent
listening to audio media. Another contributing factor to the increased use of
audio media is that I live away from home with my family and friends back in my
small town in New South Wales; therefore I am constantly making phone calls to
keep in contact with those I love.
Although there are various reasons for the obtained results,
I strongly believe one major contributing factor strongly influences my media
usage. I currently live at Duchesne College, surrounded by 200 girls my own age
and the latest learning facilities on campus. Living with so many people,
social networking has become a key aspect of my life as it keeps me updated on
upcoming sporting and social events within the college. Furthermore, old media
is only found in communal areas such as the common room or library which I
rarely visit, therefore my exposure to old media is limited on a day-to-day
basis. Likewise, on days I don’t attend
classes, social activities and face-to-face contact usually occurs, reducing my
media usage.
Through the results of my media journal, I can successfully conclude
that I am amongst the rest of society when it comes to using media in daily
life. I have transitioned without realising it into the next generation of
media usage and I believe there are only positive things to come.
Tuesday, 14 August 2012
The Sound Of Music - Lecture 4
An audio lecture. Something lectopia has educated me on. This week
in journalism we didn’t have to attend the lecture in person because it was all
about audio, and when you teach audio, why would you not have an audio
lecture?! Good thinking Bruce! The audio lecture described what it was like to
work in radio and how significantly different it is from television. Did you
know that you’re more likely to tell when someone in lying in radio rather than
in television? This is because there is no visual to distract the audience so
they focus more on what the individual is saying. It is also easier to
personalise and create an intimacy between the speaker and the audience.
Throughout the lecture I picked up little ‘handy hints’ you could call them,
about audio media and radio.
However, there was one thing that stopped me in my tracks
throughout the lecture. That made me zone out and ignore everything else that
was being said for the following 5 minutes. This was that radio is booming. It
was highly unexpected. As a form of old media, you would think that it was slowly
being phased out of society and people would be moving towards more modern
types of media. Yet it seems that radio is adapting and moving WITH the
transitioning media to blend into the modern world. Using technologies such as
podcasts and radio over the internet, people tend to listen to broadcasts more
often. This is explained by people being time poor. In my mind, I tried to make
sense of this. I didn’t really understand why time poor people would listen to
the radio. Yes, it helps us connect with other human beings, but you would
think that if they were time poor, they would do more important things than
listen to the radio.
The beauty of audio then hit me. People listen to the radio in
their car, while they walk to work, on their laptops while they are studying.
Podcasts can be downloaded and listened to as ease with the touch of a button.
It is so easy to use, yet allows you to concentrate on other things while you
listen. Somehow radio has successfully transformed without me even realising it
and society has loved the change.
It seems every week in journalism, my previous opinions on a subject
is shot down like a bird on hunting day. But that is what learning is about
right?
That’s all for now! I leave you all with a link to my favourite scene in The Sound Of Music!
My Favourite Things - Sound Of Music
My Favourite Things - Sound Of Music
Ciao!
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