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Be able to describe how we define audiences Be able to describe how media producers carry out research Will be able to describe how products are constructed for an audience. How media producers define audiences.
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Be able to describe how we define audiences Be able to describe how media producers carry out research Will be able to describe how products are constructed for an audience
How media producers define audiences • Media production is expensive, and they don't want to lose money. Media producers use audience research agencies which classify and profile audiences to help the industry stay in touch with their audiences’ changing tastes and they use the information they gather to target the correct audience. • Media producers create products for audiences these products are encoded with codes and conventions. Each genre has their own codes and conventions. • In order to encode products media producers first have to define their audience by using audience research
Audience research what can you remember? • Two types of research • Quantitative • Qualitative
Audience research • Media producers use both why? • Quantitative audience research • (audience ratings and measurement panels) • Qualitative audience research (focus groups, questionnaires, face-to-face interviews) • Question who are the following quantatative audience research boards for BARB, RAJAR, ABC?
Defining an audience • Media producers spend a lot of time and effort defining their audience so their product can be successful. They use both methods to get a true picture of their audience. • They do this through audience profiling by demographics and psychographics
Audience profiling • They use both qualitative and quantitative date to make assumptions about their audiences consumption and preferences , using demographic factors and also psychographic factors.
Demographics • What are demographics? • Why do we need to know this what is the purpose of this information?
Demographics: audience classification • SOC • Age • Gender • Sexuality • Ethnicity • Location • Education
What does that really tell you about these people? • Are we all the same?
Psychographics • Psychographics were never intended to replace demographics, what psychographics are supposed to do is to tell you about consumer behaviour, why do people buy certain products. • Psychographics are to do with values, attitudes, interests, or lifestyles. • Psychographics are based on social, psychological, and the behavioral,
Psychographics are based on Lifestyle • Lifestyle is: • Activities • Interests • Opinions
Activities why are they important? • Activities are interesting to marketers because they usually involve purchasing something? I.e. DVDs, going to the cinema • With the choice of activities the activities you choose tells us something about you. • Activities help us to identify customer needs. • Make a list of activities that you do
Activities • Activities reflect consumer lifestyle, and so do the means by which consumers learn about, acquire and pay for the products • they use. I.e. from the internet, radio, friends etc. • Market research is usually good way of finding about people’s activities and interest.
Interests • What people are interested in tells you a lot about who they are. • What are your interests? • What do they tell people about you?
Opinions or values Personality types Self actualisers Focused on people and relationships, individualistic and creative, enthusiastically exploring change, 'in a framework of no prescriptive consideration for others'. Innovators Self-confident risk-takers, seeking new and different things, setting their own targets to achieve. Esteem seekers Acquisitive and materialistic, aspiring to what they see are symbols of success, including things and experience Strivers Attach importance to image and status, as a means of enabling acceptance by their peer group, at the same time holding onto traditional values. Contented conformers Want to be 'normal', so follow the herd, accepting of their circumstances, they are contented and comfortable in the security of their own making. Traditionalists Risk averse, guided by traditional behaviours and values, quiet and reserved, hanging back and blending in with the crowd. Disconnected Detached and resentful, embittered and apathetic, tending to live in the 'ever-present now'.
Acorn Catergories • Wealthy Achievers • Urban Prosperity • Comfortably Off • Moderate Means • Hard Pressed
Geodemographics/ Regional identity • Is the way they seem themselves based on regional identity i.e. Brumies, Cockneys or Scottish.
What does this all mean • Audience research collecting data about both demographic and psychographic information can tell you a lot about the following • media preferences • product preferences • buying patterns
Three types of audiences: Mainstream, Niche and alternative • Mainstream: Mainstream generally the majority of people in this country its c2de. people so it has the highest viewing figures. Most content is aimed at them. They like mainstream films such as Hollywood blockbusters. Also can be seen as middle of the road people • Niche: Small select group of audience that has a niche or specific interest i.e comics. These are becoming a bigger interest to advertisers because now audiences have more control about what they watch. Today’s companies are using social networking sites, and new scheduling tactics to target these groups • Alternative: These types of people are more likely to protest have an interest in generating their own content, and reading the alternative press. They are anything other than the mainstream. These types of people dislike authority and do not believe everything they read.
Question 1 • How do media producers define audiences using examples
How do media producers create products for specific audiences
Construction of a product • Once an audience has been defined media producers then create a product for their specific audience. • They do this through addressing audiences through the following: • Selection of content • Construction of content
Analysing media texts • Selection of content eg what they choose to show: • Words • images • Sound • Sequences • Colours • Fonts
Analysing media texts • narratives • layout • captions • anchorage; codes and conventions, eg linguistic, visual, audio, symbolic, technical; modes of address
What you need to analyse • 1. Who is the audience for the documentary describe them demographically • 2. How has the content been selected for the audience i.e. Words, images, Sound, Sequences, Colours, Fonts • 3. How has the product been constructed for the audience analyse to the following: Anchorage • codes and conventions, eg • linguistic, visual, audio, symbolic, technical
Documentary • Documentary texts are supposedly those which aim to document reality, attempting to depict people, places and events. • However, the process of mediation means that this is something of a oxymoron, it being impossible to re-present reality without constructing a narrative that may be fictional in places. • Certainly, any images that are edited cannot claim to be wholly factual, they are the result of choices made by the photographer on the other end of the lens. However, it is widely accepted that categories of media texts can be classed as non-fiction, that their aim is to reveal a version of reality that is less filtered and reconstructed than in a fiction text. • Such texts are often constructed from a particular moral or political perspective, and cannot therefore claim to be objective i.e from the directors perspective i.eMicheal Moore’s Bowling for Columbine which is anti guns. • Other texts simply record an event, although decisions made in post-production mean that through edited, re-sequenced they cannot be said to be unbiased. The documentary maker generally establishes what they want to say before starting the construction of their text, and the process of documentary-making can be simply supporting of their idea. • The documentary genre has a range of purposes, from the simple selection and recording of events (a snapshot or unedited holiday video) to a polemic text that attempts to persuade the audience into a specific set of opinions Audiences must identify that purpose early on and will therefore decode documentary texts differently to fictional narratives.
Two major approaches You can generally categorise documentary into two major approaches: • History and biography: Dealing with events of the past, usually involving some re-creation. • Filming behaviour: intending to portray different groups of people and are usually contemporary.
Documentary formats Media theorist Bill Nichols identified six different types of documentary modes. These six can often overlap • Poetic • Expository: • Observational • Interactive or participatory • Reflexive • Performative
Poetic • The poetic mode of documentary moves away from the "objective" reality of a given situation or people to grasp at an inner "truth" that can only be grasped by poetical manipulation • Codes emphasizes visual associations, tonal or rhythmic qualities, descriptive passages, and formal organization favours mood, tone and texture. • Key Examples of Poetic tradition in documentary include: • LeniRiefenstahl's Olympia (1938) presents a glorified view of (Aryan) athletes during the 1936 Olympic Games - celebrating power and beauty of the (Aryan) human form + Triumph of the • Will (1935) + Baraka (1981) also Powaqqatsi (2003)
THE EXPOSITORY MODE (voice of god) • The expository documentary uses a narrator to address the audience directly and to present an exposition, or explanation, interpreting what they are seeing on screen. Because of the disembodied nature of the narration, this form of documentary is sometimes known as the voice-of-God mode.This is one of the oldest forms of documentary and one of the most established conventions. Programmes such as Big Brother and its follow-ups (Channel 4, 2000-2002) still use the voice-of-God narration, in the form of voice-overs by one of the producers, in order to interpret the material we are watching.Whether or not the narrator is represented visually, we are expected to trust the narration as a definitive interpretation of, or anchor for the visual material and to accept it as authoritative on the subject matter. • Most associated with Television News programming. • Key Examples of Expository tradition in documentary include: • Work of John Grierson Many nature Documentaries
Exposition mode continued In order to make this kind of identification easier, the narrator will often represent the target audience for the programme(which frequently means a male, white, middle-class narration) and will address them as a group who share the implied values of the text. On occasions, the narration of a documentary is shared between a number of people, as experts, witnesses or participants. This kind of narration is known astalking heads mode, describing the characteristic medium close-up shot which is used to frame the individual. This approach is often used in programmes such as Emergency 999 or Crimewatch(BBC) where a number of different perspectives on a single incident are available.
THE OBSERVATIONAL MODE – window on the world • Unlike exposition, observation mode grew in response to a move in the 1950’s and 1960s, which wanted to capture real life where filmakers acted as neutral observers i.e fly on the wall documentaries for instance Educating Essex. • Codes and conventions include: • The filmmaker remains hidden behind the camera, ignored by the surrounding environment, he/she neither changes nor influences the actions/events being captured. • Since nothing is staged for the camera, the camera rushes about to keep up with the action resulting in rough, shaky, often amateur-looking footage. • Key Examples of the Cinema Verite/Direct cinema Movement: . • Frederick Wiseman, Hospital (1970) – fly on the wall, American hospital • Richard Pennebacker'sDon't Look Back (1967) - records Bob Dylan's 1965 tour of Britain • Also Soho Stories (1996), Geri (1999)
THE PARTICIPATORY or interactive MODE • Unlike the observational mode, the participatory mode welcomes direct engagement between filmmaker and subject(s) - the filmmaker becomes part of the events being recorded • The filmmakers impact on the events being recorded is acknowledged, indeed, it is often celebrated. Film makers engage with their subjects through asking questions and sharing experiences • Key Examples of the Participatory Mode include: • The films of Michael Moore - here the filmmaker directly engages with the material being address, he becomes a character in the documentary - an essential part of the subject • Nick Broomfield's work, such as Kurt and Courtney (1998) • Living with Michael Jackson (2004) Bashir
THE REFLEXIVE MODE • – • The Reflexive Mode acknowledges the constructed nature of documentary and flaunts it - • conveying to people that this is not necessarily "truth" but a reconstruction of it - "a" truth, not • "the" truth • Codes/conventions • The structure of the documentary is exposed - the audience are made aware of the editing, sound • recording, etc. • Key Examples of the Reflexive Mode include: • DzigaVertov'sMan with a Movie Camera (1929) - documents the mechanization of Soviet life in late twenties - the mechanical camera and cameraman become part of the subject. The art of making pictures is part of this "new" mechanical work and it to is part of the film – we literally at points in the film see the film being constructed
THE PERFORMATIVE MODE • This mode of documentary emphasizes the subjective nature of the documentarian as well as acknowledging the subjective reading of the audience - notions of being objectivity are replaced by the use of effect • Codes /conventions • This mode emphasizes the emotional and social impact on the audience • Key Examples of the Performative Mode include: • Supersize me Morgan Spurlock 2004 • Arguably, films by Michael Moore