Thursday 21 March 2013

Question 1 - In what ways does your media product use, develop or challenge forms and conventions of real media products?

Evaluation

In what ways does your media product use, develop or challenge forms and conventions of real media products?


Figure 1

My magazine both uses many conventions of other media products in the same genre. As you can see in Figure 1 and Figure 2, the mise-en-scene of the images used are very similar. Figure 1 and Figure 2 are both very simple images with plain white backgrounds. Both models have no props, which is representative of hip hop culture, guitars and other more traditional instruments are rarely associated with the genre. Figure 1 features an image that I took in an attempt to represent British hip hop and rap, a street style/fashion with simplistic needs. The coat and backpack demonstrate the outdoors, 'out and about' culture of Britain and London, where British rap is most prevalent. In both Figure 1 and Figure 2, the cover models use their hands as an expansion of personality, while both are making eye contact with the reader. Figure 1 does, however, challenge Figure 2, as in Figure 2 Rick Ross is wearing sunglasses and expensive jewellery, whilst most noticeably he is wearing no top. This contrasts with Figure 1 where sunglasses are not present and not only is the model wearing a top, he is wearing a coat, fully zipped up. Figure 1 was taken in a studio, and I then used Adobe Photoshop to re-size, reposition and alter the levels, saturation and brightness/contrast of the image. Figure 2 was likely to also have been taken in a studio.


Figure 2

The mastheads in both Figure 1 and Figure 2 are positioned at the top of the magazine, which is the case across the market. Both mastheads cover side to side of the cover, imposing themselves on the reader. This was a conscious decision by me to have a larger, noticeable masthead. Both mastheads also contrast in colour to the rest of the cover, another similarity between the two images. In Figure 3 we see another real-life magazine demonstrating common concepts of the media. In Figure 3 the masthead's bold, block, dominant superimposition over the image mirrors that of Figure 1. In Figure 1 mirrors Figure 3 by having a quotation underneath the masthead, again conforming with real-life media.


Figure 3

As in Figures 2 and 3, the date and price in Figure 1 are placed in a small print about the masthead. A difference between Figure 1 and Figures 2 and 3 is that the price and date are in the same font and colour in Figure 1 as opposed to contrasting colours used in Figures 2 and 3.

In Figure 1, the main coverline is placed over the image, as in Figures 2 and 3, although unlike 2 and 3, the coverline on 1 stretches the width of the page. Figures 1 and 2 both use a banner to present added information, whilst Figure 3 uses a list, showing the figure one both uses and challenges concepts of real media products. Figure 3 combines both a list and a coverline in a very minimalistic cover. Figure 1 is conforms with this as it is also a very simplistic, clean cover. Figure 1 also follows a similar template to Figure 2 with coverlines slightly overlapping the image of the cover model, at alternate sides of the page.

Overall we can see that Figure 1 follows many conventions set by other magazines from similar genres but also we can see a contrast in the budgets demonstrated in operation and the obvious difference that Figure 1, my magazine, is not featuring established artists with a lot of money to show off, which is something often associated with hip hop.

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