Tuesday 23 October 2012

legal - Mr Southworth


                                                Legal

UNDER THE MANAGEMENT OF HEALTH AND SAFETY REGULATIONS 1992
YOU ARE REQUIRED TO COMPLETE A RISK ASSESSMENT OF ALL
PRODUCTIONS CARRIED OUT AT ANY TV STUDIOS.

THIS SHOULD INCLUDE A METHOD STATEMENT WHICH SHOULD DETAIL
EXACTLY HOW THE PRODUCTION IS TO BE COMPLETED AND FROM THIS IT
CAN BE DETERMINED WHAT ACTIVITIES, IF ANY, INVOLVE A LEVEL OF RISK.
THE RISK ASSESSMENT THEN DETERMINES AT WHAT POINT ALL

REASONABLY PRACTICABLE MEASURES ARE INTRODUCED TO REMOVE OR
CONTROL THE HAZARDS IDENTIFIED.

ATTACHED IS A FORM DESIGNED TO ASSIST YOU IN PRODUCING YOUR RISK
ASSESSMENT, ALONG WITH A SET OF EXPLANATORY NOTES GIVING SOME
GUIDE LINES TO WHAT HAZARDS YOU SHOULD BE LOOKING FOR.
THESE FORMS ARE NOT DESIGNED TO BE COMPREHENSIVE BUT AS A

PROMPT
TO ASSIST YOU. THERE WILL BE TIMES WHEN THE PRODUCTION BEING
WORKED ON WILL INVOLVE HAZARDS AND RISK AREAS NOT INCLUDED IN
THESE FORMS.


Clearance - Mr Southworth


                          Pre-production documentation.
MCPSRPS: License organizations to do things to do with media. For example in the music industry they give them permission to play, perform or make available copy right music on behalf of the musician or there production team. They distribute the royalties fairly and efficiently. They promote and protect the value of copyright. If I wanted to start a radio station I would need to get in touch with the MCPRPS to be allowed to broadcast the music, I would have to pay royalties, which go to the musician.

Clearances:  Doesn’t matter what you choose to use, whether it is in the music industry, film industry or anything else you have to contact the right people; MCPSRPS, equity or pact and if a musician the musician union and arrange a sum of money for the use of what or who ever you want to use. From the people who own the copyright to the piece of music i.e. lyrics and composition. You should note that for this kind of copyright, copyright exists only when the music or words have been recorded or written down. This is the publishing license.
         Clearances for showing your film on Film Network
If you submit your film to Film Network, it's your responsibility to ensure that you have obtained all the necessary clearances in writing. If somebody claims your film breaches their 'copyright' (e.g. you have used them/their identity/their work in some way without their consent), it is you, as well as the BBC, who are liable. If you have breached copyright, at the very least you will not be able to continue to show your film and you could end up being sued. Please check that the clearances you have obtained include internet use ('All media' covers internet as well) and should ideally be for use in territories throughout the world, in perpetuity (indefinitely).
Make clearances as you go along, as soon as you can, rather than trying to get permission retrospectively after you've shot your film. You may find that you encounter unexpected problems getting clearances for music or images, the most common one being how expensive it is to license well known music tracks. If you can't obtain a release for anything, use an original substitute instead. All areas in your films such as music, actors, script, content and locations require clearance before you can screen your film in public. Making a film always involves getting clearances in writing from all participants during the pre-production and production process. It’s much easier to get clearances at this stage rather than retrospectively once the film is completed as once you have completed the film it may be difficult/expensive to go back and clear work.

Friday 19 October 2012

Star consumption unit 26 LO 2


A star is consumed in a number of ways; from watching a film to looking at a picture these are all ways in which a star is consumed. ‘Stars are a phenomenon of consumption’ this quote basically tells you how a star is formed. If not for the public they wouldn’t be stars. No matter what they do whether an author, singer, reality star or actor it is down to the public and popularity if they are a star or not. A star is someone which the public want to see or hear, someone whose film sell or records or books. A magazine will have the front cover of a star because the public want to know about them so will buy the magazine. I chose to do Zach Galifianakis for a number of reasons, mainly as I find him very funny and he is one of my favorite actors and that he is world famous having over 2.8 million followers on twitter.     


Friday 5 October 2012

Unit 32 LO1 - History of Idents


BBC logos:

The first attempt at a proper brand image came in 1953, when Abram Games was commissioned to design an on-air image, probably hastened by the imminent arrival of commercial competition. Games, who designed the logo for the Festival of Britain in 1951, created the logo nicknamed the 'Bat's wings' logo, an elegant and rather ethereal image which captured the spirit of the times. In reality, it was an elaborate mechanical brass contraption, with a tiny spinning globe in its centre – for BBC Scotland, the spot in the middle was replaced by a lion.







By the early 1960s, the 'Bat's Wings had been superseded by the BBC TV logo within a circle, behind which would appear a map of Britain split into broadcast regions. This set the style for a succession of circular images, which became the BBC's recognisable on screen identity. The channel's most famous emblem, the globe, appeared in its first guise on 30 September 1963. The first such ident featured the continuity announcer speaking the words 'This is BBC Television' over a spinning globe while a BBC TV caption would appear.







The first colour pictures in the UK were broadcast by BBC2 in 1967 when it covered Wimbledon, to be followed by BBC1 in 1969. Then BBC 1 introduced the first version of the now famous 'mirror globe' – a rotating globe with a flat globe as visual behind it. The inclusion of the word 'colour' in the station ident could be viewed as a subtle reminder to the vast majority of the rest of the viewers still watching in black and white to buy a colour TV set. This BBC 1 colour globe was frequently seen in Monty Python's Flying Circus, which featured spoof continuity announcements.







By 1985, computer graphics technnology had progressed sufficiently to retire the mechanical mirror globe in favour of a new computer-generated globe, which showed a semi-transparent blue globe with golden continents and gold BBC 1. Created by the BBC graphics and computer departments, it was launched just before Wogan, a new chat show presented by Terry Wogan. Twenty-four hours later, it introduced a new soap called EastEnders.







In 1988, mainly because of growing commercial competition, the BBC decided it needed a stronger, more unified corporate brand image – to be used on and off air, and across all its commercial product. The new image (designer, Michael Peters) looked back to the traditional BBC logo but updated it by slanting the boxes and adding three coloured flashes unbderneath the logo blocks. The latter colours represented the phosphors on a colour television
(the primary colours of light).



In 1997, the globe was dramatically reinvented through a sequence of hot air balloon images, filmed on location around the UK. Over the next two and a half years, no fewer than 59 different variations of the BBC One balloon were produced. The thinking behind this new on screen identity was to take the consistently used BBC globe image and to reinvent it as something both local and national. As ever, these idents became a feature of the British media landscape, and were cleverly parodied in the opening titles of The Ben Elton Show.









A change in BBC One Controller saw the BBC One balloon image replaced by a sequence of new idents, 'Rhythm & Movement', featuring a new multi-cultural theme, with a range of dancers dancing to different musical styles. Some viewers
accused the BBC of being overtly politically correct, as one of the dance numbers involved disabled dancers in wheelchairs, while other users were dismayed that the longstanding globe motif had been abandoned after 39 years.


After six years, the idents were replaced by a new circular motif, with content much more diverse than previously seen: swimming hippos, motorbike stunt riders, kites, and surfers. Launched in 2007, the then BBC One Channel Controller, Peter Fincham saw the new branding as both a clear recognition of the BBC brand story and of the channel's heritage as well as a new symbol of people coming together – in the way that BBC One brings audiences together.

Further creative excursions around BBC on air branding have included regular Christmas interpretations, often with direct links into famous BBC brands or programmes, such as the witty and playful interpretations around Wallace and Grommit in 2008.

The story of the BBC brand is – like most brands – one of consistency and reinvention. Over the years of its history, it has become one of the most distinctive brands internationally, now used across a variety of platforms and recognised with immediacy and clarity by millions of people around the world.







Unit 32 LO2 - Typography


Unit 32 LO2 - Logo Designs


Unit 32 LO2 Channel Logo Analysis