Month: May 2016

PB4 progress

Collaboration

 

Last Monday my group met up to polish our final work. We were 70% finished with our work, and I have to say I was impressed with what we had done. We caught a minor problem, for the audio essay, our essay ended up with 50 more seconds of the interview. We know that we breached the limit, but cutting any part of the essay would make a huge nono to the overall point of our audio as every interview/monologue was important. So we emailed our tutor for her guidance, and luckily she allowed for the extension! In turn that audio essay had to be good.  Our video had also made quite a good progress, we have finished cutting appropriate videos and linked them all together, we just have to record the narration, which we had written. So everything’s going well, my job now is to finish the audio script, finish the minutes, make a list of media materials, and the bibliography, easy peasy!

Reflecting back on the first semester.

Grand Canyon

Having done 12 weeks in my first Media and Communication degree, I have learnt many important lessons around the world of media. The reason I first wanted to take this degree was because I am always surrounded by media,so why not take media studies for a degree? How stupid that thinking was, but still taking this degree has been one of the best decisions I’ve ever made. But it also one of the most important one, as this major will carve the path for my future career, and I need to show my parents that this is the right choice for me. I loved that my parents supported my decision, but understand they still have their traditional value, with their first son taking the creative industry, it is an uncomfortable support. Even though it has only been 1 semester, I have learned plenty, I am closer to the media then ever before.  I am going to tell you what I learned the most from the last 12 weeks. 

Semester one focuses on the basics of what a media is, and how ubiquitous media is in our lives.  I remembered at our second lecture, Brian told us to create a group to go out of the class and go to a location and scour the media that exist in the upper ground, lower ground, middle ground, foreground, and background.  Some of the medias that I found I posted in around my first few blog post.  There I was intrigued by so many different media items, from on-screen advertising to poster, billboards and radio stations and how apparent they are.  I shared an article in the blog, about an inmate using Instagram to sell “hoodies and caps” and posting images of drugs, cash weapons, because that’s what their followers want. Then Brian gave us an article by John Mason about noticing (really good article) that tells noticing is a beautiful and rewarding action, but it requires effort, and you shouldn’t notice everything, just the things you want to notice.  I learned from this article why noticing is important for a media practitioner. Sometimes the best scene and media material comes from the simplest situation.  Time-lapse videos are an example of this. Time-lapse shows us changes that happened over a long period of time, but static in its location. If you stayed at the same place where the camera was standing, you wouldn’t notice the same way the camera will. 

I’ve learned to be a media practitioner, professionalism must be at its best at all times, even if you are making a media material of you family/friends. I learn about what do yo have to do during pre-production, production and post-production. Forms, form and forms. Personal release forms, location release forms, insurance forms. It is important to inform the subjects of your video that you will be modifying them when you edit it, and they have given you their consent to release their identity to the public commercially/non-commercially. You also have to use  location forms, because privacy. You can’t take a video in public space without interrupting the public, and you also can’t take a video in a private place, because privacy and ownership. That’s why you need forms. It’s annoying, but it gets  things going. It’s a rule that you can bend around because the process is rudimental, they have been accepted by every  media practitioner. Responsibility is also a key learning here. The responsibility to follow agreements, the responsibility to protect your subject’s contract terms, The responsibility to handle borrowed equipment with care, and most of all, the responsibility to finish you project in time. My first experience with the forms was when I did my project brief 3.

I’ve also learned to be critical, to my own and to others. Everyone here in Media one are in the same boat, even though some of us already have skills in creating media. As fellow classmates we are obligated to give opinions to our peers about their mistakes and how they can improve them and vice versa. Being a sassy sensitive prick is not going to get you anywhere in this industry. Take the critics as a sign that they care about you. Louise once showed us a technique for criticizing in a fair wa, “The Six Thinking Hats” by Edward De Bono. I tried using the yellow and black hat  while giving my opinion on my classmate’s assignment, and it helped me a lot. I usually can’t find any mistake in my classmate’s videos, because I always think they did a great job in their videos.

Lastly, I’ve learned how important group work is in this industry, and our lecturers haven’t stressed enough how crucial it is for your career. We all have had our own anecdotes for bad teamwork, but let’s try to keep it an anecdote, not an ongoing story. I learned about collaborative contract, a written agreement by group members about their effort to pursue their group’s goals. Throughout my project brief 4, I learned how important communication between team members, is because we all have our own schedule, so making time for meetings is an effort. We also need trust, trust that each members will do their best, but we also need to do our own job, for others to do theirs. Rachel gave us a Ted talk link which I found to be very useful.

While I was writing this reflection, even though it was quite late, I realized that this semester we have been taught mostly soft skills, skills involving our manners, etiquette, and professionalism. While I’ve also learned media theories, practical skills stuck in my head the most. I understand why we are taught about this in our first semester, to prepare us into the real-work environment, which is the next semester. Definitely I’ve learned a lot this semester, can’t wait for the next, right after I’ve enjoyed my holiday first.

growth graphand this is my learning graph.

P.S thanks for my team members: Lydia, Ryan, and Isobel for making those awesome PB4 assignment.

Strength, Weakness, Opportunity, Threat

Caged heart

In a group work, it is important to acknowledge every member’s strength, weakness, opportunity, threat. I believe from a personal analysis, these are mine:

STRENGTH

  • If you have a better Idea than mine, I will 100% support it and give new ideas that I think will be useful
  • I will do what my task is and complete it under the given time
  • If no one dares to try something, I usually will be the one to step up my shoes
  • I am quite optimistic
  • I can handle critics for my project, and I’ll try to improve by their tips

 

Weakness

  • I tend to procrastinate, it also means that I’m at my best only when I’m under pressure
  • to people that I feel are much more smarter than me, I tend to be quiet and very reserved because everything I said would sound stupid in front of them
  • I care too much about other people’s opinion, so I tend to agree to go with their plan, even though their idea isn’t that good itself (luckily this isn’t the case for my project brief 4 group!)
  • I work really badly in a pessimistic group

 

Opportunity

  • I will try to speak up more and give my opinions.
  • I will try to be more friendly (my friend believes I have one of those “RBF” faces, which makes me look really uptight)

Threat

  • I think my biggest threat is my self-confidence

Making Connections

  In our tutorial, Louise explained how students should start finding new networks to make connections in the industry and to try to build our career as quickly as possible. She told us that we should start researching on the type of media industry that we want to work in, and kindly gave us tips where we should start. Then…

Technology Determinism

Distracted youth

Technology Determinism refers to the state where media technology has shaped how society thinks, feels, acts and operates as we live throughout the development of technology.

According to uky.edu, technological determinism is a belief that we do what we do because of the messages and stimulation we receive from different forms of media.

Technological determinism usually referst to the present, projected on to the future, as expressed in claims that ‘we have no choice but to adopt this technology’ – A. Murphie and J. Potts 2002

Marshall McLuhan explains that all technologies are extensions of human capacities. Tools are extensions of manual skills and computer is an extension fo our brain. For Marshall, culture media is significant not because of it’s content, but how it manages to shape people’s perception.

If so, Has television and cinema become our third/second parent? Or even the first? Because probably most modern family will have their child in front of television when they are 2 years old. Do you agree with the theory of technological determinism?

Culture and Technology

Technology

The readings gave me a lot of contemplation. Here are some of the points that surprised me the most

Technology was used sparingly in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, refering [to] the study of the arts…But by 1860 its meanings began [to] shift to its modern usage; the word had come to mean the system of mechanical and industrial arts

According to Wikipedia, the term ‘technology’ was used to describe useful art, forms of  art that is manufactured and crafted, and basically the antonym of performing/fine art.

The article also cited  from another author: William Barret

“…if our civilization were to lose its techniques, all our machines and apparatus would become one vast pile of junk”

This basically applies to all of our media work right now. No matter how expensive and advance our equipment is, without the right skill and technique the content will basically be a pile of junk

It seems that ‘technique’ is not just a specific of skills towards a certain kind of machinery, but also towards the body. Marcel Mauss believes that techniques “crucial to culture and to the transmission of culture as technologies”. The way we walk, we swim is a result of techniques pass down from our ancestors. It’s effective and traditional.

As the time goes, culture is associated with the artistic or the mind. The romantics embraced culture while the industrial opposed it, labeling the two word as if in black and white, completely contrast to each other.

Culture is dynamic because,…ideas and values change, often quite quickly, over time. Older attitudes to culture may be susperseded, or they may overlap with new ideas, or the older values may re-emerge at a later time.

like culture, technology is also messy. Technology such as the internet has allowed everyone who have accessed to it to put whatever content they want, whether it might challenge other people or not.

While corporations attempted to wring new profits out of this huge entity, governments sought to impose regulations on what they saw as an ungoverned system. The latter attempt, at least was made difficult by the properties of the internet as a global network. As one of instance of the globalization process, the internet does not respect national boundaries or jurisdictions

Just to show that the internet has become a powerful entity, capable of passing the fences each country has built.

Because the reading is way too long, I couldn’t give out all the points, because it would be stagnant and boring.  Do you have any points you want to point out?

Dear Future Self

#hope⚓

Inspired by Brian Morris lecture, I’m writing this for my future self.

Dear future self. Whatever happened, be grateful you are still alive. Be grateful for everyone you have known.  Go out of your way to help people. Meet as many people as you can.  If you’re not doing what you love by 30, find a reason why you’re doing it, other than the money. Find someone to love, and try to make them happy. Hope for the best of everyone you meet, and as awkward as you can be, be nice to people, even though people say you have RBF. Most importantly, do something that your future self would be proud to remember.

There’s actually a website that provides you a way to write to your future self. Check them out (you have to pay though) here

 

Inspiration: David Uzochukwu

I'll always belong into the sky.

Let me get this straight. He’s 18 and he’s already a professional photographer.

 

He started taking photographs when he is 10. as time progress his photography style morphed into a dark-fantasy-surreal-dreamy. my favourite. Added by the high-quality of the photos, he succeeded to create beautiful images that promote human beauty. What I personally loved about his photographs is the colour. It’s a little dis-saturated and greyish. But most photographers like him is suffering from some emotional-distress, hence the same sensation you get from his images. Here are more of his pictures. Enjoy.

Untitled

 

Circle of Energy.

 

Still.

 

Untitled

Project Brief progress

I have to say our group is steady on it’s schedule, we divided our jobs and our roles, and we did what we were assigned to do. We scraped off one of our Ideas once because the topic was too broad and we didn’t have enough time to gather the other materials.But now I think we are on the right track 

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