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Gaming Revision

KEY FACTS: ( INTRODUCTION ) Made by Notch and his Swedish based 'Mojang Studios' in May 2011. Notch = Markus 'Notch' Persson Notch received hate due to mod changes in the game so he took to twitter and jokingly said he'd sell the game. Microsoft responded and brought the game. Cross-Platform gaming: you're able to play Minecraft on different platforms such as Nintendo Switch, Playstation, and Xbox.  As of February 2020 it's had 250 million users registered online. Very popular in China. Development of Gaming: Microsoft's XCloud (a streaming site where you're able to play different games that were not made available on phones) will this be successful? AUDIENCE: Minecraft becoming established in 2011, growing very quickly but didn't have backing from mainstream publisher. Very word of mouth game. Quite a distinctive game, fan based game. Bottom up product; influenced by gamers at the bottom rather than producers who are the top of m

Deutschland 83 / Industry + Audience

Production Co-production (Two different companies) from different companies International Co-Production UFA & Sundance TV International Co-Production These are increasingly being produced because of: Resources like settings and money. If two companies come together it means they have more money to spend on shows. Companies like Netflix and Amazon are making many TV shows so smaller local companies like Sundance TV & UFA can't compete with Netflix, they don't have that much money but can combine with somebody else to do that. International Co-Production = International audience They did have a german audience but a more significantly larger english speaking audience. There could be some disadvantages such as: Overall poor profit at the end. Clash of ideologies We might lose some of this national identity, does it really have that german identity?  Context  UFA: UFA is a subsidiary of RTL RTL is a large television conglomerate they

News: Question 4 Revision

Be asked to apply theory to our case study Evaluate how useful this is in relation to audience/ownership of set product Won't know until we sit the exam which theory will come up Don't need to explain the theory in detail but must evaluate it. ALL THEORIES IN DETAIL: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1sG40mHx5kEUIhkD1EeEecnTKgN09HONTPg57P-QH7WU/edit Explain theory and how it is supported: Outline the theory in just two sentences How the theory is supported; PEE How is it NOT useful; PEE Conclude if it is useful or not. APPLYING THEORY: Audience Hall & Jenkins : The audience might be more likely to make a negotiated or oppositional reading to Daily Mail due to it reinforming dominant ideologies The Guardian challenges ideologies sometimes therefore the audience doesn't need to do so much work. Jenkins would support Citizen Journal and comments on the news website Jenkins could talk about how sharing on social media would create storyworks.

Paper One Structure

Structure / Marked out of 70 / Four Questions on News SECTION ONE Q 1 / Representation [10 marks] Q 2 / Media Language [15 marks] ( Refer to two unseen sources on the same story ) Q 3 / Audience, Ownership, Technology, Economics [10 marks] Q 4 / Apply a theory to Case Study [10 marks] ( Refer to your Case Studies ) Hour and 16 Minutes NEWS IS WORTH 45/70 MARKS OF THE PAPER SECTION TWO Not all three of these topics will come up but it will be 2/3 from these: Advertising (Could be something other than our case studies) - Analysis Music Video (Heaven Emeli Sande + Burn the witch Radiohead) - Analysis Magazine (Big Issue) - Be asked to analyse a front cover One will be a 10 marker and the other a 15 marker

Deutschland 83 & Narrative

NARRATIVE Social norms: Importance of family Politeness Is the Narrative linear? It's completely linear, everything is told in that chronological order. Multi Strand Narrative? Different narratives that are linked, clear dramatic narratives that stick to different protagonist. Not the case with Deutschland 83 as we have one clear protagonist and we follow his story. We can say that Stranger Things follows a multi-strand narrative whereas Deutschland 83 doesn't it follows one clear protagonist. Todorov: The equilibrium in Deutschland 83 is: We begin in the east, the world of Martin is the world in East Berlin. Martin is happy with this world, as we see in the first picnic scene its a world where family relations are genuinely good. What upsets this equilibrium is: The West upsets the equilibrium, Martin entering the West upsets the normal world that Martin was living in. This is quite strange, how the world begins with putting us in the East.

Scene Analysis - Deutchland 83

Opening + Semiotics: East Berlin The first thing we see is a building, looks more quite expensive, city-based, modern, looks functional rather pretty to look at. Tells us East Berlin isn't pretty but maybe functional, communism and eastern world is functional but dull. A bit bleak. Typewriter noise; comes up when we see text - connotes military, operation, we can see the genre of the show already just from the sound given; we're watching something historical and military. Then we start to hear the voice of Ronald Reagan. Mid shot of woman with her back to us, cold, she doesn't care, she's pushing us away. Ronald Reagan 'evil empire' speech - triggers a crisis of 1983. Use real footage of Ronald Reagan, not an actor, makes it feel more authentic, gives us a feel to the drama. Postmodernism Next scene - colours, plain, boring, dull, connotes dullness, coldness, East Communist side is dull, functional and boring. They end up laughing at the end of

News: Question 3 Revision

Question 3: Context, Audience & Ownership Refer to set products - Guardian and Daily Mail Touch on Context Can touch on any of the following areas: way news is produced/distributed/circulated and how this affects the news. For example, news nowadays is produced online.  Digitally convergent media (you can access it on lots of different digital platforms; on your laptop or on your social media feed or watch it on certain news channels) Ownership/Regulation Daily Mail (Lord Rotheremere/Rotheremere family) makes most of its money from advertising Guardian makes most of its money from subscription Scott Trust etc, OWNERSHIP Define audience in terms of age, be clear on who the audience are. How the news reaches its audience Shirky/Jenkins  Distribution /Circulation: How news is distributed and then shared throughout the world. This affects news as it could be biased, for example Daily Mail focuses on soft news like celebrity news because they know it makes money. Online