1) In what ways does your media product use, develop or challenge forms and conventions of real media products?
One of the first things I could talk about is general research I did into the conventions in each type of media
Say what I did, what I found and put links to the blog post
Say how I used those conventions in mine
Lots of images
2) How effective is the combination of your main product and ancillary tasks?
Main product - trailer
Ancillary - poster and magazine cover
This is about how they work in combination
3) What have you learned from your audience feedback?
Throughout the creation of my marketing campaign I repeatedly got audience feedback.
Ask them what genre it is and then ask them how they can tell. What indicates it? Was it intriguing and encourage them to see the film? If so, why? Might ask them if they can tell if its for a Hollywood film or not and how they can tell? Same with magazine covers. Same with teaser trailers. Did it make them want to see the film? What elements made them want to see the film? Did it leave them wanting more? Was there the right amount of narrative information. Genre - were they able to tell from the teaser trailer what genre it was? Music? Performance? Storyline? Narrative? Editing techniques?
4) How did you use media technologies in the contraction and research, planning and evaluation stages?
Talk about photoshop
Talk about the video cameras
Abode software
Spotify to find music tracks
Avid media composer
One of the first things I could talk about is general research I did into the conventions in each type of media
Say what I did, what I found and put links to the blog post
Say how I used those conventions in mine
Lots of images
2) How effective is the combination of your main product and ancillary tasks?
Main product - trailer
Ancillary - poster and magazine cover
This is about how they work in combination
3) What have you learned from your audience feedback?
Throughout the creation of my marketing campaign I repeatedly got audience feedback.
Ask them what genre it is and then ask them how they can tell. What indicates it? Was it intriguing and encourage them to see the film? If so, why? Might ask them if they can tell if its for a Hollywood film or not and how they can tell? Same with magazine covers. Same with teaser trailers. Did it make them want to see the film? What elements made them want to see the film? Did it leave them wanting more? Was there the right amount of narrative information. Genre - were they able to tell from the teaser trailer what genre it was? Music? Performance? Storyline? Narrative? Editing techniques?
4) How did you use media technologies in the contraction and research, planning and evaluation stages?
Talk about photoshop
Talk about the video cameras
Abode software
Spotify to find music tracks
Avid media composer
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