Tuesday, 15 May 2012

Film 3



Employers usually seek applicants with a "good eye," imagination, and creativity, as well as a good technical understanding of photography. Entry-level positions in photojournalism or in industrial or scientific photography generally require a college degree in photography or in a field related to the industry in which the photographer seeks employment. Freelance and portrait photographers need technical proficiency, gained through a degree program, vocational training, or extensive photography experience.

Personal attributes
Be patient because when it comes to editing you really need it
Be able to work well under pressure
Be creative and artistic
Be practical and disciplined, with an eye for detail
Be confident and motivated
Be able to make people feel relaxed and at ease.

Methods of recruitment


National press: This is newspapers and graphics and photography magazines. This is similar to the internet but it requires you to brows through lots of jobs offers where as on the internet you can just type it to Google and you done.

Internet: The most important Internet job search tip is to not become distracted. Keep a written log of the number of Internet jobs applied for each day. Aim to apply for three to five potential works at home jobs daily. Follow up on all email requests for interviews as soon as possible.

Internet jobs can be done seasonally, part time, or full time to make money online. Set up a functional home office to help keep distractions down while applying for jobs and working at home. Do not be embarrassed to take smaller side jobs that help maintain the necessary income level, while interviewing for more desirable positions. Use these tips to help find Internet jobs.

Personal contacts
If you have contacts in the industry you want to work in then you can consider yourself-lucky. All you have to do is give your friend a CV and let them take it to their boss. This is the easiest way to get a job because it doesn't require you calling people and they sending them your CV and waiting for months to get a reply from them which may never come.


Training on the Job


That depends on what job you doing. If its photography then you obviously need to know how to use the cameras the studio or the company you work for uses, if its for film then its similar but you need to know what video recording equipment they use as well us be familiar with the scripts and things connected with film making and lastly in graphics you need to have a knowledge of what software you meant to use and how you meant to use it as well as the computer and equipment required to create different designs. It all depends on the job you have and these can change at least once a year because the technology is moving forward which means that the company you work for has to keep up.

Job roles





A media researcher works in television, radio or new media helping to organise all aspects of media programming, from ideas to execution.
Media researchers work in different sectors of the media industry, including television, radio, film and the web. They plan, arrange and execute the production of programmes and other output in its various forms, whilst keeping tabs on the industry and its reception in the wider world.
The researcher is a point of liaison between executives, creatives and the public, and can work with different people from across these boundaries to ensure the smooth running of the programming process.
A journey through the different stages of research work might start with investigation into markets and output. A researcher is one of the people responsible for knowing about the state of the industry, so that companies can plan programmes which will be in tune with demand; adjust and tabulate their productions according to current affairs; and plan future manoeuvres to widen the public’s access to different media programmes.
The next stage becomes more specific, as researchers devise ideas for future productions. After being sent an idea for a programme, they may be required to establish its logistical feasibility or to find out about any cultural or historical knowledge that would be a necessary precondition of the pitch before it came to production.
The later stage of a media research job involves the production itself. At this stage, practical elements come to the fore, such as filming, sound recording, organisation and booking. This often involves large groups of people and catering for unusual requests from celebrities or production teams who need the researcher to set up a certain situation.
At all times, the researcher is expected to be on the ball, alert, accessible, ready to obtain information or sort out practicalities and at ease with their company.

Salary

Salaries can vary depending on the company, the seniority of the position, the commercial potential of the programme and the economic forecast.
Because of the contractual nature of the work, researchers are often paid at weekly rates, which can range from £350 for junior researchers to £600 per week for covering senior research roles.

Responsibilities

  • Emails and phone-calls
  • Meeting with directors or executives to discuss forward planning
  • Practical organisation of the programme – e.g. organising the venue for shoots, or booking travel for stars and executives
  • Writing plans and reports for past and future programmes
  • Researching market statistics and writing reports on what they might mean for the company or specific programme

Qualifications

Applicants are almost always educated with a good 2:1 degree in any subject. There is no standard request for other given qualifications, as advertisements will usually stipulate qualifications specific to the role.

Skills

  • Interpersonal skills and a good phone manner
  • Computer skills
  • Initiative
  • Ranging interests
  • Good research skills

Working Conditions

When working from the office, the working conditions are standard office practice – stress can be an issue, but other risks are minimal.
When on location, however, conditions vary. Researchers are usually expected to be on-site for the duration of filming, which can mean long stints away from home and staying in hotels with no opportunity to get away.
Furthermore, unusual settings and difficult requests from directors can involve attendant problems. However, companies are legally obliged to brief their employees on any adverse conditions they can foresee, so researchers should be going into any period of filming with some idea of what’s going to happen.
In many cases, the researchers are the people who book the place and plan the events of the filming themselves, and so they may be the best equipped for what’s going on.

Experience

Increasingly, applicants must expect to spend some time gaining experience as an unpaid intern before they are likely to be considered for a full-time paid position. Most researchers are promoted from early positions as interns and runners, and in some places it is expected that applicants for a research position will have gained experience in the media through these avenues.
However, there is no unbreakable template for applicants, as personality and programme-specific experience are so central to the work.
Recruitment advertisements may stipulate specific skills or genre-specific experience. For example, the skills required to research a reality television show in pre-production may be very different to those required to research and fact-check a historical documentary that has already been made. On the other hand, of course, many of these skills overlap, so a background in research of any kind is a big help for potential applicants.

Employers

In the UK, the BBC is a major employer of media researchers, as are all the big-name commercial television and radio stations. However, many foreign and satellite television channels who have a strong presence in the UK media will not necessarily recruit researchers here, as their production may all take place in their home country, or exported abroad where they can find cheaper labour.

Career Progression

As mentioned above, researchers can expect to progress from internships and work as runners to work as a media researcher. Promotion to a senior researcher role is a typical advance from junior research positions. From this point on, the career progression is less typical.
Some researchers will continue to work in a research capacity. Some will work as executives, commissioning and overseeing the programme at the media outlet or station. Others will focus on the creative side of the industry, writing, directing and producing work. Still other media researchers might decide to go freelance and combine different aspects of these roles.

First documentary film industry




Television, Film, Radio, Animation, Print and music.
  • Radio – This is a very popular sector within the media industry, and the distribution of audio content is increasing, within this media sector there are lots of different sectors, such as, commercial, which is when radio stations are paid for by advertisement. Then there is publicly funded which is paid for by people’s television licence, and then there is voluntary, which is where people do it for free and they usually do radio stations in places such as colleges or hospitals, etc.
The companies that work within this sector include.
BBC – They are a publicly funded station which means that people who pay for their TV licence pay for this radio station which means that there are no adverts.
Heart – This radio station is commercial which means that it is paid for by adverts. There are lots of different stations of heart which play in each different location, for example there is one a station for west midlands, London, East midlands, etc.
World Radio network – This is a global managed company and provides the world with high quality news.
  • Television – This is the most popular form of entertainment and information, the largest part of the industry is comprised of around 850 independent production companies who make some of the most popular TV shows such as, X Factor and Big Brother.
BBC - This is a popular television company, which includes lots of different channels, such as, BBC 1, BBC 2, CBBC, etc. It is publicly funded because this requires the public to pay a TV licence to be able to watch any of the channels within the BBC.
ITV – It is the biggest commercial television network in the UK, broadcasting the most talked about television and digital content, making a major contribution to the UK’s culture, economy and communities.
Channel 4 - It is a publicly owned, commercially funded public service broadcaster.They don’t receive any public funding and have to be experimental and distinctive.
Film – The film industry, is made up of six different component parts: Development, Production, Facilities, Distribution, Exhibition and Export. In 2006, the UK film industry made £4.3 billion, and £3.1 billion in 2004.
Dream works animation – It is an American animation studio based in California that creates animated films, television programs and online virtual worlds. They have released a total of 23 feature films, including the series of Shrek, Madagascar, Kung Fu Panda and How to Train Your Dragon.

20th century fox – It is one of the six American film studios as of 2011. Located in the Century City area of Los Angeles. It makes films such as Avatar, Star Wars, Ice Age, Garfield, and Alvin and the Chipmunks.
Warner Bros – is a fully integrated entertainment company and a global leader in the creation, production, distribution, licensing and marketing of all forms of entertainment. A Time Warner Company, Warner Bros. They have made more than 6,650 feature films, 50,000 television titles and 14,000 animated titles. It has made films such as, Harry Potter, The hangover, Happy feet, etc.
  • Animation - The animation industry in the UK consists of a workforce that stretches across many of the sectors in the creative media industries. Just over 2000 people work in animation in the UK, nearly half of them freelance. It is a relatively small sector, which is growing and becoming more popular. It is used in film, TV, video games, commercial, websites.
Animax Entertainment – is an animation and interactive production studio based in Van Nuys, California. Animax’s clients include Disney, ESPN, Warner Bros., National Geographic, etc.
A. Film – It is a Danish animation studio based in Denmark. It produces traditional and CGI animation for feature films, television, advertising and games. It has made things such as ‘Help! I’m a Fish.’
Pixar – Pixar Animation Studios is an Academy Award winning computer animation studio. Pixar’s objective is to provide creative talent to develop computer-animated feature films with memorable characters and heartwarming stories that appeal to audiences of all ages.
  • Print – It is one of the biggest earners for the UK Creative Media Industries.It is made up of many different sectors including, books, journals, Newspapers, News agencies, Magazines and business media, etc.
Nat Mags – (National Magazine Company) was a British magazine publisher based in London. Cosmopolitan has 63 international editions, is printed in 32 languages and is distributed in more than 100 countries.
IPC – The International Publishing Corporation Ltd was formed in 1963, it included three leading magazine publishers, George Newnes, Odhams Press and Fleetway Publications. They then came together with the Mirror Group to form the International Publishing Corporation.
Cosmopolitan – is an international magazine for women. It was first published in 1886 in the United States as a family magazine, was later transformed into a literary magazine and eventually became a women’s magazine in the late 1960s.
  • Music - It is one of the leading creative industries, record companies provide radio stations with content they need to attract the audience that advertisers want to reach. Sales of physical and digital recorded music products fell by 5% in 2006.
Universal music – It is the world’s largest music content company in recorded music, music publishing, and merchandising. Artists signed to UMG throughout the world include. Akon, 50 Cent, Lady Gaga, Cheryl Cole, Jessie J and alot more.
EMI Music – EMI Music is one of the world’s leading music companies, home to some of the most successful and best known recording artists. Their record labels include Angel, Astralwerks, Blue Note, etc. Artist labels include The Beatles, Gorillaz, David Guetta , Katy Perry, Pink Floyd, Snoop Dogg, Tinie Tempah, etc.
Sony music entertainment – is a global recorded music company with a roster that includes both local artists and international superstars. It includes artists such as, Kelly Clarkson, One direction, J.Cole, etc.
Structure of the BBC.
I am now going to Focus on the BBC and how it is structured.
it includes,
Trust unit – The general functions of this department include,
  • The Trust Unit helps them in their work and they bring in outside help when it is needed. This unit makes sure it gives the best to the people who pay TV license to watch the BBC by; listening to their complaints, taking their advice and decided whether to act upon it or not .
Content :
Journalism – This includes, reporting, writing, editing, photographing, or broadcasting news.
Vision – It is responsible for commissioning, producing, scheduling and broadcasting the content of all of the BBC’s television channels.
Audio and Music – This is everything to do with all BBC radio stations and music
Future Media and Technology – This is to do with all the information and future media ideas.
Professional Services:
  • Strategy (formerly and strategy and distribution and merged with Policy and Legal) Marketing, Communication and Audiences.
  • Finance
  • BBC People (to 2004, human resource and Internal communications)
  • BBC training and Developement
Commerical Groups:
  • BBC resources Ltd
  • BBC worldwide Ltd
How the BBC is funded.
The BBC is funded by the means of TV lisence which people who own a TV have to pay, this is used to fund the BBC which is publicly funded. The BBC is a Public Broadcaster and it’s aims are to inform, educate and entertain.

Saturday, 12 May 2012

Documentary questions for the quad Derby



How long has the quad been open for? 
How does the quad relate to the film industry?
What does the quad provide for the public?


What are the key job roles within the film industry?
What are the pro's and cons of the jobs within the film industry?
What is a freelancer?
What is your job role?
What are the professional expectations? 
Are there any advantages or disadvantages of your job? 


what was your favourite film of 2011



Just a small task based on the question 'What was your favourite film in 2011?' Myself and a partner went around college to film answers from other students and teachers. The purpose of this task was to get us prepared for our documentaries. The short film was edited on final cut pro.