Thursday, 30 January 2014

Explore different ways in which audiences and/or users respond to your chosen texts...


  • Discussion on the representation of gender
- "Mad Men is a hamfisted portrayal of a some of the more obvious biases and blindnesses of the early 60s. As if every day dawned in 1960 in order to provide white men with opportunities to manifest their sexual and racial biases and -- along with all the women and negros -- to smoke all the day through."
- "expertly captured the cultural mores and human interactions of that period of history. This is a show for those who remember those times. Some people may wax woefully about the good old days of the early 60's, but for most of us THIS was the reality. The actors behave as if they stepped out of 1960 complete with their cynicism, twisted morality, sexism, and racism. Thankfully most of us have matured beyond the behavior portrayed in 'Mad Men"
- "It is good for young people today to see what it was like in the days before feminism, when attitudes about race, religion, and sexual harrassment in the workplace stagnated opportunities for women, minorities, and gays. Things aren't perfect now, but at least there isn't a smoky haze creating a smug fictional perfection over American life"
  • Lethargic pace of story lines
  • Critical acclaim
http://www.metacritic.com/tv/mad-men
- "Mad Men is poorly written, it spews continually lackluster dialogue, and it struggles with one boring plot line after another."  
- "show proved slow, akward, boring, and seemingly uncomfortable with itself"
- "Puzzling, with so much hype and potential, but . . . mostly unlikable characters, from Don Draper (either an adulterous war hero or a tender, loving father), to manipulative underlings and a strangely misscast Elizabeth Moss, who is either frumpy and frigid or accessible and promiscuous but can hardly be both at once. The writing is curate's-eggish--good in parts, but uneven. The agency scenes don't ring true--too pat, too shallow. On the bright side, production values are excellent , the settings and costumes authentic and the videography above reproach. "



  • Provides inspiration for other shows
  • Actively research further into issues of the narrative

Thursday, 23 January 2014

Lost - Audience Response

Viewing Figures; --> wiki
- Ranked by critics on their lists of top ten series of all time.
- First season garnered an average of 15.69 million viewers per episode on ABC.
During its sixth and final season, the show averaged over 11 million U.S. viewers per episode. (this could be due to amount of enigma codes and the long amount of time taken for the answer to be revealed. May have caused more passive audiences to become disinterested as they do not want to decode the text themselves and rely on answers being given to them i.e. the radio scene where Charly asks questions the audience asks and Sayid answers them. However more active audiences will appreciate the enigma codes, and will decode the text and figure out the answers themselves, encouraging them to continuing watching the series.)

Awards; --> wiki
Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series
- Best American Import at the British Academy Television Awards
- the Golden Globe Award for Best Drama
- Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Ensemble in a Drama Series.
- the Writers Guild of America ranked Lost No. 27 in its list of the 101 Best Written TV Series of All Time.
- 61 wins and 265 nominations 

Criticisms of the Text;  --> http://lostpedia.wikia.com/wiki/Criticism_of_Lost
Michael's frequent screaming and obsession for his son was noteworthy and frequent enough for it to grate on the audience. 
- After the first season, many viewers of the show began to grow tired of the flashbacks. They were perceived by some to be repetitive and recycling information we were already aware of; flashbacks have gotten less important than they were in the first season, taking away from the on-island story lines.
-Many complain that Lost moved too slowly and there is a lack of answers in the show. This has turned many people off, even Lost fans over time. 

Tuesday, 14 January 2014

Lost, Series 1, Episode 2, "The Pilot Part 2'

ABC's Lost is an american Tv series which was first aired in 2004, and ended in 2010. The film is set around a group of plane crash survivors that end up surrounded on a tropical island. Lost's has a wide, mainstream audience, and has been encoded to be inclusive. Botha  passive and active audience are able to be gratified by it.

  The intended audience for ABC's Lost is a wide mainstream audience. The first technical convention present that makes me believe this is the use of a non-diegtic score, in order to make the audience feel the same emotions as the characters. For example, when the young boy Walt was wondering through the jungle alone to find his dog, Michael Giacchino builds up the score and it gets louder, building the intensity and creating suspense, mystery and paranoia. Passive audiences will be able to put themselves in the position of the characters, and allow themselves to feel the same emotions in which the character has. This is a common technical convention in many mainstream texts nowadays.

Another technical convention used, to suggest that the intended target audience is mainstream, is non-linear narrative. Within the first 5 minutes of the opening scene, its starts on the Island, however then jumps to flashback of the character Charly on the plane. This helps the audience learn a bit more about the characters background i.e. before they where on the island and gain a better understanding. Non-linear texts, never used to be a common technical convention, however more and more mainstream texts are beginning to use them in order to fill out time space of the programme.

Repeated use of enigma codes, thats suggests Lost's intended audience is mainstream. For example, the director uses a close up shop of pair of handcuff's. this helps to encourage an active audience would question who the handcuffs belong too? how did they get there? why are they there? These codes help to create social interactions and word of mouth, therefore helps to promote. Enigma codes are used to help create curiosity which helps to sustain such a wide audiences attention in order to find out the answer which can only be revealed by continuing to watch the series.