Thursday, January 13, 2022

Magazine Front Cover

 


Research

1) Use Google to research potential magazines that you could use as your brand/design for this project. Create a shortlist of three potential magazines and embed an example front cover from each one. We recommend looking at lifestyle magazines or a similar genre as these are more achievable to re-create.





2) Choose one of the three magazine brands to use for your project. Then find three different front covers for your chosen magazine and embed them in your blogpost. Analyse the fonts, colours and typical design. What is the language or writing style? How are the cover lines written? You need to become an expert in the design and construction of this magazine and its branding.





Planning

1) On a Word or Google document, plan your main cover line (also called the 'main flash') - this is the main cover story that links to your central image.

VOGUE - "HANDLE WITH CARE"

2) Briefly plan the image you will need for the cover - model, costume, make-up, lighting etc. At this point, simply describe the image you need to capture.

Model- Fabian

Costume- Urban Clothing

Make-up - No make-up

Lighting - Natural Lighting

3) Write the cover lines and any additional text you need for your magazine cover.

 "HANDLE WITH CARE"

4) Sketch out your cover on plain A4 paper using your written planning. Take a photo of your sketch and upload it to your blogpost.





Photoshoot

You will need to arrange a photoshoot for your cover image in your own time - you can use your phone or your own camera to take an image. If you don't have a phone or camera that is suitable, you can sign out a camera from the Media department.


1) On your planning document, write the date, time and location of your photoshoot and the name of the model or photographer you will use (you can choose anyone to be your cover model or you can be the cover model yourself).

Date: 25/04/2021

Time: 4

Location: Some hill near Greenford station

Model: Fabian

Photographer: Marcel

Publication to blog and evaluation

1) Once you have completed your design in Photoshop, go to 'File > Save as' and save your finished Photoshop magazine cover as a JPEG image. Then, upload it to your blogpost.

2) Write a short evaluation of your work: have you succeeded in your brief to create a new, original edition of an existing magazine? Would your cover stand up alongside a couple of genuine covers of your chosen magazine? How professional is your work alongside those genuine examples?

I believe I met the brief well. My goal for this cover is to make it bright and eye-catching, which I feel like I have met that goal pretty well. It looks professional but some tiny improvements can take this cover to the next level.

3) Finally, what would you do differently if you completed this assignment again?

The change of text, I believe some text in the cover can be improved so its easier for the audience to understand what the content of this magazine is going to be about. As well as minor adjustments to the photo will make it clearer.

Advertising and Marketing Index

 1.) Advertising: Narrative in advertising

2.) Advertising: Persuasive Techniques

3.) Advertising: The representation of women in advertising

4.) Advertising: Gauntlett and Masculinity

5.) Advertising: Score hair cream case study

6.) Advertising: Maybelline CSP case study

7.) Advertising: Assessment LR

Advertising assessment: Learner response

1) Type up your feedback in full (you don't need to write the mark and grade if you want to keep this confidential).

WW: Good textual analysis and application of Gauntlett

FBI: Explicit reference to the "socially liberal media" and whether it has been influential or not

2) Read the whole mark scheme for this assessment carefully. Identify at least one potential point that you missed out on for each question in the assessment.

01: the Emporio Armana 2010 advert

  • I should have elaborated more on the pose and facial expressions, which suggest lust, desire. Male model makeseye-contact with audience.
  • Secondly, this links with the appeal of the advert. Irresistible appeal – ‘sex sells’ (common narrative in men’s grooming; Barthes action code).
02: Gender representations, the Emporio Armana and the Score hair cream advert (1987)


03: David  Gauntlett on socially liberal mass media, Maybelline "That Boss Life" (2017) and the Score hair cream

3) Look at your answer and the mark scheme for Question 1 (Diamonds advert unseen text). List three examples of media terminology or theory that you could have included in your answer. 

  • Gauntlett
  • Van Zoonen
  • Representation


Advertising: The representation of women in advertising

 1) How does Mistry suggest advertising has changed since the mid-1990s?

Since the mid-1990s, advertising has increasingly employed images in which the gender and sexual orientation of the subject(s) are markedly (and purposefully) ambiguous. As an ancillary to this, there are also a growing number of distinctly homosexual images - and these are far removed from depictions of the camp gay employed as the comic relief elsewhere in mainstream media. This essay is concerned with providing a critical analysis as to the potential of such depictions to undermine conventional gender role stereotypes and the norm of heterosexuality that dominate advertising and the media at large.

2) What kinds of female stereotypes were found in advertising in the 1940s and 1950s?


women were suffering their own identity crisis after the war. Prior to the war, feminists had been articulating the idea of women having their own plans and careers; but soon after 1945, women were made to feel guilty by warnings of the 'dangerous consequences to the home' that had begun to circulate (Millum, 1975:73). Looking at women's magazines in the 1950s, Betty Friedan (1963) claims this led  to the creation of the 'feminine mystique': 'the highest value and the only real commitment for women lies in the fulfilment of their own femininity. The highest good is keeping house and raising children' (Millum, 1975:74).


3) How did the increasing influence of clothes and make-up change representations of women in advertising?


A major area of expansion in production/consumption - clothes and make-up - which led to women being increasingly portrayed as decorative (empty) objects (Winship, 1980:8; Busby & Leichty, 1993:258). A poignant example of where this occurs is in perfume advertisements; according to Diane Barthel, one of the most common images here is that of the 'fair maiden'. Taking Figure 1 as an example, the innocent female is equated with flowers and nature: 'what is communicated is the sense that any rude contact with reality might spoil the maiden's perfection.


4) Which theorist came up with the idea of the 'male gaze' and what does it refer to?


Laura Mulvey's (1975) theory of the 'male gaze' is important here; she contends that scopophilia (the basic human sexual drive to look at other human beings) has been 'organised' by society's patriarchal definition of looking as a male activity, and being looked at as a female 'passivity'. Male power means that any social representation of women is constructed as aspectacle for the purpose of male voyeuristic pleasure.


5) How did the representation of women change in the 1970s?


From the mid-1970s there was a proliferation of distinct images that became labelled as the 'New Woman', and that were seen as representative of the 'changing reality of women's social position and of the influence of the women's movement' (van Zoonen, 1994:72). The New Woman was supposed to be 'independent, confident and assertive, finding satisfaction in the world of work and recreation, seeking excitement, adventure and fulfillment' (Cagan, 1978:8).


6) Why does van Zoonen suggest the 'new' representations of women in the 1970s and 1980s were only marginally different from the sexist representations of earlier years?


According to Liesbet van Zoonen, however, the ability of these images to undermine traditional female stereotypes is superficial. At the level of content analysis, the roles that women take on in these advertisements appear to be progressive (the employee, the active woman); however, with a more semiological approach, van Zoonen asserts that the New Woman 'only departs marginally from her older, more traditional sisters.' Deconstructing an advertisement promoting the 'Jenni Barnes Working Style' range of clothing, van Zoonen points to its claim that: 'A woman should look forward to dressing for the office.' Having a job is seen merely to provide 'another happy occasion for women to dress up and present themselves.' Indeed, a woman 'is portrayed stepping confidently towards the camera in an office environment observed by a male colleague from behind; but she is not portrayed actually working' (1994:73).


7) What does Barthel suggest regarding advertising and male power?


Barthel notes that 'today's young women can successfully storm the bastions of male power... without threatening their male counterparts' providing we can reassure them that, underneath the suit, we are still 'all woman', that 'no serious gender defection has occurred' (Barthel, 1988:124-125; Davis, 1992:50). In other words, that there is no real threat to male power. Another dubious image of the New Woman is the 'dark lady': on the other side of innocence and romance, is the knowledge and sexuality of the daring femme fatale (Barthel, 1988:76).


8) What does Richard Dyer suggest about the 'femme fatale' representation of women in adverts such as Christian Dior make-up?


Richard Dyer however, claims that such images are something of a misrepresentation of women's liberation: '[advertising] agencies trying to accommodate new [feminist] attitudes in their campaigns, often miss the point and equal "liberation" with a type of aggressive sexuality and a very unliberated coy sexiness' (1982:186). Thus, all we are really left with is a woman who continues to construct herself as a spectacle and, just like the innocent maiden, is presented as a willing co-conspirator of men's sexual advances - and worse, believes she is 'liberated' in doing so.


Media Magazine: Beach Bodies v Real Women (MM54)


Now go to our Media Magazine archive and read the feature on Protein World's controversial 'Beach Bodies' marketing campaign in 2015. Read the feature and answer the questions below in the same blogpost as the questions above.


1) What was the Protein World 'Beach Bodies' campaign?


The PR team intentions were portrayed with the display of beautiful teen models to entice women to live this lifestyle.


2) Why was it controversial and how did some audiences react?


The advertisement received a lot of back lash and criticism as it promotes a body image that may not suit others and make the viewers start to question there body. This does portray a image of taking skinny supplements to feel good about yourself and have a "beach body".


3) What was the Dove Real Beauty campaign?


Dove had a image in mind when portraying the Real Beauty campaign. Having the word real meaning realistic expectations of how body image should be portrayed. Showing off body's of all ages and types, they made it clear that everyone is different and shouldn't be shamed for what there body looks like.


4) How has social media changed the way audiences can interact with advertising campaigns? 


Using Social Media as a platform, they using new technology to express their opinions and ideas. 


5) How can we apply van Zoonen's feminist theory and Stuart Hall's reception theory to these case studies?

We can apply van zoonen's theory to the beach body campaign as the women is being objectified for the male gaze and the camera is directly sexualising the women and she also reinforces unrealistic but western beauty standards of thin and light. 


6) Through studying the social and historical context of women in advertising, do you think representations of women in advertising have changed in the last 60 years?

I do think that representations of women in advertising have changed in the last 60 years because during the 1950s, women were perceived as obedient and innocent and also quite passive. However, as time has gone on, women are now able to challenge these traditional norms of women. Also there is an increasing tolerance of gender fluidity and non- binary gender in today's day and age. 


MIGRAIN FINAL INDEX

1) Introduction to Media: 10 questions

2) Media consumption Audit

3) Language: Reading an image - advert analyses

4) Reception Theory

5) Semiotics: icons, indexes and symbols

6) Genre: Factsheet questions

7) Narrative: Factsheet questions

8) Audience: classification - psychographics presentation notes

9) October assessment learner response

10) Audience theory 1 - Hypodermic needle/Two-step flow/U&G

11) Audience theory 2 - Bandura and Cohen - moral panic

12) Audience theory: Media Effects factsheet

13) Industries: Ownership and Control

14) Industries: Hesmondhalgh - The Cultural Industries

15) Industries: Public Service Broadcasting

16) Industries: Regulation

17) Industries: Brand Values and Lines of Appeal

18) Representation: Introduction - Taken trailer and analysis

19) Representation: Theory - MM article and application on of theory

20) Representation: Feminism - Everyday Sexism & Fourth Wave MM article

21) Representation: Feminist theory

22) January assessment learner response

23) Representing ourselves: Identity in the online age - MM article & Factsheet

24) Ideology: BBC Question Time analysis and binary opposition

25) Ideology: MM reading on ideology and the wider media




Magazine Front Cover

  Research 1) Use Google to research potential magazines that you could use as your brand/design for this project. Create a shortlist of thr...