GHFD
GHFD
Research
News
Deni0ons
-
newly
received
or
noteworthy
informa0on,
especially
about
recent
events.
"I've
got
some
good
news
for
you
a
broadcast
or
published
report
of
news.
plural
noun:
the
news
"he
was
back
in
the
news
again
synonyms:
report,
announcement,
story,
account;
More
informal
nforma0on
not
previously
known
to
(someone).
"this
was
hardly
news
to
her"
Conven0ons
-
This
report
is
5
minutes
and
36
seconds
long
and
shares
a
lot
of
traits
with
the
previous
one;
such
as
the
smartly
dressed
studio
reporter,
the
centre
frame
on
the
reporter
and
the
the
people
he
is
interviewing,
the
opposing
ideologies
conic0ng.
The
dierences
between
this
report
and
the
previous
one
is
that
this
report
has
no
cutaways
to
anything
which
is
a
visual
reinforcement
of
what
people
are
saying,
for
exxample
there
is
frequent
men0on
of
polls
but
no
sta0s0cs
are
shown
on
the
screen.
Another
major
dierence
is
that
the
people
being
interviewed
are
in
seperate
loca0ons
and
not
in
the
studio.
The
2
men
being
interviewed
are
shown
on
2
seperate
screens
which
they
are
in
the
centre
of
their
respec0ve
frames
and
they
are
smartly
dressed,
however
these
men
make
no
ac0ons
with
their
hands
and
they
seem
to
be
greenscreened
in
front
of
backgrounds
to
represent
the
places
they
are
in.
This
could
be
some
used
to
help
the
audience
tell
who
is
who,
another
interes0ng
point
is
that
the
man
whom
works
for
the
President
has
the
white
house
in
his
background
which
a
well
known
place
of
government
so
the
audience
may
interperet
this
as
this
man
is
in
the
government.
Oxford
(2016)
News,
in
Oxford
Dic0onary.
Available
at:
h\p://www.oxforddic0onaries.com/deni0on/english/news
(Accessed:
13
April
2016).
Blog
and
Theme,
T.T.
(2012)
The
codes
and
conven0ons
of
broadcast
TV
news.
Available
at:
h\ps://seanmaguireblog.wordpress.com/2012/05/18/the-codes-
and-conven0ons-of-broadcast-tv-news/
(Accessed:
14
April
2016).
News
Example
Examples:
h\ps://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=6I7DlZiqHUE
Documentary
Deni0ons
-
Consis0ng
of
or
based
on
ocial
documents:
documentary
evidence
of
regular
payments
from
the
company.
Using
pictures
or
interviews
with
people
involved
in
real
events
to
provide
a
factual
report
on
a
par0cular
subject:
a
documentary
programme
about
Manchester
United
Conven0ons
A
narrator
is
used
to
move
the
narra0ve
along.
They
also
are
used
to
push
and
idea
or
a
view
on
the
topic
forward.
A
narrator
is
important
to
hold
the
narra0ve
together.
Dige0c
and
Non-Dige0c
Sound
is
used
to
represent
emo0on
or
a
topic.
Graphics
can
be
used
on
screen
to
note
down
an
interviewee's
name
and
rela0on
to
the
subject.
Archive
footage
is
used
to
show
a
variety
of
views
on
a
topic.
A
sound
track
may
accompany
the
visuals.
Chroma-key-
used
in
interviews
Interviews
are
a
key
element
of
Documentaries,
they
bring
the
story
together,
usually
Talking
heads/Interviews
with
eyewitnesses,
experts
and
persons
related.
Conven0onal
edi0ng
is
used,
which
means
in
the
nal
produc0on
only
answers
and
no
ques0ons
will
be
on
screen
During
interviews,
the
camera
remains
mainly
sta0c
so
the
audience
aren't
distracted
away
from
the
interview
by
any
movement.
Documentaries
contain
lots
of
cuts
because
there
is
such
a
varia0on
of
interviews,
archive
footage
etc.
To
communicate
complicated
informa0on
in
a
way
for
that
the
average
viewer
can
understand
End
credits
are
also
used
to
credit
everyone
involved
in
the
produc0on
of
the
Documentary
Interviews
are
mostly
in
close
up
or
a
medium
close-up
shot
lmed
on
a
lem
or
right
alignment.
The
mise-en-scene
of
the
documentary
is
always
portrayed
in
the
interview,
e.g.
a
documentary
about
a
band
so
a
concert
venue
or
studio
may
be
the
senng
of
the
interview
An
Establishing
shot
is
used
in
most
Documentaries
to
set
the
scene.
The
gender
of
the
narrator
depends
on
the
topic
and
target
audience.
The
tone
of
voice,
accent
and
vocabulary
of
the
narrator
all
depends
on
who
the
programme
is
aimed
at.
interviewee
looks
at
interviewer
not
the
camera.
Eye
line
of
the
interviewee
is
in
line
with
the
top
3rd
of
frame.
Cutaways
are
edited
into
an
interview
to
illustrate
what
the
interviewee
is
talking
about.
Graphics
are
normally
just
two
lines
and
in
a
simple
font
not
to
distract
the
audience.
Terms,
P.I.
(2016)
Codes
and
conven0ons
documentary.
Available
at:
h\ps://
prezi.com/kulnf914ja0/codes-and-conven0ons-documentary/
(Accessed:
14
April
2016).
Examples
Documentary
h\ps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oy_u4U7-
cn8
Docudrama
Deni0ons
-
A
docudrama
(or
documentary
drama)
is
a
genre
of
radio
and
television
programming,
feature
lm,
and
staged
theatre,
which
features
drama0zed
re-enactments
of
actual
events.
On
stage,
it
is
some0mes
known
as
documentary
theatre.
Conven0ons
Narra0ve
Structure:
-
Open
or
closed
or
circular
depending
on
subject
ma\er
-
Linear
or
non
linear
-
Nearly
all
documentaries
are
single
strand
Camerawork:
-
Interviews
framed
to
lem
or
right,
CU
or
MCU,
following
rule
of
thirds.
-
Handheld
cameras
used
for
actuality
footage
to
react
to
ac0on
-
A
variety
of
shot
types
are
used
to
entertain
and
sustain
the
audiences
interest
-
Pan
and
zooms
used
on
s0ll
images
Mise
En
Scene:
-
Background
of
interviews
reects
subject
or
person
-
Chromakey
-
Loca0on
-
Back
drop
-
Mise
en
Scene
is
used
to
anchor
person
to
subject
or
relevance
-
Ligh0ng
can
be
used
crea0vely
on
interviews
Sound:
-
Voiceover
narrator:
Standard
English,
glue
that
holds
narra0ve
together.
Age
and
Gender
usually
reects
target
audience.
-
Sets
scene
-
Introduce
topic
-
Links
items
-
Concludes
narra0ve
-
Music
is
used
as
a
bed.
(usually
relevant
to
topic
or
to
heighten
emo0on)
-
All
ques0ons
edited
out
-
Background
sound
or
noise
kept
to
minimum
-
SFX
can
be
used
in
re-construc0ons
Edi0ng:
-
Cut
(most
common
edit)
-
To
not
distract
from
subject
ma\er
-
Dissolve
can
be
used,
but
eects
are
kept
to
a
minimum,
e.g
fast
mo0on,
slow
mo0on
-
Eects
can
be
used
as
ellip0cal
edi0ng,
such
as
fade
to
black
-
Montage
-
Can
be
used
to
give
audience
avour
for
show
-
Can
be
used
to
show
mul0ple
examples
of
archive
material
Archive
Material:
-
Examples:
lm/video,
TV,
newspapers,
magazines,
photo
s,
websites
-
Always
relevant
to
subject
ma\er
or
what
is
being
said.
Graphics:
-
Titles
are
unique
to
programme
(logos)
-
Name
of
interviewee
and
relevance
-
Anchors
who
they
are??
-
Usually
opposite
side
to
interviewee
-
Top
line
bigger
than
bo\om
-
Simple
typography
-
Credits
scroll
and
include
tribute
to
archive
material
-
Can
anchor
period
of
0me
-
Sub0tles
where
necessary
Docudrama
(2016)
in
Wikipedia.
Available
at:
h\ps://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Docudrama
(Accessed:
14
April
2016).
Example
Docudrama
h\ps://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=nAyn1gDBc7s
Docusoap
Deni0ons
-
a
documentary
following
people
in
a
par0cular
occupa0on
or
loca0on
over
a
period
of
0me.
Conven0ons
-
These
reality
shows
take
people
out
of
their
own
worlds
and
place
them
in
a
formulated
or
specially
constructed
environment
to
see
how
they
behave.
The
Big
Brother
format
is
an
example
of
a
formulated
docusoap.
So
too
are
the
shows
that
place
modern
people
in
specially
reconstructed
historical
senngs.
h\ps://trinitycollegestage2media.wordpress.com/
reality-tv/formulated-docusoap/
Example
Docusoap
h\ps://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=VKacZMt_viE
Infotainment
Deni0ons
broadcast
material
which
is
intended
both
to
entertain
and
to
inform.
A
term
and
popular
buzzword
for
a
media
device
or
service
that
delivers
a
combina0on
of
informa0on
and
entertainment.
The
content
delivered
via
infotainment
is
designed
to
be
informa0ve
yet
entertaining
enough
to
a\ract
and
maintain
the
consumer's
interest.
Infotainment
can
refer
to
a
variety
of
content
served
through
tradi0onal
media
such
as
television,
print,
radio
or
the
Internet.
Television
channels
like
Animal
Planet
and
the
Food
Network
are
prime
examples
of
media
serving
infotainment
content.
The
term
infotainment
is
also
frequently
applied
to
devices
designed
to
serve
infotainment
content,
such
as
in-car
entertainment
and
informa0on
systems
(in-vehicle
infotainment).
Conven0ons
more
chat
show
like,
the
they
usually
have
host
and
involve
looking
at
factual
things
in
an
entertaining
way.
Example
Infotainment
h\ps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bo-
yxrHKFzA
Reality
TV
Deni0ons
television
programmes
in
which
ordinary
people
are
con0nuously
lmed,
designed
to
be
entertaining
rather
than
informa0ve.
Conven0ons
Media
Languages:
forms
and
conven0ons
A
diculty
in
the
study
of
Reality
Television
is
in
arriving
at
a
precise
deni0on
of
this
genre
which
has
changed
over
0me.
Originally
used
to
describe
programmes
that
showed
how
the
emergency
services
worked,
the
term
has
now
expanded
to
include
a
number
of
dierent
formats.
Arguably
it
is
now
one
of
the
most
popular
television
genres,
inhabi0ng
a
borderline
territory
between
informa0on
and
entertainment.
The
genre
has
a\racted
a
lot
of
cri0cism
and
is
omen
used
to
illustrate
arguments
about
the
alleged
dumbing
down
of
television.
However,
a
star0ng
point
in
dening
Reality
Television
is
that
it
presents
us
with
real
people
who
are
followed
in
a
par0cular
real
life
situa0on.
Furthermore,
that
situa0on
is
unscripted
and
unrehearsed,
providing
the
viewing
audience
with
an
opportunity
to
follow
events
as
they
happen,
which
is
undoubtedly
an
important
contributory
factor
to
its
appeal.
As
the
genre
has
evolved
a
variety
of
formats
and
techniques
have
been
set
up
which
essen0ally
have
been
borrowed
from
exis0ng
genres.
Some
deni0ons
of
Reality
TV:
Reality
television
is
a
genre
of
television
programming
that
presents
purportedly
unscripted
drama0c
or
humorous
situa0ons,
documents
actual
events,
and
usually
features
ordinary
people
instead
of
professional
actors.
(Wikipedia,
h\p://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Reality_television)
Reality
TV
is
a
catch-all
category
that
includes
a
wide
range
of
television
programmes
about
real
people.
Some0mes
called
popular
factual
television,
reality
TV
is
located
in
border
territories,
between
informa0on
and
entertainment,
documentary
and
drama
(Anne\e
Hill:
Reality
TV,
2005)
Programming
that
is
unscripted
and
follows
actual
real
life
events
as
they
unfold,
usually
involving
members
of
the
public
or
groups
of
celebri0es.
h\p://www.skillset.org
The
television
genre
where
situa0ons
are
created
by
the
shows
producers,
but
the
show
itself
is
unscripted.
Cameras
capture
the
par0cipants
natural
reac0ons
and
responses
to
the
situa0ons
created,
which
are
then
edited
as
a
programme
or
series.
(Product
Placement
Glossary,
iTVX.com)
Raji,
B.
(2010)
Sammwas.
Available
at:
h\p://
www.slideshare.net/belair1981/reality-tv-revision-4525638
(Accessed:
15
April
2016).
Example
Reality
TV
h\ps://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=lICvsbDIzDA
Jus0n
Tan
(2015)
Survivor
31:
Second
chance
Ponderosa
#2
Andrew
Savage.
Available
at:
h\ps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lICvsbDIzDA
(Accessed:
15
April
2016).
Educa0onal
Deni0ons
providing
knowledge;
instruc0ve
or
informa0ve:
Conven0ons
The
structure
of
case-study
programmes
can
vary
enormously,
from
a
simple
story,
with
a
con0nuous,
single,
sequen0al
thread,
to
a
collage
of
unconnected
shots,
with
no
underlying
ra0onale
for
the
ordering
of
these
shots
apparent
to
the
viewer.
related
to
this
is
whether
a
case-study
deals
with
single
or
mul0ple
cases.
Another
aspect
of
the
structure
of
a
programme
-
and
also
related
very
closely
to
the
'didac0c/open-ended'
dimension
-
is
the
role
of
commentary
and
the
rela0onship
of
commentary
to
visuals.
Very
omen
the
structural
links
are
provided
by
the
'academic'
commentary,
either
direct
or
to
camera,
or,
more
omen,
by
voice
over
lm.
Commentary
is
not
necessarily
needed
to
provide
structure,
however:
structure
may
be
provided
by
the
ordering
of
the
shots,
perhaps
in
a
chronological
or
geographical
sequence.
The
structure
and
format
of
a
case-study
should
as
far
as
possible
reinforce
rather
than
detract
from
the
educa0onal
aims
of
the
programme.
Where
a
programme's
structure
is
complex,
it
ought
to
be
because
the
pedagogic
inten0on
was
for
students
to
try
and
sort
out
the
issues,
and
themselves
impose
some
sort
of
structure
on
what
they
are
seeing,
rather
than
the
result
of
bad
planning
or
ar0s0c
and
technical
considera0ons.
Educa0onal
TV
Programme
structure
and
style
(no
date)
Available
at:
h\p://visual-memory.co.uk/daniel/Documents/short/tvstyle.html
(Accessed:
15
April
2016).
Example
Educa0onal
h\ps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9IjJhAyj-
Bw
Wildlife
Deni0ons
A
natural
history
lm
or
wildlife
lm
is
a
documentary
lm
about
animals,
plants,
or
other
non-human
living
creatures,
usually
concentra0ng
on
lm
taken
in
their
natural
habitat.
Some0mes
they
are
about
wild
animals,
plants,
or
ecosystems
in
rela0onship
to
human
beings.
Conven0ons
This
type
of
mode
omen
uses
a
narra0ve
and
shows
the
dierent
conven0ons
of
voice
overs,
footage
that
was
lmed
as
stage
and
talks
directly
to
the
audience.
So
this
type
of
documentary
only
looks
at
the
truth
and
displays
facts.
This
type
of
mode
may
have
the
conven0on
of
realism
as
it
as
it
wants
to
display
a
truth
about
the
topic
and
teh
realsim
looks
simply
at
the
facts
and
using
actuality
footage
for
almost
a
source
of
proof.
Wildlife
Example
h\ps://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=L7tWNwhSocE
Special
interest
Deni0ons
A
program
about
something
more
specic,
its
made
more
for
more
a
knish
market
and
is
about
something
less
mass
market
and
is
only
more
about
that.
It
focuses
on
one
thing.
Conven0ons
there
are
less
conven0ons
as
each
program
can
be
about
something
totally
dierent
so
it
might
call
for
a
dierent
form
of
presenta0on
and
format
each
0me.
The
main
conven0on
being
that
it
talks
about
something
that
most
people
dont
know
or
care
about,
its
more
for
a
specic
market.
Merriam-Webster
(2015)
Deni0on
of
SPECIAL
INTEREST.
Available
at:
h\p://www.merriam-webster.com/dic0onary/
special%20interest
(Accessed:
25
April
2016).
Makeover
Deni0ons
a
complete
reconstruc0on
and
renova0on
of
something.
Conven0ons
The
transforma0on
or
makeover
of
people
and
places
has
long
been
a
standard
feature
of
popular
womens
magazines
and
is
now
a
dominant
form
of
television.
The
television
design
program
oers
an
uneasy
interface
between
the
private
world
of
the
domes0c
and
the
public
world
of
television,
a
tension
apparent
in
the
conven0ons
that
surround
the
encounter
between
ordinary
people
and
television
personali0es
in
interior
decora0on
programs
such
as
Home
Front
and
Changing
Rooms.
Farlex
(2003b)
Makeover.
Available
at:
h\p://
www.thefreedic0onary.com/makeover
(Accessed:
25
April
2016).
Makeover
Example
h\ps://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=inT4y5e3tE4
Magazine
Deni0ons
A
periodical
containing
a
collec0on
of
ar0cles,
stories,
pictures,
or
other
features.
A
television
program
that
presents
a
variety
of
topics,
usually
on
current
events,
in
a
format
that
omen
includes
interviews
and
commentary.
Conven0ons
programs
on
various
topics
that
include
analysis
or
discussion,
for
example,
talk
or
panel
shows,
consumer
aairs
or
reviews,
newsmagazines
and
documentaries
t.
This
category
excludes
programs
presen0ng
informa0on
primarily
for
entertainment
value.
The
Commission
notes
that
"Docutainment"
programs,
gossip
or
entertainment.
Farlex
(2003b)
Magazine
program.
Available
at:
h\p://
www.thefreedic0onary.com/magazine+program
(Accessed:
25
April
2016).
Magazine
Example
h\p://www.cbs.com/shows/60_minutes/
Discussion
Deni0ons
talking
about
something
with
another
person
or
a
group
of
people
:
a
conversa0on
about
something.
Conven0ons
A
group
of
people
sit
around
discussing
a
chosen
topic.
These
conversa0ons
are
usually
more
serous
and
bring
up
controversial
or
key
issues
in
the
media
at
that
0me.
Merriam-Webster
(2015a)
Deni0on
of
DISCUSSION.
Available
at:
h\p://www.merriam-webster.com/dic0onary/discussion
(Accessed:
26
April
2016).
Discussion
Example
h\ps://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=YFmDePLUNV0
Review
Deni0ons
to
think
or
talk
about
something
again,
in
order
to
make
changes
to
it
or
to
make
a
decision
about
it:
If
cri0cs
review
a
book,
play,
lm,
etc.
they
give
their
opinion
of
it:
Conven0ons
They
have
people
who
have
knowledge
and
experience
and
maybe
a
host
and
the
talk/discuss
the
movie,
book
or
what
ever
it
is
they
are
reviewing.
Breaking
it
down
giving
opinion
and
saying
If
its
good.
Woodford,
K.
and
Cambridge
Dic0onaries
Online
(2016b)
Review
meaning
in
the
Cambridge
English
dic0onary.
Available
at:
h\p://
dic0onary.cambridge.org/dic0onary/english/review
(Accessed:
25
April
2016).
Review
Example
h\p://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b06ym8sf
Chat
show
Deni0ons
a
radio
or
television
show
in
which
a
host
interviews
or
chats
with
guests,
esp.
celebrity
guests.
Conven0ons
ne
person
(or
group
of
people)
will
discuss
various
topics
put
forth
by
a
talk
show
host.
Ricky
Lake
Some0mes,
talk
shows
feature
a
panel
of
guests,
usually
consis0ng
of
a
group
of
people
who
are
learned
or
who
have
great
can
involve
interviews.
ecclestona
and
ecclestona
(2010)
Chat
show
intro
ppt.
Available
at:
h\p://
www.slideshare.net/ecclestona/chat-show-
intro-ppt
(Accessed:
26
April
2016).