Thursday, 11 June 2009

Podcasting vs Blogging

Pod casting and blogging are very similar. They both share the idea that you can talk about what ever you want, promoting discussions, asking questions, reviewing different art forms etc. They also share the idea that more can be added when ever you wanted. The main difference between the two is that pod casting is primarily sound files and blogs are primarily text.

Many celebrities make pod casts just like with blogs. People can subscribe to a podcast so they are sent the new podcast file automatically, without having to search for it Pod casts are normally down loadable but blogs are read straight from the page. 100

I have been asked to talk about one blog and the blog i have chosen to write about is the BBC News blog, written by the editors.

This blog is typically updated 3 or 4 times a day and normally contains entries of political orientation.

During the European election viewers of the BBC blog were not aloud to comment on the entries as normal as it is against the BBCs policy on broadcasting during an election.

The editors from the BBC give a much more personal opinion on matters than you would expect considering it is a BBC blog.

The blog has also seen BBC News editors giving their reasons for editorial decisions as well as defending criticisms of the BBC. Members of the public are given the opportunity to comment on the entries. The editors can then choose to respond to the comments if they fell it necessary.

Some of the contributors to the blog include Steve Herrmann and Giles Wilson.


Tommy Wilson

What Is Blogging?

Blogging is the way forward in the media. Everyone seems to be blogging these days. From companies and news rooms to celebraties and political groups. The modern blog evolved from the online diary, where people would keep a running account of their personal lives. Most writers of this kind would call themselves diarists.

Blogging is where a person can document on whatever matter they want, adding new blogs to there list at any time they want. Bloggers can edit previous blogs, recieving comments on there blog and respond to the comments. Popular things to blog on include news storys, debates and reviews. A blog primerilly contains text but can include many forms of media. A blog can be private or open for anyone to see.

It is said that blogging started in 1994, around the colleges in the USA. These blogs were able to cope with text, picture, video and sound. Open Diary was launched in October 1998 which helped shoot blogging to popularlity.

In 2001 a series of popular blogs emerged, including Ron Gunzburger's - Politics1.Com. Many of the popular blogs from the early 2000s were politics related, with people giving there opinions on political matters at that spacific time.

Social network sites like facebook, myspace and bebo also allow users to blog. The move to bring in blogs brought many bloggers to social networking sites and encouraged people who joined there site to blog more often. 238

Website Twitter brought another new way to blog, it allows you to update what you are doing as often as you want in 140 characters or less. This type of blogging is called micro-blogging. Twitter allows you to follow other people and you get regularly updated as they update there page. There are many celbraties using the sevice and lots of fans take advantage of being able to get closer to them

Blogging is massive part of the internet these days and it looks set to keep growing. Wether it kills of newspapers and magazines it remains to be seen and im sure we will find out in the coming years.


Tommy Wilson

Wednesday, 10 June 2009

Description Of Arctic Monkeys Cover













Arctic Monkeys Album Cover, with James

I decided to use the Arctic monkeys album cover as inspiration as it is one of my favourite modern albums. I also feel like the image is very effective. It looks as if the guy in shot really doesnt care whats going on and i feel the photo catches that perfectly.

I had always wanted to use the image but strugled to find somewhere with a similar background that was outside. The image needed to be outside as the man is smoking in shot. The guy smoking is one of the main noticable parts and i needed to be able to copy that.

It was when i was outside on another photoshoot that i noticed the college huts thats outline was very simular to the curtains in the album cover. It was then i decided that i was going to go ahead and do that cover.

James was my first choice to use in the image. He is one of the closest representatives to the man in the album cover and he smokes so smoking for the cover would not be a issue.

The photo was taken in three shots, only retaken to perfect the stance of the man in the cover.

When editing the photo i made it black and white and changed the setting to make the image look more grainy.

I glad i decided to use this image and i think it has turned out very well.


Tommy Wilson

Tuesday, 9 June 2009

Social Network Takeover

Social networks have taken over the web... and its just being accepted. At first it was just a way to keep in touch with friends but now its so much more. I sound like I'm promoting social networks, but I'm not.

From a music social network like Last.Fm where you can compare music tastes and find out about gigs to twitter where you can document your every move and stalk celebrities without leaving your home.

To begin the popularity of it it all was Myspace. Founded in August 2003, Myspace brought together connection with friends, listening to music and documenting your life all into one page with one login. This revolutionised the way people surfed the web.

Facebook was then founded in February 2004 as a competitor to Myspace. Facebook stayed a close second in the popularity until early 2009 when it was announced that Facebook was now more popular that Myspace. This could be due to the fact that Facebook changed the way its homepages work, making it so much easier to talk to friends and add applications, with Myspace being terribly hard to understand. Facebook allows companies to create applications making Facebook a lot more multi-website friendly.

This change meant that Myspace music was one of the only things Myspace had up on Facebook. Myspace music makes it very easy to find and listen to the bands you love or new little bands you want to check out.

Bebo is another social network site that is very popular in the UK. Before Bebo used to be very similar to Myspace but seeing the success of Facebook, Bebo is changing, trying to cash in on Facebook's success. Bebo is terribly easy to use, but the downside to that is that Bebo really isn't very exciting or easy to keep up to date with your friends. You could describe Bebo as Facebook's slow little brother.

Twitter is a site that has just recently shot to great success. You could describe twitter as half social network half mini blog. Twitter is very simple, and that's what works for it. You follow people and they write on there page what they are doing or what ever they want to write and you read it to keep up to date. Twitter has now also linked with Facebook, meaning when someone writes what they are doing on Twitter it will also come up as what you are doing on Facebook.

So why the sudden takeover of social networks? I know that i shouldnt be so obbsessed but i cant help but constantly update on Twitter and Facebook. Its the need to be in constant conversation, even though theres a possibility that no one is even reading it. So will social networks continue there take over or will everyone eventually get bored and move on? Only time will tell...


Tommy Wilson

Don McCullin


Don McCullin
West Hartlepool in 1968


Don McCullin a British Photojournalist born on October 9th 1935. He is particularly known for his war photography. His photojournalism career began is 1959. His career has specialised in examining the underside of society, and his photographs have depicted the unemployed and downtrodden.

At the age of 13 he received a scholarship for painting to the Hammersmith School of Arts and Crafts but when his father died, when Don was just 15, he was forced to go into work. For his national service he joined the RAF. He became a photographic assistant, working on aerial reconnaissance printing. He failed to pass the written theory paper necessary to become a photographer in the RAF, so he spent his service in the darkroom.

In 1968, his Nikon camera stopped a bullet that was intended for him.

Today we are going to focus at one of his photos in particular, West Hartlepool in 1968. In this photo one of the first things you notice is the contrast, from the dark grounds to the light sky being polluted by the industrial air. The light can be seen reflecting on the broken fence, this is a important part of the image as it's the first thing you eye is drawn to from the bottom half of the image.

The feeling of the image is increadabily isolated. One of the main reasons why this photo looks so depressing and isolated is because it is shot in black and white film. The man is walking alone along a empty road. The broken fence and abandoned field on the left also promotes the isolated feeling as it shows exactily what is around the man in the long black jacket.

As soon as you see the photo you can predict what era the shot is from. This could be down to the texture and detail. The photo has perfect texture making the image feel life like. The clothes that man is wearing were wore a lot during that time, so that helps distingwish the period aswell.
This shot is very powerful and Don McCullin managed to shoot it perfectily. The image is a great sign of the times and is somewhat a poster of what life was like in Hartlepool in the late 60s.
Tommy Wilson

Thursday, 4 June 2009

Goth's Blamed

The media encourage the belief that if a goth kills someone it’s because they are a goth and it’s the music they listen to that is at fault.Yet if someone who listens to mainstream music and fits in with the so called normal people kills someone its not there music or scene to blame.


They say if a person self harms, it’s the music they listen to that promotes the idea. Why is this? If someone has the desire to kill someone, surely it’s nothing to do with what social scene they are involved in. The lyrics of Marilyn Manson, Slipknot and My Chemical Romance have famously been blamed for promoting self harm and evil, but if you listen to the lyrics of these bands, a lot of their songs try to show how to escape from such feelings and offer another way out. It’s as if the media are looking for an excuse.


One of the biggest British stories linked to this idea was the murder of Jodi Jones in June 2003. Her boyfriend at the time, Luke Mitchell, was convicted of the murder. When the case went to court the kind of music he listened to and clothes that he wore were brought up and put forward as part of the blame for the murder.


Another famous incident was when the Daily Mail called My Chemical Romance a “cult suicide” band. This outraged fans and caused them to march in protest to the newspaper for putting forward this idea to oblivious readers.


So why is alternate and goth music blamed for so much that goes wrong? A lot is linked to the Columbine High School Massacre murders in 1999, where two students shot and murdered 15 people before killing themselves. It transpired they were big fans of Marlyn Manson. Ironically, far from being an evil devil worshipper, when asked what he would have said to the killers, Manson replied: "Nothing. I would have listened, because no one else did."



Tommy Wilson

Wednesday, 20 May 2009

Ansel Adams















Ansel Adams
Dunes, Oceano

Ansel Adams was an American Photographer born in San Francisco, California in 1902. He died in 1984 aged 82. He is best known for his black and white photographs of the American West and primarily Yosemite National Park. In 1927 Adams created his first portfolio in a different style than what had been seen before. Ansel Adams is considered a huge influence to photographers around the world. Exhibitions are still put on to show his work even though he is dead to continue inspiring young photographers. He took many photos over his career but today I am going to talk about one taken in 1963 called Dunes, Oceano.

This photograph is one of his most famous for many different reasons. The shot brings the picture out of the image, the way the photo is taken it actually feels like a 3D image. I feel the shot shows a good vs. evil, right vs. wrong feeling. The photo also feels incredibly isolated.

There is a clearly noticeable contrast in the image, changing from light and easy going on the left to dark and hard on the right. There is a wide variety of shades in the image though the top right side of the image is more solid black.

The texture looks as if it’s soft at the top yet rough at the bottom and there is a contrast there from top to bottom. The roughness looks as thought you could touch and feel the image and its roughness. The sky looks very soft along with the left side of the sand. It looks untouched as if no one has ever been there before and has just been discovered.

There is a wide variety of shaped in this photograph though I can see a lot of triangles. It’s as if the image is made up and put together with lots of triangles, thus creating many different shapes. The shapes are a very important part of the photograph as it is one of the very first things you notice when looking at the image.




Tommy Wilson