Skip to main content

Benefits of having a free press

The benefits of the press being self-regulated is that the stories will be more detailed and in depth. Some of the stories may get to the public domain, and therefore some stories have been known to start debates between the audience. This is because people question why the government don't want to, or like to, publish certain stories and what this could really mean.


Newspapers can commonly be bias based off the writer's point of view, which is one reason why they're regulated, and because of this, the stories published aren't always 100% factually correct. The journalists and editors publish what they want to, and will often go to extremeness to get the best articles.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Video Analysis: Burn the Witch- Radiohead

T he British children’s TV series the 'Trumptonshire Trilogy’ inspired the Burn the Witch music video by Radiohead. The video shoes an inspector being given a tour around a small town by the mayor. The town itself seems pretty normal, neat and well under-control, however it soon becomes clear this isn't the case as we are introduced to the local residents. From trying to drown one neighbour, to tying someone else up to a tree, the inspector, and equally the audience, are quickly aware not everything is as perfect as it seems, and that the town's residents are actually violent and dangerous on a day to day basis. We see the end of the video showing the inspector being tricked into a large wooden cage-type figure, which has been similarly seen in the 1973 British horror film 'The Wicker Man'. Once locked inside its 'stomach', it is then set alight by the town's people, from which we assume the inspector is left to die, but are shown otherwise as he is see...

Media Language and Representation: Lucozade & Shelter

Lucozade:   This Lucozade advert want to attract an audience, and to do so they need to get people's attention. They've done this by using a large, bold font, that stands out and is easily noticeable. Not only is it large, and takes up a lot of the advert, but it is also a dark navy which contrasts with the sky-blue background and the black and grey on the model, making it more viewable. The advert itself is simple, and is taken up by about 45% model and 45% text, with the other 10% being the bright-blue background. The angle of the camera is cleverly positioned to define the model, Gareth Bale, to have strong facial features, to make him visually appealing to the audience. This is another technique used to attract an audience, which advertises the product to a larger, and wider, audience range and therefore to engage them with the advert and the product. ''In a different league'' links to both football and the product being advertised. In the football si...

Unfinished Sympathy - Massive Attack: Research

Massive Attack are an English trip hop group formed in 1988 in Bristol, and consists of Robert "3D" Del Naja, Grant "Daddy G" Marshall and formerly Andy "Mushroom" Vowles. A popular album of theirs would be Blue Lines. It is the debut studio album by English trip hop group Massive Attack, released on their Wild Bunch label through Virgin Records on 8 April 1991, followed by the release of a remastered version of the album on 19 November 2012. The music video follows Shara Nelson around an urban street in down town LA. The camera moves around her body to face her, so when she is walking the camera is in front and reversing in order to catch an edgy video of her walking, and making it more mainstream.