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TV Essay Prep

Capital

Produced by Kudos Film Company in the United Kingdom and distributed by Fremantle. Aired on BBC One.

Essay Draft

Television producers often attempt to target national and global audiences through subject matter and distribution. David Hesmondhalgh states that operating in the media industry is a “risky business” and so many actions must be taken to avoid and mitigate this risk. One example of this can be seen in the production of Deutschland 83, which is a co-production between UFA, AMC Network and RTL television. This can minimise risk in that money is split between multiple companies. In addition, Deutschland is set in Germany, which means that having companies from different parts of the world (Germany, United Kingdom, United States in this case) can assist in the globalisation (spreading a media product to a global audience) meaning that a more diverse audience can be targeted and so more money can be made, minimizing the risk. These multiple companies also have lots of different contacts, making things such as distribution much easier. Deutschland was distributed through All 4, which has a mixed model structure as it is both stately and publicly owned. The “Genre” of Deutschland 83 is a Spy Thriller, as described by Steve Neale as a “corpus” or repertoire of elements which can have both predictable and innovative elements. Examples of predictable elements in Deutschland include when someone’s drink was poisoned and the agent’s finger was snapped.

Many theorists can be linked to Deutschland 83, such as Vladmir Propp. He talks about stock characters, such as the hero, princess and villain. Martin could be described as the hero, his girlfriend as the princess, and the West as the villain. The use of these traditional stock characters makes the product more reactionary and so reduces risk in that people are more likely to buy and enjoy the product. Another theorist that is relevant here is Tzetvan Todorov, who talks of stories having a beginning, middle and end. The “denouement” in the story is when Martin completes the mission by taking photographs of the important documents. Levi-Strauss talks about the use of “Binary Oppositions” in media products and these are relevant in Deutschland, as shown with the rivalries between East/West. Finally, Laura Mulvey described an idea she termed “The Male Gaze” and this relates to Deutschland in the sense that the main character, Martin, is male who carries out tasks which many may deem as having lots of violence. While this is occurring, the female character, his girlfriend, remains in the East, not taking part in any entertaining or enthralling activities and often being used as a source of male gratification.

Capital is a public service broadcasting program from the BBC, produced by Kudos Entertainment and distributed by Fremantle, that satisfies the BBC’s ethos being to inform, educate and entertain. Public Service Broadcasting refers to products that are broadcasted to the public for entertainment and exchange of information and not intended for profits to be made. This is contrasted by Curran and Seaton’s viewpoint, and they refer to the idea that “The media industry is controlled by a small amount of powerful companies who create media products for profit”. These powerful companies are often able to alleviate the level of regulation required on their products, as described by Livingstone and Lunt.

Key Points

David Hesmondhalgh – “Risky Business” – Deutschland co-production, RTL, AMC, UFA – different countries/companies – globalisation, diverse audience – more money

All 4 – distributed Deutschland – mixed model structure partially state/public owned.

Genre – Neale – Deutschland = Spy Thriller, corpus/repetoire of predictable and innovative elements, predictable – finger snap, poison drink, innovative = German, cold war.

Propp – stock characters

Levi-Strauss – Binary Oppositions – East/West

Todorov – Denouement, beginning middle end

Mulvey – Male Gaze

Lazarfelt – Two step flow – Capital – Ideas about London could be misinterpreted – lose money

Capital – BBC – Public service broadcasting – not for profit

BBC – educate, inform, entertain

Contrasts Curran and Seatan – Small number of powerful companies control the media

Powerful companies may be able to waive regulation – Livingstone and Lunt,

Institition Notes

What are the similarities and differences between the culture industries and other industries?

Similarities between the industries are that they all want to sell things and designate their products to different audiences they also adhere to the different stages benig production, distribution and consumption.

Differences between the industries are that the culture industries can convey lots of different ideas and meanings from their products, and there is a lot more variation of what can be sold.

“On the other hand, it is equally clear that the goods they manufacture – newspapers, advertisements, television programmes and feature films – play a pivotal role in organizing the images and discourses through which people make sense of the world. – Peter Golding and Graham Murdock

Commercial Media – ITV, Sky – Multi regional

Public Service Media – BBC – Regional

Transnational Media – Netflix, Amazon Prime – Global

Public Service Broadcasting

Public Service Broadcasting refers to broadcasting given to the public for entertainment or information free of charge, and is not created to make profits.

The ethos of the BBC is to inform, entertain and educate.

Capital is a public service broadcasting program from the BBC that satisfies the ethos being to inform, educate and entertain.

Curran and Seaton are two key theorists (talk about them in TV question). They say that “the media is controlled by a small number of companies that make products to create profit”.

Key Words

  1. Cultural industries – a range of companies selling various media products.
  2. Production – The process of a media product being made and created.
  3. Distribution – The process of a media product being spread and delivered to people.
  4. Exhibition / Consumption – The process of people getting use out of media products.
  5. Media concentration
  6. Conglomerates – Corporations of several different media businesses.
  7. Globalisation (in terms of media ownership) – The process of spreading and distributing media products around the world.
  8. Cultural imperialism –
  9. Vertical Integration – Where one company takes control over multiple stages in the production, distribution or consumption of a product.
  10. Horizontal Integration – Where one company takes control over multiple providers in one key process (production, distribution, consumption).
  11. Mergers – When one company merges (comes together with) another.
  12. Monopolies – When one company has control of an entire industry sector.
  13. Gatekeepers
  14. Regulation
  15. Deregulation
  16. Free market
  17. Commodification  
  18. Convergence  
  19. Diversity   
  20. Innovation

Capital and Deutschland

Deutschland 83

Production company: UFA Fiction

Genre: Cold War espionage

1 season 8 episodes

Was most popular foreign-drama in Britain upon release.

Deutschland 83 is a 2015 German television series starring Jonas Nay as a 24-year-old native of East Germany who, in 1983, is sent to West Germany as an undercover spy for the HVA, the foreign intelligence agency of the Stasi.

Narrative
• How does the use of the narrative conventions of the spy thriller and crime drama – use of
enigmas, binary oppositions, restricted and omniscient narration etc. – position the audience?
• The narrative of Deutschland 83 has been controversial – particularly in Germany -through its
use of binary oppositions to contrast East and West Germany.
• The role of the hero and effect of audience alignment with Martin Rauch, a Stasi Officer.
• The narrative of Deutschland 83 can be defined as postmodern in its self-reflexive style.
• Narratology including Todorov.

Capital

Production Company: Kudos

Genre: British drama television

1 Season 4 Episodes

Capital is a three-part British television adaptation of John Lanchester’s novel Capital. The series was written by Peter Bowker, directed by Euros Lyn and produced by Matt Strevens for Kudos Film & Television Company. The story centres on the residents of a road in South London as the value of each house in the street is approaching £2 million. They all begin to receive repeated postcards with the message “We want what you have”. The first episode was broadcast on BBC One on 24 November 2015.

Narrative
• Which narrative techniques are used to engage the audience in the opening episode of Capital?
• How does the use of the narrative conventions of the crime drama – use of enigmas,
restricted narration etc. – position the audience?
• Capital is characteristic of contemporary TV narrative style in its use of multiple story structure.
• The ways in which the narrative structure of Capital offers gratification to the audience.
• Narratology including Todorov.

Pages 6-9 in the CSP booklet 

CSP 8: No Offence & and The Killing

No Offence (Series 1, episode 1) and The Killing (Series 1, episode 1)

No Offence

A group of police officers try their best to keep the streets of Manchester free of crime. When all else fails, they decide to use unconventional methods to teach the perpetrators a lesson.

Language-the codes and conventions of the police
procedural crime drama are intertwined with aspects of social realism
-analysis of the process through which media language develops as genre y to understand and reflect on the dynamic nature of genre
-analysis should include: mise-en-scene, semiotics
Narrative-Which narrative techniques are used to engage the audience
-How the use of the narrative conventions of the crime drama – use of enigmas,
restricted narration etc. – positions the audience
-The ways in which the narrative structure offers a range of gratification to the
audience
-Narratology including Todorov
Genre-Conventions of the TV drama series and the way in which this form is used to appeal to
audiences.
-Definition of the series as a hybrid genre, belonging to the drama, social realism and crime
genres
-Genre theory including Neale
Representations-Negative and positive use – or subversion – of stereotypes, particularly around the
representation of women and the police.
– unusual in popular television series due to the dominance of female
characters.
-Representation of place – Manchester – by implication the nation?
-Representation of issues – series 1 deals with the disappearance and murder of children with
Down’s Syndrome and raises questions about attitudes to and treatment of people with
disabilities.
-Analysis of how the representations convey values, attitudes and beliefs about the world
-Theories of representation including Hall
Industries– AbbottVision production, an independent company founded by the writer Paul
Abbott who also wrote Shameless.
-a critical and commercial success in the UK, it was also a ratings success in
France where it was shown on the national broadcast channel, France2.
-Channel 4 uses series such as No Offence to add value to the channel through the availability
of the ‘box set’ on All4.
-channel 4 – 90% income is from advertising – £934m in revenue – however gets reinvested into company
AudienceThe production, distribution and circulation of No Offence shows how audiences can be
reached, both on a national and global scale, through different media technologies and
platforms, moving from the national to transnational through broadcast and digital technologies.
No Offence was broadcast on Channel 4, can still be accessed on All4, it was also broadcast in
France.
The way in which different audience interpretations reflect social, cultural and historical
circumstances is evident in the analysis of No Offence which is explicitly linked to contemporary
issues.
Audience positioning through the construction of characters who are morally ambiguous.
The advertising campaigns (trailers, websites at home and abroad) for the series demonstrate
how media producers target, attract and potentially construct audiences.
Cultivation theory including Gerbner
Reception theory including Hall
Social, Political, economic, cultural contexts-police force is used as a microcosm of society through which to
examine changing gender roles
-focus of the case which features children and adults with
Down’s syndrome examines the position of people with disabilities in the wider society
-Political
contexts are evident in the nature of the approach to police work which refers to a history of
corruption and the role of police power in society
-The economic context can be explored through
patterns of ownership and production and how the product is marketed nationally and globally

The Killing

Inspector Sarah Lund thought she was going to work one last day in Copenhagen before moving to a remote Swedish town with her boyfriend and young son. She was wrong. When a teenage girl’s body is found in a car with links to a mayoral candidate’s office, Lund begins what becomes a 20-day investigation into the murder.

Language-use of a noir visual style, conventions of the police procedural and multiple narrative strands
– Mise en scene
-Semiotics
Narrative-use of the narrative conventions of the crime drama – use of enigmas, binary
oppositions, restricted and omniscient narration etc. – effects the position of the audience
-analysing the appeals of the structure as
reassuring and predictable – even when dealing with difficult subject matter
-multiple plot lines related to the central crime
-Narratology including Todorov
Genre-Conventions of the TV series (The Killing had three series which had links but were also
stand-alone series) and the way in which this form is used to appeal to audiences; how it is
distinct from, but related to series and serials
-belonging to the drama and crime genres
-Analysing the current popularity of the crime genre
-Genre theory including Neale
Representation-f gender: The woman as police detective, representation of marriage, gender
stereotypes etc
-Feminist debates – Violence and the representation of gender. This could include the
controversy around using violent crime against women as popular entertainment
-national identity – Denmark including issues of multiculturalism.
-Theories of representation including Hall
-Feminist theories including bell hooks and Van Zoonen
Industries-catalyst for the wider distribution of foreign language crime programming on
UK television, its unexpected success influencing BBC4’s scheduling but also that of other UK
channels
-Danish national public service broadcaster DR, providing
the opportunity to study PSB in a different national context.
-The regulatory framework of contemporary media, with the focus on PSB
-e specialised nature of media production, distribution
and circulation within a transnational and global context
-The Killing personifies a successful transnational, contemporary media product with long
duration (it was broadcast in the UK nearly five years after its success in Denmark)
-remade by Turkish and US TV (AMC)
-Cultural industries including Hesmondhalgh
Audience-The production, distribution and circulation of the Killing shows how audiences can be
reached, both on a national and global scale, through different media technologies and
platforms
-different audience interpretations reflect social, cultural and historical
circumstances is evident in the analysis of the series which are explicitly linked to contemporary
issues – often related to gender and feminist issues
-New types of characters to construct alignment for the audience/audience positioning
-The advertising campaigns for the series demonstrate
how media producers target, attract and potentially construct audiences.
-Audience behaviour in response to the series – the interest in Scandinavian culture and
lifestyle
-Cultivation theory including Gerbner
-Reception theory including Hall
Social, political, cultural and economic contexts-e first time
saw TV series not in the English language become part of mainstream UK broadcasting
-dominated by the crime genre was part of a wider cultural phenomenon which
saw the crime genre become the key form for exploring social contexts – particularly changing
gender roles
-key factor in the surge in interest in Scandinavian culture in
the UK
-uses the crime genre to explore contemporary political contexts of multiculturalism and debate the effects of immigration
-The economic context can be explored through
patterns of ownership and production and how the product is marketed nationally and globally.

television

Witnesses

Police investigate when bodies are taken from a cemetery and placed in houses for sale, along with a photo of retired police officer Paul Maisonneuve.

Witnesses is part of cultural phenomenon of the early twenty-first century which for the first time saw TV series not in the English language become part of mainstream UK broadcasting. That these series were dominated by the crime genre was part of a wider cultural phenomenon which saw the crime genre become the key form for exploring social and cultural contexts. The series used the genre to explore society’s fear of and desire for violence,
social isolation and changing gender roles.

The Missing

Tony and Emily Hughes go to France on a holiday with their five-year-old son Oliver. However, when their car breaks down one night in a small town, Tony suddenly loses sight of his son.

The Missing’s parallel storylines, set in the past and present foregrounds the Iraq war and the political debates and controversies about the British involvement in it. The role of popular culture in examining past history is relevant here. The institution of the army frequently operates as a microcosm of wider social and cultural contexts in the exploration of changing expectations of gender roles as well its relationship to family structures. Values and ideologies of different cultures are represented through different religious and ethnic beliefs. The economic context can be explored through patterns of ownership and production and how the product is marketed nationally and globally.

Letter to the free

Music Video – Letter to the Free is a product which possesses cultural and social significance. It will invite comparison with other music videos allowing for an analysis of the contexts in which they are produced and consumed

This is a targeted CSP and needs to be studied with reference to two elements of the Theoretical Framework (Media Language and Media Representation) and all relevant contexts

“Letter to the Free,” like “13th,” addresses the issue of mass incarceration in the United States, “The 13th is an amendment that says slavery is abolished unless someone commits a crime… It’s evolved [and] is now targeting black and brown people across America for mass incarceration. It’s an epidemic that’s destroying America in many ways. So, for me to write a song about this, it’s fulfilling. It’s what I want my music and art to be, part of the enlightenment, part of moving things forward.”

When we first think about political protest, what comes to mind?
○ Attempts to change to laws or legislation
○ Organised political movements
○ Public protests
○ Petitions, marches

Cultural hegemony functions by framing the ideologies of the dominant social group as the only legitimate
ideology.
● The ideologies of the dominant group are expressed and maintained through its economic, political, moral,
and social institutions (like the education system and the media).
● These institutions socialise people into accepting the norms, values and beliefs of the dominant social
group.
● As a result, oppressed groups believe that the social and economic conditions of society are natural and
inevitable, rather than created by the dominant group.

Lyrics

‘Not whips and chains, all subliminal’

‘Shot me with your ray-gun
And now you want to trump me’

‘And we gonna free them, so we can free us’

POSTCOLONIALISM:

has a kind of hook or link into empire and colonialism

great literature has a timeless and universal significance [which] thereby demotes or disregards cultural, social, regional, and nations differences in experience and outlook’ (Barry, 2017: 194).

The arguments around postcolonial critical thought ‘constituted a fundamentally important political act’ (MacLoed, 200: 16)

Edward Said Culture and Imperialism, 1993

The Link between culture, imperial power & colonialism

the power to narrate, or to block other narratives from forming or emerging, is very important to culture and imperialism

The mode is characterised by ‘the desire to contain the intangibilities of the East within a western lucidity, but this gesture of appropriation only partially conceals the obsessive fear.’ (Suleri, 1987:255)

‘an economic system like a nation or a religion, lives not by bread alone, but by beliefs, visions, daydreams as well, and these may be no less vital to it for being erroneous’V. G. Kiernan

 ‘the privileged role of culture in the modern imperial experience’ (1997:3)

Jacques Lacan:

The other:  we cannot actually see ourselves as whole, we use a reflection to understand who we are / who we are not

Letter to the free


Music Video – Letter to the Free
 is a product which possesses cultural and social significance. It will invite comparison with other music videos allowing for an analysis of the contexts in which they are produced and consumed.

His output is highly politicised, existing in the context of a variety of social and cultural movements aimed at raising awareness of racism and its effects in US society.

resistance a political protest:

Key idea: the political, personal and cultural are always intertwined, Culture is what influences people’s hearts, minds and opinions. This is the site of popular change.

Cultural Hegemony:

Antonio Gramsci: Italian philosopher writing in the 1930s developed this theory.

Hegemonic culture: the dominant culture
● Cultural hegemony: power, rule, or domination maintained by ideological and cultural means.
● Ideology: worldview – beliefs, assumptions and values
● Cultural hegemony functions by framing the ideologies of the dominant social group as the only legitimate
ideology.
● The ideologies of the dominant group are expressed and maintained through its economic, political, moral,
and social institutions (like the education system and the media).
● These institutions socialise people into accepting the norms, values and beliefs of the dominant social
group.
● As a result, oppressed groups believe that the social and economic conditions of society are natural and inevitable, rather than created by the dominant group.

Key Concepts:
● Cultural resistance: the use of art/literature to challenge or fight oppressive system or power holders.
● Cultural hegemony: domination or rule maintained through ideological or cultural means. It is usually achieved through social institutions.
● Subcultural theory: Cohen’s subcultural theory assumes that crime is a consequence of the union of young people into so-called subcultures in which deviant values and moral concepts dominate. Subcultural theory became the dominant theory of its time.

Slavery’s still alive, check Amendment 13
Not whips and chains, all subliminal – amendment states that you can still be a slave if you are a criminal even though we don’t see it with whips and chains it is still apparent in society.

We staring in the face of hate again
The same hate they say will make America great again
No consolation prize for the dehumanized- no great version for those that’re dehumanised and treated differently, questioning who the great America is for and wanting it to be elaborated.

Post Colonialism:

-Has a hook or link to empire and colonialism, it occupies the shadow of slavery.

the power to narrate, or to block other narratives from forming or emerging, is very important to culture and imperialismEdward Said Culture and Imperialism, 1993: xiii

Overall, POSTCOLONIALISM operates a series of signs maintaining the European-Atlantic power over the Orient by creating ‘an accepted grid for filtering through the Orient into Western consciousness‘. (Said, 1978:238). Or as Paul Gilroy puts it, ‘a civilising mission that had to conceal its own systematic brutality in order to be effective and attractive’ (2004:8)

Post colonialism deconstructs and asks how we are measuring good or bad, post colonialism political thought postcolonial criticism challenges the assumption of a universal claim towards what constitutes ‘good reading’ and ‘good literature’; questioning the notion of a recognised and overarching canon of important cultural texts – book, poems, plays, films etc

Orientalism: The idea of stereotyping the middle east in a way they are exaggerated to be something worse so that the west can stay in power. Orientalism is the imitation or depiction of aspects in the Eastern world. These depictions are usually done by writers, designers, and artists from the Western world.

Jacques Lacan: “The Other”.

 we cannot actually see ourselves as whole, we use a reflection to understand who we are / who we are not. Lacan proposed that in infancy this first recognition occurs when we see ourselves in a mirror. Applying that theory to culture, communications and media studies, it is possible to see why we are so obsessed with reading magazines, listening to music, watching films, videos and television because, essentially, we are exploring ‘The Other’ as a way of exploring ourselves.

WE can not explore ourselves and will be constantly misunderstood, we are always looking for assurance.

Linking the two together the Other theory can be used to show how people compare others to us to justify a class and reinforced stereotypes.

letter to the free

https://hautlieucreative.co.uk/media23al/wp-content/uploads/sites/58/2022/01/Music-as-Political-Protest.pdf

Awarded an Emmy for Outstanding Original Music and Lyrics, Common’s “Letter to the Free” speaks out against a justice system which helps to perpetuate the terrible inequality endured by many African Americans .The lyrics criticise the money-making “business” of the “prison” system when these institutions should be a tool for positive reform and rehabilitation. Released in 2016, the rapper also worried about “staring in the face of hate” of Trump’s vision of America.

Common’s “Letter to the Free” was written for a documentary exploring this criminalisation of African Americans. Directed by Ava DuVernay The “13th” also focused on the “systems of racial control” and state laws which seem to discriminate against impoverished ethnic minorities who are then more likely to be convicted of a crime and imprisoned. For instance, despite making up 13% of the total US population. black inmates account for nearly 40% of prison population.

common

Common is an advocate for criminal justice reform and is the founder of Imagine Justice, a non-profit organisation dedicated to “empowering communities and fighting injustice wherever it appears”. “Letter to the Free” is his rally call against racism and the different forms of slavery still being used in America.

Common eventually teamed up with Karriem Riggins and Robert Glasper to create “Letter to the Free,” a powerful track off his latest album Black America Again that delves into slavery and mass incarceration. “We dealt with the whole subject matter from slavery to Jim Crow to mass incarceration which is what we’re dealing with right now,” he explained. “We wanted to make something that was strong, unapologetic, but that was also hopeful.” 

common is worth 45 million dollars.

lyrics

‘We staring in the face of hate again
The same hate they say will make America great again
‘ – when was America great? do you need to turn black people into your slaves to make it great again?

‘No consolation prize for the dehumanized
For America to rise it’s a matter of Black Lives’
no comfort for the black community who have been dragged through the mud

‘Blood of black being, a pastoral scene
Slavery’s still alive, check Amendment 13′
pastoral meaning used for the keeping or grazing of sheep or cattle. implies that black being were treated more like animals instead of human. amendment 13 = Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.”

Letter to the Free

Letter to the Free was released by Common in 2016, and it was less for entertainment than it was for sending out a political message. It was made for a documentary called the Thirteenth which documents black American culture and the legacy of slavery, and highlights the mass imprisonment of black Americans.

Common is an American Hip-Hop artist and rapper, known for intelligent and positive lyrics that were performed in a spoken-word style.

“Slavery’s still alive, check Amendment 13
Not whips and chains, all subliminal” – References the law that you can become a slave if you commit a crime, and how he believes this to be morally wrong and constituting to slavery’s resistance to dying.

“Barren souls, heroic songs unsung” – talks about how so many people, particularly of the black community, could have achieved a lot more if not for how they are treated – “heroic songs unsung”

“Tied with the rope that my grandmother died” – depicts how the slavery of old is still in effect today with similar principles.

Jodie’s powerpoint – https://hautlieucreative.co.uk/media23al/wp-content/uploads/sites/58/2022/01/Music-as-Political-Protest.pdf

Cultural hegemony: power, rule, or domination maintained by ideological and cultural means. Letter to the Free’s lyrics could be seen as cultural resistance in response to this.

Post – Colonialism

Postcolonialism is specifically looking at identity and representation through the lens of Empire and Colonialism.

The Shadow of Slavery

Postcolonial critical thought emerged as a distinct category in the 1990’s, with an aim to undermine the universalist claims that ‘great literature has a timeless and universal significance [which] thereby demotes or disregards cultural, social, regional, and nations differences in experience and outlook’

The Link between culture, imperial power & colonialism

Edward Said was a respected academic. He asked if ‘imperialism was principally economic‘ and looked to answer that question by highlighting ‘the privileged role of culture in the modern imperial experience’ (1997:3) He came up with orientalism.

Jacques Lacan

THE ‘OTHER’