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How effective is the combination of your main product and ancillary texts?
1. How effective is the combination of your main product and ancillary texts?
2. Colour Scheme: Red, black, white Font: Arial Consistent Colour Scheme/Font As you can see the colour scheme has been used quite consistently, this stemmed from the design of the listings magazine logo “TV Guru”. I think that the colours compliment each other really well and gives an overall professional and sleek look. The font style I have used is ‘Arial’ because of its plain, basic look, this allows me to used it with all my products as it is quite standard.
3. Throughout all my products I have kept a sad and melancholic tone to gain audience sympathy. I have done this through language and music choices. Music: Adele – Someone Like You (Documentary) Leonard Cohen – Hallelujah (Radio Trailer) Consistent Tone
4. Similar Style Pictures Throughout my production and my ancillary tasks I have used similar styled pictures. The direction for these pictures were that my actor David Fieller would be very natural and incorporate a lot of his personality into the pictures, therefore he had a lot of freedom to express himself in whichever way he wanted.
5. The radio and TV guides have grown to gain a lot of popularity, I think that that the combination of the two would work very well in the media market to promote my documentary. Radio audiences increased by more than 400,000 in the last quarter of 2008, to 45.5 million listeners a week. Almost one fifth of all radio listening is now via digital, up from 16.6 per cent a year ago, with almost one third of the population (32.2 per cent) tuning in to radio via a digitally-enabled set each week. Popularity of Radio & Magazines
6. In March 1991, the control on listings magazines ended and the market was opened up. Before this, there were two magazines in the market: Radio Times which was launched in 1923 and for BBC listings and TV Times which was launched in 1955, for ITV and Channel 4 listings in 1982. More magazines were appearing in the market at that time, TV Quick, What's on TV and TV Plus (which did not last). By the mid-1990s What's on TV was Britain's best-selling weekly magazine but in 2008, TV Choice which was launched in 1999 gained a higher distribution.