Wednesday, 30 September 2015

Cereal cafe attacked in East London

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p033s7xb


A cereal cafe was attacked in Eat London due to their prices being ridiculously high. The mob, who were wearing pig masks said they were selling cereal up to £5 and stated that it was ‘pathetic’. The protestors smashed the windows, threw missiles and wrote the word scum on the cafe. It was said around 200 people were involved, who were anti capitalist. They named their selves the f*ck parade and claimed that they were protesting against unaffordable housing in east London.

A witness who was being interviewed told the reporters that the riot became so out of control, she had to barricade herself in her shop for two hours. She said she witnessed dogs running away as they were clearly frightened but the people involved in the protest were careless and were hurting them. The witness said that a person looked like they were about to tear the dog in half.

Protests are always making the news, but what makes this one absurd is what the protestors was rioting for. Usually, it’s against discrimination like the Ferguson riots which was over the police brutality on African Americans. However, this is a protest which got way out of hand over something trivial.

The news reporters took the story very seriously as they were having formal discussion with witnesses. It shows awareness to the public in east London that there is a lot of anger and violence continuing as an interviewee said there are lots of people protesting against unaffordable housing. There are many homeless people in London and the expensive housing strikes anger for the homeless.

The story isn’t biased as people were claiming to have understood their point. However, their actions were uncalled for and unnecessary.

Wednesday, 23 September 2015

CPR advert for British Heart Foundation


Star power – Vinnie jones is the protagonist  in the advert because he is well known in the UK. Star power is used to engage the audience and makes it seem more trustworthy.

Use of humour – “staying alive” is playing in the background, which relates to the advert as it’s about saving a person’s life. A human dummy slides across the floor for him to use as an example. It’s not what is expected in this kind of advert as they’re supposed to be serious but it’s different from most adverts so keeps the audience intrigued. Vinnie uses humour when he says ‘you only kiss your Mrs on the lips’. This also keeps the audience interested when humour is added.

Mode of address – using colloquial language makes the audience feel as though they’re being spoken to directly. The audience feel involved and are more likely to pay attention to the useful information he’s giving than if it were to be formal without any humour. He uses informal language such as ‘geezer’ and ‘aint’. He doesn’t use difficult words to confuse the audience, instead he keeps it simple so it’s a clear guide and easy to remember. He asks rhetorical questions such as ‘what do ya do?’ in order to get the audience thinking. He uses a harsh and powerful voice to get the audience listening and secure their attention. He sounds persuasive and carries out a direct address.   

Shots- a close up shot of his tattoo which spells ‘hard’. It’s referring to the way you need to give CPR, even though that’s not what his tattoo means. He later on says you need to press hard.

Text- they use sans serif font which is less formal as their target audience is aimed at a youth audience as they aren’t as aware about CPR as adults are. They use the colour red to represent blood because the advert is for the British Heart Foundation.  

Slogan- in the beginning it shows ‘it’s not as hard as it looks’ and is mentioned again right at the end. It’s to emphasise the fact that anyone can learn CPR. It also links it back to the beginning which makes the advert more effective.

At the end he asks the audience if they’d be interested in trying out one of their courses. This gets the audience involved and is also a simple way of getting more people to learn CPR.