These are all the rest of the shoots i have been on i have no time to write about them as i have to make and film my own TVC all these shoot have been fun and a good experience i will love to work with any of these guys again i have learnt good and bad things to do on my film set in third year and i cant wait to get started
3. Corey Fuimaono - grip/gaff/camera/actor
4. Aman Seth - grip/gaff
5. Sarah Dewbery - actor grip/gaff
6. Iris - grip/gaff
7. Callum Lewars - grip/gaff/sound
8. Dan Raniera DeLaet - grip/gaff actor
9. Virat Sharma - grip/gaff
11 lana - grip 1st ac camera
these are my blogs of 2015 stay tuned for next year if i decide to do them next year
Dons shoot
i dont know what i should say about this shoot it was nothing like i have ever been on and not in a good way its was a long slow proses i was ment to be the first ad but i had no idea what i was doing the shoot on the frist day went from 8 in the morining till about 2 in the morning. thats 18 hours in one day. the next day patrick pulled me from the shoot my choice and i had a 2 day break till the next shoot no photos to this point
kims shoot
Number two
Kims shoot ko's world was the second shoot that i was on although i was only on it for day i was an actor and only had one line to say i helped carry the gear and at that point i realized i was going to carry gear on every shoot!!! to this point there are no photos from the shoot but i will update if i come across some
Lee's shoot
The first of many!!!
The first shoot of the third year films was lees film called suspicions.
On this shoot i was the grip/gaff along with ben and Aaron it was a crazy time we had to hold up a hevey blanket for about an hour here are some photos of the shoot
SHOOT DATES: 7th September - 10th September!
Wednesday, 26 August 2015
THIS WEEK WE TALK SELLING ICE
today in class we have been split up into three groups and given a topic to create a TVC to try and sell a product. We have been given the task to sell ice to Eskimos which is harder than u think
I have been on to multiple sites looking for the answer these are some examples
During my finding, I came across this video for selling ice to Eskimos
this was a difficult topic to come up with a commercial for a impossible product even scientists say its impossible but its just like selling water to people around the world when they can get it out of there taps and its all around us just like ice is all around them we have come up with plenty of things that will help sell this product
OUR GROUP IDEAS:
Kiwi Blue wants to sell ice into the Alaskan Market, devise a TVC that will make them stand out in the competitive Alaskan Market.
Selling Ice:
- OUR ICE IS BETTER
- THEY ARE PURE UNLIKE YOUR FILTHY ICE THAT’S “NATURAL”, NEW ZEALAND ICE IS VITAL FOR THIS
- OUR ICE IS CHEAPER THAN YOU THINK
- WHY DO ALL THIS LABOUR WHEN YOU CAN PURCHASE THEM CHEAPER? YOUR CHAINSAW AND OIL AND SLED IS WAY MORE EXPENSIVE THAN A WHOLE HOUSE BLOCK FULL OF ICE
- ALSO, THEY CAN BE IN A VARIETY OF COLOURS, LIKE CYAN BLUE, NAVY BLUE, BLUE, RED, GREEN, MAGENTA, ECT.
- DELIVERY IS ALSO FREE!
- THE LOGO CAN BE ON THE BAGS, AND THE NAME “KIWI BLUE” CAN BE OPTIONAL, SO FOR THE PEOPLE WHO DOUBT THIS PRODUCT WILL BE UNKNOWINGLY BUYING THIS ICE
- TARGET AUDIENCE IS THE ADULTS FROM THE RANGE OF 20 TO 50, EVEN THE ELDERLY SO THAT PURCHASING ICE IS VITAL BECAUSE THEY’RE TOO OLD TO CUT THEIR OWN ICE
- COMMENTARY THAT JUST MOSTLY MENTIONS THE WORDS “AFFORDABLE” AND “NATURAL” AND “LIGHT WORK”
I know that I want to be in this industry, but the music video idea now looking back at it is crap I look at what I wanted and go back to what I have its the same look but really bad with this assessment. I'm only hoping for a high b as I know that it is the worst thing I have ever done. I am not cut out to be the director, I love working on set, love helping people out, but when its time for me to take charge and make the calls work in everything I want I can't do it. being the director creates a lot of un needed stress if I was to have someone else shot direct and produce my ideas i would happily edit it the only reason i think i would even get a high mark is if I spent hour on hours to make it right and as everyone in my class knows I am in at course till 11 every night working on in changing it deleting it and just making it better i think that if I get it all filmed and spend at least a week on just editing i could make it work. I have only done one day of shooting and I have found out that if u want every shot to be perfect then u have to spend time on it. I spent 2 hours on two shots and they turned out perfect and amazing I then went and spent about 4 hours on 8-9 shots and I hate them the colour is off and the framing is really bad. I have an example of one of my perfect shots and followed by my not so perfect shot:
the shot above is the right lighting and framing it is one of the two perfect shots
the shot above is the not so good shot but savable
Monday, 24 August 2015
TODAY WE TALK FOODS THAT MAKE BILLIONS
Over the last three weeks, we have looked at a documentary called foods that make billions
the documentary is all about the birth and growth of companies all around the world and how the advertise
The Foods that Make Billions is a series looking at how big business feeds us. Starting with a look at the bottled water industry, moving through cereals and finally looking at yoghurt, these three episodes explore the history of how these simple commodities have become staple products, part of the global diet.
Liquid Gold looks at the competitive dynamics between two of the global leaders in the bottled water marketplace: Nestle and Danone. Episode one unpacks the brand philosophy and big business strategy behind these big hitters in the industry. But why would you buy something that you could get for free from the tap? This documentary looks at the marketing and advertising strategies used by big business to create demand that results in the distribution of millions of bottles of water around the world.
Episode two tells the story of a modern marketing miracle: the story of the breakfast cereal. The Age of Plenty investigates the processing, marketing and advertising behind a breakfast that has singularly impacted the way we live. Breakfast cereal marks the birth of modern day "convenience food", invented to make cheap and lifeless corn bits edible and easy to sell, and promoted through reverse psychology, cereal has transformed the way we eat and consequently the way we live. This series tracks the multi-billion dollar breakfast cereal industry, explaining the impact of television advertising on the promotion and sales of breakfast cereals, which endures to this day.
Over the past few decades, yoghurt has hit a stellar trajectory from funny dessert to scientific super food. Marketed as a functional food, yoghurt is the perfect product to satisfy the market's increasing appetite for high nutrition, super healthy foods. Pots of Gold, the final episode in the series, looks at how yoghurt entered the market in the form of a Swiss yoghurt brand which opened up a world of taste to British consumers and etched a space in the market where previously none had existed. "Ski" shows how, by simply adding sugar and fruit, a simple commodity becomes a high-priced necessity. By taking a basic commodity like milk, and manipulating it through processing, packaging and marketing, big business has managed to increase the profit margins of simple products by monumental proportions, resulting in multi-billion dollar industry.
These are the foods that make billions. By employing clever tactics and smart marketing, big business seduces the appetite of the consumer and entices people to spend and spend and spend. This is how global food and beverage empires are built.
out of this I have come out with a lot of knolage on advertising and how it affects your product