Here is the link for the John Steinbeck video that wouldn't work in the lesson. Check it out and take notes from it: http://www.biography.com/people/john-steinbeck-9493358
Miss Warner
Saturday, 10 November 2012
Monday, 15 October 2012
Speaking and Listening Assessment
What makes a good speaker?
What makes a good listener?
Give a 2 minute presentation on a subject of your choice.
If you are stuck for ideas you might like to base your speech on your Controlled Assessment.
Your speaking and listening assessments will take place before the end of term.
Miss Warner
What makes a good listener?
Give a 2 minute presentation on a subject of your choice.
If you are stuck for ideas you might like to base your speech on your Controlled Assessment.
Your speaking and listening assessments will take place before the end of term.
Miss Warner
Monday, 24 September 2012
Servin’ up bad manners
No wonder this television advert sparked
over one thousand complaints! It makes
speaking with your mouthful socially acceptable. The fact that a Zinger Chicken
Salad explicitly makes it tolerable speak to your colleagues with a mouthful is
one of the many reasons why I loathe this advert.
The thing that annoys me most about this
advert is the fact that not only is it set in a call centre, but it is set in
an emergency call centre! Just imagine how you would feel if you were mid
crisis, you called someone to help you at your time of need, and you were
confronted with someone singing down the phone at you incoherently with a
mouthful of Kentucky fried chicken. That would not calm my nerves in the least
bit!
A spokeswoman from KFC said “the advert
is intended to be humorous”. Who’s sense of humour the advert appeals to I will
don’t know? The funniest and cleverest thing about the advert is the catchy
alliteration used right at the end of the advert: “servin’ up soul”. Even that
is not that big or that clever!
The majority of people that complained to
the Advertising Standards Authority are parents and although I’m not a parent I
can empathise entirely with them. Not only does the advert encourage children
to speak with their mouthful, but it makes it socially acceptable in our
society. It begs the questions what do advertisers think should become socially
acceptable next?
To be honest I would never buy a Zinger
Chicken Salad from KFC out of principle. Those annoying people from the
emergency call centre, singing annoyingly, with a mouthful of annoying Kentucky
fried chicken are enough to put anyone off from being able to stomach their
lunch.
Friday, 21 September 2012
Controlled Assessment Success Criteria
Make your reasons why you love/loathe
your chosen advert clear.
Use sophisticated language for effect.
Think about the form, audience and
purpose or your article.
Make sure your work is well structured
and this includes the use of discourse markers.
Ask yourself, am I impressed with my own
work? If not ask yourself how can I make my work impressive?
Use a variety of sentence structures.
Use a variety of punctuation (at least
three).
Do the best job you can with your
spelling.
Use language devices/rhetorical
techniques in your writing.
I have also managed to put the powerpoint onto my pickup. Please feel free to email me with any questions/queries.
Miss Warner
Monday, 17 September 2012
Why an actual horse and not a Ferrari?
Here are the links from today's lesson:
Old Spice advert:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=owGykVbfgUE
Lynx advert:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EfeVEAZkJqM
Jean Paul Gaultier advert:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQf3xCXrVzI
Miss Warner
Old Spice advert:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=owGykVbfgUE
Lynx advert:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EfeVEAZkJqM
Jean Paul Gaultier advert:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQf3xCXrVzI
Miss Warner
Friday, 14 September 2012
The John Lewis Christmas Advert from 2011
Here is a copy of the article from today's lesson:
Here is the link to the advert:
This year’s Christmas adverts aren’t adverts they’re
‘events’. Ghastly events.
Nothing merely
"happens" any more: every occurrence is now an "event",
which leaps up and down pointing excitedly at itself. Once, the end of a school
term would be marked with a shabby disco down the village hall; you'd turn up
wearing the one pair of jeans you owned and circumnavigate the dancefloor
nodding your head to the sound of Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go. Now, in 2011,
teenagers don outfits chosen by their personal stylist weeks in advance and
arrive at their school "prom" in a stretch Hummer. Come, friendly
asteroids, and fall on Earth.
Christmas
adverts are the retail industry's end-of-term disco, and they have undergone a
similar transformation. Not so long ago they were bald sales pitches with a bit
of tinsel Sellotaped to the edges. Now the law dictates that any high street
chain worth its salt has to bombard the populace with some unctuous cross
between a feelgood movie and a Children in Need special.
Take the John Lewis commercial. I heard it coming before I saw it: reports reached me of
people blubbing in front of their televisions, so moved were they by this
simple tale of a fictional boy counting the hours until he can give his parents
a gift for Christmas. Given the fuss they were making, the tears they shed,
you'd think they were watching footage of shoeless orphans being kicked
face-first into a propeller. But no. They were looking at an advert for a shop.
Failing to cry
at an advert for a shop does not make me cold, incidentally. I have cried at
films from ET to Waltz with Bashir, at news coverage of disasters, at sad
songs, and at the final paragraph of Graham Greene's The End of the Affair. I
cried at these things because they were heartbreaking. And because none of them
was an advert for a shop.
An advert for
a shop. That's all the John Lewis thing is, and as such it's no more moving
than the "So Near, So Spar" campaign of the mid-1980s. Anyone who
cries at this creepy advert is literally sobbing IQ points out of their body.
Is this really what we've become – a species that weeps at adverts for shops? A
commercial has only made me feel genuinely sad on one occasion – 25 January
1990, when a falling billboard nearly killed 'Allo 'Allo star Gorden Kaye.
Fortunately
Kaye recovered. Unlike the family dog in that advert. Yes, it's clear to me
that the box at the end of the John Lewis ad actually contains the severed head
of the family dog, and that this advert is actually a chillingly accurate short
film about the yuletide awakening of a psychopath-in-training. In July the dog
was butchered with a breadknife: the deranged young assailant has been waiting
since then to present his "trophy" to his parents. Those are the
facts. And anyone who thinks I'm lying, bear this in mind: I have asked John
Lewis directly (over Twitter) to confirm or deny whether there's a dog's head
in that box, and so far it has maintained a stony silence on the issue. Which
speaks for itself. So don't sob for the syrupy Christmas story – sob for the
slaughtered hound, you selfish and terrible idiots.
By Charlie
Brooker The Guardian, Sunday 20th
November 2011
Here is the link to the advert:
Monday, 10 September 2012
Go Compare advert!
Here is the link for the article we looked at in today's lesson: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2189246/Stuart-Pearce-Go-Compare-advert.html The video links are here also.
Miss Warner
Miss Warner
Friday, 7 September 2012
Love or loathe these adverts!?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oUyxIoitg_M
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b_2Az4HjiQo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qGIN_SbjtYA
Can you add your own links and your own opinion?
Miss Warner
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b_2Az4HjiQo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qGIN_SbjtYA
Can you add your own links and your own opinion?
Miss Warner
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)