Tuesday, 2 October 2007

Why I like 'Welcome to Perez Hilton' website


I am particularly fond of this website not just because it is a celebrity gossip website but because I feel that this website is fun, eye catching and extremely easy to use.

'Welcome to Perez Hilton' website is set out similar to a blog page, each article has a heading, a humorous image and a short, snappy but also detailed and friendly written piece.

I believe that this particular website successfully uses all the potentials available to us via the web. Its extravagant use of theme colour, use of hyper links and especially its use of images all add to the visual excitement of the page.

The website also provides the viewer with the use of a search engine box, which similar to hyper links allows for easy navigation around the page. The viewer can simply type what celebrity it is that they would like to get gossip on and is then immediately navigated to the page. If that's not helpful then I'm not quite sure what is.

The entire website is extremely well laid out, the page setup ensures that the reader is able to identify exactly what it is that the website has on offer for them.

For example, on the left hand side of the page the viewer is given a list of things that they can do on the website with each section clearly labelled for the reader ie, 'send tips' and 'represent'.

Whilst the right hand side is where the adverts are positioned.

One interesting factor about the adverts on this website is that all the adverts included are ones that would appeal to the specific target audience that view this website. For example some of the adverts include; adverts about diets and adverts for gay websites etc.

This I believe can be said otherwise for many other websites, which tend to have a variety of adverts advertised on the page, rather then one's that would be of particular interest to their target audience.

Each of the adverts on the ‘Welcome to Perez Hilton’ website also have hyper links included in the short text alongside it, navigating people to other websites, which they may find of interest and which generally focuses on many of the issues that feature on ‘Welcome to Perez Hilton’ website. This again allows for easy navigation and usability for the viewer.

The website also takes advantage of other advantages provided by the web including the use of multi media. For example the website includes the use of videos via the use of you tube and it also includes flashers, which are images that flash or rollover every few seconds.

This I believe not only adds to the overall effect of the website page, but it also makes the page more appealing and in some cases interesting to the viewer.

Overall, I think that the entire website is extremely user friendly, its easy on the eye and easy to use. The entire layout and use of colours also successfully work alongside the entire theme of the website, which is witty and full of hot gossip.

Tuesday, 25 September 2007

Analysing: Is online news reaching it's potential? By Nora Paul

I found this article extremely interesting and rather educating. Through reading this article I was able to learn of the expectations people had for the web over 10 years ago in comparison to what the web has on offer now.

Nora has gathered much evidence supporting the many expectations we have lived up to and the many that we haven’t. Although I do feel that Nora may have been slightly to vague in her discussions as many of the examples she gave were American sites, whilst in comparison I believe that many English sites are very different and in some senses do exceed the expectations that were suggested all those years ago.

In Nora’s hyper-linking section she talks of a recent check of the New York Times online, showing no stories with external links-most of which required a payment of $2.95 in order to read. This is not the case for many English sites, which I think use hyper-linking to a great extent and in my eyes use it well, many of them do not have to be paid for my the reader as Nora suggests.

However, I do agree with the fact that communication between reporter and reader is not always a two-way communication as was once hoped. This is mainly due to the fact as Nora rightly states 'some reporters find it a potential time suck.'

Nora is right in saying that people now often result to becoming part of a forum to get the personal discussion and communication they long for. This of course shows a new idea that has been introduced that was not expected or thought of ten years ago and in some sense is better than the two way communication that was once expected.

Overall, I do agree to a certain extent with what Nora is suggesting within this article. She has brought to light the fact that although the web may not have reached its full potential regarding what was expected 10 years ago, it has acknowledged the expectations and that most of them do exist just not to the level that was expected.

Having read this article I have come to the conclusion that many news companies do not take the web as seriously or see it as important as their print publication. I think that when or 'if ' these news companies do come to realise that the internet is an extremely powerful and everlasting way of providing depth and scope in many of their stories, and that many people do infact long for this informaion, then maybe all that was expected of the web would in fact come into action today.

Monday, 24 September 2007

Analysing an on-line feature

The on-line feature I choose to analyse is: An Observer magazine story about Grazia Magazine


When I first opened the page and saw the article I initially thought that this particular piece looked rather dull.
It has a basic layout with the feature piece in the centre and a variety of links on the left hand side.

There is no evidence of any form of multi-media such as engaging pictures or an enticing layout, filled with wonderful, bright colours. Instead everything just appears to be extremely basic. One could argue that this is because this is the conventional layout, (i.e.: colour scheme etc) that The Observer use, which is of course the site that this feature piece was written for.

This of course lends me to believe that neither this particular feature piece or web site in general do not use the FULL potentials provided by the web. Although, the page does take some advantage of the potential provided, such as the use of links, which allows for easy navigation around the page, taking you to ‘Recent articles’ found in the magazine (which I must say was a plus), the overall layout of the main page in which the piece was featured failed to provide a sense of excitement, which I feel is a major advantage that the web can provide and a print publication cant.

There was no use of rollovers, no use of images on the main page where the piece was featured or on any of the pages you were navigated to via the links. Although there was an advert, which was centred in the middle of the feature it had no relevance to the feature itself, which again I feel is a waste of a potential that could have been used to help add to the layout of the feature.

Focusing more on the feature piece itself I believe that it shows some evidence of the standard forms and practices of print and some unique standard and practices of its own (the web). The feature piece is detailed and lengthy, it is written in continuous prose, which I believe are the standard forms and practices of print. Similar to some print features, this feature takes on a conversational tone, successfully managing to engage the reader with writing techniques such as rhetorical questions, direct speech etc.
However, in comparison to these standard forms and practices of print, the feature piece carries the conversational tone throughout the entire feature, whereas I feel most print publications loose the conversational tone and
slowly adopt a more statistical and formal tone.

I do think that in some senses this particular feature piece adds something new that is not yet used in a print publication. Unlike a print feature which has to adopt a similar tone to the one carried throughout the particular magazine it is featured in, the feature I analysed along with other on-line features are able to adopt its very own tone and can continue this particular tone for as long as they like. By having links the feature piece is also able to set out its ideas in a systematic way without having to cram it all into the one feature piece, which is typical of a magazine feature.

I therefore again do not think that on-line features, (this on-line feature in particular) are reproducing what’s in print. On-line features can be much longer more detailed and less conventional, there is no essential word limit
and so therefore no information has to ever be sacrificed.

Overall, although I may have not found the layout chosen for this particular piece very mind stimulation, nor attractive I did find the feature extremely engaging along with the extended feature found in the links provided.

Friday, 20 April 2007

Bloggers and News gender


Having researched on Dilpazier Aslam I have been asked to consider wether or not bloggers have a positive or negative effect on news gender.

If I had been asked this question before researching Dilpaizer Aslam my answer would have probably been neither as I wouldn't have thought that bloggers would have any effect what-so-ever on news gender. However, having done my own research and learning that had it not been for bloggers and in the Dilpaizer Aslam issue one blogger in particular The Guardian probably would never found the truth about Dilpaizer Aslam. It is most likely that by the time The Guardian had found out about Dilpaier Aslam his work could have offended much more people than his first article did.

Overall, after attending an online lecture on bloggers and news gender, I have come to the conclusion that bloggers do in fact have a positive effect on news gender. Bloggers can provide information that some people and some authorities can not or did not even know existed.

In some cases bloggers can have a negative effect on news gender, but all in all I think that they have a positive effect. Just like other normal citizens bloggers are allowed to express their opinion on a certain matter within reason, if by any means this opinion has any effect on news gender then it can only enhance the news allowing people to look at it from another angle with different information that has been provided, that maybe was not.

Friday, 30 March 2007

Dilpazier Aslam


I guess you really do learn a new thing everyday...

Dilpazier Aslam was a Guardian trainee journalist who wrote an opinionated article following the 7/7 bombing.
However, the Guardian did not inform readers that he was infact a member of the political party Hizb ut-Tahrir which is an international non-sectarian sunni islamist political party whose goal is to esablish a caliphate to unify the muslim world.

After this was discovered he he lost his posistion with the newspaper, due to the information provided to the paper by bloggers.

Dilpazier told Alan Rushbridger (The Guardian's editor) that he was not willling to leave Hizb ut-Tahrir, he suggested that there was a gulf between younger British Muslims and main stream British society, aswell as the older generation of Muslims. He claimed that his generation were not prepared to suffer in silence but are 'sassy' and willing to 'Rock the boat'.

Wednesday, 28 March 2007

I love the blog page "pizza hut team member"



The Pizza hut team member blog page is so funny. The thing I like about it most is the fact that it is full of anecdotes. The blogger writes in first person and uses an anecodote on each blog they post which makes it seem as though you are actually a 'pizza hut team member' yourself.
The blogger also has names for all of their regular customers so each time he refers to a nick-name you immediately know who their talking about and the other incidents that also happened with them before, which in turn highlights how you have unconsciously become so involved with the blogs.
The blogger gets lots of comments so its extremely obvious that I am not the only one who likes this blog page.
The blogger also adds speech in each of the new posts, "this lady then said. 'this pizza's cold'... " which again adds to the humour to all of the blogs posted.
It's also extremely funny because I love pizza hut and go there so it would be funny to know what they think about me as a customer!

Why I added a comment


I decided to comment on a celebrity blog page my reasons for this is because my blog page is also based on celebrities, therefore I feel that if I comment on a simialar blog page and form a relationship with that blogger then it will help me in the long run. For example they can add me as one of their favourites, which will mean that their loyal vistors would also look at my blog, inturn increasing my traffic.

Thursday, 22 March 2007

Comparing 5 different news articles online...



The different newspaper online websites I looked at included, The Sun, The Times, The Guardian, The BBC and The Independent.

All three different websites approached the playstation 3 story extremely differently. The BBC had a more official approach, it was extremely formal and was much more 'newsy' with alot of statistics and evidence. The entire story took a much more serious approach purely concentrating on the dangers of selling the computer so late at night in London, aswell as the cost. Although the story did appear on the first page of the web page it was relatively small and not extremely eye catching and so therefore did not draw as much attention as The Times web page.
On The Times web page the article appears at the top of the page which immediately draws attention to the reader, it has a large picture and a bold healine that reads, 'At last playstation 3!'. The Times takes a much more fun and entertaining approach to the story. Once you click onto the main story you are taken onto a seperate page which breaks the the story into 8 different subs stories , whci in turn allows you to choose which angle of the story you would like to look at. This in turn emphasis the inportance of the story, having so much to look at on just one story and making sure it stand out to the reader highlights how important the story to the webpage, as compared to the other web pages The Times seemed to show more dedication to the story. Also The Times was the only web page that also included a downloaded video of how the playstation 3 works, again providing the readers with more information and evidence about the game console, aswell as giving it a more fun and enjoyable approach.
The Independent approached the story extremely different to all the other webpages, while the other web pages had wrote it as hard news The Independent done a feature piece on it. Again this helps engage the reader in a differnt sense. Unlike the others , this specific srticle included alot more questions, being a feature it was also much more direct and engaging for the reader, allowng them to become more involved within the article. However, simialar to The Guardian the article didnt seem to be that important, in The Independant the article was the 12th article down on then front page highlighting the fact that it clearly is not that important compared to the other articles that appear on the page. Also similar to The BBC, The Independent focused more on the negative side of the matter not the entertaining side, as did The Times.
The Guardian didn't look at the story on playstation 3 in as much depth as the other 4 webpages. The article was much shorter and much more difficult to find. Again it looked more iof a negative approach to the matter. Although the article was the 29th one down on the homepage, it did have a picture, which although was extremely small, it did inturn grab my attention and make it slightly more easier to identify compared to the others alongside it.
Lastly The Sun was extremely similar to The Times in the way inwhich it approached the story. The article was much more light hearted and had a more friendly tone. It also included much more comments compared to the others and much more pictures, which again made it more attractive and more easier to read. The article is the 5th article down on the homepage with an image which again helps the article attract the reader immediately.
Overall, it is extremely evident that all the different news online websites approach the playstation 3 story differently, mainly because the other news stories are seen as more important than others.

Wednesday, 21 March 2007

Google news (my personalized version)


I did happen to find the google news website of some use. The idea of being able to decide on what I feel is important news and what I would like to know or read more about works extremely well with google news.
As soon as I log onto the sight I am able to read updated news on topics that I have set out to be top stories, therefore those specific subjects/topics that I have marked as interesting to me are put at the top of the page and are therefore read first. Thanks to this I am able to cut straight to the point and gather information that I want, without having to browse around or type things into search engines. Overall, I must say that I extremely liked google news, itk is extremely good for personal/individual use and will be using it in future.

Friday, 16 March 2007

The elderly and the internet!

Men are from Mars, women are from Venus - and when it comes to computers, this theory certainly appears to hold true. A new survey published today by Age Concern and Barclays reveals that men aged 55+ mostly use the internet for pursuing hobbies and finding information (78%) while women in this age group use it more as an alternative to the telephone for chatting with friends and family here and abroad (86%).

  • According to Age Concern 44% of over 50's have no access to a computer.
  • 89% of over 60's have never used the internet.
  • 83% surf on a regular basis according to a survey by BTopenworld.
  • 35% say it has offered them a wider circle of friends after retirement.
  • According to NAO 17% of over 65's have logged on the the internet, compared with 94% of 16-24 year olds.
  • By 2025 23 million adults could be missing out on what the internet has to offer.Anecdotes:
  1. The 75-year-old would only be allowed to sign the forms for the Carphone Warehouse's TalkTalk phone and broadband package if she was accompanied by a younger member of her family who could explain the small print to her.
  2. "I love playing poker and bingo online with people all over the world. I find websites are a great way to meet new friends. My grandchildren call me 'cybergran'!" said Bradford surfer, Elizabeth Sheridan, 73.

Friday, 9 March 2007

Group blog evaluation (LDNY)

Although I feel that our group blog was an extremely unique and intresting idea, I believe that we limited ourselves by having such a restricted target audience. By deciding to only target 25-40 year old buisness travellers, frequently travelling to and from New York and London I believe that we prevented ourselves form adding variety to our blogs.
Had we chosen a much wider target audience I beleive that many of us including myself would have found more to right about and most of all would have found it much more easier as we could relate to our blogs more effectively. For example as young students I feel that we don't have a clear and defined understanding of what 25-40 year olds like.

A way in which I feel we could have overcome this problem was to have carried out reseach before we started blogging that way we could have gained an understanding of what it is our target audeince would want to know and read about.
I think that the name of our blog worked well, I believe it clearly reinforced what our blog was about. However, I do feel we could have defined this much more on our blog by providing a brief description on what our blog was about.

The style of writing within each blog I feel worked extremely weel, each blog had a similar tone and style to it which i believe all in all made our blog work well. They were all easy to read and understand and our use of pictures helped grab attention and successfully linked with the writing.

I do feel as though we could have designed our blog much better although it all flowed well and the use of colour and font, remained consistent throughout, I think we could have chosen a better template and used more colours that brought our page out and added to the sophistcated theme that is carried out throughout each blog. We were trying to target a specific target audience which happens to be 25-40 buisness travellers therefore we could have chosen colours that linked well with them for example black and silver, as both colours are more sophisticated and stylish, which inturn reflects the target audience.

I also feel as though our layout could have been slightly more easier, as we were all blogging everyday, one New York and the other London the page was a bit too busy and there was no clear differentiation between the two.

In relation to my own post i feel as though I could have made each a bit more unique. In some cases I felt as though i was repeating myself within each blog.
Having chosen to do clubs I felt as though all I was talking about was the music and atmosphere and so on , rather than including my own opinion.
However, this is alot to do with the fact that many of the places I wrote about were places i had never been, therefore I had to rely on other people's view of the club on the internet and then incorporate it within my blog. Although this was not much so for my London posts it did seem to effect my NYC posts. As I live in London I found it much easier to talk about clubs there, this is because i have experienced the atmosphere within clubs there.

Something I feel I need to improve and focus on for next time is my spelling and grammer, as I often make silly mistakes, due to me not properly proof reading.

Overall, I think that our blog worked extremely well and I beleive that we all fulfilled our criteria well and worked very well as a group.

Tuesday, 20 February 2007

Review on Justin Timberlake's made-up video!



“What goes around comes around”
This music video for Justin Timberlake’s new song ‘What goes around comes around’ IS NOT the original version, but I must say I absolutely LOVE IT!
The video, which was put together by a young lady called Claire Redfield, who is sixteen years old, is a blend of Justin Timberlake music videos from his past to his present, HOWEVER this music video has a twist. The video also includes cuts from Britney Spears’ music videos. Claire has tactfully put both these videos side by side to reveal what she believes and I am sure what you will all believe is the hidden message behind Justin’s new song.
As I am sure you all know Justin and Britney were once the world’s most idolised celebrity couple but after a few years they experienced a harsh split. Although Justin claims the song is about his best friend's experience with a partner I think we can all tell by the lyrics that it is really a message to the now ‘wrecked’ Britney Spears. Which of course explains why Claire created this video.
For me watching this video almost described the build up to Justin and Britney’s break up. I liked the way each cut has been put together, using the various music videos, I think helped to create a picture story, with the song acting as the narrator describing what happened to them in the past and why. Although using different cuttings from music videos did add to the narrative of the song the wrong lip sinking I believe was a major put off! It sometimes made it extremely difficult to concentrate on listening to the lyrics to the song because the lip movements in the video were not to the same song. However, the majority of the words from the lyrics were successfully linked to similar words or actions made in previous videos, which then made particular words from the song, stand out. Although it may not have intended to do so i think that the music video resembles a time line stretching from the days when Justin was a member of NSync to his present solo career, as well the days when he was with Britney. Once again I believe this works well with the song as it adds to the narrative of the song as he is singing about his past.
Some people who may end up watching this music video might think that the white screen that sometimes appears as each scene is cut is slightly distracting or unprofessional, but I believe it is extremely effective and helps add a sense of destruction to the video, which is of course representing the state of the relationship.
Both Britney and Justin fans who watch this video will of course know that the cuttings used from this video are taken from a number of music videos, which I think I think will help them identify how well this has been put together.
The line from the song I found the most ironic was, “heard you found out what his doin’ to you. But you did me, aint dat da way it goes’’ I believe this particular line successfully conveys the entire message of the song as well as the link to his relationship with Britney.
Overall, I think the entire video is extremely successful, in my eyes its quite gripping and is very well put together for a 16 year old amateur, who had obviously just used footage from the music video’s found on the web.

Wednesday, 14 February 2007

Size zeros are no hero's....But then again nor is the British media!


The thing that frightens me most about the British media today is that the press and their entire entourage are so lost in their own fantasy worlds full of both lies and deceit, that they fail to recognise that they are in fact hypocrites.
With women’s magazines and tabloid newspapers constantly bombarding their readership with “What’s Hot and what’s not!” I think its only nature that the women of today are confused with how they think they should look and what’s right to eat.

The media today are currently showing their awareness on size zero models and how important it is for them to be banned from catwalks and other modelling activities due to the influence that their petit or shall I say under under-nourished bodies could have on women of today’s society. However excuse me if I’m wrong but is it not the media that subsequently first planted this idea of what our body ‘should look like’, in the first place? I think it’s fear to say that had it not been for the media’s portrayal of slim being best (or them knowing best), the women of today would be able to acknowledge for themselves that these size zero models are not what women should look like or consider aspiring to.

While the media viciously attack these size zero models and show their everlasting support for the London’s fashion week, which has banned all their size zero models from appearing on the catwalk, they are still needless to say publishing articles on ‘what’s the best diet this month’, ‘which celeb has the best work out video’ oh and less not forget our all time favourite, ‘how to drop two dress sizes in 4 weeks’. Now someone tell me that this is not a hypocrite in the makings. How can the media in one breath be encouraging people not to follow these size zero models but to instead be happy if not content about your figure and your weight, whilst in another breath telling you that loosing two dress sizes is an achievement which will make you feel better about yourself and make you stand out from the rest. I mean its no surprise that some women get stuck in between those fine lines of what’s right and what’s wrong when it comes to how they look.

If 37% of women are dieting most of the time whilst another 18% are skipping meals to keep their weight down can someone please explain to me when exactly they’ll have the time to realise that they will probably never obtain the perfect size body because THERE ISN’T ONE… But of course these women’s magazines are not going to tell us women that now are they, because that would be completely demolishing the unique selling point of their magazines. It just saddens me to realise that we women don’t recognise that.

But any women reading this don’t be fazed or feel stupid because it happens to the best (and worst) of us, we are so quick to be led by the British media on how to look that we barely get used to being comfortable in our own skin before we go changing into the next. So while the British media continue bantering on about how naïve these size zero models are and questioning what possessed them to look as they do or think that what they look like is right or sexy. Maybe they should consider the fact that it is the media that implants this ideology of what looks good, and that maybe these innocent young women that started off just like you and I with an aim to look a little slimmer got too carried away with these "Fantastic" diets praised by the media. All to fulfill what they were made to beleive was 'the right figure' or 'models expectation.'
“But who are they to decide” I hear you ask, “they are just normal people like you and I, who gives them the right to decide? “ That’s the funny thing… because WE DO! But why? I'll never know!

If the media really want to fulfill their roles of being the news providers and helping our country and it's citizens strive for the best, than maybe they should think about including what starving yourself silly and constanly subjecting yourself to diets is really capable of doing to our bodies, instead of promoting these outragous ideas about changing them.

Friday, 9 February 2007

Who's online?

With the internet being the lowest cost system ever developed which allow millions of people from all around the world to communicate with one another it is not to suprising to hear that in the UK 37,600,000 (62%) use the internet on a day to day basis for a varity of reasons.
According to comScore Networks up to 694 million people currently use the internet worldwide
.
Results found showed that 50\50 Men and women found the Internet equally useful for doing their jobs and for shopping. While other statistics show that only 40 percent of adults with less than a high school education use the internet, which reinforces the idea that the internet is mainly used within schools for educational purposes.

What users do on the internet:
Email: 90%
General information: 77%
Surfing: 69%
Reading: 67%
Hobbies: 63%
Production information: 62%
Travel information: 54%
Work/ Buisness: 46%
Entertainment/games: 36%
Buying: 36%
Chatrooms: 24%
Homework: 21%




Tuesday, 6 February 2007

My personal thoughts on the Blog "Go Fug yourself"


The blog page "Go Fug yourself" is an extremely entertaining page full of real life celebrity pictures. The entire blog is based on fashion and the way celebrities can or cannot carry off a particular outfit. In this case the particular topic spoken about is 'who wore what on the red carpet'. Although the blog reflects both the bloggers (Heather and Jessica's ) personal thoughts on many of the celebrities outfits and can be seen as entertainment for its viewers i do not believe that this blogg page and its content can be seen as journalism. There is no core structure or detailed meaning to the writing. The text is purely two people harshly critising others as a source of light entertainment, there is no news of information adopted within the writing or even to the blog page itself.

Web 2.0 (What is it?)











Many people are extremely intresed on what web 2.0 exactly is: according to Wikipidia
Web 2.0 is a term often applied to a perceived ongoing transition of the World Wide Web from a collection of websites to a full-fledged computing platform serving web applications to end users. Ultimately Web 2.0 services are expected to replace desktop computing applications for many purposes.
However,
according to Tim O'Reilly who first coined the phrase 2.0 it is: " the business revolution in the computer industry caused by the move to the internet as platform, and an attempt to understand the rules for success on that new platform. Chief among those rules is this: Build applications that harness network effects to get better the more people use them."