Wednesday, October 23, 2019
Frontline: Camera and Current Affairs Programs
How do the creators of ââ¬Å"Frontlineâ⬠convey the main issues in the text? The truth in the media is a subjective commodity which is often sensationalized, fabricated and manipulated for a number of reasons. Therefore, realistically the media only represents certain facets of the truth to suit their purpose and context. Rob Sitchââ¬â¢s Frontline is a satirical examination of current affairs programs and explores the mediaââ¬â¢s selective dissemination of information to construct the desired truth. Though being disturbingly accurate in their sarcastic attack on the deceit and hypocrisy of the media, the producers of Frontline use wit and parody to challenge the reliability of the media and such concepts are explored through a number of film techniques in episodes such as ââ¬ËThe Siegeââ¬â¢ and ââ¬ËAdd sex and stirââ¬â¢ The commercial nature of the media dictates that the content of the broadcast must rate well and be profitable. The episode ââ¬ËThe Siegeââ¬â¢ exemplifies the commercial nature of current affairs programs and re-emphasizes the mediaââ¬â¢s potential to regard the truth as a subjective commodity to further gain higher ratings. Frontline seeks little more than authenticity to convince their audience that they are a credible resource. In ââ¬ËThe Siegeââ¬â¢ Rob Sitch blurs the boundary between fiction and reality, through illustrating a story based on a real incident which occurred in 1994 making it harder to discern the truth. Frontline pursues a story about a father who has held his children hostage during a custody battle. This episode exposes the true nature of journalism and the unethical practices that the media undertakes to win the ratings war. Marty ironically says ââ¬Ëyouââ¬â¢ve crossed the line mateââ¬â¢, this pretense of ethics is juxtaposed with ââ¬Ëyou beautyââ¬â¢ when he realizes that it was the Frontline team itself that got through to interviewing the gunman. Marty further sensationalizes and exaggerates the truth by wearing a flak jacket and crouching down to make it appear that he is in a dangerous situation, when in reality he is five kilometers away from the danger zone. Through the use of dialogue ââ¬ËHow about if I crouch down like this? To make it look like Iââ¬â¢m in dangerââ¬â¢ Marty illustrates his blatant disregard for the truth thus emphasizing the importance of appearance and ratings over the depiction of the truth within the media. Brooke further epitomizes the mediaââ¬â¢s motives through the use of incongruity in the dialogue ââ¬ËMrs. Forbes do you have any nine volt batteries? ââ¬â¢ Such dialogue accentuates Brookeââ¬â¢s superficiality as she is not at all concern ed about Mrs. Forbes feelings. The camera close up of Brookeââ¬â¢s exceedingly concerned facial expression when she interviews Mrs. Forbes is juxtaposed with Mrs. Forbes misery and Brookeââ¬â¢s deception when she asks ââ¬â ââ¬Ëwould you be able to cry again Mrs. Forbes? ââ¬â¢ The on and off camera persona evidently shows that the truth is subverted by the media to construct a desired representation, portraying the truth to be a subjective commodity. The mediaââ¬â¢s relentless pursuit of higher ratings to ensure commercial success plays a significant role in determining the representation of the truth they present to their audience. The episode ââ¬ËAdd sex and Stirââ¬â¢ epitomizes the mediaââ¬â¢s selective dissemination of information to construct a desired truth, thus exemplifying truth to be a subjective commodity. Frontline pursues a story about the unfair dismissal of a sportswoman who is supposedly dropped from the team because she is not gay. Although Brooke acknowledges that the sportswoman was dropped from the team because of poor form, she decides to portray the misleading sex angle of the story in the pursuit for higher ratings to ensure Frontlineââ¬â¢s commercial success. Frontlineââ¬â¢s clean crisp picture quality, still camera and immaculate sets gives a sense of professional respectability and authority to create a sense of credibility. Rob Sitch employs caricature to emphasize the potential for the media to regard the truth as a subjective commodity to gain more ratings. Sitch satirizes the limited value that the media places on the truth through Brookeââ¬â¢s satirical comment ââ¬ËWell thereââ¬â¢s a lead story, Stu, lead player dropped due to bad form, out breaking. ââ¬â¢ The truth is further manipulated through filming Brookeââ¬â¢s nods separately and out of context which further amplifies their falsity, emphasizing her lack of integrity. Brooke completely distorts the truth through creating a re-enactment, in which the story is further exaggerated through the steamy atmosphere in the girls change rooms, demonstrating that it is sleaze that sells rather than the truth. The dramatic background music in the re-enactment further satirizes the mediaââ¬â¢s pursuit for higher ratings, portraying that the mediaââ¬â¢s ââ¬Ëessential objective is profit, rather than saving the worldââ¬â¢ Chris Masters (ABC correspondent). Through this it is clearly evident that the truth to the media is a subjective commodity that can often be manipulated, fabricated and sensationalized for a number of reasons.
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