Interactive media

HOW TO BUY ART

Whether you are a casual buyer of art, buying to decorate, or building a collection, it is important that you understand what you are buying and know if you are getting value for your money.
This section describes the most common art products on the market and gives you some sense of their relative value. It is followed by a glossary of art terms.

http://www.avisca.com/ (African America Art)

 

http://www.time.com/time/ (TIME NEWS

Some Ads Worth Paying For

There are two things you should not cut corners on when it comes to the production of your commercial. The first: Get the best camera crew possible so that you can be confident that you will get the best final product for your company.

The second: With all of the money you saved on script writing, actors and locations, you should have plenty of money to buy prime advertising time on your local television stations to make sure your commercial is seen by the public. In order for your commercial to generate revenue, it needs to be seen, and it is essential to get the best possible advertising time you can to have your commercial aired.

http://uaddit.com/discussions/showthread.php?t=642 (Advertisments)

 

If You Happen to Be on Great plains

 

I’m really having a difficult time trying to put into words the experience that has been at Sterling College. So many wonderful moments in lecture rooms, incredible Theatre performances, Athletics and lovely people just to mention a few.
So much joy and celebration! So much praise and worship. I am filled with such gratitude, happiness, and yes, a bit of sadness as I attempt to tell of the most amazing of age and time. All the hard work, long hours and tireless dedication brought have paved way in creative thinking and a touch of professional practice in the media industry. 

 

These videos bring about just a glimps of my 2009 media production project.  

DVD in the making. 

Malaria Commercial 

Kansas prairie burns are necessary, but smoke is problematic

http://www.kansas.com/2010/05/01/1294204/kansas-prairie-burns-are-necessary.html#ixzz0mjJ8o5X6


Critique:

The T-Model is clearly used to catch the audience interest, first of all Kansas is a farmers setting. This story brings interest to the target audience by the picture illustrations.

The first sentence has tells of what to expect from the images of the subject matter. As an audience, the information I gather from the first two to three sentence, brings about credibility in the story because in this case the source of the satellite.

“According to satellite images.”

There is a drift from the fire and how the farmers in Kansas are affected to the scientific effect of the fire.

“The annual burn drove the Wichita area's ozone levels over federal air pollution limits twice last year and once this year.”

As a reader I gain more interest in reading more material gathered in relation to the fire burning a large piece of farm in Kansas.

Quotes from credible sources are used to give value to the article towards the end of the piece; this best brings about interest in the reader.

Sub headings/titles have played a major role of maintaining the sequence and the relationship between the problems and measures to take and the solution.



http://www.kstatecollegian.com/

Is your writing career a  doubt! Write more...

 

http://www.spj.org/rss.asp

 

Africa is Life changing... 

 

Africa consisted of many powerful empires between 1000 1500, before the European's arrived. The continent of Africa contained many exclusive natural resources such as gold and salt. These natural resources helped these African empires thrive. These natural resources grew attention from the European's. This led to the invasion of Africa from foreign invaders.

Uganda a land locked nation in the eastern part of Africa best illustrates why and how Uganda need our help. Too much of development is ideas imposed from the outside by people "who know best", which is very much a patronizing attitude from the very people that are supposedly trying to help (especially in these worrying times where speaking about "regime change" is rarely challenged).

-People in developing countries are not stupid; they are just disadvantaged financially, which currently, where money speaks louder than anything, even louder than the deaths of children from untreated diarrhea, is admittedly a hindrance, AIDS but not an impossible obstacle.

-If only the Buganda people were given a fair chance: Fair Trade, a fair deal on the price of drugs from multinational drug companies, a fair hearing when help is needed desperately then these people would help themselves make an impact to their society.

-The world will remember when Rwanda the immediate neighbor to Uganda begged for coverage of its tribal warfare, and no one would cover it, we as Park University, Kansas among other states should unite and not only watch and listen but, make a step of faith to countries like Uganda.

 

According to UNAIDS (2006) "people living with HIV, women, young people and other most-at-risk populations, such as sex workers, men who have sex with men, drug users and prisoners, should play a major role in the setting of national targets" (p. 9).  

-Furthermore, one must take a pragmatic approach to the problem in question, as resources such as drugs are not always affordable, if not consistently available.

-This would entail implementing cost-effective measures such as primary prevention that was specific in targeting reservoirs and "vectors" for the transmission of disease.

-The most discouraging example so far of a profound impasse that is crippling many of Uganda towns and villages include the rebels. It is an impasse between tribe and nation, which is also a clash between tradition and change, fact and aspiration.

On one side is tribalism:

-The stubborn loyalty of over a million Uganda people to primitive subgroups that represent certainty amid confusing social and economic upheavals. On the other side is nationalism: the heady hope of creating more modern towns and cities that will lead to Ugandan affluence and power.

-Until Uganda’s churches and political front unify divisive tribes and build strong economies, a dream that can be attained not only in Uganda but also the entire Africa.

Politics:

-Civil servants are plagued by tribal kinsmen who expect to be put on the dole if not put up in the city man's home.

-Ministers and senior civil servants can usually afford a separate wing for the "tribal family." Youthful civil servants cannot, and hence often ask to be sent to work in a village as far from their own as possible.

-This was intensely brought about by the government of Uganda fighting the Lord Resistance Army (LRA)

 

http://www.hutchnews.com/

http://issuu.com/stir/docs/stir_issue_5_for_web

http://issuu.com/stir/docs/stir_issue_4_complete

http://stir.sterling.edu/article.php?nid=887

http://stir.sterling.edu/article.php?nid=875

 

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