Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Final Project-Audio Documentary

Internet Radio in Egypt: The Not So-Known Platform




Image taken from:
Google Images

Internet radio platforms have been evolving recently in Egypt. Some radio platforms are on their way to success but others are shutting down because of funding problems. This documentary explores this new platform and the challenges threatening its sustainability.

Length of the documentary: 14 minutes and 44 seconds.

Special Thanks to all my interviewees:
Akram Kassem
Mohmaed Youssef
Mostafa Fathi
Sara Alaa

Clips taken from YouTube:
Voices of people are taken from YouTube channels of DLTV, AboutLockergnome and KXLY
Egypt's Internet Revolution clip taken from CBS YouTube channel
Horytna Jingle by Lefty-M
Ezai by Mohamed Mounir 
Chanting is taken from Lorenzkh YouTube channel
Interview with Activist clip is taken from YouGertTube YouTube channel

Music and clips taken from Free Sound:
FM Flip
Morenita
Dandelion 
Solo Trumpet
Home Style Mandolin
Mellow Plagasul Guitars 

Music Taken from Free Music Archive:
Before After by Jahzzar
Candlelight by Jahzzar
Lemonade by Jahzzar
A Bird Came Flying by Anne Van Schothorst

Radio Program is taken from Nos El Kobaya Online Radio and Be Good Be Happy promo is taken from Sound of Sakia. 

Saturday, November 17, 2012

Radio Program-THE RUNDOWN

The World at Your Fingertips


Image taken from:
Kennet Radio

Taken from:
Apple
The above audio file is a Radio Program entitled THE RUNDOWN  produced for the JRMC460 course. The first part of the program is a discussion between JRMC460 students Dina Meky, Linda Badr and Mona Bassel about Apple's donations to victims of Hurricane Sandy, Apple's new products; iPad mini, iMac, Fusion Drive and iPhone 5 versus other products like those of Google Nexus and Samsung. The second part of the program is an interview with The American University in Cairo (AUC) Reference Librarian, Rosie Johnson in which she talks about the latest technological devices used at the library and for research at AUC.

Host: Dina Meky
Guests and Producers: Linda Badr and Mona Bassel
Interviewee: AUC Reference Librarian Rosie Johnson
Music: Sleepless Nights by Anitek, taken from Jamendo


Picture of the team is taken by an AUC student
The other pictures are taken by Linda Badr

Check out the following links for more information:
iPad mini Overview  
Google Nexus Tablet Features                                           
Windows Phone Devices Competing with iPhone  
Updates on Apple and HTC Patent Disputes  
Samsung Pays Apple $1.05 billion 



Sources Used for The Radio Discussion:
Apple's $2.5 million Donation to Hurricane Sandy Victims 
iPad mini Features 
iPad mini vs. iPad 
Google Nexus Tablet Price  
Google Nexus vs. iPhone 5 Prices
Environmentally Friendly Phones 
Fusion Drive 
iMac Features  
                                                                                    
                                                                                  

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Podcast-Shopping Overdose

 Confessions of A Shopaholic                   
                                           by 
Sophie Kinsella

Picture Taken from:
Google Images


The above podcast was read from the first section of Sophie Kinsella's book Confessions of A Shopaholic (pages 5 and 6).                                                                                                                        

Music Credits
The song used is entitled Birthday Cake by Jahzzar, taken from Free Music Archive
Birthday Cake (Jahzzar) / CC BY-SA 3.0
The podcast was recorded using an M-audio recorder


Taken from: Google Images
OK. DON'T PANIC. Don't panic. It's only a VISA bill. It's a piece of paper; a few numbers. I mean, just how scary can a few numbers be? I stare out of the office window at a bus driving down Oxford Street, willing myself to open the white envelope sitting on my cluttered desk. It's only a piece of paper, I tell myself for the thousandth time. And I'm not stupid, am I? I know exactly how much this VISA bill will be.
Sort of. Roughly. It'll be about...£200. Three hundred, maybe. Yes, maybe £300. Three-fifty, max.
Taken from: Google Images
I casually close my eyes and start to tot up. There was that suit in Jigsaw. And there was dinner with Suze at Quaglinos. And there was that gorgeous red and yellow rug. The rug was £200, come to think of it. But it was definitely worth every penny---everyone's admired it. Or, at least, Suze has.
And the Jigsaw suit was on sale---30 percent off. So that was actually saving money.
I open my eyes and reach for the bill. As my fingers hit the paper I remember new contacts lenses. Ninety-five pounds. Quite a lot.
But, I mean, I had to get those, didn't I? What am I supposed to do, walk around in a blur?
And I had to buy some new solutions and a cute case and some hypoallergenic eyeliner. So that takes it up to...£400?
At the desk next to mine, Clare Edwards looks up from her post. She's sorting all her letters into neat piles, just like she does every morning. She puts rubber bands round them and puts labels on them saying things like "Answer immediately" and "Not urgent but respond." I loathe Clare Edwards.
"OK, Becky?" she says.
"Fine," I say lightly. "Just reading a letter."                                                                             
I reach gaily into the envelope, but my fingers don't quite pull out the bill. They remain clutched around it while my mind is seized---as it is every month---by my secret dream.
Taken from: Google Images
Do you want to know about my secret dream? It's based on a story I once read in The Daily World about a mix-up at a bank. I loved this story so much, I cut it out and stuck it onto my wardrobe door. Two credit card bills were sent to the wrong people, and---get this---each person paid the wrong bill without realizing. They paid off each other's bills without even checking them.
And ever since I read that story, my secret fantasy has been that the same thing will happen to me. I mean, I know it sounds unlikely---but if it happened once, it can happen again, can't it? Some dotty old woman in Cornwall will be sent my humongous bill and will pay it without even looking at it. And I'll be sent her bill for three tins of cat food at fifty-nine pence each. Which, naturally, I'll pay without question. Fair's fair, after all.



Taken from:Google Images

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Project #1: Final Project Promo

The Voice of The Youth

The following audio piece is a promo about internet radio in Egypt, recorded for the JRMC460 Final Project.


Picture Taken By:
     Linda Badr

Music Credit:

The Crowd (excerpt) (Jahzzar) / CC BY-SA 3.0


Help me share my promo via this link http://bit.ly/QSl0mr


Project #1: Interview

The Emergence of Internet Radio in Egypt: Success in The Making or Fad of The Time?

The following audio piece is an interview conducted with Akram Kassem, The Marketing and Production Manager of Sound of Sakia, in which he tells us more about internet radio in Egypt, how successful it has been so far and what difficulties is the platform facing.




Interview Transcript:
Interviewer:                  Linda Badr
Narrator:                      Akram Kassem
Date:                            15 October, 2012
Place:                           Sound of Sakia Studio
                                      26th of July Street, Sphinx Square, Agouza
University:                    The American University in Cairo (AUC)
Professor:                     Kim Fox
Date Completed:        15 October, 2012
 [Introduction]
Badr: Hello and welcome to my first interview conducted for the JRMC460 documentary in which I'll be talking about the emergence of internet radio in Egypt and more specifically about how successful it has been so far and how it is expected to be like in the future. With me right now is Akram Kassem, The Marketing and Production Manager of Sound of Sakia internet radio who will talk to us more about the subject.
[Interview]
Badr: Hi Akram.
Kassem: Hi Linda, how are you doing?
Badr: Good, how are you?
Kassem: Good good.
Badr: Before we start, I need you to introduce yourself first.
Kassem: My name is Akram, I joined El Sawy Culture Wheel for the project Sound of Sakia Radio. It's the first culture and art online radio and the whole objective of the project is to spread the cultural and art scene of Egypt to the worldwide and put it on the map, the worldwide map.
Badr: Not a lot of people know about internet radio, I was sitting with one of my friends and talking to her about my audio documentary and I was like "I'm Doing My Documentary About Internet Radio" and she was like "What is Internet Radio?" so can you please tell us more about it?

Kassem: Well, I wasn’t aware for the internet radio also from like two years ago. The internet radio gives you more space of listening to a content anywhere in the world and it gives you an opportunity that you can spread whatever you are doing across different countries and giving the opportunities for these artists to be exposed more worldwide. I think the internet radio started to be more popular in the last period and specifically in Egypt after the revolution, we got a very strong feedback and more attention to the project when the revolution happened in Egypt.
Badr: We already have radio stations with frequencies, why would someone listen to internet radio when we actually have the radio stations with diverse content.
Kassem: The difference between the online radio and the frequency radio is that also the online radio gives you more space of freedom of expressing yourself and it's more dynamic, it's more straightforward and short to the point and it has to deliver whatever you wanna as messages as you wanna deliver to the listeners in a very short briefed way.
Badr: Speaking of the advantages of internet radio platforms, do you think it is easy to establish, like any one can have a studio for example at home and start his or her first online radio platform?
Kassem: It could happen, it could happen actually. It is a matter of how much investment in the project. 
Badr: so do you think internet radio has achieved success?
Kassem: Definitely, the whole industry is becoming more successful on a monthly basis even, you find a lot of radio stations that just came out for the last period. We have been there for over than two years but we found lately there is Wasla, just opened up from a couple of months ago and there is also Cairo Capital  which was previously called Masr EL Gedeida and there is a lot of other online radio stations that becoming more successful in this region. The only problem about it  maybe that the investors are not seeing yet how this industry is spreading and how they could utilize it for their own benefits, in terms of from the commercial side and this is what we're suffering for the last period.
Badr: Yes actually one of the disadvantages of or one of the things that I've found while researching is that a lot of internet online radios have reported that sustainability is one of the main problems that they are facing. They said that they do not guarantee the sponsors. Enough sponsors so they really fear that they might not be able to sustain their platform.
Kassem: Absolutely right. From a research also I found couple of radio station have opened up but they couldn’t sustain the project because at the end of the day you have spending and you have expenses that you need to cover. Still sponsors and commercial side, they still cannot realize how important this industry is. I think it's a main role for the digital agencies to push these radio stations and to push these brands to at least go for a try and see this is on your target segment or not. This will solve a lot of issues for us as an industry.
Badr: That was a good sum of information, thanks a lot Akram.
Kassem: Thank you Linda, thank you very much.

All pictures are taken by Linda Badr at Sound of Sakia Studio

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Nat Sound Essay

The Pre-Class Journey 

The following audio piece is a nat sound essay on the sounds collected from The American University in Cairo (AUC)library.


Image taken from:
Google Images

Script: As you enter the AUC library, you will encounter siren-like sounds. Starting from the moment you check in with your ID. One of the usual things students do at the library is ask for books on reserve. They have the option to read the chapter at the library or photocopy it through the photocopy services available on the ground and first floor. The plaza floor at the library is usually the most crowded so if you are looking for a more peaceful environment, you can go up to the second floor. As of July 22nd, 2012, students have been given the right to use elevators. While students go to the library for different purposes, you will find the majority either sitting on computers finalizing their due papers or printing out their assignments.

Saturday, October 6, 2012

Nat Sound Exercise:

Welcome to The Home of Books and Research

The following audio piece shows examples of nat sounds that you could hear in The American University in Cairo (AUC) library.

Picture taken from:
Google Images

The Log of The Nat Sounds:
1) Library door opening
2) Library siren
3) Footsteps of someone going upstairs
4) Photocopying machine                                                                                         
5) Elevator
6) Keyboard typing
         
 The sounds were collected by Linda Badr and Mona Bassel

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Listening Journal # 1: This Can Go On Forever


If you would ask me what my dream job is,I would say working as a news presenter at a recognizable television or radio station. But why news? Well, that's not what I want to discuss here. Here comes the irony though, when it comes to listening especially to documentaries, I have different interests.I'm not into political or news related ones and that's why I fetched for something that would make me want to listen till the end ,a catchy and an emotional story, something that I won't find whenever I switch to a news channel. That's why I chose to listen to This Can Go On Forever or as I would like to call it "The Reunion".

 
Documentary Title: This Can Go On Forever
Produced by: Shea Shackelford and Virginia Millington  
Narrated by:Carol Broback and Joel (the whole story was told by the interviewees themselves)
The length of the documentary: 10:25 minutes




Have you seen the picture above? That's whom the documentary is all about. Joel is the baby boy whose mother has sent for adoption after giving birth. Carol, the mother, was only 19 when she discovered her pregnancy after her break up with her boyfriend. Carol however manages to see her son after eighteen years. I bet you would like to know how they found each other!

 
Now let me give a review on how I found the documentary production wise. Let me begin with a point that I think should have been otherwise. The story begins with the mother reading an e-mail that her son has sent her after he has done some research and investigation to know who his mother is, in the hope that she turns out to be the right person. That's a really good start for the interviewee but I believe it would have been better, if there was a narrator who introduces the story first, or just give a glimpse about what is going on and then leave us with the mother reading the e-mail. If I haven't read the text before listening to the documentary, I wouldn't have understood what was happening.At the same time, the idea of getting the mother start her story reading the  e-mail out loud was a catchy and a good start to make listeners engaged. I was so curious to know what Joel will say after 18 years of not seeing his mother.

A very creative way of picking the nat sound was picking up the sound of the paper (printed e-mail) she is holding. When I heard the sound of the paper, I visualized a scene in my mind ; the mother holding the printed e-mail in her hands and reading from it. I noticed however, throughout most of the interview, a sound that seemed like an air conditioner was turned on. It wasn't very obvious but when you pay too much attention to the background sound you will hear it, especially if you have previously taken editing courses and have worked in that field before, which I did. 


The overall audio quality was excellent, the tone of both speakers, Carol and Joel, was the same.The words and sentences were all clear. The audio level was apparently adjusted well. Also, the quality of their voices was excellent. The way Carol and Joel delivered their stories made it very interesting to listen to. Carol's way of delivery changed according to what she is saying, she was not acting, she was feeling every word. She would laugh at times at her bitter moments and cries and gets too emotional when she speaks about her reunion with her son.  Joel would speak with a neutral way of delivery but would emphasize on certain words to reflect a surprise or excitement regarding a certain thing.

A very recognizable aspect of this documentary which made it very well produced and enjoyable to listen to was that it was produced in a conversational manner; the mother would talk, then the son would speak and then the mother again and the pattern continues. They don't talk about different points, the sentences each says complement and are like additional information or points to what the other is saying, as if both are sitting together adding up and chatting with each other.

  
There wasn't a segment for a narrator, the whole documentary was told by Carol and Joel but what is unique about this piece is the use of descriptive words that make you envision how things are. The son describes to his mother ,in the email, how he looks. He uses the words "I'm sixty feet tall, 145 pounds, blue eyes and brown hair". Other descriptive words of looks and places are used throughout the interview, an effective methodology used in audio production pieces.   

The documentary was neither short nor long. It's length was good enough to give us all the information that we would like to know, starting from the reason Carol gave up her child up till the moment she met her son and the story ended strongly, with Carol's comment "I will never lose him again", leaving us with no questions.


The documentary is very interesting because it makes you wonder and think and make you want to listen to the whole thing without missing a point.Throughout the interview, I was thinking to myself "what will he do when he meets his mother", "how will she feel"," what's next".It is one of the best documentaries I have ever listened to.


The website was very easy to navigate. The link posted in the assignment guideline directed me to the list of documentaries and I easily got to choose what interested me. The documentary piece loaded very quickly as well. 




 Producer
Shea Shackelford

taken from:
  Third Coast International Audio Festival





"This Can Go On Forever won the Best Documentary: Bronze Award in the 2010 Third Coast / Richard H. Driehaus Foundation Competition."




       Producer

 Virginia Millington
      taken from: 
Third Coast International Audio Festival