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Sunday 20 April 2014

Individual exercises - Alejandro Ordóñez

It’s time to catch up. Now playing it safe. Plain and simple written-down analysis of all I haven’t done or done as if it had never been done, to all intents and purposes.

The feature:
I chose this feature on Barbra Streisand. Why? Because I love her so much and because a piece on musicals has to incorporate music, and that’s a technical aspect with interesting content to analyze for the exercise.

The program it’s called El Musical, in Radio 5, Saturdays at 17:35 and Sundays at 16:17, so I take it’s a very short program or a section inside another program.

They start with news on the European tour of Barbra, and then they move to her biography, focusing more on the past than in the piece of news. When and where she started her career, biggest hit, some details on her personal life...

The whole feature develops with her song ‘People’ in the background, which is played louder at the beginning and after recalling it as one of her most iconic tunes. Then the speaker presents/goodbyes himself and the song keeps playing for the rest of the program, approximately 45 seconds.

Overall, the informative component is very high, keeping it in an objectively descriptive style. There are no sound effects, the editing is very simple and lack of complications and the music used is 100% related to the topic since, as I’ve said before, the only song played is directly quoted. In fact, it feels like the purpose of this feature is to talk about the voice and style of Barbra, so choosing to balance the speaker’s text and the song itself would be a very effective election.



The commentary: 
My analysis is on an editorial by Carlos Herrera, broadcasted during his program “Herrera en la onda,” which airs daily from 6 A.M. to 12:30 P.M. in Onda Cero, one of the most important radio stations in Spain. The show itself focuses on discussing topics of general interest such as politics, economy, etc. News in the end.

Why did I pick this specific commentary? Because I found the structure and the boldness when it comes to giving an opinion (absolutely biased with not even a glimpse of trying to be impartial) particularly interesting.

The commentary revolves around the hot news of the day. It can be divided into four sections, each one focusing on one piece of news. The first one would be an antiterrorist operation, treated not in depth. The second one seems as the most important of the commentary since the taxation issue is the one the piece is named after. Herrera discusses the reform of the fiscal policies of the Government from a more informative perspective, explaining the main points of the actions taken.

Even though, as I’ve said, the part focused on taxes should be the longest inside the commentary, the third topic is the one that I found more analysis-worthy. Herrera looks driven by his face-forwarded opposition to the independent movement in Cataluña, so he dedicates more time on this subject, and less impartiality, for the record, talking about the independents as lunatics and other adjectives too pejorative for me to quote.

And to wrap with the commentary, there is a fourth issue that I find personally insulting. How can a prime-time program treat with equal (or even more) importance a soccer game that the aforementioned topics? The music goes louder, everything very passionate about an issue that’s not an issue at all compared to terrorism and the population being sucked the blood by the Government once again. But I guess that’s the perk of the commentary, that each speaker distributes the relevance of the things they talk about as they please, isn’t it?


To finish with, the point I wanted to make clear with this analysis is that the key is making the commentary personal and from the speaker’s perspective and opinion. And in this case, it totally serves the purpose.

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