On Saturday evening I will be embarking on the trip of a lifetime- this is my first time traveling abroad as a journalist. Saturday's flight will take me to Kuala Lumpur where I will get all of my touristy desires out of the way before the work begins. The following week I'll meet with my team in Singapore, from there we'll head to Hanoi as journalists.
I'm nervous because this will be entirely different to the backpacker lifestyle I've grown accustom to. For the first time there will be work to be done while I'm abroad. During this time there will be a lot going on and it's important to reflect on what we are doing. This blog will serve as a place of reflective practice.
“Reflective practice is an active, dynamic, action-based and ethical set of skills, placed in real time and dealing with real, complex and difficult situations (Moon, J. 1999).”
While in country I will be using reflective practice to explore journalistic theories and frameworks and to apply them to my experiences. Using a process flowing from reading about journalistic processes, asking questions about how things are done and why, talking with my peers about our views and experiences, and thinking and reflecting on what I have done and what I would do differently in the future I will be able to better my future work from the gained understanding of my processes and how they can be improved (Thompson, N. 1996).
Looking forward there are a number of challenges I can foresee in obtaining the best media possible. When recording sound I anticipate one of my biggest challenges will be to adequately capture clear voice over loud city sounds, or whatever ambient sound there happens to be. To test my equipment for these problems I did a demo recording on the Story Bridge at lunch time. To set the mood and gain a greater understanding of what I might face in-country I read the opening passage from Loung Ung’s First They Killed My Father, a novel written about the Khmer Rouge. I recorded first using my lapel mic and then again using the attached mic. The best version was recorded with the lapel microphone. There seemed to be a clearer distinction between dialogue and background sound.
When in country I know that we will be faced with a number of different terrains and levels of lighting in the places we are trying to shoot. In preparation for this I tested a number of setting on my camera in the rainforest of Mt Tambourine.