SYLLABUS
Course Title: EIS 1220.01 – Survey of the Entertainment Industry
Semester: Spring 2008
Instructor: Mark Volman, B.A., M.F.A.
Phone/Fax: 615-794-5801
E-mail: volmanm@mail.belmont.edu
Office Hours: by appointment – Meeting hours available on office door of Room 248A
Course Credit: 3 units
Class Location:
Meeting Time: Tuesday and Thursday 9:30 – 10:45AM
Final Exam: Tuesday - May 6 - 8:00AM
Educational Objectives of the Mike Curb College of Entertainment & Music: 1) to provide a personalized, career-oriented and practical education that emphasizes leadership, innovation, private enterprise and entrepreneurship. 2) to equip students with the tools to think critically, communicate effectively, accept responsibility, make successful decisions, and prosper in diverse work environments. 3) To emphasize quality classroom instruction within the parameters of ethical Christian principles.
Course Description: Students participate in an overview of the major areas of the entertainment industries. This course serves as an introduction to the structure and internal organization of the entertainment industries. Attention is given to practical application based on theoretical and historical foundations.
Learning Outcomes: Through homework, quizzes and a student driven research driven project, the students will synthesize all course outcome through understanding of common business practices related to the complex study of entertainment related topics.
Performance criteria: 1. Analyze business-related issues and skills necessary for effectively maintaining a career in all sectors of the entertainment industry 2. Explain the options where the entertainment industry continually intersects with the music world 3. Explain career possibilities in the entertainment industry 4. Compare the vocabulary and terminology of the entertainment industry and the distinction between art and commerce in the entertainment business at the corporate level.
Honor Code: It is the responsibility of each student to abide by the Belmont University Honor Code. “In affirmation of the Belmont University Statement of Values, I pledge that I will not give or receive aid during examinations; I will not give or receive false or impermissible aid in course work, in the preparation of reports, or in any other type of work that is to be used by the instructor as the basis of my grade; I will not engage in any form of academic fraud. Furthermore, I will uphold my responsibility to see to it that others abide by the spirit and letter of this Honor Pledge.”
Accommodation of Disabilities: In compliance with Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act and the Americans with Disabilities Act, Belmont University will provide reasonable accommodation of all medically documented disabilities. If you have a disability and would like the university to provide reasonable accommodations of the disability during this course, please notify the Office of the Dean of Students located in Beaman Student Life Center (460-6407) as soon as possible.
Attendance: Class attendance follows university policy as stated in the current Undergraduate Bulletin. Class participation is expected; attendance and absence will be noted. Missing classes is UNACCEPTABLE and WILL affect your final grade. Lectures are only given once, and it is the student’s responsibility to obtain any missed notes from a fellow student. You are responsible for all material covered in class and class readings.
Notebook: Students should keep a notebook. You will want to keep a notebook of this material, which will not be available in the textbook. It could be on the quizzes.
Textbooks: “Entertainment Industry: The Business of Music, Books, Movies, TV, Radio, Internet, Videogames, Theater, Fashion, Sports, Art, Merchandising, Copyright, Trademarks, and Contracts.”
By: Mark Vinet
Homework Assignments: There also will be homework assignments during the semester given for more point credit.
Grading Procedure: There will be 5 quizzes given during the semester based on weekly lectures. Each quiz is worth points that accumulate till the end of the year. If the student misses a quiz, there are no make up quizzes given.
Term paper: You will be required to complete a research paper. This paper will be a minimum of 10 pages long and will be due the day of the Final Quiz. This paper must include a bibliography of at least five sources. An outline of your paper is not optional and will be worth points toward your final grade. You are required to complete an outline and it is due by Oct11. The outline should include:
· The topic/thesis (must be "Entertainment Industry" related)
· Your expected content…in outline form
· A summary of sources you plan to use (at least 5 sources)
· What you hope to learn from this paper
The research paper will be due on the day of your final exam.
The research paper should include:
· Technical requirements:
1). Must be typed!
2). Minimum 12 pages of topic coverage
3). 12 pt. "Times" font
4). Margins: 1" top and bottom; 1.25" left and right
· Your outline (attached to the back of your paper)
· It should follow your outline content
· Bibliography with at five sources
Some suggested Thesis/Topics for Term Paper:
1. An interview with a person(s) in the entertainment Industry (i.e. managers, agents, production, business managers, talent, media company executives, Information industry, promotion, etc.). This paper should have a thesis related to an area of the business that personally interests you from our course of study.
2. A research paper on convergence issues including the inception and pitfalls of an entertainment business career. This does not need to be a successful media artist, just a "real" story of a director, writer, etc. This is not to be a biography.
3. Compare and contrast entertainment delivery formats. Use a minimum of six different styles and examine the techniques of how they successfully make themselves different (i.e. programming, sales, promotion). Interview an on-line publisher, radio executive, film director, etc.
4. A research paper of one topic of study we may not have covered from any decade in entertainment history. You may relate this to any sector of the entertainment or media industry. You should consider:
*History *Consumer *Possibility of Success
*Formats/Platforms *Business Models *Social implications
*Branding *Competition * Moral Issues
*Global Issues *Job Opportunities *Outlook & Future
Percentage of point values:
Tests 25%
Homework 25%
Final Paper 25%
Final Exam 15%
Attendance 10%
Total Final Grading Scale: Final grades will be points accumulated from: attendance, homework, quizzes, extra credit, and your final paper.
95 -100% = A 90 - 94% = A-
85 - 89% = B+ 80 - 84% = B
77 - 79% = B- 74 - 76% = C+
69 - 73% = C 65 - 68% = C-
60 - 64% = D+ 56 - 59% = D
50 - 55% = D- Below 50% = Fail
Topics and Lectures: This schedule is subject to change, but we will try and cover:
1/10 Opening Class/Introduction
1/15 Copyright
1/17 Copyrights & trademarks
1/22 Deals & Contracts
1/24 Music
1/29 Music
1/31 Music & Books – quiz
2/5 Books
2/7 Movies
2/12 Movies
2/14 Movies
2/19 Television– quiz
2/21 Television
2/26 Television & Radio
2/28 Radio
3/4 Radio
3/6 Internet
3/11 Internet – quiz
3/13 Video Games
3/18 Video Games
3/20 EASTER BREAK
3/25 SPRING BREAK
3/27 SPRING BREAK
4/1 Advertising
4/3 Public Relations & Theater
4/8 Theater
4/10 Fashion – quiz
4/15 Fashion
4/17 Sports
4/22 Sports & Art
4/24 Art
4/29 Merchandising
5/1 Jobs & Careers & Prep for final quiz
5/6 Final quiz and Paper due
Topics and Lectures: This schedule is subject to change, but we will try and cover:
8/22 Opening Class/Introduction – “Is it your world anymore?”
8/28 Television- History, overview - Jobs,
8/30 Television- Programming, production - engineering and sales
9/4 Television - Who does what and News, Primetime,
9/6 Television - Soaps, Cable, Sports and Careers
9/11 Movies - History, Making movies Budgeting
913 Movies - Screenwriting Who does what, negotiating
9/18 - Movies - directing, testing & marketing – Quiz # 1
9/20 Movies – Independents, Music video & Documentaries,
9/25 Movies - Video, DVD and Beyond
9/27 Special Effects - History & Living digitally - The People and jobs
10/2 Special Effects - “Animation, Pixar, “Mickey Mouse to the Dark Knight”
10/4 Advertising - Computers don’t animate, People do” History & Promotion – Quiz # 2
10/9 Advertising - Media, agencies structures & the Mega-brands
10/11 NO CLASS
10/16 Radio - History, AM & FM & Public radio - Who does what & Satellite,
10/18 Radio - Programming, news, the future
10/23 Public Relations - History and what it is who does what, Public service,
10/25 NO CLASS
10/30 Public Relations - Corporate Vs. independents, Entertainment
11/1 Book Publishing - History, Structure & who does what – Quiz # 3
11/6 Book Publishing -Publishers, Agents submissions and the Nuts and Bolts
11/8 Magazine Publishing - History, editorial side, who does what and salaries
11/13 Magazine Publishing - Productivity, Creativity, Freelance, Desktop Revolution
11/15 Newspaper Publishing - History, Media Giants Who does what and salaries
11/20 New Media - History & The Web – The Information Highway, programming Quiz # 4
11/22 NO CLASS
11/27 New Media - Desktop publishing, On-line graphics & Web Design online and Specialization
11/29 -New Media - Video Game, History,
12/4 Sports Management - Sports Agents
12/10 Finals Quiz # 5 and Paper due