Monday, March 24, 2014

Audio Assignment One

My first audio assignment threw a couple of obstacles my way. I noticed when I was recording that no matter how close I talked into the recorder, it would not go to -6. I assumed this was just a technological error because the audio sounded fine when I listened to it from the device through headphones. However, I did not realize that the gain was only at six, when it was supposed to be at ten.  Because of this, my audio was basically impossible to hear without editing. I also didn't realize that I could just put the voiceover on one track and add and delete sentences. Instead, I just kept rereading my entire script over and over again until I came up with the best result, and all of them were different tracks. In the end, it would have been a lot better to keep it all on one track, and the sound would have been better as well.  After listening I realized I also talk a little fast, and was not the easiest to understand.  However, I think that for my first assignment, I kept my voice at an even level, and I was fairly easy to understand.

Script and article:

A crucial piece of evidence was examined in the murder trial of world famous paralympian Oscar Pistorious yesterday.  Forensic investigator Colonel Gerhard Vermuelen recreated the bathroom Pistorious shot his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp through, using the bullet ridden toilet door from the scene of the crime. Pistorious claimed in his opening statement that he knocked down the door with a cricket bat while wearing his prosthetic legs. However, Vermuelen recreated the scene by kneeling at the height of Pistorious without his prosthetics. His recreation showed marks on the door were low enough that Pistorious was probably not wearing his prosthetics when he knocked down the door, showing that he could have lied in his statement. Nonetheless, the defense claimed Pistorious was swinging the bat with his back bent, which could explain why the markings on the door were so low.

Pistorious, who has won multiple gold medals in the Paralympics earning the nickname blade runner, could spend the rest of his life in South African Prison if he is convicted of Steenkamp’s murder.
  

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