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Response to a problematic job advertisement
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Unknown
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To whom it may concern at Flipside Media, I am writing to you to express my concern and disgust towards your recent vacancy advertisement. I have been applying for jobs similar to the one you have described and was considering applying for yours, but upon further inspection I discovered multiple flaws and infringements within the requirements. Firstly, this advertisement states that the employee will be required to work between 10 and 45 hours per week and earn between £15000 and £35000 per annum. This is an extremely broad spectrum and the amount is not a certainty, and could become potentially illegal as another requirement you have stated is that the applicant must be 'under 30'. Not only is this an infringement of the Equality Act (2010) under discrimination of age, an employee under the age of 18 cannot legally work over 40 hours per week. Within an employment contract, it is required to outline the start date of the employee, a job title, and holiday allowances, a...
Connotations of News Starting Sequences
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Unknown
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News programmes aim to broadcast/publish newly received or noteworthy information, particularly about recent events, and claim to be the most unbiased source. There are many different ways that news programmes try to promote their impartiality, and these can primarily be found during their opening sequences. By initiating their neutrality from the beginning, an implied trust towards and from the viewers is created. A few of the ways news programmes connote urgency, importance and neutrality during their opening sequences are; Transparency This is a common and popular trait favoured by news programmes and can be found in many places of the opening sequence. There are many ways it can be shown, and this element is important to ensure the viewers that the information they are receiving is the complete truth, and that none of it has been hidden or changed. Often transparent text and graphics are used to imply this, but another subtle way is to display the newsroom set. I...
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