Friday, March 19, 2010

Advertisement exercise

http://www.spreadingjam.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/superman-got-milk-ad-commercial1.jpg

This is a "Got Milk" advertisement and is not much different than ads the Got Milk foundation has used in the past. Got Milk is known for having celebrities pose with a white milk mustache with a couple of sentences next to their picture explaining while Americans should be drinking everyday. In this advertisement, actor Brandon Rouche, the star of the blockbuster update of Superman, poses in his superman costume. The advertisement claims that drinking milk will make you strong and "super" like superman. It argues this claim by saying that "milk helps your bones grow strong so that....you can have bones of steel." It furthers this super feeling by showing Brandon flying in the air, above the clouds, the ultimate super hero fantasy. A lot of Got Milk ads are aimed toward children, so this ad easily can make children think that if they drink milk, they could be as strong as superman.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

2001: Well Predicted But Unentertaining

Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, set in the year 2001 but made in 1968, follows five astronauts and a robot as they embark on a mission to Jupiter. The robot, Hal, is considered a sixth member of the crew and is made to be infallible. When Hal senses an impending system failure on the ship, two of the astronauts, Dr. Frank Poole and Dr. Dave Bowman, check it out and determine that nothing is wrong with the system. They then decide that Hal is not as reliable as once thought and decide to disable him so that he does not endanger the mission. What they do not know is that Hal can read their lips and therefore is aware of their plan. Hal conspires against them, killing four of the five astronauts including Dr. Poole. Dr. Bowman escapes being murdered by Hal and in a famous scene Frank begins to dissemble Hal as “Hal gradually regresses as his mind is taken apart until he is finally shut down” (IMBD). Dr. Bowman continues the mission to Jupiter where he comes across a monolith which has been seen many times throughout the movie. He goes inside the monolith and is transported through space and time. He ends up finding himself on his deathbed with another monolith at the foot of his bed. He then becomes a star child, a fetus inside an amniotic sac orbiting the earth.

There have been many opinions and theories made about Kubrick’s film. One thing is for sure though; he did a fantastic job predicting the technologies of the future. The technologies used in this film, such as video chatting, were only fantasy in 1968 but have become reality today. Because the movie was made in 1968, Kubrick had to work on the special effects without the help of computer animation. With this said, the special effects of this movie are ahead of its time. Kubrick was the first to show the idea of weightlessness in space and the scenes of the space ship landing on the moon and Jupiter are done without looking hokey as science fiction movies tended to be in the 60’s.

Along with its advanced special effects, the music in 2001: A Space Odyssey has made an indelible mark in history. Kubrick originally hired Alex North to create an original score for the film but he used classical music temporarily while he edited the film. He liked it so much that he decided to keep it. According to Roger Ebert, this was “crucial” because North’s music “attempts to underline the action—give us emotional cues. The classical music chosen by Kubrick exists outside the action. It uplifts” (rogerebert.com). The music was such a good idea that it is used in montages and spoofs today.

While the special effects and music were without question the best of their time, that does not stop the movie from being a major snore fest. Maybe this is because this movie, meant to be watched over and over and contemplated, went over my head. It also bored me because in a 160 minute movie, it contained only 40 minutes of dialogue. I can’t read a book that does not have enough dialogue, let alone watch a movie. This is why the music is so important throughout the movie. Kubrick needed something to take up the dead space left by the lack of dialogue. Since the characters aren’t going to tell the audience when to be sad and when to be mesmerized, the music had to. When I sit down to watch a movie, I want to relax. I snuggle up on the couch and await laughter and tears. I do not want to have to analyze every scene, determining what the characters are thinking and which scenes are important and which are fillers. 2001 is all about symbolism and I don’t have the desire to figure out what everything means. It takes a certain kind of person, intellectual and inquisitive, to be able to sit through this movie and get what Kubrick is trying to say.

Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey no doubt displayed innovative thinking through its spectacular special effects and novel use of classical music, but it failed to be entertaining to the average audience. While many people enjoy a film that forces them to reflect upon it as they leave the theater, I do enough of that in school and work. I don’t like movies that make me feel dumb for not understanding their complicated plots and symbolic meanings. I had a hard time staying awake while watching this movie and would not watch it again given the chance.

Monday, November 2, 2009

The Website is Almost Done!

So my very first website is almost finished. In case you don't know, I am making a website about webcams with 3 other people for my English class. It is still going extremely well. I just finished making a page about "The Other Uses" of webcams. I talked about how people use them for security while they are on vacation and how webcams can be uses as beachcams or trafficcams. Our website looks great, so if you ever have any questions about webcams you should visit our site at thetruthaboutwebcams.weebly.com. Its not up and running quite yet, but it should be some time this week.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Our Webcam Website

We are doing a website discussing webcams and the dangers of using them. We have specific tabs geared toward parents and another tab for teens. We then use a different persuasive technique for each audience. When it comes to parents, we talk about the positives of webcams and with teens we show the negatives in order to scare them from doing anything dangerous with their webcams. It is going really well so far when it comes to each person doing their share of the project. The creation of the actual website itself is pretty easy do to the template we are using. Our group gets along well and i am sure that our website will look great as well.

Monday, October 19, 2009

How to Make an Essay Interesting

After reading the Media/Design chapter in Nortan Field Guide I began to think about the many newpaper stories and essays I have read throughout my life. Some have been particularly hard to get through, and I think that's because nothing about them ever popped out to get my attention. Scholarly essays are usually written in the standard Times New Roman font with a 1o pt font. A boring, small font tends to make me zone out while I'm reading, but the large type of newspaper headlines always get my attention. I especially love when the stories include graphs and pictures which pull me toward the story. Although some fonts and pictures aren't appropriate for certain articles, I try to get those attention grabbers in my essays as often as possible.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Intros and Conclusions: The Root of All Evil?

The into and conclusion to every essay I have ever written has been the hardest part of the paper. I have the worst time trying to figure out how the engage the reader in my essay. I have had plenty of pointers on how to start off, such as asking a question, starting off with a quote or an interesting fact. Those have helped me through the many essays I have written in high school, but I can't use those tools in my conclusion.
The conclusion of an essay is the hardest for one major reason, teachers can't seem to make up their mind on what its function is. I was originally taught that the conclusion is supposed to summarize the paper, so with that in mind, that is how I wrote my conclusion. I would restate my thesis go over my main points again. As I have progressed to more advanced English classes though, I have found that I am not allowed to summarize in my conclusion. One teacher actually told me that my conclusion "needs to go out into the world." I don't even know what that means. Figuring out how to end my paper on a powerful and rememberable note is hard enough without everyone telling me a different way to do it.

Monday, September 21, 2009

Not So Far Apart?

The first essay in the textual analyses section, "Parallel Worlds: The Surprising Similarities (and Differences) of Country-and-Western and Rap", really struck me. The author, Denise Noe, really made me think of both of those genres in a different way. I am not a huge fan of rap, there are some songs that I like to dance to though, because of how graphic most of the songs are. There is one Eminem song, "Stan", that graphically depicted a crazed fan tying his girlfriend up and sticking her in the trunk of his car, then drives it off a bridge. After hearing that song for the first time, I swear I heard the girlfriend's screams of terror in my sleep. Rap songs no longer speak the minority blacks and their triumphs despite being born on the streets, like they used to. Now it is all about who has the best car or who can have sex with the most women. But, as Noe pointed out, country can be that way too. The men of country too speak of themselves as superior to women. Although country songs aren't as graphic, there are some songs that don't put women in the best light. On the other hand though, I have never heard a rap song put a woman as high up on a pedestool as almost every country song ever made does. Most country songs involve the woman leaving the man, and it is always the man's fault, and the men aren't afraid to admit that. But let me tell you right now, we women make some mistakes too.