Monday, April 11, 2011

Group 2 Blog Project- Black Eyed Peas: Where is the Love?

The song “Where is the Love,” has our English course theme right in the title; therefore, there was an immediate connection for us. Using rap and hip-hop in this song, the band Black Eyed Peas uses a pop culture medium to ask the question, “Where is the Love?” This choice was a group decision because of all of the elements it includes is cohesive with our class theme.

A question mark appears very frequently in the video, symbolizing the title and the question, “Where is the Love?” The colors of the question mark vary throughout the video, and carry a deep meaning. The black question mark symbolizes death and killing, and the white symbolizes its opposite, life. The color red symbolizes love while the colors of black and white make up important parts of our lives. Happiness and a full life only come when we remember that we need more than just black and white. We need the red, or the love, to feel complete. The love adds color to life and unifies us all as one.

About half way through, the video takes an upward turn. The van drives up a hill while children are raising their arms and smiling. A man is raising his arms to the sky and people are looking upwards. Even aliens, from up above, are asking the same question, as seen by the crop formation of a question mark. People who find love have changed the path of their life into an upward direction, which symbolizes happiness and something better; a step in the direction of unity. This could also be enhanced by people raising their arms in the air towards the end of the video. More smiles are seen in the second half of the video, which leads to the love they see in the sky as universal, since everyone is looking in the same direction.

Children’s attitudes about love and hate have an important place in this video. Children’s faces and their emotions are often the main focus. Their sadness is evident in their faces in the beginning, along with some of the learned behaviors that instill hate in their hearts, such as violent video games. The message of hate has trickled down into the lives of these children. They are the first to remember the importance of love because of their direct relationship with the disconnected “grown ups” they use as role models.

This song/video proposes that love has been overshadowed by hate, a lack of unity, and societies allowance for an unnatural state. Racial discrimination also plays an important role in the video. Almost all of the people in the video are minorities. At one point, a white police officer is chasing a black man who tried to spread the message of love. This symbolizes a division in the races, and a lack of understanding of love between races. The minorities are seen engaged in various stereotypical situations that include negative connotations such as drug dealing and stealing. One black man, while being watched by a store security camera, seems to be trying to steal from a convenience store. However, the black man turns out to be spreading the message of love as opposed to stealing and dividing the races.

While watching this video we want the class to keep in mind a variety of thoughts and questions. First, how do the lyrics and the music video evoke a sense of wrongdoing by the population as a whole? Secondly, if you were the director of this music video, how would you have directed it to deliver the question, “Where is the Love?” Lastly, to you, what was the most memorable aspect of the video? Was it the expressions on the people’s faces? The heavy atmosphere? You decide.

Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WpYeekQkAdc

Group 2 Blog Project- Black Eyed Peas: Where is the Love?

The song “Where is the Love,” has our English course theme right in the title; therefore, there was an immediate connection for us. Using rap and hip-hop in this song, the band Black Eyed Peas uses a pop culture medium to ask the question, “Where is the Love?” This choice was a group decision because of all of the elements it includes is cohesive with our class theme.

A question mark appears very frequently in the video, symbolizing the title and the question, “Where is the Love?” The colors of the question mark vary throughout the video, and carry a deep meaning. The black question mark symbolizes death and killing, and the white symbolizes its opposite, life. The color red symbolizes love while the colors of black and white make up important parts of our lives. Happiness and a full life only come when we remember that we need more than just black and white. We need the red, or the love, to feel complete. The love adds color to life and unifies us all as one.

About half way through, the video takes an upward turn. The van drives up a hill while children are raising their arms and smiling. A man is raising his arms to the sky and people are looking upwards. Even aliens, from up above, are asking the same question, as seen by the crop formation of a question mark. People who find love have changed the path of their life into an upward direction, which symbolizes happiness and something better; a step in the direction of unity. This could also be enhanced by people raising their arms in the air towards the end of the video. More smiles are seen in the second half of the video, which leads to the love they see in the sky as universal, since everyone is looking in the same direction.

Children’s attitudes about love and hate have an important place in this video. Children’s faces and their emotions are often the main focus. Their sadness is evident in their faces in the beginning, along with some of the learned behaviors that instill hate in their hearts, such as violent video games. The message of hate has trickled down into the lives of these children. They are the first to remember the importance of love because of their direct relationship with the disconnected “grown ups” they use as role models.

This song/video proposes that love has been overshadowed by hate, a lack of unity, and societies allowance for an unnatural state. Racial discrimination also plays an important role in the video. Almost all of the people in the video are minorities. At one point, a white police officer is chasing a black man who tried to spread the message of love. This symbolizes a division in the races, and a lack of understanding of love between races. The minorities are seen engaged in various stereotypical situations that include negative connotations such as drug dealing and stealing. One black man, while being watched by a store security camera, seems to be trying to steal from a convenience store. However, the black man turns out to be spreading the message of love as opposed to stealing and dividing the races.

While watching this video we want the class to keep in mind a variety of thoughts and questions. First, how do the lyrics and the music video evoke a sense of wrongdoing by the population as a whole? Secondly, if you were the director of this music video, how would you have directed it to deliver the question, “Where is the Love?” Lastly, to you, what was the most memorable aspect of the video? Was it the expressions on the people’s faces? The heavy atmosphere? You decide.

Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WpYeekQkAdc

Monday, April 4, 2011

Chelsea Gallagher: primary sources

1.)
This commercial is for Doritos if you didn't catch that at the end...it was shown at the SuperBowl. This commercial caused a lot of controversy for obvious reasons.

2.)
This is a preview of a show called Skins on MTV. A huge emphasis is put on sex in this show and it is meant for teen viewers. It is a little ridiculous watching the clip and counting how many times sex is mentioned or shown.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Nick D'Apolito samples

http://www.moddedmustangs.com/
This is a forum designed for people interested in Mustangs, it covers all models and deals with modification and tech. Many people on this forum spend countless hours and thousands of dollars working on their cars to make them the way they like or perform how they want. Also, most of these people are not professional mechanics so they are doing this on their own time due to their intense passion for Mustangs.

This is a Burger King ad for a new sandwich, the as states "It'll blow you away" with a picture of the sandwich next to a females open mouth. This shows that even fast food resturaunts are using sex to try and sell their product

primary sources Winnie Agbalevu

https://subscribe.hearstmags.com/subscribe/seventeen/61024?source=svnonlinepromo

This post about the pretty amazing contest, is the search for the next seventeen Magazine cover girl. I am glad seventeen magazine wants a regular girl to be the cover and not a celebrity for once but despite all that, they have beauty tips on how to look, how to pose and even how to get a cover magazine hair which i still thinks implies that they want certain types of girls on the cover. This could still encourage what the definition of beauty is in our society today; which could make those who don't win feel like they are not pretty enough.

http://www.adrants.com/2003/08/marketing-food-body-sushi-style.php

This post advertises a human sushi platter; this ad is a form of objectifying women as tables even though men also are used for the body sushi. I don't know how it is valued in japan since is originally an obscure Japanese practice, I still think is a form of objectification.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Primary sources Nick D'Apolito

http://www.moddedmustangs.com/
This is a forum designed for people interested in Mustangs, it covers all models and deals with modification and tech. Many people on this forum spend countless hours and thousands of dollars working on their cars to make them the way they like or perform how they want. Also, most of these people are not professional mechanics so they are doing this on their own time due to their intense passion for Mustangs.

This is a Burger King ad for a new sandwich, the as states "It'll blow you away" with a picture of the sandwich next to a females open mouth. This shows that even fast food resturaunts are using sex to try and sell their product.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

"Revenge of the Friend"- New York Times' Modern Love

The following is an example of a sample Blog Project Facilitator Group entry. Hope it's helpful!


Source text: Revenge of the Friend by Christi Clancy


I first encountered this source while reading the New York Times in print this Sunday. I enjoyed the article, so when I came from from the coffee shop where I was reading the newspaper, I went online to the NYT website to read more. This is one of my favorite sections of the Times, and I generally look out for it each week. I also saw several of my friends tweet or Facebook post about it, so I know that this column is something my peers were talking about recently.

In this article, I was drawn in especially by the authors' references to pop culture. Clancy, a spinning instructor who unexpectedly encounters a former-friend who cheated on his wife in her class (with his new partner, no less), uses pop songs to enact part of her "revenge"--
I turned away and cued the music. I like making themed playlists for my classes: Irish music for St. Patrick’s Day, songs about food for Thanksgiving. I’ve got playlists for rain, snow, summer, peace and revolution.
For this occasion, I created a new playlist: music for cheaters. I had spent the week going through my iTunes library and settled on songs like Rihanna’s “Unfaithful,” Jewel’s “Till It Feels Like Cheating,” and some classics: “Heard It Through the Grapevine,” “50 Ways to Leave Your Lover,” and “Tempted.”
For me, this really reinforced the way that the rhetoric of love-- even lost, or betrayed love-- can be used as a tool. It has arguments that are meant to have effects, even if (as in the case of Clancy's former friend and his new lover), these are largely ignored. The humor of this piece rests on the author's point-of-view: she assumes that the new lovers will have certain reactions to her attempts at sadistic "punishment"-- the punchline occurs when their reactions are surprisingly opposite.

I'd like for the class to think about the ways that even pop culture--something that is supposedly "easy" to get or "obvious" assumes a level of literacy, or the ability to interpret it correctly. Do you think that "reading" pop culture is something you have to learn, in the same way you might learn to read music, or a foreign language?

Secondly, what happens when your "definition" of a pop culture source is different than someone else's?

And last, what other factors might help determine this understanding, and how? I always think of age as one-- for instance, my love of contemporary music is a total mystery to my parents, so even though I thought certain bands or songs were TOTALLY deep as a teenager, they just couldn't resonate with an audience that was older than me by almost thirty years.

I look forward to hearing what you think!