Monday, April 30, 2012

Review of Communication 497AJ


Overall, I found Communication 497AJ to be one of my favorite, if not my favorite class at UMass. I feel as though it rounded out my education at the university and in the Communication major perfectly. The class explored many of the ideas that I have been introduced to over my past four years here in a different way than I am used to and I think that the class model itself proved extremely successful. I thoroughly enjoyed hearing what all the members of the class had to say as well as hearing about their personal experiences with the topics discussed in class and I think it really benefited my experience with the course material as well as others in the class. Many professors aim to run a class on a discussion model and are unsuccessful at either inspiring students to participate or allowing the students to participate and I think that Professor Yousman was very much able to prove that this model is both possible and extremely successful when done right. Some of the things I think were especially helpful for me were the discussion leaders as they help to synthesize the readings for the class and bring about key points that maybe the individual would not have focused on otherwise. Also the online discussion board, though tedious at times, was great because it allowed the class time to post their thoughts on the readings in a more formed manner than an in class discussion. Sometimes people benefit more or learn better from reading and writing than listening and speaking and the combination between in class discussion and online discussion allows for all individuals to thrive in their learning style and challenge themselves in a learning style that does not best suit them.

I think we would all agree that this class was not a light course load, but it is so different when you take a class that is challenging and you are learning as compared to a class that is challenging and you are not learning. Everything that I read this semester was applied to discussions and assignments and while that may seem like common sense, anyone who has taken a college course knows that is not a common feeling for all classes across the board.

I have not taken a class in a very long time where it is hard for me to decide my favorite reading/topic and for this class it is actually quite difficult for me. But, I stick by my review from mid-semester and still say that my favorite reading was Gerber and the topic of the Mean World Syndrome. I think that analyzing this thesis closely has hugely beneficial to my own media literacy but was also equally beneficial in my understanding of topics in my other classes. I have not taken a semester of classes that related so well together since the last class I took with Professor Yousman when I was a Sophomore…so maybe it isn’t the classes and it is actually just one great class that makes the semester…I guess I’ll never know. Haha.

It’s funny, filling out the end of year evaluations for all my classes I always get to the box about “How much did you learn in this class” (or however it is phrased) and I always feel like it is average or below average. For this class though I actually feel as though I learned “Much more than average” which is really refreshing as I am doing my closing interviews for my loans and finding out exactly how much I owe for the past four years. Some classes seem worth it and some don’t but I feel lucky that I am able to end on a note in my major where I feel like what I studied was both challenging and enlightening.

Thanks all for a great semester and CONGRATULATIONS 2012 GRADS!!

Review of the Power of Nightmares: Part III


Part 3 of Adam Curtis’ series “The Power of Nightmares” focused largely on the September 11th, 2001 attacks on the twin towers and the Pentagon and how these attacks led to the culture of fear that we are saturated in. I found this series to be both informative and interesting and I thought that “The Shadows in the Cave” was particularly interesting because I was able to relate not only the discourse but the key players back to my own experience with 9/11 and it allowed me to check my own mentality in some respects which was quite eye-opening.


One thing in this segment that just left me speechless, that I had no idea about before viewing the film, was that out own government is responsible for the creation, or rather fabrication of the group “Al Qaeda”. The film explains that Osama bin Laden and Aymen Zawahiri had tirelessly attempted to create a group that they could rely on to carry out their missions to spread Islam and ban western ideology but had failed miserably time and time again. However, after the bombings at two U.S. embassies in East Africa, the U.S. government decided to attempt to prosecute those who carried out the attacks which proved to be very difficult. The FBI realized that they needed each “terrorist” to be unified into a group of terrorists and out of that idea Al Qaeda was born. Just to be sure we are on the same page, American officials were actually the ones who created Al Qaeda, not the terrorists who were “a part of it”. After hearing this in the film I had to take a break from the film and think for a few minutes, I just needed to process this idea…which I still feel as though I am processing as it is not easy to swallow the fact that this major enemy that we have been running scared from for years now…was created by us!


Watching how the film explored the unfolding of the Neoconservative agenda following the 9/11 attacks was equally disturbing however, as I mentioned above, this is less of a shock to me as I am more aware of the actions of Bush, Wolfowitz, and Rumsfeld. I believe that this series did an amazing job exploring the discourse of good and evil between the United States and the radical Islamists. The in-depth exploration of the history of the issue as well as the development of the culture of fear through this particular conflict has been eye opening for me and I have thoroughly enjoyed it. I only hope that eventually we, as a society will learn from our mistakes and begin to be more critical of those in power, because at this point, it is really all that we can do.

*just thought this was funny, coming full circle on the blog from Night of the Living Dead to Week of the Living Neoconservatives

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Review of the Power of Nightmares: Part II


The second section of the series “The Power of Nightmares” investigates the eventual collapse of the Soviet Union and those parties involved in the grueling battle in Afghanistan who believed that they had finally ousted the Soviets and were in turn fully responsible for the victory. The radical Islamists who had come from all across the Middle East, urged by their religious leaders, had begun to form a powerful group who believed their mission was to enlighten the people of the Middle East of their religious ideals and warn them of the pitfalls of consumption and of the dangers of lack of belief in all teachings of the Quran. The film puts forth the interesting idea that the “defeat” of the Soviet Union was never really a victory for anyone because truly the Soviet Union crumbled under its own societal pressures, it was a society rotting away from the inside out and it never really needed anyone to defeat it because it eventually proved to be capable of that itself…

The idea that both the Islamists and the neoconservatives held that they had defeated evil led each party in very different directions, both bursting with confidence and in search of their next venture. The Islamists decided that they needed to continue to spread their religious ideals and continued to develop the idea that if Muslims were not following the Quran then they were subject to murder and they continued the religious war across Algeria, Egypt, and many other countries and they had zero success in toppling the regimes like they had planned, this led to a lot of confusion and anger amongst members.

Meanwhile, in America the neoconservatives were having a but if a rough time coming up with their new target for a mission of good v. evil and they began working on building myths within their own infrastructure itself in order to impose some control on the people. This venture mostly manifested itself in religiousness, the pressing ideals of getting rid of multiculturalism, homosexuality, and women’s rights to their bodies, these were all platforms of Bush Sr.’s campaign for re-election. At first this seemed to be spreading about but people quickly realized that it was too harsh and peoples support seemed to wane and shift toward another candidate, Bill Clinton. People seemed to support Clinton because he was the antithesis of the Bush administration and people supported a serious change. During Clinton’s presidency the neoconservatives, especially Paul Wolfowitz, worked tirelessly to bash and malign the administration until it crumbled. As we all remember, the crumbling happened when the Lewinski scandal broke and neoconservatives began to push for impeachment. They finally had the details they needed to crush the liberal agenda once again. In turn, the second part of the film concludes with bin Laden and Zawahiri’s beginning plans for the attack on the source of all their problems, America.

While I have enjoyed watching both sections of this series so far I think that it is odd how much they leave out regarding finances and financial benefits to be had by choices made by both parties. I believe that the series is lacking some sort of real motive other than just the fact that neoconservatives wanted to rebuild and rebrand America as a source of “good” in a battle of “good v. evil”. I think that the deep historical account for how we ended up where we are is great and it definitely provides some background on many key players in history that I did not know much about and that in itself it great but I feel as though the whole story is not quite there however, maybe it will be summed up in the final chapter…

Here is a funny video of a Dana Carvey stand-up show that I saw years ago--I couldn't find the clip where he talks about "evil-doers" but this is almost as good!


Thursday, April 12, 2012

The Power of Nightmares: Part 1 Review

I found the first part of The Power of Nightmares to be very interesting. I think that it is the beginning of a series that sheds a great deal of light on the American Military-Industrial Complex and the history of war that we have built in our country. At the beginning of the film I was having a little bit if a hard time following who the main players were and keeping them all straight since the film skips between the Soviet Union, Egypt, the U.S.A and other countries. By the end it made a bit more sense who the key players were and I felt more prepared to watch the second part which I was worried I would be confused for. It is an interesting film that offers commentary from all different kinds of people from varying backgrounds and political affiliations which is nice to see in a film about such a controversial and unclear subject.
Before watching this film I had never heard of Sayyid Qutb or any of his theories. I found it very interesting to hear about the way that he viewed American gluttony in the period of American industrialization and booming growth. The moment that is described in the film about Outb’s feelings when he was at the dance (I believe it was a dance) and they played “Baby it’s Cold Outside” and while it was the typical symbol of lust, love, and American freedom, Qutb felt that it was actually an unmistakable sign of being trapped by their own “selfish and greedy desires”. The clip and commentary just made me think about what it might be like to view something like that from a more ethnographic standpoint or from an outsider’s standpoint—I am sure that the people did not look as free as they felt.
            I was a bit confused about how Qutb ended up in prison but the description of the torture that he endured was sickening and not that I could ever condone it but I can somewhat understand how a person in that situation could develop such deep hatred and disgust from America after that. The film mentioned that his experience in prison being tortured helped him come to the further realization that Americans were infected with a disease called ”barbarous ignorance” and this disease was spreading around the world, and much to his disgust and surprise it had spread to Egypt and was running rampant. This was the disease of feeling free and being much less than that, it was really an act of being sold out by one’s own politicians.
            The film went on to discuss Leo Strauss and the group of students that he formed in which he planted the seed of the two myths in society; 1) religion, and 2) they myth of the nation…this was the idea that America had a specific mission, a destiny to be the force of good that brings down all forces of evil, starting with the Soviet Union.
            The film continues to discuss the way that the war played out in the Soviet Union and how the neoconservative agenda helped to shape the way that Americans viewed the Soviet people. This topic investigated Strauss’ first myth, religion and how the Christian religion was used by neoconservatives to push their particular, “force of good” agenda further. The big point that neoconservatives continued to push was that the Soviet Union was the force of all terrorist evil in the world and their time was up, they had to answer to the forces of good, America. What happened next was very interesting, there was a huge push to prove the claims against the Soviets and so the CIA was told to prove their theories and at that time it was uncovered that the CIA would not find any information on the matter because they had made it all up…The shocking part for me to hear was that Casey, the new head of the CIA did not believe that any of the claims had been false and thus he went on with his search to prove that the Soviets were indeed terrorists…and eventually he found the information he needed in order to launch a full out attack on the Soviets.
            The film basically ends there with a perfect segway into the second part of the series where we will surely see the aftermath of the attack on the Soviets. I think that this film fits in very well with the reading and discussions from class as it seems to provide a different discourse/a new kind of context for the history that we call our own. I myself can admit that I have been so unaware of the entire story that explains the war that we have been fighting in my country for over ten years and it is actually very embarrassing and shameful that I know so little about why it is even happening…I think that the first part of this film, while hard to watch is critical to understanding the history and I look forward to the next section!

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Review of Hip Hop: Beyond Beats and Rhymes


Hip Hop: Beyond Beats and Rhymes is a film created and directed by Byron Hurt, ex-quarterback turned gender and sexuality activist and educator at Northeastern University. A longtime fan of hip hop music, Hurt decided that this film was a critical step in his investigation of hip hop music and its values and the stereotypes that it promotes. Hurt takes his time with the film, collecting interesting interviews from artists such as Mos Def, Chuck D, Jadakiss, Fat Joe and many other interesting members of the hip hop community. The overwhelming sentiments from most involved, revolve around the fact that there has been a great shift in hip hop music and its values, which the former president of Def Jam records, Carmen Ashhurst says is a direct correlation of the biggest record companies buying up all the labels in order to create a different kind of music and it resulted in “the shift from Fight the Power to Gin and Juice”. Ashhurst and Hurt along with the other people who were part of the film make it clear that good, meaningful rap music is still being made all over however it will never sell and it won’t get them famous. This idea is seen in action in film when Hurt goes to the Hip Hop Power Summit and talks to one of the aspiring artists, who does a short rap about societal problems but them comments that that kind of thing does not sell and that is why he can’t talk about those kinds of things in his music and instead focuses on being hard, killing people, drugs, bitches, etc.
"if their ass is showin', we gonna slap it!"
I found it very interesting in the film to hear what some younger, white folks had to say about rap music and its messages. One female interviewee takes the time to explain that she likes rap music because she comes from a primarily white, suburban community and the music gives her and people like her a chance to look into a community that they might not normally ever get to see. The problem here is that, like Oz and other programs that promote unrealistic representations of society’s core issues, this music is not exactly exhibiting the real problems and everyday life that black men (and women) are exposed do on a daily basis.

I also thought that the discussion about hip hop music and its homoerotic tendencies was excellent. I thought that Tim’m West did an excellent job explaining where homoeroticism can be seen in mainstream rap music and also explaining the way that these images conflict with the primarily homophobic mindsets of rap musicians and avid fans. The discussion about the use of “me and my boy” or just “my boys” in general and its relation to homoeroticism was also intriguing. It is very interesting to think about the very strong homophobic tendencies in rap music and culture but also the complete disrespect and disregard for women in any way other than sexualizing them, and yet the deepest connection is with one’s “boys”.

In conclusion, I thought that is film was valuable and helped to explain the fact that “Hip hop is completely subservient to white power structure”. I thought about the way that we are educated in college to do the right thing, to be better than we could have ever imagined ourselves being and then post-graduation we are working for the systems that we have spent 4 years learning about the problems within them but yet don’t know how to change them and don’t possess the tools needed. There are metaphorical similarities between white and black cultures in this respect. Obviously it is different in that for a great deal of white men they learn about the power structures that exist in society and the inevitable power that they possess and instead of being able to apply that knowledge and make change they play into the structure (for many reasons) and end up working their way from the bottom to the top and forgetting about all the systemic problems that they learned about in college. For black men, they know that there are huge problems in rap music and most of them do not really hold the values that they are singing about, but yet they play into the system because they don’t believe that there is a real way to change it. They know that they either need to play the game or be labeled a “pussy, chump, etc. As Hurt points out “REAL MEN are lacking in the representation of black men…a real black man stands up for when something is wrong”. This conclusion is true not only for black men but for white men as well—and women too!—it seems that we are just generally lacking real people.
" BET is the cancer of black manhood,  it one dimentionalized us…made us a one trick image"

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Review of Edward Said On Orientalism


I would like to start by saying that I have enjoyed most all of the films from this course so far, however this film left me with a bit if a different reaction than the others. While I enjoyed listening to Edward Said talk about his roots in Palestine and I fully agree with much of what he presented I found the structure of the film to be very difficult to follow, un-engaging, and generally difficult to understand and follow. I was left disappointed in many ways because I am interested in Said and his ideas but I just couldn't seem to get all that much clear information from the film and I ended up reading about Said and his theories later and feeling as though I got much more from that than the film itself.

I was very much intrigued with Said's description of Orientalism as "the idea that these people (Middle Eastern Peoples) do not change…they are still in time". I thought more about American representations of people from the Middle East and it really made sense. I thought about the Arab Spring and the images that we have seen from the rebellions, especially the revolution in Egypt and it really clicked in my mind why American’s have this representation of Arabs. The images and footage that we are provided with from this revolution make the Egyptian, Bahraini, Syrian (the list goes on and on) people seem as though they are savages. We see images of bottles being thrown, people being beaten, yelling, screaming, bombs, fires etc. and we are left with the thought that these people have no concept of what it means to be civilized. The interesting point that I am trying to make is that it is so incredibly progressive for these dominated groups to have the courage to get together and rebel and yet the images and discourses that American’s are provided with still tell the story that these people are “stagnant savages”. We do not see all of the amazing things that these people have done, we are not told the story of why these people are fighting or why we are seeing the images that we are seeing and so the images take on a different meaning and help to gloss over the stereotypes that American people have of Middle Eastern peoples.

Another point that I found interesting from Said was what he talked about in the section of the film titled “Orientalism and Palestine Question”. Because Said himself was Palestinian he took on a clear stance in the conflict (one of which I happen to strongly agree with) and he presented it in a positive way, with a possible solution. He talked about the importance of coming to agreement of “coexistence” which is so very important in this conflict because both of the peoples fighting for the land have experienced exile and devastation. He does not make it a question of “who gets what” but rather how the two groups can coexist and finally find peace.  As Said put it so profoundly, “Finding a peaceful, human, and just solution will require overcoming Orientalism and its ideas of difference as a threat that must be contained or destroyed”.  This is the case not only for Orientalism and the American representation of Arabs and Muslims but also for American representations of all groups who are different from themselves.

In general this film offered some very interesting commentary on Orientalism from Said but like I mentioned above I found it hard to follow—not exactly “user friendly”. However Said himself is an amazing theorist and someone that I would love to study more in the future.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Midsemester Review of Communication 497AJ

So far I would say that I am really enjoying this class. There is a lot to be said for a professor who can design a class that engages students the way that Professor Yousman is able to do not only with Comm497AJ but also the other classes that I have taken with him. The assignments seem worth it--they don't make me feel as though I am wasting my time doing busy work. I have very much enjoyed most of the readings for the class and though they are dense at times they certainly educate. I particularly enjoyed reading about George Gerbner and the mean world syndrome. Though this class is not the first time that I have visited Gerbner's thesis in college, I feel like I got a lot more out of it in this class than I have in other classes. I feel particularly affected by the mean world syndrome as do I feel many of my friends and family are in the same boat. I find Gerbner's ideas easier to understand than some other theorists and also the fact that they are applicable to me helps in building interest.

I can say that I really struggled with Hall and the different theories of representation and though I understand it better after revisiting the material for the midterm I still feel as though the ideas are hazy in my mind. I wish that I could grasp this thesis a bit better because I can see that it is important and very applicable for the kinds of analysis that we are doing in this class. I feel as though Foucault's ideas about historical context have been extremely important to our analyses since we read the chapter and I just wish that I understood the whole chapter a little bit better.

I have very much enjoyed watching some older horror films and getting the chance to break them down, especially Night of the Living Dead and The Exorcist. I think that the blog is a good way to communicate about the films with such limited class time and it seems to be pretty effective for the class as a whole. The film "War on Drugs" was much more interesting than I thought it would be--given the fact that it was quite poor quality, hard to find, and Dutch subtitled. I thought that the information was so interesting that I actually passed on the link to the film to my supervisor who also enjoyed the documentary. It seems as though the films and readings are able to give us all as students a broad understanding not only of the different perspectives about the culture of fear but also the kinds of writing and film making that are done around the topic. It really feels as though the different parts of the class mesh well together which helps keep my interest in the subject and also makes the work a bit more interesting than tedious.

As far as the discussion board goes I think that it is a good way to keep the class discussing the readings and materials from class since we only meet once a week. I am not a fan of Spark however, it seems to have a lot of problems for me--maybe I am just unlucky. I think that the concept should continue if the class runs again as a blended class but maybe at that point there will be a more functional system.

I would say in general I am very happy in this class. This is my final semester and I was really hoping to have a Comm class that I really enjoyed as my last one so that I could leave the major on a high note and I will say this is not only a good one but maybe my favorite. The materials that we have covered have influenced me quite a bit and I would say that I feel more conscious and aware of the culture of fear and what it is doing and has done to society--so I guess the class is doing it's job!

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Analysis of the HBO Show Oz



Before this class I had never seen the show Oz. My mom has worked for different cable companies for years so I have had access to HBO and other movie channels for years however I seem to have missed this show which was probably a blessing in disguise because I probably wouldn’t have been able to decode the messages that I was seeing on the screen and would have been caught up, like most of the shows fans, in thinking that it was a realistic representation of a maximum security prison.

After watching several clips of Oz and contextualizing what I have seen with the film “War on Drugs” and the reading by Glassner and Yousman it is crystal clear that the show Oz is not a real representation of prison in the slightest. Yousman states in his article that “The HBO audience is wealthier, more educated, and more suburban than the general population of television viewer. Demographically, this is the precise opposite of the US prison population. Inmates tend to be poorer, less educated, and more urban than the general population.”(266).  This is a very important idea to consider when analyzing the messages that are put out by the HBO program Oz. It is likely that most of the people who are watching this program do not have any first hand experiences or personal experiences with the prison system in our country and thus they have no ability to contextualize what they are seeing on the screen. Then, by default, the viewers of Oz develop a very skewed perception of not only what it takes to end up in prison but also what prisoners’ lives are like. From the reading in Glassner’s chapter 6 and the film War on Drugs it has become clear that most of the people in our real prisons are not in for violent crimes but rather for drugs however, in the show Oz (granted it is a maximum security prison) nearly all the main characters are in for horrible murders, rape, and other very violent crimes. This leads the typically upper-middle class viewers to view prisons are a holding tank for all the misfits and psychopaths of society.

Another thing that I noticed from watching some clips of the show Oz is that the prisoners are essentially free to roam the facility and commit ever more violent crimes inside the iron gates. I watched one clip called “Jaz Hoyt’s Death” in which two men (I assume prisoners) are sharing a hospital room, neither are shackled or restrained and after the nurse leaves the room (yes the young, female nurse in the room with two un-restrained prisoners) one man gets out of his bed and stabs and kills the other man…The nurse able to see it all through  a crack in the door but does nothing about it. This is something that if watched as just part of another episode of a television show that a person enjoys would not resonate as odd however it is extremely unlikely  that that could ever be the possible set up for hospitalized prisoners. The misconception that prisoners have the freedom to roam around and do harm to other prisoners, guards or other persons working in the prison is further pressed in another clip I watched called “Adebisi gets rejected by Shirley” where the prisoner Adebisi tells Shirley to give him oral sex through the cage and Adebisi is then caught and taken away from her cell after she says no and refers to him with a very derogatory term. Just the fact that women and men are ever in a place where that is possible in prison is very uncharacteristic of a real prison. However viewers are fed the illusion that this is how things work in prison.

We have learned from the film War on Drugs and Yousman’s article that “Stories of punishment have long been a source of titillation for audiences, and this titillation often has served political purposes.” (267). This is very evident in Oz and in the real prison-industrial complex. In War on Drugs there are several stories, one very interesting about a young college student who was dating a small time LSD and marijuana dealer. The woman was charged with aiding and abetting a drug dealer for only providing the police with his location. She was in turn given close to 30 years in prison and when her parents were interviewed her father mentioned that the judge had said that the severe charges were only given because they were a message to others about the severity of charges for anyone involved in any way with drugs or drug dealers. This is a prime, real example of how stories of punishment can be used to control the people. The difference between real life and Oz is that the “stories of punishment” in the HBO smash hit are not real and thus they make audiences think that political decisions to build more prisons, be harsher on crime, and continue the War on Drugs are good and just decisions. Since the audience that is primarily watching this program is not from the social group that the program focuses on, it builds a wall between the truth and the illusion. Had this program been shown on another network it is possible that it would have been received quite differently because the audience would have a better or rather, different understanding of the discourse being presented. 

Monday, March 5, 2012

Review of The American Nightmare

This interesting documentary sets out to investigate the "Golden Age" of the horror genre. The helps to contextualize the great horror films of the late 60s and 70s within historical events happening in the United States and in the world. There is a lot of conversation about what horror actually is and what it means to the various directors, writers, and other key persons in the film. Tom Savini, a famous horror make-up artist talks extensively about where he learned the reality of his craft, Vietnam. He defines a line of difference between reality and representations that we are exposed to in films. This information that he is providing is coupled with harsh but important images from the Vietnam War where he was a soldier. I found this to be a particularly interesting part of the film because I think that the Vietnam War was not only important to Savini but also to many of the other horror directors and writers of that time period even if they had not experienced the front lines themselves. The group dissects Night of the Living Dead in many of the ways that can be seen in my previous post as well as the posts from fellow classmates of Communication 497AJ. The cast talks about the cannibalism in the film and the sheer brilliance of turning the nuclear family inside out. I particularly enjoyed the comments offered about human instinct to say things like "you're so cute, I could eat you up!" and how that related to the slaying of Harry and Helen Cooper by their daughter Karen. The cast also talk extensively about the significance of the ending scene in Night of the Living Dead. The brutal murder of Ben at the end of the film had revolutionary mimetic tendency to the heinous civil rights struggles of the late 60s and the death of Martin Luther King Jr. I think that hearing the cast, being that they are knowledgeable not only about the horror film under analysis but also about the historical context of the events represented in the film, allowed me to have a different kind of respect for the film and its message.

This is another film that shows us the importance of historical context. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre would never have been as interesting and relevant had it not come out at a time of "No Gas". Also, it is important to note (which I did not know before watching The American Nightmare) that the family of psychopaths who take Sally and the others actually used to be slaughterhouse workers/owners however they had been run out of business. This little detail relates to the changing economy in those times and the fear that if someone loses their job they could in turn lose their mind and end up becoming like Leatherface.

I kept finding myself shielding my eyes from the screen even knowing full well that the things I was seeing were only snippets of the film, and I had no idea of the narrative but I was still scared. I couldn't help but start wondering what this was which led me back to the film. I believe it was Romero who said in the film that he wasn't scared of much but what did scare him was people. I think that I have found that this is true for myself also, however, much like any other average American I am not scared of the right people. I don't shield my eyes when I watch Obama saying that he is approving the Keystone XL pipeline or John McCain saying that we should really start serious air strikes on Syria but I do cover my eyes when I watch a the brutal snippets of killing in The Last House on the Left or Halloween...

IT'S ONLY A MOVIE, ONLY A MOVIE, ONLY A MOVIE, ONLY A MOVIE

The one question that I was left with at the end of the film is what is next. The "Golden Age" seems to have passed on and as we have learned we are in a kind of new horror genre, the slasher film. I feel as though with more knowledge of the horror genre itself, I am very curious to see what films have come, are coming, or will come out as a result of the history of today. I am wondering where the horror film commentary on society is...am I missing it? Has it come? Will it come?

Sunday, February 26, 2012

Analysis of Night of the Living

I want to start out by mentioning that before viewing Romero's Night of the Living Dead I completed the reading of the Wikipedia entry and article by Harper on Night of the Living Dead and those two readings, especially the reading by Harper allowed me to absorb much more from the film than I would have without the literature. The reading allowed me to understand the film within its historical context, for instance I would not have been thinking about the political and social anxieties that people were feeling in the 60s and 70s surrounding the Vietnam War and nuclear warfare. Most likely, I would have also missed the the killing of Ben at the end of the film and how this alluded to the murder of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. These are just some of the things that were very helpful to have a heads up before watching the film so that I was able to get much more from the viewing. 

Clearly knowledge of the historical context of racism and sexism are very important to the films success. It would be easy to miss the way that Barbara precariously positions the knife towards Tom when they are first in the house even though he is protecting her and doing his best to help her. It is also seen in the film that the women are nearly useless. This is something I can say I certainly do not miss seeing in films. The men talk about the women as though they are only a burden and they actually become a burden at times in the movie that women would not generally be in a real life situation (i.e. Judy running out to join Tom in the truck and getting her jacket stuck and leading to the death of the couple, and also Barbaras catatonic state and utter un-helpfulness). The contextualization of these events in the film are critical to understanding what they mean to us as viewers.

The articles were also specifically helpful in relating the film back to the Hall article from the last two weeks of class. I watched Night with the Hall article in mind and I must say it really helped me understand not only the historical context of the film itself but why historical context is an especially important topic to consider when viewing the film. It struck me as very interesting to watch the relations between Ben and Mr. Cooper with the idea that it was nearly unheard of to have a black character as the protagonist of a film in the late 1960s. I enjoyed watching how Ben seemed to "rule" the upstairs and Mr. Cooper couldn't seem to put his trust in Ben, most likely because of the color of his skin. All of the bickering and disagreement between the two men (metaphorically, the two races) eventually leads to the demise not only of the two men but of everyone in the house. At the end of the film when Ben is murdered by the white police officers because they didn't realize he was a human I thought about the flag from the beginning, waving metaphorically in the graveyard and symbolizing the death of America. I tried to use Hall's article to break the flag down, the flag is the sign, the signifier is the flag, the form of the American Flag, its stars and stripes and the cloth of what it is made, and the signified is the concept of the flag, and here it is representing "the meaninglessness and deadliness of patriotism" (Harper p. 5). 

Another way to apply Hall's ideas of representation is to look at the meaning of the zombies. The meaning, or signified, of the zombies can be interpreted many different ways. They can be seen in a biblical sense as those who rise on "the last day", they can be seen as "the younger generation of Americans which, as it seemed to many in the late 1960s, wanted to overthrow traditions and replace them with new social order" (Harper p. 5), or they could also be seen as "the homeless, AIDS sufferers, drug users, or any other marginalized group" (Harper p. 5). There are many different possible meanings for one single thing in the film and that is why Hall's ideas are particularly important for the interpretation of this film. 

"THE TELEVISION SAID THAT'S THE RIGHT THING TO DO"


Sunday, February 19, 2012

Analysis of The Exorcist



I should start off by saying that I am actually not a fan of horror movies at all and normally I try and avoid them at all costs. For this assignment I decided that if I had to watch one I might as well make a classic that I had been meaning to see for a while, I chose The Exorcist. I found the film to have an eerily slow start that left my entire body stiff waiting for something to happen at about thirty minutes in. It was interesting to watch a film that had less blood and gore to keep my attention and more plot. I couldn’t help but think about the idea of signs when seeing the barking dogs, artifacts, and other religious imagery in the beginning scene in Iraq, which helped me focus on the idea of representation throughout the film.

In terms of the Hall reading, one of the “myths” that stood out to me most in the film was the idea of “children are demons”. I believe that the idea of children being demons came about to me because while watching the film I was thinking about one of the only other horror movies I have seen, Rosemary’s Baby. Rosemary’s Baby came out around the same time and it is about a woman who is unknowingly pregnant with the devil’s child.  Rosemary’s Baby came out around the same time, 1968. After finishing watching The Exorcist I looked around online and another film that came out with the same myth was The Omen, which I have not seen. I feel like this was the beginning of those in powerful media positions teaching us to fear our children. It is possible that I am off on this, however, it seems to match.

After finishing The Exorcist I found myself unbothered by most of what I had seen in the film, which is very uncommon to my typical feelings after watching a horror film. I started thinking about why this might by and I think that it is possible that it has to do with Foucault’s ideas about historical context being the key to the production of knowledge through discourse. I think that I was relatively un-scathed by the material I had seen not because I believe or do not believe in exorcism but because the technology used in 1973 and the special effects are nothing compared to what I am used to and thus I am much less afraid of what I am seeing because it looks so much less real than what I am used to seeing in horror films. The historical context is not only important in aspects of technology but also in changed laws and social norms such as the doctors smoking in the hospital or Father Karras having a few beers to blow off some steam at the bar. Because I know that these laws/social norms I am less likely to believe the other things happening in the film are real.

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Applying Hall to Three News Programs


For this assignment I tried to watch a diverse group of news programs in order to get a better understanding of what is going on with representation in news shows. I chose to watch three news programs on February 10th, 2012 so that I could see which stories were covered in depth by each news program. I watched Democracy Now, The Rachel Maddow Show on MSNBC, and The O’Reilly Factor on Fox. Democracy Now is an extremely Liberal and progressive radio and TV show which features Amy Goodman and Juan Gonzales. The Rachel Maddow is another liberal show, however being that it is on MSNBC (prime time network television) it can only be a certain amount Liberal. Lastly, The O’Reilly Factor is a very traditionally Conservative program on an extremely Conservative network. This turned out to be a great idea because I was able to see very easily the kind of Hall’s representation technique each program adopted.

Democracy Now was the first show that I watched. This program seemed very reflective in my opinion. The show starts with a 10 to 15 minute segment where Amy goes over the headlines from all over the world. On 2/10/2012 those included the $25 billion mortgage relief fund that has been supported by Obama, 8 civilian children killed in a NATO strike on Afghanistan,  work conditions in Apple’s Foxconn facilities in China and the protests surrounding these allegations, and even things like addressing the growing gap between rich and poor as was a headline in the New York Times on Friday Morning. This segment gives the viewer an understanding of a large number of issues going on in the world that many other programs just do not offer. The  show then covers some of the issues more in depth, for this episode it was the $25 billion dollars for the mortgage relief fund and the work conditions in Apple’s Chinese Foxconn facilities.

But no...really...there were 12 suicides last year AT the Foxconn facility...clearly the workers were trying to say something to whoever was listening...

 There were multiple guests for each segment which helped to emphasize that the show is much more of a conversation about the news rather than a yelling match or a “story telling” time for the host. There is a lot that each person on the show adds to the conversation about the issues and it gives the viewer the chance to see another side of the issue that is not covered really on mainstream news stations. I can mention that neither of these top two stories from Democracy Now were even mentioned on Maddow or O’Reilly.

Next I watched The Rachel Maddow Show. As far as Hall’s representation techniques go I would say that this program falls under intentional. Anyone who watches Rachel on a regular basis knows that she has a clear political agenda and opinion that frames how she comments on what is going on in the world. To my surprise, nearly the entire program was about election politics. This was shocking to me, especially since I had just watched Democracy Now and noticed that not one of the 8 or so headlines was about election politics or the GOP. She spoke about the issues from her own standpoint—clearly disagreeing with the Republican candidates—etc, etc. This really seemed intentional to me—the clips she showed of Romney, Gingrich, and Santorum—she selected those clips in order to emphasize her point and opinion and get the “liberal” view out there rather than presenting the issues in the election in a clear and unbiased manner.

The last, and in my opinion, the least was The O’Reilly Factor. This episode Laura Ingraham was taking the reigns for Bill as he was out. I found the representation technique surprisingly hard to detect in this particular episode—however after considerations I would classify it was constructionist. The most emphasized stories were about the GOP and the new legislation that Obama introduced in order to require all religious institutions to provide contraception to women regardless of their beliefs and the changes made to this later when he stated that the institution wouldn’t be required to pay for the contraception if they did not want to—the insurance companies could foot the bill.  There was a guest on the program, a Reverend from Cambridge, MA, who supported the new legislation and this startled and upset Ingraham. She attacked the Reverend saying that she was “pro-abortion” also, and that she must have been one of those members of the clergy who had supported the legislation from the beginning (insinuating that the Reverend was wrong in her opinion). There was just such a clearly defined agenda that did not include anyone, including a guest, to deviate from it at all.

I can't help but think...Why didn't Fox or MSNBC cover anything about the protests against the treatment of workers or news about Foxconn facilities in China...?

I think that it most times that I watch the news, especially the local news I notice that there is much more of a constructionist approach however I believe that due to the fact that elections are “coming up” most stations are focused on covering every second of that nonsense. I highly recommend Democracy Now as a regular news program because in all this election haze we are missing tons of information and events that are slipping by right under our noses—everything from the XL pipeline to what is going on with Iran and Syria. We have become so confused as a people by being exposed and un-exposed to critical moments in our history due to these different techniques of representation—it is time that we start to realize what is going on and how to change it. 

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Review of Bowling For Columbine


I personally find Bowling for Columbine to be Michael Moore's best film, not only because I am interested in the material it covers but also because I think that the small injections of satire into the plot make this gruesome and devastating issue somewhat bearable. I should say that I am absolutely pro-gun control but I think that the fact that Moore himself is part of the NRA and chose to focus on this particular issue of American culture is key to the films success. Having the film, Bowling for Columbine, done by someone who is completely anti 2nd Amendment would have resulted in a completely different picture, it most likely would not have contained the same interviews, humorous cartoon, and overall "take" on the situation.



“Yes our children were indeed something to fear, they had turned into little monsters, but who was to blame?”

One of the most intriguing parts of the film for me was the segment about who is to blame for the school shootings. I thought that what Marilyn Manson offered in his brief opportunity to debate the allegations that he was to blame for Columbine was incredibly well said; “you put on a record and it’s not going to yell at you for how you are dressed, it’s going to make you feel better about it”. I can remember the Columbine shootings quite well. I remember watching the news coverage after the shootings happened and being confused and scared—much like the rest of the American public. However, I remember talking in classes about why we though this had happened and what we could do to keep it from happening again and when Marilyn Manson and other heavy metal or punk musicians came under fire by those in power for being the cause of the tragic events at Columbine. It was even obvious to me at the time, a ten year old girl, that musicians were not the cause of this. The part of Manson’s interview that I was not familiar was the theory that “keep everyone afraid and they’ll consume”. After Columbine my high school in Litchfield, CT went “buck-wild”. They invested limited funding in security cameras, we hired a police officer to be present in the school building at all times that school was in session, they started locking all the doors after the second bell so that one would have to be seen on camera before they were buzzed into the main lobby, and we started having “code white” drills. These drills were bomb and intruder drills where we were instructed to close the blinds, lock the doors, and wait under our desks while the administrative staff came by and checked if the doors were locked and made sure we were silent. This was the first time that I had experienced fear in my school, maybe even in my town—the first time that I felt as though it was possible for something like Columbine to happen in little ole’ Litchfield, Connecticut. I must say, keeping us afraid worked, we all went home to our parents talking about how school had installed new security equipment and such and then parents started wondering, “If the school has it, I should probably have it too, right?” This was the point that our little suburb decided it was time to start protecting ourselves from the “wackos out there” that James Nichols was talking about!  



I think that the conclusion that Michael Moore comes to: “a public that is this out of control with fear should not have a lot of guns or ammo hanging around” is simply wonderful in that it is so obvious! Everyone is busy pointing fingers at who is responsible for the U.S.A’s 11,127 gun related deaths per year that they don’t even realize what is right in front of them, fear. The fear that is engrained in us through American television and other media is at the root of our problem. A great example of this was the clip of Moore in a bar watching the local news in the evening in Canada—Canadians do not watch the same things that we watch—their breaking news is “NEW SPEED BUMPS” while ours is about some person of color who committed a violent crime on a white man. Gerbner’s thesis of the mean world syndrome is clearly alive and well in Bowling for Columbine. Unfortunately, since this film came out there has been little change made in the way of gun control and even less change in the way of violent programming, but that doesn’t mean it’s not possible!

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Review of "The Mean World Syndrome"



I suppose I should start off by saying that this is not the first time I have seen “The Mean World Syndrome”. Like many other students in Communication 497AJ I have seen this film in several other courses that I have taken at the University of Massachusetts. However, I must be clear that this film seems to resonate more deeply with me each time I have seen it—I suppose that has to do with building on the knowledge that I have gained from other classes I have taken in the Communication major.

                The film “The Mean World Syndrome” focuses on the effect that heavy viewers of television and other violent media sources experience life in what was deemed “The Mean World” by George Gerbner. Basically this is means that those heavy viewers are more not exactly more likely to commit violent acts but rather that they are more likely to be fearful of violent acts being committed upon them. I found the discussion that Gerbner gave about the difference between real violence and “happy violence” to be especially intriguing this time around. Gerbner uses the term “happy violence” to describe highly entertaining and not disturbing scenes of violence that always lead to a happy ending. The biggest problem with this kind of programming is of course that we are being desensitized to real violence because we are so caught up in “happy violence”. We do not see the images of the two continuing wars that we are fighting because those are not happy, they are real and they are disturbing and obviously do not lead to a happy ending and thus those images are off limits in the propaganda machine.

                Gerbner also talks about cultivation. In this sense Gerbner uses the term cultivation to describe “a steady stream of messages and concepts that shape our view”. These violent images, especially those involving Arabs and Muslims (clips shown from “Reel Bad Arabs”) as well as Hispanic and Black peoples are key in determining social stratifications that are leading us into class warfare. I couldn’t help but think about the connections between Glassner’s idea that one of our real fears should be about the class warfare that is unfolding right under our noses and how it is created through these portrayals of racial minorities are drug users, murderers, thieves, kidnappers, rapists, etc. This is just another example of how we are allowing these unjust activities continue on and on while we stand idly by and watch them for our own entertainment value.  



                The one thing that disappointed me about the film “The Mean World Syndrome” was that there were not really any solutions offered in the end. Gerbner merely suggests that we need to create a system “that is more fair, equitable, just and less damaging”. I understand that as a goal however I would have appreciated a bit more of a substantial conclusion. There is no doubt that through the extensive research that Gerbner completed in his lifetime he came up with some incredibly valuable suggestions for change and I would have liked to hear some of them. With that in mind, I must conclude by saying that this film was not only entertaining but informative and relatable even after several past viewings.