Monday, October 12, 2009
Corporately funded news
I’m sure we are all aware of a certain celebrity blogger by the name of Perez Hilton. Now I love Perez Hilton and all, but I know that he may not always be right. A couple years ago Perez Hilton claimed on his blog that Fidel Castro had died; he was the president of Cuba. Perezhilton.com being so successful that many readers believed what he had written. Of course when you hear this you believe it’s true? I mean it’s Perez Hilton, but later on did we find out that in fact Fidel Castro was not dead that Perez himself was given faulty facts. This comes to show that not everything you hear or read about is necessarily true just because the source may seem trustworthy or may hold a valuable reputation.
This brings us to another type of corporately funded news which includes Entertainment. Do you pass by stores and notice magazine headlines that just sound so outrageous and crazy. Why is it that these tabloids are able to print such false news and fabricated argument’s and still people believe every word of it as if it were being said by CNN or BBC. By reading such false news people lose sight of what is real news.
So, there are many different serious news that are corporately funded but I choose to talk more about the entertainment side just because more people are able to relate it back to them. We all know we love Hollywood and every time we pass the checkout counter we just walk slowly to read the new leads from People magazine or Ok. We just need to know how it affects us.
Work cited
Corporate-funded studies a concern. Mer Eckstut, 30 Oct. 2003.10 Oct. 2009. http://thedp.com/node/40538
Reality
So if The Hills is not real then what is? Chuck Klosterman in his book, ‘Sex, Drugs and Coco Puffs,’ writes about reality and what it is. He compares many movies and one that mentioned is Mulholland Drive. I myself have seen this movie and did not quit like it because I couldn’t really tell what was real until the very end. After the film you question what reality is and what is real. The fundamental question is, what is real? Well we all have a different perspective of what reality is because of what we have been exposed to growing up.
All I know is that anything is possible and that’s what I believe. Writing about reality I also came across something crazy and you have to be an open minded person to believe this or at least try to be.
The Time traveler’s wife a movie starring Rachael McAdams and Eric Bana is about a man who can time travel and meets his future bride when she was just a little girl. So it got me thinking about if time traveling was real and I heard from a friend that it was possible, and then I stumbled upon this clip. This man claims that he found a portal under his kitchen sink. So he went to fix his leaking sink by crawling through the bottom until he was able to stand up. He met the future him and videotaped it so people would believe him. The question is, is it real?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E2sp-clMk8s
Now with such crazy things we see on TV and of all the new innovative experiments and cures, so with technology progressing at an alarming rate, is it still possible? Well, no one’s certain but I’m a believer and I do believe anything is possible.
“The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and science.”
-Albert Einstein
Work cited
Abovetopsecret.com. 21 Apr. 2007. Web. Oct. 2009.
http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread278967/pg1.
Collected Quotes from Albert Einstein. Kevin Harris, 1995. Web. 11 Oct. 2009.
http://rescomp.stanford.edu/~cheshire/EinsteinQuotes.html.
Kristin Cavallari: 'The Hills' isn't real, the producers tell me what to do. Christopher Rocchio, 30 Sept. 2009. Web. 11 Oct. 2009.
http://www.realitytvworld.com/news/kristin-cavallari-the-hills-isnt-real-producers-tell-me-what-do-9632.php.
Analysing advertisements

I was looking around for the perfect ad to discuss when I happened to run into this certain ad which was perfect. I have never really heard of companies using sex to sell cars, I always thought it was for clothing, shoes, accessories, etc. but not cars.
Here you can see the front seat of the car, the seat and the hand brake. By looking at this ad we all know what the handbrake is supposed to represent and I just found this so funny and amusing because again, I have never seen a company use such tactics to get across their product.
I think this ad is trying to convey the message that if you buy this car you will get lucky in more ways than one as well as be on your A-game in terms of having the latest toys. Also, if you notice the slogan, ‘We’re just excited as you,’ is just perfect to describe this car. Another term associated with this car is, ‘And you thought this was just a family car.’ Both these slogans use innuendos. I think what this ad is trying to get across is that the Volvo is the newest and hippest car for you to get weather you’re single or have a family because of its versatility. It’s directed to anyone and everyone weather you’re a teacher, student, mother, father, everyone.
In Chuck Klosterman’s book ‘Sex, Drugs and Coco puffs,’ Klosterman writes about “the acceleration of culture” when talking about porn. He was referring to amateur porn and professional porn and how people prefer amateur porn on the internet. People like watching porn that has these people looking like normal people like the girl next door, your neighbour, teachers, etc. What these people like is watching attractive reachable targets because it gives them a sense of hope. Also, Klosterman writes about how sex is something anyone can relate to as long as what they are seeing is reachable. Now you may wonder, what does this Volvo ad have anything to do with porn? Well, this ad and porn have a lot that correlate with one another. This ad is made for everyone. I believe that this ad is an example of amateur porn in the sense that this car is something anyone can attain. This car is something everyone can relate to because almost everyone has a car so it’s a common ground between people. So for the company advertising the Volvo car, I saw we do our share and buy the car only then will it make us all united right?
Work cited
15 Ads That Prove Sex Sells... Best? Amy Gifford, 2006. Web. 8 Oct. 2009. http://inventorspot.com/articles/ads_prove_sex_sells_5576.
Klosterman, Chuck. Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs. New York: Scribner, 2003.
Mass Media
The mass media to me is media in any form being presented to a large audience. It takes many forms such as broadcast Medias like radio and television, print broadcasting like news papers and magazines, and the internet. My perception of what the media is varies from individual to individual because of my experiences. For instance, I myself love the media for the main purpose of communication. Others may not see it the same way because they may believe that the media is full of fake news or bias.
In the book written by John Berger, ‘Ways of Seeing’, you see women in oil paintings naked. These paintings were made by men for men. To me this was a form of mass media in the past because this was a form of entertainment that many men were exposed to. Men were the medium that would publicise or communicate their work and the women were the message.
When oil paintings were seen it was an art piece that you could get lost in because it appealed to your senses. In the past, that was what was popular in their culture, for the rich to have the wealth, power and women while the others envied them. Oil painting erases reality for a moment and allows the viewers to be engulfed in this new reality where what they see is what they get. That to me is my understanding of what the mass media is. It takes different forms and is a way to escape reality. To me, that may not always be a bad thing
Work cited
Berger, John. Ways of Seeing. London: British Broadcasting Corporation and Penguin Books, 2008.
The Ecology of Media
Americanization is changing the face of the world and ultimately, many countries are losing their cultural identity. Many girls now across the world are watching shows such as Gossip Girl and are being influenced to believe what they see as real and acceptable. Now all around the world people are becoming more ‘Americanized’ and thus losing their true cultural identity because of the television.
Neil Postman believes that our society has not plummeted to levels of intellectual deprivation and that the television does not have enough ‘resonance’ to change the truth of reality. My understanding of what reality is, is the world we inhabit. As kids are watching shows and movies that contain violence, I strongly believe our youths are being desensitized to violence. With that, television can change the truth of our world therefore changing the reality we live in. Also, I believe our society has plummeted in levels of intellectual deprivation because now what we watch is being taken in for face value and no being properly understood. As a result of this lack of ability for the viewers to compare the difference between truth and fabrication, viewers are losing that one thing that holds true to them and allowing it to fade away, their intellect.
The television can be a device that can do more good than harm if used properly. It’s a tool to help understand global events, and is a form of entertainment. ‘Television, for Postman is inextricably linked with entertainment and is dangerous when it attempts to be serious.’ I agree with this statement because if entertainment and gossip is taken serious then we believe it and therefore we are being influenced by false perception. It’s important to understand the importance of the television and to understand all the cultural implications the television has to offer. ‘The medium is the message,’ is what Marshall McLuhan said and what he meant by this was that the medium is merging itself within the message which is creating a relationship where the medium is influencing how the message is being perceived.
work cited
The Playboy Interview: Marshal McLuhan. March 1969. 5 October 2009 http://heim.ifi.uio.no/~gisle/links/mcluhan/pb.html.
Marshall McLuhan: Media is the message. Todd Kappelman, 14 July 2002. 5 October. 2009. http://www.leaderu.com/orgs/probe/docs/mcluhan.html.