Sunday, October 24, 2010

The oh-so-lovable rants

There are many, many, many, things that I could rant about but I had to narrow it down to things I could propose solutions for. Therefor the famous I-hate-children rant has been left out, but I still have these:

  1. People who think they are so incredibly fantastic when really, they are perfectly average. Even possibly lower than average. People who for some reason feel the need to spend every waking hour of every day talking to every single person they meet about how fantastic they are. Talking about the amazing skill they possess in every area of their life. About how good they are at their respective instrument in band. It takes every ounce of restraint that I have not to stand up and yell "You think you're so fantastic? I would like to tell you, you SUCK." Honestly I would. Or about how well they did on a test they took or how good their grade in a class is or how just eveyone in the entire world loves them. Cocky, would be the word to summarize these people. Hate would be an admittedly slightly strong but fairly accurate word to describe how I feel about them.
Now that I've calmed myself slightly after that, I continue with the second (and last that I will write about) thing that drives me absolutely nuts.
 
   2.   People, people, please, please, please realize that replace "good" and "well". I never took grammar, I don't know if that is technically a grammatical mistake you could be penalized for, or what exactly is wrong with doing that, but I know it sounds terribly, terribly wrong to say "I did good." and not "I did well." Another thing, on that note, "is" and "are" are not interchangable words. "Is" refers to a singular object, "are" refers to plurals. Please, people, do not say "we is going" to do this or that, it drives me absolutley nuts! Its not even that deifficult to realize what the difference is, you can tell when to use one and when to use the other. I understand the good and well thing is a little different, but those aren't interchangable either and you can tell the difference! Its not hard, really. So if everyone would please learn to speak correctly for my benefit (selfish I know, so sue me) that would be fantastic.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Noam Chomsky and his antics. Though personally I liked Nim Chimpsky better.

Is antics really the appropriate word to use there? I don't know, I wanted a creative title. Not that that even really counts. Well, I was gone on friday and therefor saw very little of this film compared to how much I could have had I been present. What I did see was admittedly incredibly boring and hard to follow. Maybe thats just because I was tired. I did get an argument out of the droning of this video, though. The media is in total control of the amount of information, and type of information, presented to the general public. They decide what to print, they decide with what bias to write it. And they can, as the ones who give us all the information they have the power to do what they want, to take out certain facts, to set the tone of the article, to present highly unimportant details as huge news and to hide the things that really matter. The question, or one of as there are many, is should they  be allowed to do this? Do they even realize what they're doing, and the results of their writings?
I found this article (below) about tactics the media uses to make a story more interesting than it actually is. So, maybe the media knows exactly what they're doing when they choose what they think the American public needs to know. Here are the points I found:
  • False Novelty: Making something look like news when, in fact, it has been known for a long time.  
  • False Urgency- creating a sense that things are happening quickly or developing, to add drama. 
  • Exaggerated Risk- reporting on a very unlikely danger without giving the chances that it will actually happen (which, I would assume, are usually fairly low. the odds of someone getting struck by lightning are actually higher than a lot of things people consider to be terrifying and altogether possible events.)
  • Skipping over details: leaving things out that (no matter their relevence) may make the story less exciting to read.
  • Naming news: giving titles or nicknames to make the news read more like an action story or movie.
And thats not even mentioning the bias that all media reporters write with. Its unavoidable, I know. But it's there.

If anyone felt the need to look at examples or check my paraphrasing for accuracy :)

Anyway, all of this relates back to what Noam Chomsky (though I really like the monkey, Nim Chimsky, much better. He's a lot cuter :) ) was saying in the documentary. He made the point that the media controls our knowledge, and they do. The examples given in the film of Cambodia and East Timore (if I spelled that correctly at all) were completely valid and frankly terrifying. That the media could have such knowledge and willingly keep it from the American public was astounding. The New York Times, I think it was, paraphrased an article from the London Times. They took it down to probably a third of the information given in the London print, and as an affect we Americans were once again ill-informed. We don't know what could have been done if we'd had all the facts; we don't even know if anything would have been done at all; but isn't it within our rights to figure that out for ourselves? Not to have the media determine it for us? Imagine if the coverage of 9.11 had been less. Already there are things that are sure to have been left out of the media that are known about those attacks. If we had been given even less information, who knows what would have happened. Would we have accepted our ignorance and moved on? I don't think so. Personally the idea of not knowing who was behind it, or what the plans were, or any other information that would have been left out is terrifying. Noam Chomsky and his very attractive glasses were right in saying the media controls what we know. And I think that is wrong. On so very many levels.
                                                        


Sunday, October 10, 2010

Exerpts.

So for my open blog assignment I couldn't decide what to write about! So I decided to take an exerpt out of the peice I've been writing in my spare time. I was just working on it today, and it seemed like a pretty decent idea. So, heres just a small segment from what I've been writing for Novel Club with Mrs. Decker:

Now, half an hour later, Zahira was in the same position on her bed she had flopped down in when she had come in. She had so many questions rolling around in her head, but none of them mattered to her at that moment. He had accepted her, the way she was. And she suddenly had more than just a friend in Robbie. She didn’t know what he was to her, but she knew she was happy about it. She finally drifted off to sleep feeling blissful, as if everything would be perfect, with a smile on her face.
The next day she woke up even happier than ever. She sighed and curled her toes up in her blankets, just reveling in the moment. Zahira never wanted to move, she was blissfully aware that if she did she’d have to go about doing things like showering, studying, and finish up her homework. However, she was pulled out of this mood by a musical-sounding knock on her door. She jumped up in bed and glanced at the clock. It read eleven thirty, she had slept late. Zahira got out of bed and looked down at her appearance. Silk camisole and green short shorts. She shrugged, not caring, and opened the door to Robbie’s face looking in on her.


So, yeah, I cut if off there to avoid tons of dialogue on my blog. Its still a work in progress and thats just a tiny exerpt from chapter seven. Hope its not terrible :)