I watched the Greg Gutfeld Show on the Fox News Channel for my media analysis. It airs on the weekends from 9:00pm - 10:00pm. It is hosted by Greg Gutfeld and this week’s guests were Anthony Cumia, Carrie Keagan, Katherine Timpf, and Tyrus. Throughout the show, Gutfeld and his guests discussed the political news of the week with a comedic twist.…
In the article The Trump Doctrine: Make America Guess Again, Tim Mak pokes fun at Trumps latest mishap at the Mayflower hotel on Wednesday afternoon. Trump is supposed to be making America great again but he is rather delivering speeches that he knew nothing beyond what was scrolling across the teleprompter. As stated by Mak, "But there…
1. According to the text, self-presentation is something that we act out in response to the expectations of others. It is how one chooses to present themselves to an audience. Self- presentation is the cardinal decision that one chooses to make.…
The American mentality has shifted from “we” to “#me.” Narcissism has been on the rise for the past twenty years. John Paul Titlow, author of “#Me: Instagram Narcissism and the Scourge of the Selfie,” believes that social media has caused a culture of “digital narcissism.” This narcissism gives Americans the ability to look into others’ lives and see private aspects while also allowing an attractive person to become famous for being attractive (Titlow 122-124). In this essay, Titlow writes, “The third most used hashtag on Instagram is #Me” (122).…
But further in the debate Trump seemed to make a few false claims. Along with the fact that further into the debate Trump seemed to lose his temperament, even though he claims the opposite. Collinson stated, “he made inaccurate statements on everything from laws regarding policing, his support for the Iraq War and his contention that Clinton was behind the so-called birther conspiracy.” After the debate Trump claimed he was happy with the outcome of the debate. Trump told CNN’s Dana Bash, “It went better than I ever…
Guyland is an attempt to look inside the minds of American males as they progress through a lengthening “pre-adulthood,” which is aimed to provide clarity into this relevantly new life stage. In order to accomplish such a task, Kimmel speaks with hundreds of millennials from the ages of 16-26 on topics covering sex, sports, media, and even how certain “rites” are necessary for young men to enter “Guyland.” Kimmel discovers a novel and thriving male dominated subculture through these testimonies, one which traps young men into a reactionary community that denounces emotion, depth, and individuality in favor of communal strength and solidarity. With “Guyland” being one of the most influential subcultures on the future men of America, Kimmel hopes…
Everyday people view articles and stories that are produced by the media. Just one event can create hundreds of different stories explaining the event. Each type of media and each company produces a different story. It is so hard to distinguish which articles are telling the truth and which ones aren’t. The hardest articles to see the truth in are ones involving politics or large scale world issues.…
In the article, “When all news is ‘fake’, whom do we trust?” the author Ruth Marcus writes from an interesting point of view about the media. Her article provides no biasness and only gives facts about the media and the society at large. She leaves the begging question as to whether the media should or should not be trusted by the society to the reader of the article. She provides facts to support her article, the technique of the author’s delivery is established as formal.…
Furthermore, Hooks also talks about how stereotyping and the concept of invisibility is made aware through the black imagination. For example: ‘Blacks, I realized, were simply invisible to most white people except as a pair of hands offering a drink on a silver tray.’ Reduced to the machinery of bodily physical labor, black people learned to appear before whites as though they were zombies, cultivating the habit of casting the gaze downward so as not to appear uppity. To look directly was an assertion of subjectivity, equality. Safety resided in the pretense of invisibility (Hooks 30).…
Colbert makes homophobia seem single-minded, sexists look like Neanderthals, censorship childish, and Racists as outdated and unwanted as the United States’ Postal Service. As I stated earlier satire is a complicated form of comedy, as an example the Stephen Colbert you have likely seen today on the Colbert Report is not actually what the man is like off camera. Though I know from news interviews of Colbert being out of character that he is Catholic, from the South, but is not conservative, obviously. (BIO, n.d) Colbert’s humor is viewed as liberal satire, meaning it makes conservatives look like uninformed idiots. Colbert is also known to rip on major slam talk show hosts like Bill O’Reilly, which make sense because Colbert created his character to be just as obnoxious as Bill O’Reilly…
The second presidential debate was at the Washington University in St. Louis. The moderators for the debate were CNN’s Anderson Cooper and ABC’s Martha Raddatz. The debate was divided into six 15 minute segments, with topics about immigration, national security, health care and many more. In the beginning of the debate a member from the audience asked each candidate if “they feel that they are modeling appropriate and positive behavior for today’s youth, knowing that educators assign viewing the presidential debates as student’s homework?” Each candidate completely ignored the question and went off topic.…
The 2016 presidential election will go down in history as one of the most controversial elections in American history. During the campaigning our lives revolved around news jam-packed with predictions and contentious headlines about both the Republican and Democratic candidates. Most of us were fed up and could not wait until November 8th when the incessant character assignations would finally come to an end. All the while many of us had high hopes for the future mixed with the fear that polls are not always accurate and dreams do not always come true. Finally, on November 8th, the presidential race entered its final lap and it was obvious that the Democratic candidate was trailing in the numbers.…
In the SNL video called "Guns", the cast used exaggeration and incongruity to convey how guns play a role in today's society and what it could be like if we were to allow anyone to own a gun. In this skit the cast of SNL mocked the whole gun control debate and portrays a world were guns are common. It shows everyone owning a gun and these people use their guns freely without questioning anyone's intentions. By showing people doing this it is demonstrating what the world could possibly be like if the government were to allow everyone to own a gun without proper background checks and limitations to the ownership of a firearm.…
ISSUE: Why can't we fight fake news effectively ? The spread of misinformation has been a topic that many are talking about. One serendipitous irony was discussed by Adam H. Johnson in his article, “Everyone Wants to Stop ‘Fake News’ but No One Seems to Know What Exactly It Is”. During his article Johnson discusses an example of wishful thinking in the fight against fake news, “ As The Intercept was quick to point out, PropOrNot’s blacklist included “WikiLeaks and the Drudge Report, as well as Clinton-critical left-wing websites……
Last Week Tonight is a news/satire program hosted by John Oliver. During the program, Oliver discusses current events and attempts to persuade the general audience in his viewing. In the episode “The NCAA,” Oliver attempts to get the audience on his side about unfairly compensated Student-Athletes using logic, credibility, and emotion. This essay will analyze the effectiveness of his persuasive methods.…