Breakfast

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    Breakfast Club Stereotypes

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    The Breakfast Club This movie is about a day of Saturday detention and group of teenagers fitting in your typical high school stereotypes. It was brilliantly written with teenagers in mind. They could identify with each character and their portrayed stereo type. They all had at least one thing in common and that was that they didn’t get along with their parents. This is realistic for who really got or gets along with their parents in high school. You are in the process of finding yourself and…

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    The Breakfast Club is a timeless moving picture that captures the essence of the different social groupings of the American teenager. The film uses the setting of a Saturday morning detention to portray how different cliques interact with each other, and how they can ultimately melt together to create a unique coterie. In the movie, five different socializations are represented by individuals coming from those backgrounds, John Bender, the criminal, Claire Standish, the princess, Andrew Clark,…

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    The Movie, “The Breakfast Club” by John Hughes and the short story “The Bicycle” written by Jillian Horton share many similarities in regards to, rebellion, living dreams through others, and characters throughout both stories. It’s important to discuss these two different stories because of the effect they can have on an influential person, regardless of being about two totally distinct stories from two very different times. In both “The Breakfast Club” and “The Bicycle” there is a strong…

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    OVERALL BED AND BREAKFAST INDUSTY STATUS OF THE OVERALL INDUSTRY A bed and breakfast is typically a small lodging establishment that offers overnight stays for guests and sometimes serves breakfast in the morning. These places are typically private homes that use their spare rooms for the guests. There are numerous reasons for travelers to choose Bed and Breakfast establishments over traditional hotels. Bed and Breakfast lodgings on the average are at least fifty percent cheaper than…

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    The Breakfast Club is a film detailing a Saturday detention involving five very different students who are forced into each other’s company and share their stories. All the students are deviant in their own way and eventually are able to look past their differences and become friends. The film also offers detailed observations of social status, the different aspects of identity formation, social sanctions, and the three different sociological perspectives. The first concept seen in the film is…

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    movie that I have chosen about contemporary American high school social life is the 1985 classic, The Breakfast Club. I chose this movie because I believe it displays an accurate representation of the sociological discussion from Milner’s article. Milner talks about how norms are important when it comes to shaping a student’s status in schools. Everyone knows the famous quote from the breakfast club “You see us as you want to see us, in the simplest terms, in the most convenient definitions. But…

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    Let's get one thing straight. We are not the Breakfast Club. We did not meet by chance, and we did not leave whether or not we would always be friends a mystery to those who were watching us. As far as I know, we will always be friends, and if we are not, I’ll always try to remember what made us, us. But in terms of the Breakfast Club, I believe we have helped each other quite a bit, and we all are extremely different. It was right before the summer, so the day was warm but also wet and…

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    6 Movie Paper: The Breakfast Club The Breakfast Club is a classic 1980’s John Hughes movie that exemplified many social psychology theories and ideas. The movie opens at Shemer High School with five students who are dropped off by their guardian for an all-day Saturday detention. These students are Andrew, Claire, Brian, John, and Alison from varying social groups. Each student is assigned a stereotypical nickname with John Bender designated “The Criminal", Andrew Clark is "The Athlete", Brian…

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    The Breakfast Club is a well-known 1980’s movie directed by John Hughes. It follows five teenagers who end up in detention on Saturday due to their actions during the school week. Each of these teenagers come from a different social group and immediately judge one another but after getting to know one another they realize that they are more similar than they first thought. Each character in this film commits deviant behaviors. A deviant behavior is a behavior that/…. Andrew Clark is a…

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    nerd. Does that answer your question? Sincerely yours, the Breakfast Club.” That's not necessarily how John Hughes chose to end his 1985 blockbuster The Breakfast Club (Hughes), but a 2016-2017 rewrite might follow suit in the same way. In each and every high school, subcultures and stereotypes are perpetuated unto students that seem to fit according to their peers, but are they necessarily fair? Judd Nelson’s character in The Breakfast Club didn’t seem to have much of a choice in the title of…

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