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    Page 31 of 32 - About 316 Essays
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    Humor In Homer's Raunchy

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    A sexually uptight TV host, who has never had an orgasm, embarks on a sexual odyssey to experience her first one, but her obsession jeopardizes her engagement. STORY COMMENTS FINDING HER O presents as a raunchy, romantic comedy with an organically funny premise with the idea of the protagonist going in search of her first orgasm. It’s a fun concept. It’s also refreshing to have a female protagonist drive the plot and, in addition, it nice to see a script that focuses on the sexual…

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    Husband and wife marital counselors find their own marriage in trouble when the husband begins an affair with the wife of a couple living in their home prompting the foursome to agree to an unconventional living arrangment. SYNOPSIS MAGGIE and ELLIOT WILSON (middle aged) are relationship counselors who counsel others on how to keep love, passion, and intimacy alive in a marriage. Their own marriage is tested when Elliot band Maggie invite KAREN and ARNIE GREEN into their home while their own…

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    Sexual Odyssey

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    the love story won’t work. Find ways to elevate their chemistry and convince the audience that they do belong together. The other options are that she leaves Harry and finds someone else, or at the end she decides that she wants to be single. The subplot involving Dr. Zane, unfortunately, doesn’t generate strong humor and it doesn’t feel fully credible. The idea that Dr. Zane has his own sexual issues adds too much distraction and competes with Izzy and Harry. In other words, this sometimes…

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    Mothers In The Sula

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    The power and Influence of mothers in society After reading through the two novels, this one summer by Jillian, Mariko Tamaki’s and The Sula’s by Toni Morrison, we understand that the two novels demonstrate how family and friends connect to prevalent issues individual identity, sexuality, and race? The both novels expressed the gender inequality as well as the ideology of how women. View each other. A careful review of the novel, This One Summer, and Sula shows lack of love, friendship and…

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    Famous- known about by many people. How does the son of an unsuccessful salesman become amongst the most famous American authors of all time, and the author of a book discussed in high school curriculum all across the nation? He does something unprecedented, taboo. F. Scott Fitzgerald was a man of his times. He wrote during the Jazz age, about the Jazz age, in all of its glory. A less discussed attribute of this time period was that, along with the rise of independence instilled in women and the…

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    g” (49). Race is societal and cultural in America, so is gender. And interweaving with them is the issue of class. The ideology about race, gender and class in American society indicates hierarchies that values white over black, males over females. Deriving from this hierarchy are oppression and revolt that keep shaping America till today. Movie is one of the lens for examining this hierarchy in America, both reflecting the ideology of societies and influencing it—the 1934 and 1959 versions of…

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    King Lear is widely regarded as Shakespeare’s most intense and powerful tragedy. The bleakness of a Jacobean tragedy takes an embodiment in King Lear. The parallels and juxtapositions between the play’s main plot, and subplot combined with its tragic end, has made Shakespeare’s version of King Lear famous for centuries. Since its conception King Lear has befuddled audiences and readers alike with its seemingly messy plot that raises more questions than it answers. In this essay, I will, with a…

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    Nicholas Georgiadis collaborated with MacMillan on multiple occasions throughout his career. His set designs along with John B. Read’s lighting design creates a “vast production” (Thornhill). However, the “core component” of the vast production is “the evolution of Romeo and Juliet’s relationship, from their initial shyness to their final moments” (Thornhill). Georgiadis’ designs create an “evocative, visual history of [Romeo and Juliet] and the dancers who created it” (Brown). In keeping with…

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    Frying your Brain on the Internet: Social Media is Cooking your Gray Matter Kathryn Fitzgerald -- July 18, 2016 Even though Steven Johnson's essay contains convincing arguments, his thesis that "Watching TV Makes you Smarter" (120) is overwhelmed by a tsunami of scientific evidence to the contrary. Nicolas Carr's essay deals with a different type of media -- internet browsing -- and takes the opposite stance to Johnson. Carr asks, "Is Google Making us Stupid?" (609). Even though both…

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    in Scandal to Annalise in How to Get Away with Murder, black women are on-screen professionals now more than ever. Although black women are seen dealing with issues in their stories’ plot, the great majority of these plots take a back seat to the subplot of romance. The success of black women in media is relentlessly measured by their love life. Regardless of the success of their financial, employment, or platonic relationships, black women are still conceived in the media to act as if love will…

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