Monday, November 19, 2007

More News - This Really Happened-

This is from the AP: COSTUME INCIDENT COULD COST MYERS POST. Myers, director of Immigration and customs Enforcement, and two other agency managers gave "the most original" costume award to a white employee who came to the agency's Halloween party dressed as an escaped prisoner with dreadlocks and darkened skin.

Where do they get their news?

We are doing focus groups in our qualitative class on the topic pertaining to where certain classifications of people get their news. One student said she did a focus group with newspaper reporters. She described them as being cynical. They were also expressed that they get a lot of news from a lot of places and feel saturated. I'm not a reporter-yet... but I already feel saturated with so much stuff people just throw on the NET and here I am comparing and contrasting trying to figure out who is doing the factual reporting - if anything like that exists. So what's my point - how much saturation does it take for humans to be ate up with consumption (flaky news and entertainment) before they retire or expire literally and figuratively? Is there a pill we can take for this so we won't get too bloated and uncomfortable and at the same time don't feel any side effects?

Just to let you know - Santa Claus is a fat dude who is a bad role model for children who are overweight. If you are planning on doing the Santa claus thing this season (extra employment at the mall) don't say HO, HO, HO, but say HA, HA, HA (that was posted in the news online) and if you are worried about recalled toys from China - just think of all the toys we've had in our lifetime before 2007 that had tons of lead paint that weren't even from China. And as far as the bad hamburger meat, does anyone out there knows that the U.S. has more cases of e-coli going around that most underdeveloped nations? Why? Because people in underdeveloped nations eat fresh meat (when they have it) and don't eat ground beef that is processed in unsanitary processing plants. Like the local bovine personality says on TV - "Eat more chikin!"

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Do yo think you may be a nerd?

Find out if you are a nerd. Take a test. Go to www.nerdtest.com. Don't worry, you won't be graded.

Friday, November 9, 2007

A Lesson in Semiotics

My qualitative classs required that we search journal articles reflecting semiotic analysis.

I located an article "The male heart and the female mind: A study in the gendering of antideprressants and cardiovascular drugs in advertisements in Irish medical publication" by Phillip Curry and Marita O'Brien . They showed how messages directed to an audience are created to influence consumers - in this case how signs were used to influence the consumers of medications. Signs are associated with meaning and are associated with "codes" we pick up. Distinct images are used by advertisers in medical publications to identify patients at risk of or suffering from depression and cardiovascular disease. Content analysis in advertisments displaying humans showed that 91.17 percent of the users of cardiovascular medication were male and 85.7 percent using anti-dperessants were female. This showed the difference was highly significant and there was an extremely strong relationship between gender of user and the category of the drug advertised. Women in anti-dpressant medication ads are shows as being passive, sad and helpless. Men in cardio-vascular medication ads are shown in control, engaging in activities such as dancing and jogging - think of our own American ad with the inventor of the Jarvik artificial heart and the doctor jogging with his son. The images focused on activity rather than on the individual. Also signifiers, such as clothing - outdoor clothing for men engaging in outdoor activity imply a continuation of a healthy lifestyle whereas women are depicted as aging and becoming depressed, becasue of it, and are shown wearing grey and sitting on a floor holding their knees. In Ireland men have a higher suicide rate than women, yet men are shown less in ads for anti-depressants. it is interesting to note that in the Republic of Ireland the legislation controls drug advertisements and those advertisements are only permitted in medical publications. Think of how we are bombarded in the US with pharmaceutical advertisements in every magazine from Newsweek to Family Circle.

Thursday, November 8, 2007


I attended the Holocaust testimonial of William and Rosalie on November 7 at UNT. For those of you who missed it, William and Rosalie are Holocaust survivors and gave their testimony that was subsequently written into a book that was published through the Mayborn Literary Non-Fiction conference . Rosalie spoke about Oskar Schindler , the German Catholic entrepreneur who saved hundreds of Jews who were destined to go to death camps during WWII by convincing the Nazis that he would make the Jews productive by using them as forced labor working in his factories. Those Jewish survivors and their families will never forget Shindler and what he did to keep them alive by using this ploy. Oskar Shindler is buried in a Catholic Cemetery outside the Old City of Jerusalem in Israel. Jews customarily place stones on the gravesites of those they wish to remember and honor. In this picture, Shindler's gravesite is shown covered with stones. I paid tribute to Shindler in January of 2006 and took this photo. The enamelware made in Shindler's factories are on exhibit at Yad Vashem, the Holocaust Museum in Jerusalem. A facsimile of Shindler's list is also on display.

Friday, October 26, 2007

Jacquielyn Floyd's Article

I had to force myself to read Floyd's article. It is like forcing myself to watch TV. So what exactly is Floyd's point? I guess I have handled too many murder investigations in my life as a cop and when I become a reporter I'm going to be ahead of the silly games regular reporters play. Floyd says, "It is just means that every so often we all get it wrong." I would suggest that she speak for herself. I'd like to hear what the other students think about this.

Friday, October 19, 2007

Metrosexuals

In our text book, Soldow cited Simpson (2002) that metrosexuals easily fit the gay stereotype of being interested in and concerned about fashion, style and grooming and, "As such, they are attractive to both heterosexual women and homosexual men and report not being threatened by the attractiveness to the latter. Metrosexuals are urban, heterosexual males who are often mistaken for being gay although they are not disturbed by the inaccurate assumption (p. 326).

The Tumi (luggage) ad in the New Yorker, Sept. 24, 2007, issue depicts what appears to be a metrosexual. Ermenegildo Zegna also shows two males posing in winter jackets - they too are depicted as metrosexuals. Then you have a "Hear the world" ad with Placido Domingo. I just like the way he sings - His message raises awareness of the importance of hearing and the support for projects helping hearing impaired people. The message is clear cut. As for metrosexuals - they look "beautiful" and that's what the advertising people succeeded in doing for everyone who cares about fashion, luggage or whatever.

I am reading a book on reserve at the Willis titled "Qualitative Researching with Text, Image and Sound," edited by Martin W. Bauer and George Gaskell. It addresses a lot of what we are covering.