Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Portfolio: Looking Back (Cover Letter), MySpace VS Facebook (Essay #1), The Big Move (Essay #2).


Looking Back
            Second semester has really flown by with the blink of an eye.  All throughout my schooling, I have only had two fun English classes this is one of them.  There were many components to this class that I enjoyed and that was actually quite helpful. The workshops helped us students communicate with our peers. It helped us interact first off with our class members. Secondly it helped us with our essays by bouncing our essay ideas around and seeing which one was stupid or not. Before writing an essay, I will now start bouncing around ideas with my brother or someone in general. It really helps you look at different perspectives.
            The movies and documentaries we watched in class were helpful by having a physical visual to watch and see the emotions across many faces that we were introduced to. If I can find a movie or something to watch that’s related to the topic that I am going to write or talk about it would be extremely helpful because you would feel like you are there. It would be easier to add pathos in whatever that’s needs to be discussed.  Like the documentary we watch about Iran. To be honest I did not know anything about Iran, only that America and them did not get along, but did not know the exact reason why.  Being a visual learner myself, it really opened my eyes to the history being the conflicting countries and the emotional toll that got casted upon its citizens.
            In the beginning of the year, everything was so nice and shiny. I was pretty much a lost puppy. Not only did I not know how to navigate around school, but also I did not know anyone. It was terrifying having come from a school that you knew the majority of the people to somewhere where you do not know one persons name. It was definitely a challenge to overcome. Putting aside the social aspect, the academics side was a much more difficult challenge to overcome. College was without question is more difficult than elementary, middle school and high school combined.  The expectations are much higher, and the knowledge is vaster.  Overall something that changed in me was not caring not much about the social aspect of college. In high school, especially the early years, being “cool” and “popular” was the thing that most teens cared about. Of course I would be lying if I said I did not care at all about it but overall it was not something I put high than anything else.  College especially now grounded me into not caring about the social aspect at all. In the broader sense of identity, I still feel like I have not truly “found” myself.  Mainly, because I find myself making decisions that contradict what I believe in.  Everyone says college is where people find themselves, which I want to happen already. I feel like when you do then you can truly make the right decisions for yourself, long-term wise.

MySpace VS Facebook
MySpace and Facebook have become addictions in our everyday life. Similar to people who are dependent on drugs or alcohol, social networking junkies count the minutes to their next profile fix, checking their computers multiple times per day to see how many shout-outs, or new friends they have acquired. Personally sometimes I guess I am one of those junkies, especially when I am bored. The Facebook APP will one day become the death of me. Sometimes even in class I start refreshing my Newsfeed. Even though I know half the “posts” I see on there will be worthless. Despite it all I still feel as if I am connected to the people in my friends list.
Personally, I only had MySpace for about a month. Starting it up was slightly confusing as I remember. One thing I liked was that the layout really was customized to your liking. You picked any background you wanted. My favorite part was you could choose a song, so when someone visited your site it would start playing. One thing that always frustrated me was trying to find friends or navigating from one place to the next.  Unfortunately, I deactivated it because my parents did not like me having one.
Shortly after my friends introduced me to Facebook, which I made just like everyone else to keep up with the newest and “coolest” social network. Almost everyone I knew was already on there.  I felt like the new student in class. I did, however, get used to Facebook in a shorter time than I did Facebook. Why? The Facebook layout is very simple and easy to navigate around. Everything is literally in front of you clearly wrote out. All you have to do is click. Which, of course, was a plus.
Facebook got started with a group of students from Harvard. It seems logical that the owners of multi millionaire and billionaire companies are from Harvard: Microsoft and Facebook. This is why most mention that Facebook users are more in the higher social class. Which is ironic because half the things posted up there are definitely not “high class”. According to the article by Boyd, “MySpace is being associated with the term “Ghetto”. Defined, it means a section of a city, especially a thickly populated slum area, inhabited predominantly by members of an ethnic or other minority group, often as a result of social or economic restrictions, pressures, or hardships. Teens use the term probably because mostly minorities take up more of the demographic and also it is used as a music outlet. Mostly hip/hop and rap.”  Until this article, I had never associated the term ghetto with MySpace before. The only distinction I have seen is that MySpace is more for people that are into their music, and somehow want it to get promoted.
I have to say I like Facebook more both the reason that I got a MySpace and Facebook was because a guy asked me if I had one and I didn't want to be an idiot and say no lol I have never referred to MySpace as ghetto though I think that's really funny... I think Facebook had more features than MySpace but the one thing I loved about MySpace was the personalized profile
-Anonymous
According to Danah Boyd, “Social media is faddish. MySpace came first and many teens chose to embrace it. When Facebook came along, plenty of teens adopted it as the “new thing.” In doing so, some chose to leave MySpace, while others simply maintained two profiles. Yet Facebook did not simply usurp MySpace. In May 2009—two and a half years after teens began splitting—comScore reported that MySpace and Facebook had roughly equal numbers of unique visitors. In other words, while a shift did occur, not all MySpace users left for Facebook, and not all who joined after both were available opted for the newer site.”  I agree with the notion that teens embrace whatever fad comes along. Attending high school you see this first hand with all the trends that teens are exposed to every so often. We see this with, for example skinny jeans. Everywhere you look now skinny jeans, skinny jeans. Can they be any tighter? I’m not even talking about the girls, the boys equally if not more.  The article also brings up a good point about the speed that these websites come about.  To me it is like a domino effect, when one falls they all one by one fall at a good speed. Like Boyd said, “ At the beginning of the school year, teens were asking “Are you on MySpace? Yes or No?” At the end of the school year, the question had changed to “MySpace or Facebook?”
“I actually didn't switch over at first. I was using both websites simultaneously. My cousins were using Facebook more, and my friends were using MySpace more. I didn't like how everything seemed like a competition on MySpace. For example, if you were or weren't on someone's top friends list, or if your profile background was considered "cool" or not... I don't like that Facebook has turned into some sort of stocking website. In other words, people know your every move, and for some people, they want the people on their friends list to know. However, what I don't like about both websites is that they make you waste so much of your time. I never thought about MySpace being ghetto.”
-Anonymous
            From my findings, not one person had ever associated Ghetto with MySpace. There were others that like me had thought about the music promotions that MySpace has whereas it a little more difficult showcasing it on Facebook.  Either they did not know what ghetto meant or they thought the idea was “funny”. I believe this is more a matter of opinion. Although yes, it’s true MySpace and Facebook have different users which statistics shows but I wouldn’t go as far and say its Ghetto.


Boyd, Danah. “Implications of User Choice: The Cultural Logic of “MySpace or Facebook?” Interactions. 2009. Web. 16 May 2012.
Kim, Jenny. Personal Interview. 29 Feburary 2012
Dagstanyan, Marie. Personal Interview. 29 Feburary 2012


The Big Move
            I was born 1993 in Armenia. According to my parents, that year was hell in Armenia. Food was scarce especially things that were essential to a baby like milk and bread for example.  Along with my parents, my aunts and uncles always say how lucky I was to survive.  I cannot imagine what my parents went through to trying to feed their baby, but I heard all about the difficulties they went through.  When I was about 10 months old, my parents decided to go to Russia to have a better life for their child (me). Russia was doing okay at that time and Armenia was not in good shape, consequences of the 1988 earthquake in Armenia. As the Armenia State Fund USA states, “The years 1993-1994 were most definitive for Armenia Fund. The need for prompt action dictated its mission, and a broad responsibility emerged to overcome hardships plaguing Armenia and Karabakh at one of the most critical periods for the nation. Established with a strategic vision, Armenia Fund focused on projects that addressed immediate humanitarian needs.”  The quote pretty much sums it all with the “hardships”. We were in Russia for about 5 years, for which when my brother was born. My parents were prosperous there for the first time since Russia. After 5 years my parents decided to go back to Armenia for a few months. They still say that coming to America was an accident, which is pretty funny if you ask me. They applied for an interview and they unexpectedly passed. Coming to America, they did not realize it was going to permanent. What was ironic is that my dad was never a “fan” of the United States of America. Besides my dad leaving his business in Russia, my parents also lost the value of their college degrees. My parent’s were/are highly educated people. My mom graduated from medical school in Armenia and my dad graduated from two universities in physics/ mathematics. Unfortunately when we came to America we were immigrants, so they could not transfer their degrees to the equivalent of a U.S degree. The most difficult part was the language barrier. They barely knew one word in English, so it really constricted their job seeking.  They ended up working for Armenian businesses. Of course it was miles far from what their degrees were for. Having no choice, and having children to take care of, they did all they could.
            We ended up in Glendale, California, which is known for a big Armenian population. That was not surprising. Being in Glendale, was a little easy on my parents in the language department because wherever they turned an Armenian would pop up. However overall they felt helpless in the job field because they were highly limited. Imagine not being able to properly convey your emotions to the person in front of you. The stress and frustration that will come along with it. My brother and I pretty much learned English through cartoons with the captions on, reading along. Obviously for children it is easier for them to pick upon languages, which is why my parents were not that much worried about us. They say I because I am the oldest starting talking basic English in about 2 months and then greatly progressed as I was put into school, and started interacting with children. In and out of the classroom. What I greatly regret about the big transition is forgetting Russian. I see old videotapes of me speaking in Russian, or reciting poems at school events and I feel like I am speaking Gibberish. My parents always say my classmates’ parents back in Russia first thought I was Russian, which is ironic because I was slightly dark compared to their stark white. Despite being Armenian, I could still say that Armenian was not the first language I spoke. I was about nine months when we moved to Russia; therefore I was exposed to mainly Russian. I was put into Day Care and later preschool, where all I spoke was Russian. Imagine going from country to country having to learn the language, and the pressures that come along with it.  After being able to speak perfect Russian we moved to the United States of America, where I obviously had to learn English as soon as possible because I was already 6, the age for first grade.
            When you hear about people coming from third world countries, it is almost always about religion freedom, women’s rights, economic/social reasons, etc. Neither of those really pertained to us, besides maybe economic reasons. Yes, coming here was an accident; however, the economic reasons were the reason for staying.  Compared to Armenia, America has greater career opportunities for even a “commoner”. The education system really helps out people, whether it is Financial Aid, Loans, or other government programs that are out there.  When asked, “What was one of the main reasons for staying in America?” My amazing mother replied by saying, “For you and your brother, our time has passed. It is your and your brothers time to do something with your life. You both has many opportunities in America.  We will do everything to provide you guys with anything you need so you guys can go on with you guysies studies.” It was extremely touching, however I had a hard time not laughing at her grammar.  When I asked her “Why did we move to Glendale first?” Her reply was, “That is a stupid question. You have not seen how much Armenians there are there. Its like a small Armenia.” According to Armeniapedia, “Glendale, California hosts the second largest Armenian population of any city in the USA (Los Angeles is first). It has the highest percentage of residents of Armenian descent, most of whom arrived in the city in the last two decades.” Apparently, my mother is right.
            Besides the language barriers, other things came into play with coming to a different country completely different from our own. The main ones were traditions, customs, and in general the way the two cultures think. We as Armenians, especially my parents and the elders, have a strict sense of tradition.  Yes I do believe keeping our heritage and traditions close to our hearts, because deep down we are who we were. On the other hand, there are areas where being open-minded is a good thing.  Being in this country for almost 13 years, I am extremely open-minded to new ideas, customs, and lifestyles.  Lets take for example the debate on gay marriage. I am all for it. If that’s what makes someone happy, and they choose that life for themselves, then so be it. However, my parents and most of the older generations of Armenians completely disagree with me. Like the republicans, they feel that marriage is between a man and a woman and it is not right. I respect this statement, along with anyone’s opinion on the issue. My parents frequently say that I am Americanized and that I should have been an “American”. It does irk me, but if being tolerant and open-minded is called American then I am fine with it. I do not really blame them that is just an outcome of where and when they were born. I have a feeling if they were brought up here, they feelings would be a tad different. A quote from Persepolis was fitting for my parents. “What do you expect, I came from a traditionalist country.”
A small transition we made after 3 years was moving from Glendale to Burbank.  It definitely was an easier one, because we knew the language very well, were familiar with the school system, and most importantly it was not overseas. It was only 5 streets over, because we lived on the edge of Glendale. This move according to my parents was purely social. I was 2 weeks into 4 grade when we moved.  In a couple more years I would have gone to middle school and then of course high school.  My parents say they did not want us to go to the middle school and high school in Glendale. They had heard stories from other parents that there were always dangerous fights happening inside the school walls, as well as other things.  An online magazine called Ararat says in one of the articles, “The most significant one occurred in 2000, when senior Raul Aguirre, who had no gang affiliation, was stabbed and bludgeoned to death while intervening in a fight between rival Armenian and Hispanic gang members. Aguirre’s death and that of Avetis “Avo” Demirchyan, who was shot in 1998 in an inter-Armenian-related dispute, tainted the Glendale school’s image for years, even though none of the events occurred on campus.”  It goes on to say.  “Hoover High School is located in a city containing the largest Armenian population outside of Armenia and Russia, but ethnic friction between Hispanics and Armenians has been problematic in nearby communities as well.”  This really was the case. I had cousins going to Hoover and Glendale, they were always talking about some fight that happened that week, or if they were lucky, month. Yes, of course, there were fights in my high school, but not as often as the Glendale ones.
Despite all the struggles my parents faced when first coming to America they have finally slightly found their place.  My brother and I are immersed in the American lifestyle, mainly, because of the schools. My parents make us talk Armenian at home, which is a good thing because as they say my Armenian could use some work. My dad still is not that much of a fan of America. As he says, “America brainwashes you kids.”
             





Armeniapedia, The Armenian Encyclopedia.  27 October 2011.  15 May 2012.

Armenian Fund USA. Hayastan All-Armenian Fund. 20 July 2007. 16 May 2012

Aghajanian, Liana. “Culture Clash: Armenian and Hispanic Relations in the Past, Present and Future.” Ararat (a magazine from AGBU). 6 July 2010.  Web. 16 May 2012

Satrapi, Marjane. Persepolis. France: Pantheon, 2002. Print.

Hakobyan, Knarik. Personal Interview. 14 May 2012.


Monday, April 23, 2012

Gender roles

The book i am going to use is as nature made him.  I am going to talk about gender roles and sex.  Which is stronger. Then i want to dive into nature vs nurture, talk about the effects of both. I want to use articles about all these controversies. Use my psychology notes which are very helpful. Im debating on whether if i should ask people their opinions on these subjects. If I do I'll include it in the essay.

Monday, April 16, 2012

As nature made him. #2

To be honest I still feel the same way. I am for nature because i think its innate therefore stronger than any extrinsic influences. Yes we do tend to give boys toy cars, more guyish things to play with therefore boys are raised falling into the man role.  Like when Davids parents made him play with girl things he was very against that and always wanted to come out of the farce of him pretending to be a girl because he knew that was not really him. Sex is how your born and gender is how construct yourself. I think the sex side is stronger and will come out at one point or the other.

Sunday, April 8, 2012

As nature made him

Having taken psychology in high school, I know that one of the most important debates in psychology is Nature VS Nurture. In Davids case the nature side of him is winning. I have always thought that no matter what nature is the strongest of the two. WHY? Because we are born into it, its set in our genes, DNA whatever you want to call it. Davids parents are doing everything  to teach him how to be a girl. As much as he's been taught he still has the manliness in him (machoness). Its understandable what the parents wanted to do. However they weren't strong enough to go against how he was born. Even so nurture still does play a role in lives but not when the nature side has a great pull such as in this situation. I think nature is a very important aspect of all our lives. I think nurture plays a small role compared to nature. As much as David was being taught to be a girl he still was expressing boy characteristics because he was born a male. I think sex does determine gender .

Monday, March 26, 2012

Prject SPace

I visited a high school my old one. THe walls there are so much more colorful and bright and have helpful posters on it. In college the walls are white like a hospital.  The classes there feel much warmer, and approachable to the students.  The students feel a different kind of energy.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Shop-Phobia.



This may come across shocking, but as a woman I don't love shopping. I find it as a necessity more than pleasure. You will definitely not find me in the mall everyday weekend looking for cloths or whatever item for "fun". I go when I really need to for school, occasions, or to buy gifts.  According to Norton, shopping for women is something that she can use to get away from everything, being husband, kids, or the house. Or that women use it for girls day out. Time for them to engage with others. I do completely agree with this. All these are very girl things to do. It provides a little me time for women, you can even say for anyone if they enjoy browsing through the mall that is. 

Another point Norton made was, "When she spends money she exercises an authority over property that  law and custom may deny her. If she has nor resources independent of her husband, this may be the only authority over property she is able to exercise. When she  buys things her husband does not approve of- or does not know of-she further subverts an order that leaves control over property in her husbands hands." That was a mouthful wasn't it. I feel strong about this statement. I think every women should feel some control in their lives. No matter what it is. Even the smalls help. By going out and having the control over picking a blue cotton blouse or a pink silk blouse is something that can help a woman in the long run. Because being able to make a choice for yourself is pertinent. 

As for men, it seems like they are happy with shopping from catalogs while looking at women's legs in a skirt. 

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

MySpace's Ghetto?!


MySpace and Facebook have become addictions in our everyday life. Similar to people who are dependent on drugs or alcohol, social networking junkies count the minutes to their next profile fix, checking their computers multiple times per day to see how many shout-outs, or new friends they have acquired. Personally sometimes I guess I am one of those junkies, especially when I am bored. Some days I refresh my Facebook app constantly checking my newsfeed to see what is happening and what others are posting. In a completely non stalker way.  
Personally, I only had MySpace for about a month. The way it worked was a little confusing from what I remember. One thing I liked was that the layout really was customized to your liking. You picked any background you wanted. My favorite part was you could choose a song, so when someone visited your site it would start playing. MySpace as almost everyone says is a little confusing I remember I always had a hard time finding things for some reason, from trying to find friends to navigating from one place to the next. I deactivated it because my parents did not like me having one. Shortly after my friends introduced me to Facebook. Again shortly after I made one just like everyone else to keep up with the newest and “coolest” social network. Almost everyone I knew was already on there.  I felt like the new student in class. I did however get used to Facebook in a shorter time than I did Facebook. Which, of course, was a plus.
Facebook got started with a bunch of students from Harvard. Seems like a lot of good is coming from that university, like Microsoft and Facebook. This is why most mention that Facebook users are more in the higher social class. Which is ironic because half the things posted up there are definitely not “high class”. According to the article by Boyd, MySpace is being associated with the term “Ghetto”. Defined, it means a section of a city, especially a thickly populated slum area, inhabited predominantly by members of an ethnic or other minority group, often as a result of social or economic restrictions, pressures, or hardships. Teens use the term probably because mostly minorities take up more of the demographic and also it is used as a music outlet. Mostly hip/hop and rap.
Personally, I only had MySpace for about a month. The way it worked was a little confusing from what I remember. One thing I liked was that the layout really was customized to your liking. You picked any background you wanted. My favorite part was you could choose a song, so when someone visited your site it would start playing. MySpace as almost everyone says is a little confusing I remember I always had a hard time finding things for some reason, from trying to find friends to navigating from one place to the next. I deactivated it because my parents did not like me having one. Shortly after my friends introduced me to Facebook. Again shortly after I made one just like everyone else to keep up with the newest and “coolest” social network. Almost everyone I knew was already on there.  I felt like the new student in class. I did however get used to Facebook in a shorter time than I did Facebook. Which, of course, was a plus.
I have to say I like Facebook more both the reason that I got a MySpace and Facebook was because a guy asked me if I had one and I didn't want to be an idiot and say no lol I have never referred to MySpace as ghetto though I think that's really funny... I think Facebook had more features than MySpace but the one thing I loved about MySpace was the personalized profile
-Anonymous
Facebook got started with a bunch of students from Harvard. Seems like a lot of good is coming from that university, like Microsoft and Facebook. This is why most mention that Facebook users are more in the higher social class. Which is ironic because half the things posted up there are definitely not “high class”. According to the article by Boyd, MySpace is being associated with the term “Ghetto”. Defined, it means a section of a city, especially a thickly populated slum area, inhabited predominantly by members of an ethnic or other minority group, often as a result of social or economic restrictions, pressures, or hardships. Teens use the term probably because mostly minorities take up more of the demographic and also it is used as a music outlet. Mostly hip/hop and rap.
According to Danah Boyd, “Social media is faddish. MySpace came first and many teens chose to embrace it. When Facebook came along, plenty of teens adopted it as the “new thing.” In doing so, some chose to leave MySpace, while others simply maintained two profiles. Yet Facebook did not simply usurp MySpace. In May 2009—two and a half years after teens began splitting—comScore reported that MySpace and Facebook had roughly equal numbers of unique visitors. In other words, while a shift did occur, not all MySpace users left for Facebook, and not all who joined after both were available opted for the newer site.”  I agree with the notion that teens embrace whatever fad comes along. We see this with for example skinny jeans. Everywhere you look now skinny jeans, skinny jeans. Can they be any tighter? I’m not even talking about the girls the boys equally if not more.  The article also brings up a good point about the fastness that these websites come about. Like Boyd said, “ At the beginning of the school year, teens were aksing “Are you on MySpace? Yes or No?” At the end of the school year, the question had changed to “MySpace or Facebook?”
“I actually didn't switch over at first. I was using both websites simultaneously. My cousins were using Facebook more, and my friends were using Myspace more. I didn't like how everything seemed like a competition on Myspace. For example, if you were or weren't on someone's top friends list, or if your profile background was considered "cool" or not... I don't like that Facebook has turned into some sort of stocking website. In other words, people know your every move, and for some people, they want the people on their friends list to know. However, what I don't like about both websites is that they make you waste so much of your time. I never thought about MySpace being ghetto.”
-Anonymous
            From my findings, not one person had ever associated Ghetto with MySpace. Either they did not know what ghetto meant or they thought the idea was “funny”. I believe this is more a matter of opinion. Although yes, its true MySpace and Facebook have different users which statistics shows but I wouldn’t go as far and say its Ghetto. 

Monday, March 5, 2012

Essay: Well a part of it...

MySpace and Facebook have become addictions in our everyday life. Similar to people who are dependent on drugs or alcohol, social networking junkies count the minutes to their next profile fix, checking their computers multiple times per day to see how many shout-outs, or new friends they have acquired. Personally sometimes I guess I am one of those junkies, especially when I am bored. Some days I refresh my Facebook app constantly checking my newsfeed to see what is happening and what others are posting. In a completely non stalker way.   
Personally, I only had MySpace for about a month. The way it worked was a little confusing from what I remember. One thing I liked was that the layout really was customized to your liking. You picked any background you wanted. My favorite part was you could choose a song, so when someone visited your site it would start playing. MySpace as almost everyone says is a little confusing I remember I always had a hard time finding things for some reason, from trying to find friends to navigating from one place to the next. I deactivated it because my parents did not like me having one. Shortly after my friends introduced me to Facebook. Again shortly after I made one just like everyone else to keep up with the newest and “coolest” social network. Almost everyone I knew was already on there.  I felt like the new student in class. I did however get used to Facebook in a shorter time than I did Facebook. Which, of course, was a plus.
I have to say I like Facebook more both the reason that I got a MySpace and Facebook was because a guy asked me if I had one and I didn't want to be an idiot and say no lol I have never referred to MySpace as ghetto though I think that's really funny... I think Facebook had more features than MySpace but the one thing I loved about MySpace was the personalized profile
                     -Anonymous
             Facebook got started with a bunch of students from Harvard. Seems like a lot of good is coming from that university, like Microsoft and Facebook. This is why most mention that Facebook users are more in the higher social class. Which is ironic because half the things posted up there are definitely not “high class”. According to the article by Boyd, MySpace is being associated with the term “Ghetto”. Defined, it means a section of a city, especially a thickly populated slum area, inhabited predominantly by members of an ethnic or other minority group, often as a result of social or economic restrictions, pressures, or hardships. Teens use the term probably because mostly minorities take up more of the demographic and also it is used as a music outlet. Mostly hip/hop and rap.





Sunday, March 4, 2012

Project Space

For our space my group and I picked the new performing arts center.  We had the most exclusive tour that could have been given. We asked a woman who came out for one second if we could take a look inside, for a project because the doors were locked. She was gracious enough to not only agree but to give us a tour inside, I think mostly because she was probably scared we would ruin the smudge free zone. The inside lobbys were so spotless and shiny it looked highly luxurious and expensive. Actually it was expensive it cost a whopping 120  million (donation money) to build the whole thing. For which they are literally still paying for. Every little part of building had got so much thought put into it, every wall glass, tree branch, tiny tiles that cover an immense amount of wall. It was truly amazing. It is the only upscale building on campus. From outside to inside it is always kept pristine. There is a terrence that only donors who donate 25 grand plus 3 grand get to be wine and dined there.  I never though place on campus will be like this one. Its very calm as well even though ironically there was music playing when we shown the tour. I loved and I would like to go to a performance there.

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Essay Proposal!

I would like to ask people (facebookers) about the transition they made from myspace to Facebook and the reasoning behind it. I want to go into the term, ghettoization of Myspace and if anyone had noticed that before or even had thought about it before. Analyze the article associated with it.  I was thinking about doing some kind of survey again on Facebook and see how that works out.

Monday, February 13, 2012

Gamer?



The movie Gamer was not what I expected whatsoever. In my mind I thought it was going to be about teens who are OCD on playing video games or somewhere along the lines of that. With that being said, it did do this in a subtle way or as worded in the question: its the "social commentary. Simon portrayed a typical teenager gamer. Obsessed with his toys, he may have had more advanced systems, but the general image is there. Another thing, it showed was that Simon seemed to enjoy was the girls. Especially when the girls flashed, I would think that’s point on portrayal of teenage boys. 

A social commentary that we talked about in class was the man in the wheelchair.  Clearly he was obese. Everyone knows about America being an obese country. We see it, hear it, and there are statistics that prove it. The man was handicapped because of his weight, so the only way to function in society was to be literally in "Society".  It goes to show how impersonal we have gotten especially with the advancements in technology. Everything is so much easier, unlike back in the when a letter would have probably taken about a month give or take to arrive in the hands of the recipient. Now all you have to do is “shoot an email”. Or better yet Skype, iChat, Facetime, etc. Believe me all these are much appreciated.

In “Society” the people got paid for their time. In the real world people will do what ever it takes to support a family or even to sustain themselves. I feel like we have come a place where no job is shameful anymore, yes- even prostitution. I am not saying I am condoning it only that some people’s responses have changed when they hear such things.  The players very much used the game as a fantasy land where everything and anything can be true, take the man in the wheelchair. For most people fantasy is better than reality, which is understandable, except when they let it consume them. Players should not cross the thin line between sanity and insanity.

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Gamers Anonymous



I had never heard about Role Playing Games before reading this article. No one I know plays this kind of game. Mostly they play Modern Warfare, my brother being one of them. I still don’t get the hoopla on video games, and now Role Playing Games.

I do believe that the extreme gamers tend to blur the lines between fantasy and reality.  In my previous English classes, we were presented with articles similar to this topic.  One of the articles talked about a young boy around the age 10, while playing a wrestling game on a playing system, beat a 6 year old girl to death while mimicking the wrestling moves. Yes it is not RPG’s, but it involves the same or similar concept how those games affect some people.  As the theorist Arthur Asa Berger said,  “Playing video games may lead to alienation; this alienation can often lead to a sense of estrangement from oneself…what is difficult to know is how being immersed will affect players. Will new video games become a kind of opiate for people who can find an outlet in simulations that seem better than those offered by their reap-life experiences?” (107-108) I get the need to find an outlet for the stress’s in life; however there should be a limit to how much some gamers dive into the fantasy lands.

One of the reasons I think people are obsessed with these systems is because they get a chance to be involved in things that are not possible in real life, do not have the means to, or is illegal.  It gives them a chance to go outside the “box” which is normal. To me it does not become okay when gamers apply fantasy to real life negatively.  For example if they drive around in a car trying to run over things for points or a similar example like that. I believe Role Playing Games or any type of those games/systems should be used in a healthy dose. Not to the point where the person can not sleep because they are thinking about their game or even dreaming about it. They should especially be careful not to mix reality with fantasy.