Sunday, November 28, 2010

Drugs in Media

                Drugs are everywhere. It is normal for a person to have some sort of encounter with drugs in their lifetime, especially in high school or college.  When someone is seen around drugs, a certain judgment is passed about them, and they are sending a message.   Even if someone is not actually doing the drugs, simply surrounding yourself with them speaks about your character.   Our culture has grown with drugs especially through music.   Listening to music that sings about drugs also sends a message out about yourself.   My dad listens to a lot of music that expresses words about drugs and this made me ask him if he has ever done any drugs.   He, who is a man of his word, told me he has never done any drug or even smoked anything, such as a cigarette or cigar.   Because of the verbal drug paraphernalia used in the songs he listens to, I passed judgment about my dad and assumed that he has been exposed to some kind of drug before. There are hidden meanings in drugs and involving one’s self in that sort of situation sends a message to your peers.  
                In Europe, a much calmer and more laid back culture, drugs are used casually.  They do not inflict the same judgments from society, but they do receive media messages.   In their book, Media Society, Croteau and Hoynes write that “the flow of media products, the argument continues, results in the erosion of local cultures and values” (355 Croteau and Hoynes).   Drugs, as a media product, is traded, sold, and bought throughout different states and even countries.   Drugs being shipped from America to Europe would impose a rushed and somewhat addictive media message on the Europeans.   Drugs shipped from Europe would ensure a relaxed and casual environment based off of the media message that is sent with the drug from overseas.  


Friday, November 12, 2010

E-Harmony

Within the last couple of years, online dating websites have become one of the most common ways to meet someone.   It is a way for people to meet someone online in order to start dating, a relationship, or even lead to a marriage.   In order to use an online dating site, a person must first make a profile of themselves, in which they list specific characteristics, likes, dislikes, personal information, and even pictures.   This profile serves as a list of what a person wishes for others to see, it is often what they consider to be their most attractive traits.   People hide the skeletons in their closet because of the fear that if they show any weaknesses on their profile, they will not meet their soul mate.  Media forces us to hide important parts of our lives and create a façade of what we believe to be perfection through online dating profiles.   People feel obligated to post pictures of themselves in bathing suits or minimal clothing in order to attract others.   Media influences our perceptions of what is attractive and what is socially acceptable to show the world.
Along with media constructing our personal profiles, there are many advertisements along the sides of dating sites such as E-Harmony, which distracts the user from finding true love.   Croteau and Hoynes express that “Marshall McLuhan (1964) wrote that with the rise of electronic media, ‘we have extended our central nervous system itself in a global embrace’ (p. 19)” (Media Society 337).   McLuhan is right in that our whole central nervous system, or society, is now available, or becoming available, on the internet.   Through the internet and dating websites, anyone is a few seconds away from being connected, in a relationship, or even married.   Communication and peoples’ personal lives are heavily influenced by media.   Using online dating sites, such as E-Harmony, allow people to create a profile of themselves.   Through these profiles, they attempt to create a façade of perfection by hiding their flaws and subjecting themselves to the media movement.  

As you can see in the pictures, E-Harmony advertises itself to be a happy site where love can easily be found.   There are pictures below of different advertisements and profiles made my users of E-Harmony.








Below is a Mad TV parody video of an E-Harmony commercial (this is fake!):

Friday, November 5, 2010

News and Newscasters

Many people around the world watch news stations and listen to the daily stories and events.   As they tune in every day to hear the newscasters, they are being subjected to different biases.   One story could be that a neighborhood boy rescued a cat from a tree, but it can be spun many different ways.   One news station could focus on how it was irresponsible of the cats’ owners to even let it out in the first place.  Another station could center on the young boy and his bravery in rescuing the cat.   When listening to the news, viewers must remember that the truths of the event are most likely hidden behind political opinions and disguised media messages.  
                The newscasters are also dressed up in fashionable clothes and covered in make up in order to look ‘presentable’ to the public.   They must hide their natural look and change their physique to appeal to society’s shallow needs.   Croteau and Hoynes express that “the media give us pictures of [society]…and by their sheer repetition on a daily basis, can play important roles in shaping broad social definitions” (163).   Media expresses that newscasters are people we should look up to and desire to look like.   They are loaded with makeup and their every word is structured by a teleprompter.   Newscasters have little freedom with what they look like and what they say, yet they deliver a strong media message encumbered with political views and hidden meanings. 

Below is the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001 shown on CNN News.
 Below is a female newscaster wearing lots of make up and a sexually suggestive shirt.
 Below is a picture from the show Family Guy in which the two newscasters, Tom and Dianne, are sending a sexual media message over the news.
 This is a notoriously left-wing news station.
 This is a notoriously more centered and somewhat right-wing news station.