Friday, December 12, 2008

Merchants of Cool

(1)In the movie there is a theme called "cool hunting." This, as Malcom Gladwell explains is, "The search for a certain kind of personality, and a certain kind of player in a given social network," or finding the influence held by those who have the respect and admiration of their friends. "Cool hunters" look for the kid who have the most influence on their peers. One woman describes it as searching for the 20% of teenagers who influence the other 80%. They consider themselves "culture spies" who penetrate the region of the teen landscape where corporate operations aren't welcome. "Searching for trendssetters or leaderswithin their own group." However by discovering cool, major companies then ruin cool.(2)One professor in the documentry puts his perspective on the relationshipbetween big companies and teens in a very interesting way. He compares the teen nation to an actual armada, with weaponary ranging from clothes to music to films. All of this to make money in the market war. (3)MTV excutives consider the bond with teenagers to be completely run by the teens. The videos on TRL are completely requested by the group and is played for everyone. Human research is the same but the goal is completely different, focusing on the human, as, well, a human. Minus the profit from the market.(4)When talking to a teenager to determine what they are in to simply for research, they don't consider the teenager as a person at all, but rather a customer. A market researcher's goal is to project what this teen says is cool and to make money off of it.(5)I believe that the best description of teen culture is given by "The Merchants of Cool," because they already know where teens are going. The critics and rebels are along for the ride. The excutive producer of Dawson's Creek said it best during the documentry by saying "Why put another finger in the dam, when it's going to bust anyway?" You cannot stop what what will and will not be popular or cool, no matter what the critics say, they are critisizing the "merchants of cool," who already know where the profit is at.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Nickel and Dimed. Serving in Florida.

Enrenreich begins her journey of living life in poverty in Key West, Florida. She has mainly one goal in this experiment: to see if someone can pay one month’s rent on nothing but minimum wage. Filling out applications for dozens of employers, she fails to mention her education level, saying she is limited to a few years in college. I found it interesting in the introduction on the fifth page she writes, “No one ever questioned my background, as it turned out, and only one employer out of several dozen bothered to check references.” The standards are quite high for an upper class job rather than a minimum wage job where an illiterate individual could perform the tasks perfectly well.
She finally lands a job at The Hearthside restaurant working from 2:00 till 10:00 P.M. for $2.43 and hour plus tips. She gives great detail about the actual job letting the reader know that the hardest part about being a waitress is the “side-work.” And a fellow co-worker by the name of Gail who we learn has recently lived in her car and did her business in a bottle. Something that I’m sure the writer isn’t use to being around people who can afford a roof over their heads or at least some protection. Gail even says, “You can’t live in a truck in the summer, since you need to have the windows down, which means anything can get in, from mosquito’s on up.” This really puts you in the mind’s eye of one who struggles with life every single day. But Gail isn’t the only one, the author talks about co-worker Joan, whom she admires for standing up for her when she is overpowered. In return, Barbara gives her a chunk of her tips.
This brings us to the notion in this book about the rivalry between the employees and the employers. Page 22 she explains, “Not that managers and especially ‘assistant managers’ in low-wage settings like this are exactly the class enemy. Mostly, in the restaurant business, they are former cooks still capable of pinch-hitting in the kitchen, just as in hotels they are likely to be former clerks, and paid a salary of only about $400 a week. But everyone knows they have crossed over to the other side, which is, crudely put, corporate as opposed to human.” She talks about the complications she’s had with the employers, such as being caught glancing at a USA Today, in which case her consequence was vacuuming the entire floor with a broken vacuum cleaner. Another instance is when they are called for a meeting because of how “disgusting” the break-room is. Or, my favorite, the fact that basically talking to any other employee is considered “gossip.” Stu, one of the managers began to speak rudely about some of the Haitian immigrants working there.
One of the more interesting things about someone living in poverty is their lack of health. Gail, for instance is paying $9 a pop for estrogen pills. But what can really put you into perspective is a co-worker Marianne, whose boyfriend lost his job as a roofer because he missed so much time after getting a cut on his foot. Furthermore about the health issue, on page 35 when she is now working at Jerry’s she mentions that, “Rising stress levels reflect a new system of ‘management by stress’ in which workers in a variety of industries are being squeezed to extract maximum productivity, to the detriment of their health.”
While working at Jerry’s, Barbara meets a cook from the Czech Republic. I found it really interesting that he isn’t even paid by the management there at Jerry’s, but by the “agent” who shipped him over. He gets about $5 an hour minus a dollar or two for the “agent.”
Barbara then decides to walk to the adjoining building and get a job as a housekeeper. She keeps this job one day, quitting Jerry's and leaving Key West.

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Running While Black

Running While Black
By Bob Herbert
I really liked this article from the New York Times. His idea overall is how the Republicans choose to play the race card during this race. The party chooses to "run low-life political ads featuring tacky, sexually proactive white women who have no connection whatsoever to the black male candidates." Also at the start of the race, John McCain's campaign stated "The American president Americans have been waiting for." The made me laugh out loud actually because of how crude the party was assuming that a person running for president was some un-American who decides to burn the Ameircan flag in his fire place during his free time. How Herbeert has written this clearly states what it;s like to be running while blac; exteremely difficult. Reading this actually makes me like Barack Obama a little bit more. Mr. Obama endures all of those outrageous accusations about him with a smile and comes back at McCain with less... What's a good word...? I'm not sure but Barack keeps his smile and his cool, while McCain and the Republicans play the Race Card in a game of uno.

Eyes on the Pride

Eyes on the Pride
By Dick Meyer
This article is quite the opposite from the previous article, "Does Race Really Matter?" Meyer focuses completely on the race issue and believes that it is essential for Democrats to accept that they have an African-American running for president. He calls the Democratic party 'sneaky,' and not exactly proud to possibly be making history. The rest of the country should be proud as well. Meyer also tells us that is Obama were white, this election would be based on the unpopularity of John McCain. All of Obama's television advertisements are forced on letting the public know that the Democratic party cares about them all individually, when, as Meyer believes, there is not one voter out there that5 possibly believes that such a large corporation cares about them all individually. Those advertisements need to focus on that fact that Obama could make history and give voters a solid cause to embrace this monumental event.
Reading this makes me want to afree with Meyer. He is a very powerful writer and can support anything he talks about. The realization is that Obama is not white. I, personally, do not understand racism. I can see through all that, but I know most everyone out there cannot. The only way to overcome that is to make it known, and like Meyer said, the Democratic party should not be nonchalant about anything involving something so important.

Does Race Really Matter?

Does Race Really Matter?
By Michael A. Cohen
There was a recent article in the New York Times concerning the Bradley effect with this year's election. There is the thought that whites all over the United States have been lying to pollsters about voting for Barack Obama because they don't don't want to vote for him simply because of the fact that he is black, Cohen dubs the people 'closet racists.' However, come election day, the color of Obama's face may play a factor to the outcome of the race. Despite the color of his skin, 66 percent of voters think Obama "shares the values most Americans live by," a higher number than that of Mr. McCain. The most interesting fact is what might save Obama if this Bradley effect is true; he is likely to reel in 95 percent of the African-American vote. "If Obama wins 95 percentof the black vote, he will not need a single additional voter over what John Kerrey recieved in 2004." Obama is also leading in the Hispanic department.
This was a well thought out article. It includes every which way that Obama is winning the election right now and a wonderful comparison of elections prior to 2008. Especially the mention of the Bradley effect, it really makes you wonder; Does race Really Matter?