Monday, December 10, 2007

Sound track of my life

Rodney Atkins, “Watching you”: Throughout the scenes of Rodney Atkins singing there are clips of interactions between him and his son. The clips all vary from each other but they all represent things that he and his son have in common and they also represent things that he has taught his boy. One clip in particular represents the way his boy dresses just like his father and how he wants to be just like him. Each has on their camouflage pants, cowboy boots and yellow shirts on. Matching perfectly. Growing up, I was very close to my father. I spent most of my time trying to be just like him. I can remember the feeling of how his boots fit over my shoes loosely making it nearly impossible to walk. But it was his bee veil that he wore every day that sagged over my eyes making it tough for me to see that really made me feel just like my father. I remember the smell of the smoker lingering in the fabric of the veil, the feeling of the straw hat scratching slightly at my scalp and the sticky strings that tied loosely around my waist. Dressing in his work cloths made it possible for me to feel like I was on top of the world, a man, just like my dad, strong enough to work in the bee yards. While wearing his boots, shirt, and vale I could fall away into my imagination, working hard in the backyard on my hollow hives. After viewing this video and listening to this song it becomes clear that the connection between my father and I is felt by many sons and their fathers. Thinking back on those days where I would dress like him and mimic his every move he performed in the bee yard, I hope that I can be as good a man that he is.



Alan Jackson, “Remember When”: While Alan Jackson plays his guitar and sings this song he is surrounded by pictures that go through his life. Pictures of himself and his wife when they were younger and all sorts of events up to where they are in their life right now. There is one clip that is shown in the video that is recognizable to anyone who has a relationship with their grandfather. The picture is of a grandson and his grandfather. Together they sit on an old wooden dock and fish the day away. As far back as I can remember I can picture fishing with my grandfather at the lake three miles outside of town. The old wooden dock that we sat on used to seem like it was miles long and reached into the middle of the lack. We would sit their together casting out into the lack and reeling in slowly, waiting for that slight tug on the other end. My grandfather would sit and teach me the tricks of the trade. “Reel it faster, O.K. now let it sink, now reel it in a little more, good, good, keep it up.” It always seemed that these fishing hints would turn into stories and I would learn something new about him that I never knew every time. Time seemed to slow down when we would sit there on the dock hanging out feet over the edge and fishing the entire day. It never got old and I would have done it every day of the year. I was lucky enough to be able to spend a lot of time with my grandfather on the lake and I was able to learn life lessons that I would have never gotten from anyone else.



Public Enemy, “He Got Game”: In the background of this entire video, made as the sound track for the movie He Got Game, clips of basketball players, basketball courts and hoops fade in and out. The ball faded out from overuse and the nets hanging from the rim barley holding on. The scenes of the basketball and the courts no doubt are recognizable anyone who spent time playing ball on the courts in their home town. When I was younger I spent countless hours, sometimes all day, outside playing basketball on my court in my back yard on a rim that could be lowered to about eight feet. That hoop allowed me and my best friends throughout the neighborhood to become the stars that played on T.V., we would lose track of time and play until we had no energy left to expand. When the sun went down and the rim and ball were no longer visible we would climb into the tree by the court and rig up the lights to shine over our court and extend our playing time. The game would last until my mom’s voice would cut through the air and end the game. From watching the video it became clear that basketball plays a big role in the lives of lots of kids not just for me and my friends. Basketball can unite friends and build memories.


Kenny Chesney, “No shoes, No Shirt, No problems”: In this music video Kenny Chesney preaches his motto no shoes, no shirt, no problems. The video is a combination of different scenes on an island where he has no worries and lets everything else go. He spends the day on boats and on the beach wearing no shoes and no shirt and having no worries. During the summer, before I got a job, I spent almost every day out on the lake or at the river riding on our boat and on our jet skies. The black an yellow paint blends together perfectly and glistens from the droplets of water that cleng on to the side of the Jet Ski. The seats leather becomes scorchingly hot, but never hot enough to keep me off. It always seemed like nothing else mattered but how long we could stretch the day out to be. The boats were like home for those long days in the sun, the water was the only thing that mattered. No worries about school or jobs just the water, friends and family. I would be found either out on the water or lying in the sand. I did not have any other things on my mind other than having fun in the sun. Those days seem to be far and in between now, but without them I would be missing many great memories that will be with me forever. Those are the good times that shape what kind of person you turn out to be. Without those good times and those times spent with family and friends I do not think my life would be as complete as it is today, making relationships that will last forever out there on the water and sitting on the beach.



Jason Aldean, “Amarillo Sky”: While the song Amarillo Sky plays throughout the entire video, Jason Aldean is shown singing in fields and playing his guitar. The majority of the video however is not the artist singing or dancing but young men my age and displaying their role on their family farms. The pictures and video of the young men are very recognizable to anyone that is from a rule, farming community. As I grew up I a rule community in small town Nebraska I spend endless amount of hours driving tractors across golden wheat fields, stirring up dust and taking on the hot, golden sun. The big green frame of the tractor pumping out a consistant loud roar from the engine. Its tires stand taller than I and the climb to the driver’s seat seems impossible the green ladder covered in mud and grime. But what I remember the most was the hard tractor seat, boucing up and down on its four worn out springs and how it was home for the summer. It is all that a majority of young men just like me and my friends know during the long summer days. I remember how the roar of the engine would fade away as the day went on and my mind would take over, I would look over the edge of the tractor, down at the dry land and the endless clouds of dust billow out from behind the tractor, hoping and praying for rain the next day. But always, no matter what, whether the rain came or the summer ground stayed cracked and dry I would turn the tractor around and make another round through the field. The music video from Jason Aldean and the song that he wrote connects to an enormous number of people throughout the mid west. I believe that this type of work and way of life has really shaped me into the person I am--someone who is not scared to work hard and be completely dedicated to something in life.




Poison, “Ride the Wind”: In this song by Poison the lead singer of the band begins the song by singing the words, “Hearts of fire, Streets of stone, Modern warriors, Saddle iron horses of chrome.” The song that he sings is about riding motorcycles and it connects with anyone who has owned a motorcycle and tasted the open road. The opening words that the lead singer sings makes my mind shoot back to summer days when I would spend long hours washing and shinning my motorcycle until it gleamed from front to back. The silver paint on the gas tank sparkled brightly as sunlight beamed down on it and every inch of the fifty cubic inch chrome motor shined perfectly, so perfectly that my reflection appeared almost flawless. Each of the chrome five spokes in the wheels shot rays of light in every direction. On each side of the bike ran a long, four inch, round exhaust pipe. Both cleaned to perfection and shinning just like the rest of the bike. No nicks or scratches were visible just smooth, shinny, sparkling chrome. The seats black leather would grow warmer each second it sat in the gleaming sun. Even the dark black leather saddle bags that sat near the back of the bike packed full of gear gleamed with perfection. I am sure that the singers of the song “Ride the Wind” have felt the same feeling I did when I stepped back and saw every gleaming, sparkling inch of the chrome horse. As I go back in time to those summer days in my mind I pray for summer to come fast and think about how much fun times I have had while being on my bike.



Kenny Chesney, “I Go Back”: Between clips of Kenny Chesney singing his song “I Go Back” on an old gym floor and hallways of a high school images from his past show up throughout the video. There are images of himself as a kid, himself in high school taking girls on dates and images of his family and him together. Throughout the video there is a specific style of photos that seem to be popping up frequently. It was those photos of him in his football uniform and his teammates from high school that really made a connection to me and I am sure connects to anyone else that played a sport in their years of high school. As I have graduated from high school now and moved on to college I find myself looking back at the times I had on Friday nights playing football with my best friends in my life. The red jersey with a white five posted on the front below the word PLAINVIEW and RUTLEDGE posted above the number five on the back fit tightly over the hard plastic shoulder pads. Scattered, different colored nicks and scars of other team’s helmets littered each shoulder of the jersey. I remember that feeling of the pads slipping over my head easily and the feeling of synching them up tight around my chest. My best friends beside me perform the same tasks, preparing for battle on the gridiron of high school football. It is obvious that Kenny Chesney still holds the memories of his teammates and football career tightly just like I do. Those are the memories that stick with me forever and memories that always make me smile.



Kenny Chesney, “There Goes My Life”: This video displays the life of two young high school kids and how much their lives can change. In the video the kids’ life changes from a simple life to one that will be filled with hardships because they are going to have a baby. At the beginning of the video the two kids are scared but as the video goes on the young kids turn into parents. By the time the video nears the end the baby girl is heading off to college and the mother and father are saying goodbye. I know that everyone in this class can connect very closely to this video. Each one of us can remember the day we left for college, the day we left our family, our homes, and headed off to pave a new path in our lives. I remember the day exactly. My red car was clean and shining brightly. The backseat was piled high with cloths and things to make my room feel more like home. There were many things in the trunk, making it hard to close and the front seat was filled with food from my mother (incase I got homesick). I looked back at my parents standing there watching me back out of the driveway, tears rolled down my mother’s face and my father was trying to stay strong. I was off, off to write a new chapter in my book of life. The first chapter of the new edition is coming close to the end, but I will never forget the feelings that I experienced with my parents on that specific day. It was these feelings that allow me to feel like I have support and will have the support forever. Nothing is more important than family, and I am glad I went through something like this to allow me to understand that.

Monday, November 19, 2007

First Video


The Tootsie Roll song of 1994 was a hit. I can remember this being the first video I saw because I always thought it was the greatest. I had two older sisters and of course they thought it was cool, therefore I was forced to watch it. After seeing the video I of course was forced to perform the dance, “to the left, to the left, to right, to right…” Not one of my proudest moments by any means but at that time a definite step in the right direction toward coolness, I thought. I actually feel in love with the song at that young age of 6 or 7 and if I do say so myself I got pretty good at the dance. I remember being in the other room and hearing the song come on my sisters boom box or cd player and hurry to the that room to perform my dance skills.
As I look back on my time as a tootsie roll fanatic I wonder why anyone would let me do that kind of thing. The dance was an odd thing and the song a very different one. However, it is funny to look back on it now and remember that feeling that I felt when I finally learned the dance and the feeling of how old and cool I felt. It is fun to look back at that song and see how it was the craze of that time, the new hit dance of that ear and how it swept across the nation just like now a days with the Soulja Boy song and dance that made its way into the main stream. Maybe someday someone will be writing a paper about music videos from their child hood and they will be saying the same thing about the music and songs of today.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Worst Video

The music video for the song Macarena is my least favorite music video. I have not been able to watch this video since the day it has come out. When the annoying sound of the song starts to play it immediately makes me feel an annoyed and crabby mood. It was bad enough to write a song like the Macarena and to actually play it on the radio for the public to hear but to make a video that is equally as bad was just plain sickening. It amazes me that the music video that displays one of the worst dances ever invented was actually a popular thing in our history. I am happy to say that I never feel into the trap of liking this song or ever taking part in the dance that corresponds with it.

There are many reasons why this video is my least favorite. I could sum it up by saying that I dislike the entire video as a whole, everything about it. However, there are specific things that I dislike more than I dislike others. First off I do not like the song that plays in the background of the entire video. The song is one of the worst in the history of music. Secondly, the dance that these females do in the video makes them look really dumb. I mean who would put themselves through that? Why would you want to make yourself look like this? The cloths that these girls wear make the entire video that much worse. To top the worst video I think to every hit the public market off is the two creepy guys that are just watching these girls perform this sickening dance while singing words that no one knows. Why are there two old men watching young girls dance? I am glad that this video has come and gone and that I no longer have to hear the music on a regular basis.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Smokers


What ruins an evening as soon as you walk into a restaurant? It is something that you do not even have control over. Give up? It is when you and your family, sometimes young kids go to a restaurant to enjoy a nice meal with your loved ones and open up the door and are blasted in the face by a wall of smoke; that terrible smelling, poisonous smoke takes your breath away and makes the rest of the evening a flop. It was not your choice to poison your lungs and possibly spread disease, but since someone else chose that path, you have to put up with it. I mean all you have to do is ask for a non-smoking seat on the other side of the room; over there you will not get any effect of that smoke hanging in the air, right? Wrong! Thank goodness that this is no longer a problem for the residents of Lincoln. However, it was once a definite and real situation that many people had to deal with when they were going out for a nice evening meal with their family.





Today in Nebraska, people are not able to smoke in public places, such as restaurants, government buildings, or private work places. Also, Nebraska’s leaders have taken an important step toward protecting the state’s people from the terrible toll of tobacco by increasing the cigarette tax by 30 cents a pack for the next two years. By doing this, it will reduce smoking among both kids and adults, and save lives by reducing smoking-caused disease.

In this cartoon featured in the Lincoln Journal Star, it addresses the issues of the smoking in public and the taxes that will be induced by the state of Nebraska. Also it portrays the way some smokers view the way they are treated by these laws that are being enforced. In the cartoon it portrays smokers as people who believe that these laws and taxes are unfair and that they are persecuting them, as if what they are doing has no affect on anyone else. Some of them firmly believe that they are the ones being punished unfairly. Through the use of rhetorical strategies the artists conveys his feelings of a smoker in a society where smokers feel they are persecuted.
There are numerous rhetorical strategies within this cartoon. There could be a case developed for all types of rhetorical strategies used but the artist who developed this cartoon developed and used some more than the others. One of the most prevalent uses of rhetoric in this cartoon is the use of illustration. The entire image itself, the man sitting there, is an illustration. The way the artist drew the man in the picture makes it the focal point, he uses an exaggerated image, makes the image darker and bigger than everything else in the picture making the reader’s attention focus directly on the image the way he wanted them to. The entire illustration is a caricature that serves as a stereotype. It stereotypes blue collar smoking men. The image was made with specific details to send this message to the audience that all blue collar smokers feel a certain way. If the image is looked at closely you can tell that the man in the picture is an out of shape, large man of an older generation, he has white hair. He is not wearing a nice slick looking suit and standing by a nice new car but rather wearing a small tight t-shirt and an old ball cap while smoking two cigarettes. The way the image was created immediately sends the message of what type of person is being argued about in the picture. Not only do the cloths and appearance of the man send the message that he is a blue collar man but he is also sitting in a factory. All of these aspects combined portray the man in the picture to be a blue collar kind of man. The illustration creates a feeling that the older generations of blue collar smoking men are ignorant and self-absorbed. In the picture the blue collar smoker is oblivious to the facts that are stated in the surgeon general’s warning, which is located behind the figure; he is facing the other way, which allows the reader to make the assumption that the man is totally oblivious or totally unaware of the facts. Also adding to the fact that the man is self absorbed and ignorant is the way his body is drawn. It is clear by the weight of the man that he does not care about how healthy or unhealthy he is. Not only is the man in the picture faced the other way not paying attention to the warnings he is also reading a piece of paper that, by reading the text, we know is talking about enforcing cigarette taxes. It is the man’s quote at the end, “This is so unfair!!” that makes the entire point of the illustration. Everything in the picture was placed in a certain spot, and drawn a certain way to really prove the point of the artist. The way the artist used illustration and the way he chose to place things in the picture really made it an effective image.
The argument is made by using all different kinds of rhetoric strategies, and these strategies portray rhetoric appeals. One could make an argument for all three rhetorical appeals in any image or text, but in this particular argument the artist focused on two of the rhetorical appeals to convey his argument. The artist used the logos appeal or “the logical appeal” in his argument. He accomplished this by adding in the surgeon general’s warning. The warning contains logical facts. By using the logical appeal it enhances the argument and the image however the artist focused more on the appeal to emotions, pathos, because it was an efficient way to prove his point and to keep the audience interested in what he wanted to say. When everything in the picture comes together is when pathos is reached. The caricature of the man, the way he is facing, the surgeon general’s warning and the way the words are displayed all come together to appeal the readers emotions. The way the artist creates irony with the images and placement of everything in the picture also creates humor. Throughout the entire cartoon the sense of emotions is used. The man in the picture wants society to feel sorry for him which is a complete contrast to the way our society really feels, creating irony. The irony of the entire image is humors, creating an appeal to the reader’s emotions. The picture makes us laugh or smile and therefore makes us interested.
The use of the rhetorical strategies like narration, example, illustration, and cause and effect really does a good job of making it easy for the audience to be able to understand the argument that the artist is trying to prove. When these strategies are used effectively like they are in the cartoon is clears up any confusion about the argument and allows the artists views to be seen very clearly. In this particular cartoon it is not only what the artist feels but what society feels as well. By combining these effective strategies along with the appeal to the emotions of the audience makes a good and effective augment.

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Music Video

The choice of my favorite music video was a tough and time consuming decision. There are so many good videos and songs out there right now that it was tough to pick one. However, I finally decided on one so I could begin writing. I chose the video of Crank That by Soulja Boy. The video is for one of the newest songs. Also it is one of the most popular song and video made in the past few years.
The video is basically just an introduction of a dance which has become widely known. When the song comes on over the radio or someone plays it at a get together most of the room immediately heads to the dance floor to show off their dance skills. I have yet to see someone who can perform the dance as good as its creators but there are some people who know it very well. I am one of the guilty ones who did give in and learned the dance. The reason I like the video so much is because it is not like a most music videos because it does not tell an entire life story or time in someone’s life. Instead what it does is introduce the artist’s new dance to the public, and that is exactly what it accomplished. I guess you could say I have jumped on the bandwagon here by using this video as my favorite because I am sure that lots of other people would say the same. However, I really do like this video because the dance is awesome and the whole video is something that you could watch a lot. You can always find something new to add to your dance arsenal every time you watch the video. This awesome video combined with the hit song makes it my favorite and I am sure many others as well.