Nathan Jurgenson, The IRL Fetish
the weekly flimflam, stratagems, stories, readings, and more
Tuesday, November 15, 2016
Has CyberSpace taken over Real Life????
A Modern Day Catalyst: The iPod
Niki Saval: Wall of Sound: The iPod Has Changed the Way We Listen To Music
Sunday, November 6, 2016
ASIAN INVASION: The Movies
In the chapter 6 paired readings, one reading focused on Asian Americans in movies. Basically, the author just labeled some of the different types of characters that Asian actors tend to play.
Really, there was no bias or showing of discrimination/ cultural appropriation. It was mostly just labeling the type of characters and how Asians are never really the main actor or the only one actor; there is always another actor or color with them or whatnot. One example I remember is Rush Hour 3 because Jackie Chan and the other black guy was there. They included their picture in the reading as well. Although I see that Asian actors are usually type-casted as the fighter/nerdy character or just supporting actors, times have definitely changed. There is even a TV show all about an Asian American family living in America, called Fresh Off the Boat. It features the type of cultural differences they experience moving to a white-suburban area. I do not really like the show because even though it features an Asian cast, the material on that show is so whitewashed or Americanized to even be considered cultural. To me, it shows how Americans perceive Asians. That show is all stereotypes, and no cultural appropriation.
I feel like the reason for not casting as many Asian actors compared to white actors is that white people are the majority in the American acting industry. I mean, in Korean dramas for example, they feature literally an all Asian cast with little to no white actors because the film is from Asia. It goes the same for America because the majority of Americans are white. Still, America is slowly becoming diverse and more Asian actors and actresses are on the rise right now.
Tuesday, November 1, 2016
Movies and more movies!
David Denby, Has Hollywood Murdered the Movies?
This article from Reading Pop Culture showed how Hollywood is endorsing these low budget films and make it into these highly gross weighing films. They used the Avengers as an example. When I saw the movie, I personally did not see it as a great movie that everyone praised. I felt like it only caught a good amount of attention because of the familiar names of all the superheroes that the audience grew up with. There were big names like the hulk, captain America, iron man, and all the Marvel favorites. The film probably did not cost that much to produce but it did gain a lot of profit because of just the fact that it had all the heroes in one movie. That is one of the examples that showed how Hollywood is able to endorse these low budget films and make them bigger than they really are. Some other movies series that follow this are the story line ones where the last book always ends with "part 1 and part 2". Reason for that is, they know people who followed the story line will watch the movie no matter what and by separating and elongating the movie into two, they make more profit knowing full well the fans are gonna watch it. I think of movies like The Hunger Games series, Twilight, Harry Potter because all of the last movies ended in part one and part two. This RPC essay also talks about movies and the kind of "false praise" that movies have. Those also tie in with story line series based movies and the movies with familiar characters.
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