Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Guess who's hiring. . .

Driving home from a pack meeting tonight, I flipped on the radio.  An attractive, young (early 20s), female voice came on the radio.  "I serve my country by traveling the world but I can't tell my friends and family where I am going or what I am doing."  The voice catches your ear, and then you hear an interesting job pitch.  Apparently, the CIA is hiring and they believe the best target audience for their work is listening to the radio.  Interesting.  About seven years ago, they made a lot attention by going out to college campus to recruit at job fairs at major name schools.  Now, they are aiming for the masses.  Having seen the commercials for Columbiana, it is intriguing that they chose the voice over that they did.  Who is the target audience?  And what does it say for our national secuity system when we are seeking help on broadcast radio?  What genre of music was the station?  Country.  104.3.  Interesting. 

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Libya

Congrats to the rebels. You've taken power.  Now, the hard part comes. . .

ABC and the New Television Season

As I sit and home tonight, working on my teacher goals, I do it in front of the television.  Always curious about popular culture, I gave Take the Money and Run.  On it, a pair of regular folks gets $100,000 to hide for 48 hours.  If they succeed, with two detectives on their tail, they win the money.  If they detectives find the money, the cops get the money.  In this episode, it is two male domestic partners.  What makes this episode so interesting is the very real reactions of the two characters who seemingly prepared in advance for the event.  When the jail doors shut, everything changed for them.  Watching the the supposed stronger character fall to pieces  and (spoiler alert!) quit the game early, we learn a lot about te role of prison and solitary.  This ties nicely with the Stanford Prison Experiment. 

Combat Hospital is set in Afghanistan, with mixed Canadian, Australian and American military medical personnel.  The scenery is very good, the emphasis on the stresses of combat and hospital trauma.  What set Tuesday night's episode (August 23) apart was a nice discussion of the role of a woman in the world.  Two Western women spoke of the concept of wearing the burka and protecting oneself from the thoughts of men.  It povides an important opening for a discussion of gender relations and agency that is overdue.  Let's have it. .  .

Sunday, January 2, 2011

AIDS and the Black Community


Greater Than AIDS TAKE ACTION: Action is Greater Than Apathy from Greater Than on Vimeo.


I saw a commercial for "Greater Than" over the break. It caught my eye, as it seems to speak to a specific culture.  See if you can see what I saw.  The NBA version, and the Facebook videos are closer to what I saw, but I was unable to link in the Facebook.  The NBA is below. 

NBA Cares from Greater Than on Vimeo.


It is interesting to see commercials aimed at specific cultures and ethnicities in a positive manner.  McDonald's has begun to target black families.  I was unable to find the commercial.  How often do you se commercials that portray non whites in a positive, pro-family view?  Be aware of the commercials and who the target audience is while you watch them. Companies are spending LARGE amounts of money to target specific audiences, and create commercials that are as specific to groups as they can.  Then, they find a show on televisionthat fits the demographic they are targeting.  How does Facebook make money?  They gather information about you based on your interests, profile, likes, etc.  They sell that information to interested parties.  And, those companies build more targeted commercials to sell to you better.  Interesting, huh?

Sunday, October 31, 2010

The Modern American prison cell.  Compare to Finnish.




Zimbardo's experiment played out, with a touch of Milgram.  People of Iraq tend to fear dogs, and are fairly modest.  Nudity and barking canines are non normative.  For an authority figure to play actively against the normative behavior of a group, does this constitute torture in and of itself? 


Lynndie England is the young woman in the following photos.  Male nudity before a woman that is not a family relation (wife) is not allowed in the culture.  Also, naked male to male contact is not acceptable.  These photos were widely circulated at the time, and provide a good stepping off point for the discussion of power and authority. 


Social Control and Prison




These are examples of Finnish prison cells.  How do they differ from American prison cells, and what effect does this have on recidivism?  What is the purpose of prison:  Social control or resocialization?

Saturday, August 14, 2010

My own private sociology

I watched two older men (late 40s early 50s, older than me) while I sat at McDonalds for lunch. They could be described as maybe a homosexual, liberal, artsy set (well kept hair, not a business style of hair, well kept skin, unusual jewelry including a thumb ring, tattoos)  or just very unique.  What caught my eye initially, though, was the fact that both men ordered happy meals.  They sat next to a father (older, also, possibly grandfather), with two young (under seven) children.  The men compared their toys, then handed them to the kids at the next table.  A small act of kindness in a world that often overlooks such acts.  All of this made me think, from a sociological perspective, how we try so hard to catalogue, place, and fit others into boxes that we construct in our minds. We have a need to label and understand, even if this really doesn’t help our understanding.  What box would I put them into?  I wish I had the guts to approach them and ask to take their photo.  I wish I had the guts to talk to people.  I am terrified of the phone, and stumble through small talk with people.  I am the poster child for dramaturgy (look it up in the text book).  I would love to have posted their photo and asked what stood out in this photo.  By the time I worked up some nerve to stand up (a couple with a baby carrier needed to sit down, and I was in the handicap seat), the men had finished, and were heading to their car.  They got in a truck (veers away from liberal, although it wasn’t a super duty) and the passenger (the younger looking) put out a plastic powerade bottle beneath the car, littering (obviously, not too green).  I guess that breaks the easy liberal stereotype. Boxes aren’t so easy to fill we find, or we should realize.  Soon, I hope to have the courage to document tattoos and piercings that interest me as I see them in the world.  If I find the courage.