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Search results 471 - 480 of 1900 matching essays
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471: Feelings Of Belonging To The O
... would be greater if I was to be a male. I -1- would always try to look big, tuff and muscular to please others. Guys, I think, are faced with enormous pressures to look good. Television, for example, almost never features old, heavy, or unattractive, shriveled up men. Even if a character is a doctor or a scholar on television, he looks like a “Bay-Watch” character. When it comes to sexuality, I think there is great confusion for both men and women. One contributing factor is the double standard still existing. For instance, the ... and the media, and each of us must integrate these messages and arrive at some value system that makes sense to us. Another reason there is confusion is that we are taught by movies and television that sophisticated people are free and spontaneous while we are being constantly warned that casual sex can kill us. Becoming a male Hispanic Catholic, I think my parents and siblings would be less protective ...
472: Fahreheit 451
... pictures the future as a somewhat a dictatorship government. The government controlled everything in their lives. People don t think either. Technology is made it so that people are given all their information through a television sort of a device that imitates a family. Books are obsolete, so they are burned. Our hero of this story is a fireman . Only, these futuristic firemen don t fight fires, they burn books. They ... books hidden in the heat vent. He picks up one and starts reading it. The Sieve and the Sand They both spend the day reading, and Mildred argues that she likes the pretty colors of television more than boring books. Montag realizes that he needs someone to teach him how to understand what he is reading. He calls up an old professor he met in the park named Faber. He doesn ... could burn books, and ruin peoples lives without even shuttering. Another thing that I thought was strange was that how insignificant religion was. The Bible was homogenized by the censors and shown to people on television, and the original print was outlawed. This is another example of their totalitarian government Critique Ray Bradbury, the author of this novel, used irony that added effect to the story line, although the ironies ...
473: "Violence in Schools"
... to protect their students and teachers. Most of us were taught at a very early age that hurting others is wrong. We were also taught at a very young age that what we see on television is make believe. So why is it that parents are afraid to send their children to school? To "SCHOOL". Of all places to be afraid to go, school should not be one of them. Since ... or the shooting range kids should not be able to handle these powerful killers at know point in time. According to most law breaking criminals, no matter age or crime it is always blamed on television or the movies. Television and movies have been here for quite some time and things I feel are totally different now. If you turn on the T.V, yes you will see violence on majority of the channels ...
474: Fahrenheit 451 & Brave New World: A Comparison of Themes
... for the society in which she lives. (Wolfheim) Like Brave New World_characters escaping from reality through the use of soma, Montag's wife, and many other characters, escape through watching a sophisticated form of television. This television system covers three of the walls of the Montag's TV room (they can't afford to buy the screen to cover the fourth wall), has a control unit that allows the watchers to interact ... with this is that Montag's wife takes the program as a substitute for reality. She is almost addicted to the program, much as people were with soma in Brave New World. Bradbury uses this television and it's programs as a way of showing the escape he is worried people will look for in the future. Without actively questioning society's values, he is concerned that people will look ...
475: DECA Research Paper on Marketing
... don’t really even have to promote themselves they all ready have the popularity which brings them the money they need to survive. How did they get this popular? , ”You ask” well they probably used television commercials and newspaper ads to provide the proper promotional acts they needed. Restaurant Marketing Restaurants usually use either promotion by word of mouth or their commercial ads on the television. People usually go to the restaurant that they choose. If someone does not like a restaurant then why would they go and spend there hard earned money on it? Sports and Entertainment Markting Sports and Entertainment Marketing is mainly done by television commercials and also newspaper ads, but sometimes people talk about something going on and then people make there plans to attend. Sports and Entertainment Marketing are the most profitable kind of marketing out today. ...
476: Comparison Between Brave New World and Fahrenheit 451
... normal for the society in which she lives. (Wolfheim) Like Brave New Worldúcharacters escaping from reality through the use of soma, Montag's wife, and many other characters, escape through watching a sophisticated form of television. This television system covers three of the walls of the Montag's TV room (they can't afford to buy the screen to cover the fourth wall), has a control unit that allows the watchers to interact ... with this is that Montag's wife takes the program as a substitute for reality. She is almost addicted to the program, much as people were with soma in Brave New World. Bradbury uses this television and it's programs as a way of showing the escape he is worried people will look for in the future. Without actively questioning society's values, he is concerned that people will look ...
477: Advertising Analysis
Advertising Analysis In the following essay you will be shown the analysis of 4 advertisements that are taken from television. By using the analysis layout discussed in class the report will demonstrate the features and aspects of the following advertisements . 1. Coca-Cola 2. Telstra’s U mobile connection 3. Apple iBook presentation 4. Intel ... demonstrates a clear symbol of love for the product. Advertisement 4.- Intel Pentium III The intel pentium III processor has already began halfway this year and has expanded thanks to their advertisements but especially through Television. The central message intoduced by intel is the new and fast way to create Internet websites and interactivity with web-video conferencing. The combinement of technology, computers, speed, family and information highway create the illusion ... advertisement of this product becomes alive and entertaining. The symbolism used in the ad is technology, because it demonstrates the needs and uses of their new technology “the intel pentium III” In conclusion all these television ads have demonstrated vast and diverse techniques of getting people’s attention just to purchase their product and become another member of the consumer world of advertising and marketing.
478: Advertising
... It can be highly selective and concentrated on a particular segment of the public such as stockholders, suppliers, or opinion leaders. Intensive community coverage may be secured through the use of local newspapers, radio, or television advertising. Which will provide enough space to tell a complete story and inform and educate people. The advertiser can control the timing and space given a public relations message by buying a certain amount of ... it and start saying it themselves, then they say it to someone else and they remember it, and so on. So word of mouth was a reliable source, as well as the newspapers, radio, and television. "Vocal advertisement came first; visual second,"(Wood 23). There are five creative strategies that advertisers use: 1. Objective (what advertisers should do). 2. Target Audience (who is your consumer). 3. Key consumer benefit (why the ... competitors, that would be a change worth considering." (Petroski 207). In conclusion, the advertisements of today are far more different, with the computer technologies, it is becoming more and more expensive to get things advertised. Television and radio are more expensive these days. With the different variations of popular products people will just get the cheaper product. Getting your product on the market is not as important as getting it ...
479: Fahrenheit 451 & Brave New Wor
... for the society in which she lives. (Wolfheim) Like Brave New World_characters escaping from reality through the use of soma, Montag's wife, and many other characters, escape through watching a sophisticated form of television. This television system covers three of the walls of the Montag's TV room (they can't afford to buy the screen to cover the fourth wall), has a control unit that allows the watchers to interact ... with this is that Montag's wife takes the program as a substitute for reality. She is almost addicted to the program, much as people were with soma in Brave New World. Bradbury uses this television and it's programs as a way of showing the escape he is worried people will look for in the future. Without actively questioning society's values, he is concerned that people will look ...
480: Economics: Turn Around is Fair Game
... selling items at a price less than what it costs to make them is called dumping. Foreign governments subsidize the manufacturing processes of certain industries so their companies can displace the competition's industry. The television industry is a perfect example of subsidized dumping. The post World War II infusion of subsidized Japanese-made televisions, terminated the United States(U.S.) television manufacturing industry. In the late 1950's, half a million units crossed our borders, tax and tariff free. These television sets were made using cheaper components and cheaper labor. However, the cost of transportation, which would normally escalate each individual price, was paid for by the Japanese government. The pioneering inventors of the electronic ...


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