To most people, Peter Capaldi is best known for the Twelfth Doctor on BBC's Doctor Who. Before that, he'd starred in handful of other productions, in particular as John Frobisher in Torchwood: Children of Earth, Cardinal Richelieu in The Musketeers, and as the ironically named W.H.O. Doctor in World War Z.
Before all of that, though, he was Malcolm Tucker, the profane head of the Department of Social Affairs in The Thick of It, a political satire/drama series. Below is a short analysis I wrote of the man as a leader and a character.
Tuesday, September 5, 2017
Tuesday, May 16, 2017
Opinion: Why Attacking Net Neutrality is a Precursor to State-Run News
Updated 8/23/2017
While I’ve been signing a number of petitions to make my opinions known about political matters over the past few months, I very rarely comment on them.
While I’ve been signing a number of petitions to make my opinions known about political matters over the past few months, I very rarely comment on them.
However, with this one, I felt a special connection and an obligation to post my thoughts. Below is what I said and why.
Saturday, April 29, 2017
Saw VI: Mixing Political Commentary & Horror
Background
For this assignment - from an American Horror course, I was instructed to pick a horror film and analyze how it approaches a political or social topic. That was the core idea of the assignment, though I was largely limited to analyzing the film according to references in notes and material covered in course discussions.
I lacked a wide array of horror films with an explicit focus in politics. The few films I noted with a subject matter that involved politics or social topics basically consisted of The Omen (original series and remake) and Day of the Dead (original, 1985). However, with healthcare being a major subject in recent months, I decided on Saw VI, which uses healthcare as a plot point
The following is my written analysis, albeit highly edited and, in my mind, improved based on my own feelings and feedback after I submitted it*.
Wednesday, April 5, 2017
Characterization in Louise Erdrich’s Indian Boarding School – The Runaways
I recently rediscovered a few older assignments from my time at HACC. One of these is an analysis I wrote about characterization for a short story in my Fall 2014 Introduction to Literature course.
I wrote this analysis as the second part of a two-part assignment studying the Carlisle Indian School in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. The first part involved a slideshow presentation with a partner with information about the Carlisle Indian Industrial School.
I have little to add beyond the fact that little, if anything, has been added or edited from this posting.
I have little to add beyond the fact that little, if anything, has been added or edited from this posting.
Monday, February 20, 2017
Genres: Few, Many & More
Background
This is an early assignment I wrote while at HACC for a media studies class in 2015. The instruction was very much, "Pick a topic from a list of topics and write about it; include references to conglomeration, convergence and how advances in technology have affected it."
From this list, I selected a topic about genres. I first asked, "What can I write about this that would make it unique or worth reading?" Eventually I narrowed down on an angle: how genres have evolved over time and how they can divide in to sub-genres, and those sub-genres can be divided, and so on.
I wasn't planning to post this at all, but after one of my classes studied genres and narratives, I decided to revisit this and post it.
This is an early assignment I wrote while at HACC for a media studies class in 2015. The instruction was very much, "Pick a topic from a list of topics and write about it; include references to conglomeration, convergence and how advances in technology have affected it."
From this list, I selected a topic about genres. I first asked, "What can I write about this that would make it unique or worth reading?" Eventually I narrowed down on an angle: how genres have evolved over time and how they can divide in to sub-genres, and those sub-genres can be divided, and so on.
I wasn't planning to post this at all, but after one of my classes studied genres and narratives, I decided to revisit this and post it.
Friday, December 23, 2016
The Music of National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation: An Analysis
Here, I was asked to analyze an aspect of a film and write about it.
I decided to look into one aspect of a Christmas classic that probably few people ever think about.
Sunday, December 4, 2016
Mythology & Media Accuracy: An Analysis
Foreword
For this assignment, I had two choices: write about myths in art, and about myths in the modern world. Since my topic was so applicable to both categories, I ended up writing a hybrid paper.
A quick side note: in my write up, I make a few comments that may come off as me disparaging the Indiana Jones and Sleepy Hollow series. I'd like to clarify first that, while I'm not a huge fan, I'm a follower of both franchises. This paper isn't meant to belittle either series, but meant to illustrate an example of errors in mythological research in media.
In a time where people are despised because of how little others understand their religions, I think a greater understanding of those religions will be extremely important.
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