score and Maybelline revision

that bossed life, gay man included named manny. the mise en scene is glamorous and bold with colour connotating to the product.

score is an old advertisement for hair gel, mise en scene includes being in a jungle and a man being held up by half naked women suggesting that this hair gel attracts ladies.

Hesmondhalgh and his theory of media is a risky business connects with Maybelline that bossed life due to the involvement of a gay male. Stereotypically make up was designed and used by woman and solely woman but due to the uprising acceptance of the LGBT+ community Maybelline made the decision to make their products inclusive to those who are gender fluid and in general just want to use it. This makes it risky due to potential backlash for advertising and promoting male usage of make up as there are still people who believe that being apart of the LGBT+ community is wrong.

Social historical and cultural contexts in regards to Score suggest that the man is better than the woman. This is seen through the man being placed higher up than the woman suggesting his status within society compared to the woman’s.

OPENING PARAGRAPH

Maybelline; That Bossed Life and Score are two very controversial advertisements. That Bossed Life is an inclusive meaning that the product is advertised to everyone and anyone whereas Score is advertised to solely men. Bell Hooks theory of Multicultural Intersectionality suggests that there is a need to explore class and sexuality which can be seen through the use of a gay male in That Bossed life and the man being put on a pedestal in comparison to the woman, in Score.

Letter to the free / Ghost Town

Ghost town is a music video which vocalises the racism issues surrounding the united kingdom while the prime minister was Margaret Thatcher. Thatcher created the notion of keeping Britain white linking with orientalism as Black British citizens had ideas created against them changing people attitudes and actions against them.

Ghost town is apart of the SKA movement led by 2tone which was a mix of blues music crossed with rhythmic music. The movement in the UK was based upon battling racism and pushing back against the British conservatoire government.

The idea of a car crash is suggested within the video, where all band members become ghosts haunting the empty city. This has connotations with the idea of it being a ghost town as ghosts haunt the town.

Letter to the free

letter to the free is a music video fighting against racism in America. This music video suggests that America is a prison to black citizens which is seen through the lyrics “Prison is a business, America’s the company”. The idea that it is based around America being unsafe for black citizens is through the fact that when slavery was abolished, an amendment came in suggesting a practice of punishment for crime. Up to40% of prison inmates were black citizens many of which were innocent but due to the corrupt justice system and racial profiling against black citizens many were convicted for crimes they did not commit.

Opening paragraph

Stuart Hall agreed with the idea of two systems of representation. Language being used as a from of communication and conceptual being visual and what you see being what you think about. As an audience we visualise America to be a prison due to the lyrics “Prison is a business, Americas the company” in Letter To The Free. This communication to the audience is a form of encoding and decoding. Due to the artist encoding the idea of being stuck and unsafe in a place which was advertised to be safe, which the audience decode to be America profiling these citizens due to skin colour.

Letter to the Free + Ghost Town

Intro:

Fluid identity / constructed identity – Gauntlett :

Double Consciousness –  the struggle African Americans face to remain true to black culture while at the same time conforming to the dominant white society

Frantz Fanon – Fanon perceived colonialism as a form of domination whose necessary goal for success was the reordering of the world of indigenous (“native”) peoples. He saw violence as the defining characteristic of colonialism.

Paul Gilroy – Paul Gilroy believed “unstable” and politicised identities are “always unfinished, always being remade” and ethnicity is an “infinite process of identity construction”.

Post colonialism – Postcolonial theory is a literary theory or critical approach that deals with literature produced in countries that were once, or are now, colonies of other countries.

Diaspora – the dispersion or spread of a people from their original homeland.