Monday, April 15, 2013

Long Essay!



                Our lifetimes are defined by the sum of our experiences; both the good and the bad. Every challenge we face is a place for growth. Every mistake we make holds a lesson to learn. No two people will have the same experience, just as no two people will have the same reaction to that experience. For that reason, it is even more crucial that we consider others when speaking and acting. One of the hardest concepts for humans to master is walking in another person’s shoes, and because of this we often speak and act without considering what our words and actions might cause. Our intentions may be harmless, but we do not always consider how they will be perceived, how they may hurt another.
                I’m not here to lecture you about the harmful effects of bullying. If that were my intention, this essay would be much easier to write. I could easily Google “bullying” and get hundreds of statistics and examples and spit them back out at you in a nice, organized way. But that’s not my intention. I have played both roles, the bully and the victim, and I have grown from both. I have seen both sides of bullying through personal experience as well as witnessing these situations. I do not elicit your pity, and I also ask you to please remember that I, too, am human if you choose to judge me for what I have to say. Rather than trying to lecture you on how bad bullying is, my intention is to share my personal growth from these experiences. Whether or not you gain insight on overcoming issues or reflect on the effects of your own actions is entirely up to you.
                I was homeschooled until fifth grade. As much as I would like to blame that for how unprepared I was for the social aspect of public school, there is nothing that could have prepared me as thoroughly as actually going to school. My childhood was sheltered, to say the least. My parents were very strict Catholics and it was important to them that their children grew up that way, which is why my older sister and I were homeschooled. Their worst fear was that we would go to school and pick up foul language and that awful “pop music garbage”, so instead we stayed at home and only hung out with kids my parents approved, aka other Catholic homeschooled kids. Just like me and my sister, the other kids I knew were raised on the golden rule: treat others as you would want to be treated. Needless to say, we were all generally nice to each other and if we had a problem with someone, we simply wouldn’t hang out with them anymore. Problem solved. However, life isn’t so convenient.
                I entered the first day of fifth grade in tears. Even though it was my choice to go, I felt like I was thrown into water without any clue as to how to swim. I was terrified of leaving the safety and comfort of the only lifestyle I had ever known. I had seen plenty of TV shows and movies that depicted public school, but I reduced much of what I had seen to exaggeration. On TV, bullies gave swirlies and the nerds who wore pocket protectors got the swirlies; but real kids were all normal, right? When I walked into the classroom on my first day, I saw no nerds with pocket protectors and wet hair and no one looked incredibly menacing, so that was a good sign. I sat down in the desk with the name tent that said “Kathryn”, next to a girl who was deeply absorbed in a book, whose name tent read “Kendra”. When I sat down, Kendra looked up and said, “I think you live down the street from me. My brother pushed your brother down like two years ago when we were roller skating and my dad made him come apologize to your brother. I ran and hid because it was really embarrassing… oh yeah, I’m Kendra.” From every show/movie I had seen to base it off of, Kendra was quite obviously ‘popular’ and I was extremely relieved that she hadn’t threatened to give me a swirly, so I said, “Yeah, I remember that! I’m Katie… I’ve never been to school.” Kendra and I instantly became friends. I was so relieved that my first conversation was successful, and I took it as a hint that all the kids would be this nice.
                The next week at recess Kendra invited me to play soccer with her and a bunch of the other kids. Being incredibly clumsy and also terrible at soccer, I declined the offer and told her I was just going to go swing, but thanked her anyways. She looked over at the swings and turned to me and said “see that boy on the last swing? That’s Garrett, he’s a total jerk so don’t talk to him!” I thanked her for the advice and we parted ways. I was both curious about her warning, and naïve, and there were no open swings so I walked up to Garrett and asked if I could swing. He didn’t even consider the question before saying “beat it fatass!” My whole world came to a screeching halt. This small comment brought me to two realizations; that not all the kids were as nice as Kendra, and that I was fat. Before then, I had no idea I was fat. I walked away from the swings and spent the rest of recess sitting on the benches by the door, crying. I told Kendra what had happened while we walked home from school. She, of course, said the expected “I told you so!” and went on to reassure me that Garrett was fat, too, so he had no room to be talking and that he was a jerk and to ignore him. It didn’t help though.
                After that, news apparently traveled fast that Katie Spiegel was fat. By the next day at lunch, when we all lined up in front of the cafeteria, several of the boys joined in with Garrett’s harassments. They had already come up with several incredibly creative nicknames such as fatty, pig, fat pig, fatass, and of course the constant mocking with the pig noise. When I sat down to eat, it didn’t stop. Garrett made a point to announce to the whole lunch room that “piggy’s hungry!!!” as several of the boys followed up with oinks. I felt like my life was ruined. I felt ashamed to be me. I hoped that this torment would get old for them quickly, but I was not so lucky. I never wanted to go back to school, I never wanted to see these boys again, and I never wanted to be called fat again. Since the first two were clearly not an option, I went home that day and searched for some article of clothing that would make me not look fat. Sadly, I was fat and there was no hiding it. I put on a hoodie, which actually made me look larger than I was, and decided that was the best I could do. I went to school the next day wearing the hoodie, hoping that they would leave me alone, but they didn’t. The oinks and names continued. Now, not only was I fat and constantly reminded of it, I was also uncomfortably hot in the 85 degree weather at recess. But I still didn’t take off the hoodie. I didn’t want to let them see my body, and to be honest, I didn’t even want to look at myself. I was disgusted with myself.
                About halfway through fifth grade year, some safety organization came to my school and we got to make those ID cards that say “have you seen me?” to give to our parents in case we ever get lost. The ID card had a photo of us, our name, birthday, height, eye color, and to my horror weight. When I received my ID card in gym class a few days later, all I could see was the word weight and the mocking reminder printed next to it: 110lbs. I tried to quickly shove it into my binder, but I was too late. A boy from my class, Vidal, had snatched it from my hands. He examined it before saying “damn Katie, you weigh 110? I knew you were fat but not that fat!” I begged him to give it back but he ignored me. He got the attention of the whole class before saying “hey guys! Guess how fat Katie is!” My face burned red and I felt tears coming. Garrett chimed in “really fat” before Vidal announced “110 pounds!” The whole class burst into laughter, except me. I wanted to crawl into a hole and die. I had never been so embarrassed in my life, and I was quite sure if it was possible to die from embarrassment, I would have dropped dead, right then and there. The rest of the year went pretty much the same. They still harassed me, and most days I would go home and cry. But I never gave them the satisfaction of crying in front of them.
                Today, I look back at fifth grade and laugh. Nothing about it was in the least bit funny, but I lived through it, and came out a better person in the long run because of it. I wouldn’t change the experience if I had the chance because those hardships I faced that year are just another part of what makes me the person I am today. That said, I must acknowledge the self-image problems and horrible fear of eating in front of people (especially guys) that I still have to this day. However, not all of it was bad. Facing those things helped me build a wall. Now, when people say mean things to me, their sticks and stones hit the wall but will never break it; the dementors now feed off of my patronus and not my soul. Also, Garrett, the bully, has since become one of my really good friends. I could have held a grudge and hated him, but I chose to forgive him. He’s one of the funniest and sometimes nicest people I know, now. Rather than letting this awful experience control my life and break my spirit, I chose to move on and let it go. I always show people my fat pictures from that year, now. Half the time they’re shocked that it’s me, but everyone always laughs. And this time, I laugh with them.
                Sharing my experiences about being bullied was the easy part, for me. It will be significantly harder for me to relay the details of the events that took place with me as the bully. When I was the victim, I was able to reassure you that I was fine despite some relatively minor psychological troubles, and I was able to reassure you that there was a happy ending in the long run. However, with the following story, I cannot say the same. I promise you, the reader, my utmost honesty with the following story, no matter how awful it may reflect on me, because it is important. That said, I ask you to please realize that the Katie in the story is seven years less experienced than the one who speaks to you now.
                In eighth grade, Kendra and I were still best friends. When we were together, we were the kind of best friends that no one wanted to be around. We thought we were hilarious, and most of our humor came from making fun of other people. We would usually pick a victim, whoever was around, and make fun of them. If no one was with us, we made fun of each other and it was still just as hilarious to us. Most people knew not to take our jokes to heart, and most people would just laugh with us, knowing that’s how our humor was. That year, we had math class together and also rode the same bus. This was the perfect set up for us, allowing us time in the morning before school to talk, time in the middle of the day, and then again after school on the bus ride home. This was, however, unfortunate for those who were in our math class or rode our bus because they were all possible victims. One girl was misfortunate enough to share both a math class and a bus with us.
                Molly Kleink had gone to school with us since fifth grade. She was a tiny Asian girl with, until eighth grade, the most obnoxiously positive attitude and the ugliest, most childish pink and purple outfits. In eighth grade, though, she started wearing all black to school, going by MJ, and developed what I assumed to be OCD, or a mental disorder I now know as Trichotillomania. She would constantly rip out her hair and examine the strand, as if they weren’t all exactly alike, then rip it in half with her teeth and drop it on the ground. She was weird, to say the least. She hadn’t entirely dropped the positive attitude, but it was definitely buried deeper that year.
                On the first day of math, Kendra and I sat next to each other and Molly sat in front of us. We immediately took notice of her new look and asked her what the hell happened to her and why she was soooooo emo. She said “fuck you, leave me alone” Kendra and I burst out laughing. This reaction told us all we needed to know: Molly was an excellent victim. We constantly tormented her with jokes and rude remarks. We made jokes about her emo-ness, her “hunger for hair”, and of course the classic Asian jokes. We thought we were hilarious, but she didn’t find us the least bit funny. We enjoyed taking turns sliding her books off of her desk when she wasn’t looking, and on two separate occasions I put gum in her hair. This torment went on for the majority of the year, unmercifully.
                One day, towards the end of the year, Kendra and I got onto the bus and chose the seat behind Molly, in case we decided to mess with her at some point during the ride. We had gotten a history test back that day and Molly was comparing her scantron to the test, checking her answers. The test was over something that had to do with Kamikazes, I remember that much. Kendra and I spent most of the bus ride discussing our days but when we ran out of conversation, we sought other means for entertainment. The answer was right in front of us. I stood up, reached over the bus seat, snatched Molly’s test from her hands, and quickly sat back down. We laughed. Molly popped her head over the seat and yanked the test out of my hands. We laughed ten times harder. I waited a minute, trying to be sneaky, and then snatched the test back. This time though, I ripped it to shreds and threw the pieces over the seat onto Molly’s head, looking like dandruff. Molly stood up and looked over the seat. I grabbed a book and held it up like a shield saying, “Watch out! She’s going to Kamikaze us!” At this point, we were in tears from laughing so hard. Molly was furious, I could tell, but there was nothing she could do about it so she sat back down, defeated. Kendra got off of the bus at the first stop, about a minute later.
                After Kendra got off the bus, still laughing at Molly’s expense, Molly popped up over the bus seat and said “you guys think you’re funny, don’t you?” to which I replied, teary eyed from laughing still, “pretty fuckin’ funny, yeah.” The next thing I knew, Molly’s fist was colliding with my jaw. She had punched me, and a lot harder than I would have expected. I was stunned, speechless. I didn’t hit her back, no, I laughed harder than I ever had at her expense. I moved to the bus seat next to her, trying to get my words out through the gasps of laughter, “Dude, MJ, *gasp* that was *gasp* so fuckin’ funny! *gasp gasp* I can’t believe you hit me! *gasp* so much respect for that *gasp* you little *gasp* Asian bitch *GASP*” She looked both confused and like she may hit me again, but said, “You’re a huge fucking bitch, you know. You deserved that and I’m not sorry” I couldn’t control myself anymore, I thought I was going to pee my pants from laughing so hard, and Molly just looked at me, pathetically, knowing that I didn’t care, and looking like she might cry. When we got to my bus stop, I took the gum out of my mouth, dropped it on Molly’s head, and proceeded to stumble off of the bus, trying to contain my laughter.
                We still bothered Molly sometimes after that, but significantly less. I would love to say that this story had a happy ending, and I wish it had stopped with her punching me in the face because that would have been a fair and happy ending (relatively). However, the story does not end there. The next year, freshman year of high school, Kendra had moved to Bexley, but Molly was still around. I didn’t torment her daily like I had before, but I what I did was much worse. One day, in the lunch line, Molly was handing out her prescription medication to the losers that usually left at lunch to smoke cigarettes by Speedway, and I just happened to be right in front of them, witnessing this blatant stupidity. After lunch, I went into my Algebra class where Molly sat next to me, and my friend Erika sat on the other side of Molly. As obnoxiously and loudly as I could, I said “hey Erika! Guess who was giving out drugs in the lunch line! If you need any drugs, hit up MJ!” Molly gave me the dirtiest look and said “fuck you Katie!” Mrs.Bringardener, our teacher, had been standing at the front of the class listening to this conversation, pretending to write out notes on the projector. She walked over to the computer, typed for about five minutes, and then started class. Not even ten minutes later the office sent for Molly. That was the last time I saw her, ever. She got expelled.
                I, of course, cannot fully blame myself for her expulsion. I may have brought it about sooner than expected, but Molly had blatantly disregarded the rules (not to mention law) in front of about 350 people. There were five cameras in the lunch room and seven teachers (not including the school resource officer, who was also there) on lunch duty, babysitting us. I may have been the first, but I was not the only witness, nor the only one who had brought it to the attention of the administrators. I hadn’t intended to get her expelled, in fact, I didn’t even know that was the punishment for such an offense. I had merely intended to get Molly’s goat, so to speak. But that doesn’t make it okay.
                Looking back on what happened those years with Molly, I am horrified. I’m embarrassed, disappointed, and, quite frankly, shocked with my actions. I cannot even imagine what was going through my head, or why, during these events. I don’t know when, or why or how, the change took place in me, taking me from heartless monster to whatever I am today, but I’m glad it happened. I don’t mean to tell you that I have made a 180 and renounced my evil ways completely, for that could never happen. I did, however, start trying to consider those on the receiving end of my words. I will never be a saint, and I will never be able to change what I’ve done, but remorse for my actions and the changes I’ve made trying to be better are what set me now apart from myself seven years ago.
                In fifth grade, I was weak, I was a victim. In eighth grade and the beginning of high school, I was a bully. After fifth grade, I wanted to escape my weakness. I wanted to be as far from weak, fat, young me as I could, but I took it to an extreme. Using Molly as an example, a warning to all, I showed the kids at school that I was not to be messed with, as I was in fifth grade. I was a bully now, just like the boys who called me fat, and I expected that to make me immune to any torment. But it didn’t. Becoming a bully did not solve my problems, make me forget what I had gone through, or prove to be better than being the victim. All it did was make me just as low and cruel as the boys in fifth grade. The way to avoid being the victim is not to bully others by example, and I learned that the hard way. As I said before, I do not wish to tell you how to live your life. I simply hope to show you that there are two sides to every story, just as there are two sides to every person. As a wise man, named Sirius Black, once said, “We all have both light and dark inside us. What matters is the part you choose to act on.” Go forth and choose wisely.

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

I've been published....

Hey everyone,
If you get a chance, check out my letter to the editor! It got published in the Columbus Dispatch yesterday!!!
http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/editorials/2013/04/08/1-lets-find-alternative-to-guns-in-schools.html
I'm really excited about it! First step in the right direction is getting your writing published, right? :D
EEEEEKKS!!!!!

Friday, April 5, 2013

Short takes #4

Wow I just realized how behind I am on short takes!
Having just read several essays, now seems like a good time to catch up!

"Human Cruelty" by Hayden Carruth (the essay I will be doing my presentation on)

First, I would like to say that this may be one of my favorite essays I've read in this book. It's probably second only to "Son of Mr.Green Jeans" which takes the cake for my favorite.

In this essay, Hayden Carruth describes an experience he had as a child. There was a popular radio show in the 20s and 30s called Major Bowes' Amateur Hour which was kind of like an American Idol kind of talent search contest. The "Major" had a gong he would bang if someone was doing terribly, to further embarrass them. On this particular day (Carruth says that the World's Fair was going on in New York at the time. He doesn't remember the year but thinks it was 1932. Remember that.), they had brought in an African drummer that didn't know a lick of English. He drummed, the crowd booed, and the gong was banged (bung should be the word for banged). BUT, having no idea what the gong sound meant, the drummer kept drumming until they actually physically removed him from the stage. This bothered Carruth deeply. Carruth understood that there were terrible people (like Hitler) who did terrible things (genocide), but this was his horrifying realization that horrible, awful, fucked up people were amongst the general population as well. He wanted no part of it, no matter what kind of image that would project for him, he was not afraid to be called womanly, he had proved his manliness.
 
Hayden Carruth would be horrified if heard this Tech N9ne song >:D muahaha

Alright, so what's so great about this essay, you may ask?
 Well for one thing, the essay is written in 3rd person. Interesting stylistic choice, Carruth.
And also, I did a bit of research on Hayden Carruth. He was born in 1921 and died in 2008 after a series of strokes. He wasn't an essay writer really. He was a critic, novelist, reviewer, an editor, and a highly regarded poet. He was married four times, divorced 3 times. He had two kids, one of which died in 1997. He had a lifelong battle with mental illness, most notably severe anxiety and phobias. He lived in a mental hospital for a while, then felt "cured" and left, then soon after he relapse and returned to the mental hospital. When he returned, they gave him electroshock therapy which damaged his memory. This is important to the essay. The World's Fair took place in New York in 1924 and 1939. There was no World's Fair in 1932. At the  end of the essay he says he had proved his manliness in other ways. He's probably referring to the fact that he served in the Army in 1949 and 1950. He attempted suicide in 1988 when his 3rd wife left him. He refused an invitation to the White House in 1998 because he found Clinton to be atrocious.
I found this quote, where he speaks about a period of time that he spent living in his parents attic, terrified of the world.
"Agoraphobia is when every night at 2:00 AM for 5 years- that's 1825 nights- you go out loaded with Thorazine to walk in the street... and you never get more than 100 yards away from your door."

Final Essay Preview, essay!

This is a preview of my final essay. Please note that it is nowhere near complete.
This is what I had to start with, and where I got stuck, having no idea where to take it. After meeting with Elizabeth yesterday, I have decided where to go with it and I'm incredibly proud of what it has turned out to be. It's a lot further along in progress than what you see here, but the point of a preview is to not give away the whole thing.
Don't mistake the tone of the essay. It's truly not going to be sad, or a rant about how much I suck (you all already know that hahaha). I swear.
Enjoy :)


I’m overly self-conscious. I want my writing to be perfect, but I myself am imperfect, and therefore hate writing about myself. I’m overly private and protective of my life. I only let in those who I feel least judged by, those who I deem worthy of knowing who I really am. Cognitive dissonance is a term used to describe when your thoughts clearly object to your outward situation. I am a writer, and I am private, and these have created cognitive dissonance in my life.
I want to tell you why I am overly self-conscious, but that would mean giving up my privacy. I want to tell you why I am a writer, but I still don’t quite understand that. I have too much to say maybe, and no one to say it to. In a world where I am surrounded by the judgments of others, I stay as concealed as I can. Reclusive, possibly. Terrified, most definitely. I’ve been called every possible bad thing anyone could think of to call me, and because of that, I have built a wall. The Great Wall of China would look like a white picket fence compared to the blockade that keeps me safely guarded from the world. Things don’t bother me anymore though. I have built up immunity to the terrible things people say about me. I was metaphorically vaccinated in fifth grade. The sticks and stones hit my wall but do not break it. The dementors feed off of my patronus, but not my soul.
In spite of these terrible things I have faced, or possibly because of them, I have also done and said terrible things to people I loved as well as people I hated. I’ve been overly judgmental, ruthlessly cruel, and heartless on countless occasions. I have played both roles, the bully and the victim, and I have proven that I am no better because of it. I don’t want to admit that I am a bully just like the boys who called me fat in fifth grade. And I also don’t want to admit that I have been a victim of bullying because that would mean admitting that I have flaws worthy of being tormented over. I am not all bad though. I have stood up for friends and strangers alike. I have been selfless. I have done good deeds, but the good deeds make me a hero no more than the bad things make me a villain.
I project an image to the world, and because of that, people believe they know who I really am. I wear a lot of black, and therefore I am sad and angry. I have piercings and tattoos and therefore, I am probably a bad influence, or even criminal to some. I don’t have a permanent smile etched in my face, and therefore, I am unapproachable and mean. My boots and jacket are both leather, and therefore I am scary and dark. I have scars, and therefore I am broken. I smoke, and therefore I am unladylike. I am quiet, and therefore I have nothing to say. I am blonde, and therefore I am not smart. I have big boobs, and therefore I am a slut. I am a girl, and therefore I cannot drive or make a good joke. I get good grades, and therefore I do not like to have fun. I do not cause unnecessary problems, and therefore I am weak. I do not deny any of these beliefs, and therefore they are all true.

How about some comic relief?
This is me passed out on a car trip like 5 years ago. God I'm so attractive.

This is me in fifth grade. muahaha see why they called me fat? ;)


Friday, March 29, 2013

Didion/Rodriguez Essays

I have to first acknowledge that it's 6 AM and Harry Potter (Prisoner of Azkaban) is on HBO right now. It's my favorite of the Harry Potter movies and I'm absolutely giddy.

Anyways, I really enjoyed all three of the essays. I found "Goodbye to All That" the least relatable of the three, but still found some passages that stood out to me. On page 684, she says, "I could make promises to myself and to other people and there would be all the time in the world to keep them. I could stay up all night and make mistakes, and none of it would count." This is my favorite passage of the essay, along with the one on 685 of similar effect but where she has realized that it all really does count. I find it to be incredibly relatable. I have gone through the "I'm young so this doesn't count" phase too many times, with too many things.

Moving on, "In Bed" was a wonderful essay. It was a perfect balance of factually interesting and insightfully interesting. Apparently insightfully isn't a word because the red squiggly line is under it but I'm leaving it. Take that society. Anyways, I am well acquainted with the migraine, having had them since I was very young, but this essay was the first time I had ever heard of a "migraine personality" which is FASCINATING to me. Also, the section about how LSD was first synthesized while looking for the cure to migraine, on page 690, was really interesting. I'm not sure if it's entirely true, as I have learned elsewhere that LSD was synthesized while trying to create a respiratory stimulant, but oh well, what's "truth" anyways? The migraine personality is, as she says, "ambitious, inward, intolerant of error, rather rigidly organized, perfectionist." I absolutely fit into the migraine personality, however I have never been able to embrace the pain as she has, which I find to be both admirable and a bit annoying. Good for you that you turn a bad thing into a good thing, but fuck you for making me feel weak because I can't look at a migraine like yoga.

"Late Victorians" was a very interesting read. I'm not sure if I really grasped the entire message of it because there was a lot going on in it. The first lines really brought me in though, "we are restless hearts, for earth is not our true home. Human unhappiness is evidence of our immortality. Intuition tells us we are meant for some other city." Beautiful. The idea of the Victorian house paralleled with the homosexual lifestyle was a very interesting concept. I definitely learned a lot about the advancement of the Gay community from this essay, as well as about the advancement/culture of San Fransisco. I'm not entirely sure what the overall message of the essay was, but what I took from it was that Rodriguez tried to suppress who he was in the interest of trying to be a good Catholic, but he missed the fact that he was surrounded by so many accepting people, and successful Gays that were happy and not ashamed to embrace who they were like he was, like he made himself.



Snape embraced his homosexuality, so why couldn't Rodriguez? hahahaha just kidding, Snape!!!

Monday, March 25, 2013

Reality Check?

Turn on the TV and flip through the channels, what do you see? Television today is dominated by the “reality TV” fad. There seems to be a show for everything: Jersey Shore, American Idol, Real Housewives, 19 Kids and Counting, The Real World, Survivor, Storage Wars, Duck Dynasty, Dancing With the Stars, Deadliest Catch, Face Off, Hell’s Kitchen, Judge Judy, Teen Mom, The Bachelorette, America’s Next Top Model, Tanked, The Apprentice, Moonshiners, The Biggest Loser, Extreme Makeover, Ghost Hunters, Fear Factor, Here Comes Honey Boo Boo, and more. One would think that in this small list of the growing number of reality television programs, you could find at least one show that actually depicts something resembling real life. Go ahead, I challenge you to try! In their attempts to recreate day to day life, television producers have left out one crucial element: reality. Before getting swept up in the reality TV craze, ask yourself, whose reality is this? If you’re a rich Guido housewife with 19 kids (one of which is a pageant queen), a knack for sci-fi make-up and costume design, a passion for creating multi-million dollar fish tanks, and a ghost haunting your mansion, you’ll easily be able to find something appealing and relatable to watch. However, for the rest of us, finding a show that’s relatable isn’t so easy.
                I find myself entirely unable to relate to shows like Buckwild or The Hills, which claim to depict the life of average teenagers. However, many shows exist that successfully recreate both the mundane and the dramatic qualities of everyday life. Shows such as Degrassi, Awkward, and Freaks and Geeks mirror the reality of the everyday life of a teenager, without the claim of reality TV, far better than those intended to be realistic. Not every teen can say that they’ve experienced the lavish life of the Hollywood hills, or the risqué lifestyle of West Virginian teens. However, every teen can probably say that they’ve faced, or known someone to face the challenges presented in shows like Degrassi, such as peer pressure, suicide, drug use, violence, death, teen pregnancy, bullying, self-injury, body image problems, and psychological disorders. In their attempts to recreate reality, creators of these shows continuously overlook and ignore the qualities of real life that make it relatable, in search of something more entertaining and less realistic.
                Reality shows claim to be raw, unscripted life, and depict life in its natural environment. However, when TV crews are following you around during your day to day activities, situations are bound to be manipulated. I know that if my life was the focus of a reality show, broadcast for millions of people to see, I would always put on make-up, be more conscious of what I say and do, and probably leave my dorm room more. Already, I’ve admitted that my reality show would be a manipulated version of reality, and therefore not reality at all. It’s not always easy to be yourself under the pressure and judgments of all those surrounding your life, let alone millions of viewers. I know I would feel incredibly uncomfortable being boring Katie Spiegel if millions of people were watching me. I would hope that there were make-up artists, and joke writers on staff to make me funnier and better looking. Also, if my real life were on TV, I would be forced to question whether my friendships and interactions were real or just fabrications from fame mongers. Not to mention, if I were getting paid, I probably wouldn’t be nice or let things slide. I would take advantage of my situation and probably be ruthlessly mean and say whatever I think because I’m rich and I can, and that’s what Americans want to see, apparently. As you can see, just the thought of being the focus of a TV show has made me doubt who I am, change the way I act/speak, stage situations, and toss my morals out the window. If you think that reality TV stars don’t face the same dilemmas, you’re not being realistic.
                Maybe real life can’t be found on TV because real life does not belong on TV. Television exists to escape reality, not create it. No one’s life is as consistently funny as Family Guy or Workaholics, or as dramatic as Breaking Bad or Sons of Anarchy, or as interesting as Supernatural or Game of Thrones. TV shows are created to give examples of what could be, or what would be, allowing us to imagine what it would be like to be something we’re not. Occasionally, a show comes along that actually depicts something we’ve faced, and gives us an example of how others dealt with it, allowing us as viewers to judge their actions. More often than not, TV is exaggerated and unrealistic. Real life can’t be recreated by TV because real life is full of boring routines and work and TV is the escape from those realities. TV is meant to entertain, not to bore us to death with the same routine we face each day. When seeking out real life to recreate, reality TV creators tend to fabricate interesting situations because they aren’t as common in real life as they are on TV. Maybe it’s time to face the fact that there is no such thing as “reality TV” because reality doesn’t belong on TV.



Friday, March 15, 2013

Eggers vs Eggers



The two passages I’ll be using are:
Pg. 204, the long passage where he works out how he’ll fit into the cast of The Real World, as the “tragic person.”
vs.
Pg.235-237, the passage where he, very dramatically, begs to be on the show.

The biggest difference is the tone. The first is light hearted, kind of funny. He’s telling this interviewer that he basically has the show all figured out in the way of the cast members, using sometimes short choppy sentences, contrasted with these long sentences of description, saying how certain people will influence the show. It’s also funny because it’s pretty dead on. He expresses this tone by almost thinking out loud, for example, when he says, “Maybe an Asian or Latino, or both. Or wait. A Native American. You should get a Native American!” he’s planning this out as he goes, and agreeing with himself. He then goes on a tangent (I think tangents might be his forte) about how he’s never met an Indian, then comes back to the original discussion. 

However, in the second passage, he’s very desperate and points out all of the things that make him tragic and how he can play them up for sympathy. It’s sad and almost a little pathetic that he wants so badly to be on this awful show. His tone is expressed really well through really long run on sentences, frantically searching for something that will make the interviewer think “this is our guy!” and then really short sentences that are concise, but very impactful. For example, “I will be shot in an elevator, I will be swallowed in a sinkhole, will drown, so I need to bring this message now; I only have so much time, I know that sounds ridiculous, I seem young, healthy, strong, but things happen, I know you may not think so, but things happen to me, to those around me, they truly do, you’ll see, so I need to grab this while I can, because I could go at any minute, Laura, Mother, Father, God—Let me be the conduit.” He’s almost in a panic here, thinking the words as he says them, trying to get out exactly what he means, over and over again. In contrast, he as these little short sentences that increase his panic, but slow his writing, our reading, down, for example, “I could die soon. I probably already have AIDS. Or cancer.” He’s thinking out loud, but retains the frantic, desperate tone.