AdelineL2010Humanities
Sunday, May 15, 2011
iMedia: The American President
This Clip from one of my favortie movies, The American President, it brings out the imporatnt traits of a president and what the American people should be focused on.
In the movie clip Pres. Andrew Shepard, played by Michael Douglas, is giving a speech to the American people and mostly to his competitor, Bob Romson, about needing serious people, character and the little things that are not relavant to his presidency like his girlfriend, or burning an american flag.
This reminded me of Obama, how people make such a big deal about a little detail, like his birth certificate, or his background. Obama has wonderful character and you need that to get elected as a president but the American people shouldn't worry about the little things in the president's life, as long as they are doing your job you should not worry. But as said in the movie , "the American people do have a funny way of decideing what is and what is not their business" -AJ.
The little things make you think if it will change the presient's ways or not. But Michael is saying they do not matter, he is the president and it is his life. According to him it is time for serious people, not the ones blaming other's for things so they look bad, we need serious people in serious times and something like a birth certificate is not as serious compared to an overthrow of a president in a thrid world country.
Monday, May 9, 2011
Inconvenient Truth: We are mortal
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
Blogging Around 5.4.11
This is definitely true with me too Katie. I get so absorbed in what I do and just go along with it and it is kinda blah, but then you take a step back and realize what could make that moment even more special for you or the people you are with, it makes a difference in you satisfaction. Like if we look back in 50 years at our lives we want to remember what we did and we want to know that we were happy back then. This is a great connection that made me think about my own life and to really realize what needs improvement for satisfaction. Good Job Katie.
Then I commented on Kathryn's about the Do You Mind questions we do in class. She has learned a lot from herself and other in the class because of these questions. And it opens up new ways to think about the questions given. I said:
I totally agree with you Kathryn. Do you mind questions are great because they make you realize so much about yourself because you can be totally honest and no one can judge you and you do not even need to tell anyone your thoughts. The sharing part is great too, you can find out and absorb the way others around you might see a question differently than you that you might have passed over. DYM questions are good to get to know others and yourself more deeply and teach you things like living in the moment and realizing what is going on around you in the world.
Saturday, April 30, 2011
Best of the wek: Who programs who?
Monday, April 25, 2011
Mash Up: Solidarity
Solitude: The act of being by yourself, lonely and possibly reflecting, thinking, and finding oneself.
1. I could not explain the soul-sick feeling I got underground that night, when there hadn't been an R train for forty minutes and the platform was crowded as if it were rush hour. I couldn't explain how cut off i felt, sealed in a pneumatic tube of a commute that spit me out every morning on a gray sidewalk teeming with business suits, and spit me out again at night in a peaceful, isolated, hopelessly square far Brooklyn.
2. Allow your judgments their own silent, undisturbed development, which, like all progress, must come from deep within and cannot be forced or hastened.
12.
13.Bon trenchantly observed that because external enemies are such spurs to group solidarity, some groups will anoint paranoid leaders because such people are expert at identifying external threats, thus generating pleasurable group solidarity even when the threats aren’t real.
14. Strangers, waiting, up and down the boulevard
Their shadows searching in the night
Streetlight people, living just to find emotion
Hiding somewhere in the night
15. I never found the companion that was so companionable as solitude. We are for the most part more lonely when we go abroad among men than when we stay in our chambers.
16. And to speak of solitude again it becomes clearer that the fundamentally this is nothing that one can choose or refrain from. We are solitary.
Works Cited
1. Powell, Julie. Julie & Julia 365 Days, 524 Recipes 1 Tiny Apartment Kitchen. New York: Little, Brown and, 2005. Print. (52)
2. Rilke, Rainer M. Letters to a Young Poet. New York: Modern Library, 2001. Print. (23)
3. Rilke, Rainer M.(8)
4. Sorgjerd, Terje. "The Aurora on Vimeo." Vimeo, Video Sharing For You. 21 Mar. 2011. Web. 22 Apr. 2011. http://vimeo.com/21294655.
5. Rilke, Rainer M. (53)
6. Wolff, Tobias. Bullet in the Brain. Print. (4)
7. "Google Images." Pharmacy Escrow. Web. 22 Apr. 2011.
8. Rilke, Rainer M. (44)
9. Rilke, Rainer M. (62)
10. Rilke, Rainer M. (109)
11. Barrett, Andrea. The Sea of Information. Kenyon Review. Print. (17)
12. Albert Einstein (No Source)
13. Shirky, Clay. Cognitive Surplus: Creativity and Generosity in a Connected Age. New York: Penguin, 2010. Print. (164)
14. Journey. "Don't Stop Believing" Escape. Colombia, 1981. Vinyl
15. Henry David Thoreau (No Source)
16. Rilke, Rainer M. (87)
Sunday, April 24, 2011
Best of the Week: Change
Friday, April 22, 2011
Blogging Around 4.21.11
Also Dajana's blog about cleaning and reorganizing her room , I really connected to. She talked about spending hours listening to music while cleaning and throwing away and donating her things. I said, " I feel the same exact way. I almost cannot work in my room until everything is in place and cleaned up. A cluttered mind is from a cluttered space but once you clean it up you have a clear mind to create, think, imagine etc. It is good to throw away things you do not need and give to charity what is still wearable".