Sunday, September 26, 2010

Bowling For Columbine Overview

Journal 1-2

Bowling For Columbine Overview

I. Honestly, I didn't really get any new information reguarding the answer to my questions from last week. However, after watching Bowling for Columbine, I have a little better understanding of the power of fallacies. Michael Moore uses tons of them to make his points. As a viewer, I found myself being easily fooled by his media tricks.


II. This week we watched Bowling for Columbine. I really enjoyed it, actually, and took a lot out of it. Michael Moore takes real life conflicts and reflects on them in a way that is overly sarcastic and funny. He does a really good job of holding the viewer's attention. By turning serious matters into dramatic jokes, Moore is able to pull people's opinion one way or another.




One fallacy that is used very frequently in this video is phantom questioning. He cuts out certain sections of the video clips from various interviews, making the person speaking look like a moron. We often see the response of the person, but not the question that was asked. This causes the person to appear different than they actually are.

Another thing that stuck out to me during the video was the "Wonderful World" montage. It was ridiculously easy to pick out the parts of the cartoon that were completely inaccurate. However, any normal viewer who is not asked to analyze the content might not notice the historical inaccuracy. Wrong ideas were expressed about the following groups: Indians, white people, the KKK, the NRA, and the British.




There is one final thing that stood out to me during our exploration of Bowling for Columbine. Someone in class mentioned that it would have been really different for us if we hadn't researched the people and things involved before watching the video. I agree completely with that statement because some people were made out to be way more harmless than they actually are. Also, facts about things like the Oklahoma City bombing and the Columbine High School massacre were altered or dramatized for media effect.




III. One thing I would like to know more about this topic is: When Michael Moore interviews these people, does he tell them that their interview is going to be cropped and dramatized? Are they made aware that he's going to cut certain things out to create a desired effect?

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Ambiguity, Fallacies, and Loaded Language

Journal 1-1

Ambiguity, Fallacies, and Loaded Language

II.  This week in class we learned about ambiguity, fallacies, and loaded language. We first watched a powerpoint on ambiguity. The example I best remember is a sign that says: SLOW CHILDREN AT PLAY. This can either be interpreted as a sign warning drivers to slow down because children are playing, or a sign that states "slow children" are at play. Next we studied fallacies. There are fallacies of relevance, fallacies of weak induction, fallacies of presumption, fallacies of ambiguity, and fallacies of grammatical analogies. Broken down even farther, there are 22 different types of fallacies that fall under those 5 categories. One day for homework we wrote a radio commercial using fallacies and loaded language. Our commercial included the use of power words, such as: extraordinary, amazing, horrific and demolishing. These words are either overwhelmingly positive or overwhelmingly negative. Finally we watched "The Awful Truth" and discussed the media techniques presented in the episodes.



Personally I thought these topics were all very interesting. Some of the examples of ambiguity were rather humorous. My favorite topic, however, was fallacies. I have witnessed most of the given examples in my own life, but never actually analyzed them. When we were asked to make up a new example of each fallacy, I realized just how often they're used in everyday language.



Also, I believe that writing the radio commercial was a good exercise for the class. It helped me to get a feel for what goes through the minds of radio advertisement writers. A lot of thought has to go into the use of loaded language. You have to decide who the target audience will be, and what they will want to hear. You have to decide what is going to motivate the listeners to buy into what you're advertising. Not only do you want to be convincing, but you also have to be careful not to be overly dramatic. I believe that when loaded language, like power words, is used excessively, it can be unconvincing to the listener.

III. One thing I would like to know more about from this week's class is this: How much do fallacies actually affect people? Like, when media uses them, do viewers actually recognize it? Are people easily fooled by fallacies?



Sources: 

CSL Cartoonstock. Fallacies of Cartoons and Comics. Retrieved September 19, 2010, from http://www.cartoonstock.com/directory/f/fallacies.asp

History of Ideas: Evolution. Course Objectives. Retrieved September 19, 2010, from http://flightline.highline.edu/gavantag/Evolution/evsylF08.htm

New World Disorder. (2008, November 27). Logical Fallacies. Retrieved September 19, 2010, from http://theskepticshelpdesk.blogspot.com/