In the end, Alex Bumberg asks Russ Feingold why no one is pushing for a change in the system. His response, though it could be described as disheartening, is something that I can understand. “It’s the system, and it’s the water in which we swim…[they] were elected under the system...It’s hard to get people to change something after they win that way.” It is crushing to think that Congress could be so corrupt. But any system can be difficult to challenge, especially when it benefits so many people with so much influence. Bumberg points out how many of the politicians and lobbyists they spoke to hate the mess that is political fundraising. I honestly don’t think I understand the system well enough to fully appreciate that these individuals who…
ISR 3 The First Part Last by Angela Johnson is a book about a teenage boy named Bobby Morris a sixteen year old boy who has just found out on his birthday that his girlfriend Nia is pregnant with his child. After finding out this news a lot has changed in not just her life ,but also Bobbys. This isn’t your typical pregnancy story where the dad is not in the child's life it’s actually just the quite opposite.…
Angella Johnson is the author of the book The First Part Last. This book is about a boy named Bobby growing up in the urban area of New York. Bobby turns 16 and he's going to skip school and hang out with his friends. They go eat at Mineos where Bobby’s dad Fred works. Then they go climb to the top of the Empire State Building. Looking down at the observation deck they see that people look like little tiny ants and they have a great view of the city. Afterwards Bobby comes home for a great surprise when he sees his girlfriend Nia standing in front of Bobby’s house. Nia is holding a red balloon looking at him with a worried look “I’ll never forget that look and how and how her voice shook when she said “ Bobby Iv’e got…
When it comes to corrections, it covers all the legal reactions of society to some illegal behavior. (9)…
The Final Passage explores the anxieties of entering the colonial motherland and the departure from ‘home’. ‘The Passage’ chapter outlines a description of the entrance into England where ‘Leila looked at England and everything seemed bleak. She quickly realized she would have to learn a new word; overcast.’ The apprehension of entering a new and unfamiliar space causes Leila to feel uneasy.…
The stars say they can’t finish school, and get a job because of the difficulty of caring for a child interferes with their time to do so. With the salary that they have they don’t have to worry much about getting a job. Teenagers might not want to have to work so they will think that if they get pregnant they won’t have to worry about it. When teenagers see the stars in magazines they will want to get pregnant so they could also be in magazines and on multiple shows.…
Nearly 750,000 teenagers get pregnant in a year. In The Pregnancy Project by Gaby Rodriguez, is a 17 year old girl who decides for her senior project she is going to fake a pregnancy. While only telling a total of 5 people from her school and family. “I’m not surprised. Does she know that she just ruined her life?” (Rodriguez 141); Gaby wanted to hear all of the gossip that would be said about her. I believe this book was written for a good reason, to fight stereotypes and gossip gets around. While reading this small portion of Gaby’s life, I can see that it had made a big impact on her and many other lives. After reading how this book touched the lives of so many; I can say I truly enjoyed reading this book.…
In July of 2009, MTV aired a new reality show on their network, 16 and Pregnant. The concept of the show was to tape the journey of pregnant teenagers throughout their pregnancy and the first few months of being a teen mom. They wanted to show viewers the struggles and hardships these girls faced. The show got such good ratings that they produced a spinoff, Teen Mom. Teen Mom follows four of the girls from 16 and Pregnant as they embark on motherhood. MTV aimed for this show to bring awareness of how hard it is to be a teen mom and the struggles the teens and their babies have to face. The real question is does 16 and Pregnant and Teen Mom correctly get the message across or do these shows glamorize teen pregnancy?…
“Why do people give into stereotypes other people give them? Why would you ever let someone else's negative thoughts dictate how you’re going to live your life?”(Rodriguez 143) A memoir called The Pregnancy Project is an inside look in daily life of Gaby Rodriguez faking her pregnancy for a school project. The novel is full of heartbreak, some humor, break-downs, and especially drama. The memoir has a good insight and it contains many details in the beginning but it seems like she just gave up with details near the end. Even though the book lacks detail, I recommend this book to teen girls that are in high school or even college because it is very inspiring.…
Statistics show that teenage pregnancy is an extremely common matter lately. Sadly, lampooning and shaming teenage mothers is also a popular topic. In the The Pregnancy Project Gaby Rodriguez, a 17 year old senior, decides to see exactly what teen moms have to deal with by faking her own pregnancy and tricking half of the world. The Pregnancy Project follows Rodriguez as she demonstrates the struggles of teen moms-to-be by revealing her family troubles, some critics reviews and the impact it had the community.…
The book I chose to read was “When I Say No, I Feel Guilty” by Manuel J. Smith. The first thing to stand out to me in this book was it seemed a little outdated. Even though the writing style and the examples appeared to be from a different era, I was still able to see how different points were relevant today and to me personally. This title screamed my name when I was browsing the list of choices because no matter what I am saying no to, I always feel guilty.…
According to the National Center for Health Statistics, 86 percent of mothers who give birth out-of-wedlock are teenagers. MTV’s show “16 & Pregnant,” which has only been on air since June 2009, is already reflecting the rapid boom in teenage pregnancy across various cities in America. Since the early eighties MTV has been considered somewhat of a cultural phenomenon for American adolescents and its depiction of gender has a strong impact that continues to this day (Holtzman 2000). Created by Morgan J. Freeman (director of teen shows Dawson’s Creek and Laguna Beach), the show “16 & Pregnant” has been said to be guilty of exacerbating, normalizing and even glorifying teen pregnancy. Perhaps, it’s just reflecting a current social dilemma occurring amongst female youth. Each week a new episode revolves around a different girl struggling with the challenges of teenage pregnancy. The network presents these characters as “real”, plucked from the grips of reality, validated and “chosen” to represent some sort of normalized or otherwise glamorized middle-class identity of teenage motherhood. The show depicts women’s roles that are often typified to include traditional gendered norms of heterosexual relationships, marriage, motherhood and femininity. “16 & Pregnant” serves as a platform to broadcast what is seen as a stereotypical American culture that is now engulfing teen girls everywhere. The social identities MTV presents reinforces those of traditional female roles and gender norms and attempts to establish a new model for pregnant teens in a modern age.…
The shows are not sending the right message to teenage girls and because of that there are many teenage girls want to get pregnant on purpose. That’s why they made the movie “The Pregnancy Pact” showing how a group of teenage girls all wanted to be pregnant so they could “feel good and sexy” and feel attractive because they wanted all these attention from boys. The show has not only sent the wrong message to teenage girls but they have also taken the meaning out of pregnancy. The shows co-stars are on social media making pregnancy seem desirable. When pregnancy is something so meaningful to many women. For a women getting pregnant and being able to have children is already such an honor and blessing. For us women our body’s isn’t magazine perfect but when we look in the mirror we see a mom and there is no greater honor, love or blessing. For the show they don’t realize that and the have made pregnancy seem desirable and attractive to teenage girls and that’s something completely unacceptable. MTV should capture the real feeling and the real-life experience of a teenage mother, so many teenagers don’t make mistakes and end up all alone with no financial income and a baby in their arms because they thought they were going to be on MTV’s next season “16 and…
Their research examined the association between teens’ interest in the reality television program surrounding teenage pregnancy and motherhood, and changes in teen childbearing outcomes. Using Nielsen ratings data to measure viewership geographically, temporally related internet searches and Twitter messages concerning the program, pregnancy and/or birth control were measured as well as teen birth rates.…
Teen pregnancy has been gravelly increased in the last few years. Bad media influences (Many programs at TV programs or sexual content movies as well as other mediums) can be the factors that teen girls nowadays are getting a wrong advice that teen motherhood can a common way to live. Partners and friends’s bad influence is making them think that is right to have sex at a young age and will make them feel more popular. In that regards, this essay by Cristina page is restating the issue that more forms of bad media and wrong people’s influences are available today than ever before and consequently teens girls are much more exposed to a lot of information and these sometimes switch teen girl’s mind to do something wrong when they think is totally normal and it also has made teen girls to believe that having children at a young age might be beneficial because they think giving a child for adoption might improve their fortune giving them away for millions of dollars , so it can’t ruin her adolescence too but in reality it can really affect them.…