Detroit is one of the most important cities in Michigan and the United States. Detroit is the center of American motor industry and is the birthplace of Motown. Detroit is also home to four major league sport teams. However, one team is infamous for being the worst in their respective sport. This infamy belongs to Detroit’s football team, the Detroit Lions. Founded in 1930, Lions are owned by Martha Firestone Ford and play at Ford Field in downtown Detroit. The Lion’s colors are Honolulu Blue, silver, and white. The Lions play in the NFC North division of the NFL along with the Green Bay Packers, Minnesota Vikings, and the Chicago Bears. The Lions history has been full of highs and lows, much like the city of Detroit.…
Tyler Joseph is a musician, singer, rapper, and songwriter, best known as a lead vocalist for the musical duo Twenty One Pilots. Tyler Joseph as the lead singer and creator of this duo, is often ridiculed because there are so many people who don’t know where they should be categorized. Many people say that they can be known as alternative hip hop and rock, whereas, others say that they could be known as pop. Many critics also believe that their music isn’t good, that there’s no meaning behind it except for the literal meaning of the words put together. Many people don’t look at the meaning behind the words.…
This and the use of incorrect grammer, so common to rebellious teenagers, helps portray the message of the song, which is that today’s youth are prisoners of the older generations society, which alienate the younger generation and instead of looking for support and comfort, they thrive to rebel against these rules and law enforcement bodies, with the institution of society having no effect on the younger generation as they don’t comply and don’t want to reform. This creates the younger generations culture, arguing they are their own society.…
Looking at the image, one is able to see the different socioeconomic classes. The working class being the black workers since they are sitting on the dockyard and the upper middle class being the boss or owner sitting above yet beside them. This ranking between them shows the higher/lower incomes they are getting. Higher income earners are able to buy whatever they want whereas the lower income earners are restricted to providing for their families and making sure they have a roof over their heads. The song portrays this idea in a more complex way by telling a real life story about expenditures.…
Throughout most of the song you hear eccentric figurative language, except in the chorus (also known as hook). “It's like MK-ULTRA, controlling your brain suggestive thinking, causing your perspective to change, they want to rearrange the whole point of view of the ghetto…
Tupac starts the song with a very clear statement “I’m tired of bein’ poor and, even worse, I’m black” that announces what the song’s is going to talk about. In a decade where police brutality in Afro-American neighbourhood was a real debate, Tupac claims “Cops give a damn about a negro, Pull the trigger, kill a nigga, he’s a hero”. Problems are never far from you in these communities even for the younger “Give the crack to the kids, who the hell care? One less hungry mouth on the welfare!”. In this song, Tupac seems to put the fault on the system that doesn’t help them in any way. These inequalities are necessary to keep the American system on track. As an example, the singer says “First ship’em dope and let’em deal to brothers. Give ‘em guns, take a step back, watch them kill each other”. In the second verse, Tupac puts more accent on racism “I see no changes, all I see is racist faces. Misplaced hate makes disgrace to races”. Overall, lyrics undoubtedly shows the presence of an ethical issue and the author protest by saying that things need to change all along the song “We gotta start makin’ changes, learn to see me as a brother instead of two distant strangers”.…
This is a victory track to Peter. The lyrics deconstruct the idea of the typical gangster or hustler and redefines it. The song then applies these negative stereotypes of a gangster to those in power of America. It is quite literally a satire that illustrates how those in power of this capitalist work force are the real destructive gangsters. It coalesces with the montage perfectly in that it establishes a new way of being a “gangster” that does not involve all of the negative attributes; it is an alteration of the work environment and the institution of work altogether, at least in the context of the film. Another iconic scene uses Ice Cube’s “Down For Whatever” in which the three main characters exchange the virus-filled computer disc that will finally enact their plan to drain money from their company’s account. Much like the song, this scene, while comical implies that the three characters have established a bond in making a revolutionary move against the system. In this action, they have more or less sealed that they too are “down for whatever” as it regards actualizing some…
One can pick many instances in Detroit's last hundred years and conclude that the two riots of 1943 and 1967 were the presiding factor for this once great city's fatal turn. Detroit has come to be known as the Motor City due to its insurgence of the automotive industry, has been dubbed Detroit Rock City for its groundbreaking revolutionary music throughout the 20th century, and has even been hailed as Hockeytown for its euphoric love of the city's hockey king known as the Red Wings. While the city continues to be the automotive juggernaut of this nation, what with the Big Three GM, Ford, Daimler-Chrysler all located in and around suburban Detroit; its music industry still a hotbed among…
Water is necessary for all living organisms on this planet, especially humans. Without water, you will die. You can make it about three weeks without food, but you can only make it about three days without water. I guess you can say that water is pretty important. In Flint Michigan, they can’t even drink their water without a serious risk to your health. About two years ago, the state decided to save money by switching Flint's water supply from Lake Huron, to the Flint River. This plan backfired. Many problems have began to occur as a result, so if we don’t fix this water one major problem soon, this issue will only got worse.…
. This song is about someone having to live up to the expectations someone else wants for them. They are pressured into having to be exactly like that person. They are nonstop always being smothered, and absolutely hate the fact that they cannot be who they want to be. They eventually get tired of listening to him/her and start living to their own expectations.…
The first verse appears to show the appeal of the west to struggling families living in eastern states and goes on to explain, “the land was free and the price was right.” At the end of the next verse, Natalie Merchant uses the first-person perspective for the only time in the song, stating, “I see Indians that crawl through this mural that recalls our history.” This seems to further express…
In verse two he uses rain as reference to his current situation. ‘You know it's funny when it rains it pours”(2pac). Meaning when bad things happen other more difficult situations seem to occur at the same time. Another figurative language that he uses are Idioms. He doesn't have that much , but he is trying to make it the best way he can. “I'm trying to make a dollar out of fifteen cent” (2pac). One of most interesting part of this song is when he talks about blaming his mother for turning his brother into a crack baby. “We ain't meant to survive , cause it's a setup” (2pac). Which goes in to explain that the government want the black community to…
This song speaks on the issues in the U.S. during the time of the Vietnam War, specifically towards the civil rights movement. The civil rights movement is present in this song when McGuire explains the issue on minorities struggling to gain their rights (blacks). He says, “...Then take a look around to Selma, Alabama- You may leave here for four days in space- But when you return its the same old place” (31-33). This shows the problems of how blacks were struggling during this era for equal rights, such as voting. Selma, as seen in the song, was the key town in which African Americans sought to gain their voting rights where they started a march to Selma in order to gain attention from president Lyndon Johnson (Yardley). The lines also explain how the issues of the civil rights movement were not easily changed when he talks about how if you leave for space for a few days, that the problems in America have still stayed the same. The efforts of the civil rights movement is also present in the song when McGuire says, “And marches alone can’t bring integration” which also alludes to the March on Washington, in 1963, where blacks petitioned for equal jobs and…
/They’re trying to build another prison/ For you and me to live in/ Another prison system/ for you and me/ Minor drug offenders fill your prisons you don't even flinch/ All our taxes paying for your wars against the new non-rich/ All research and successful drug policy show that treatment should be increased/ And law enforcement decreased while abolishing mandatory minimum sentences/ In 2001, Serj Tankian and Daron Malakian, members of the band System of a Down, wrote this song in frustration about the mass incarceration of poor American’s, for minor drug offenses, that was going on then and , unfortunately, is still going on today.…
The abstract idea of the use of Little Rock in the song was to highlight the crisis taking place in 1957, when a group of young African- American students (as known as the Little Rock 9), were denied and prevented from entering a segregated high school. This event actually happened 3 years after the Brown v. Education, which was a Supreme Court case that ruled segregation in public school systems unconstitutional. Ole Miss was a similar case of the Little Rock 9, where James Meredith became the first African- American student to enroll at the University of Mississippi, which resulted in a riot between Southern segregationists and government officials. These two topics relate to each other because they both featured a moment of violation of the constitution, which stated segregation situations like the ones stated in the lyrics of the song are unconstitutional. The conflicts both have had government actions taken to reassure the historical African-American students were going to go further than what they came for. These topics relate to U.S history due to the fact that these events triggered a new evolution of equality among race, resulting in boycotts, powerful speeches, and much more that involved the movement of the American soil. These events both came to symbolize both massive resistance to social change and the government’s commitment to enforcing African-American civil…