The book, Last Man Out by Mike Lupica, is a very unique book and I would recommend it to anyone who loves sports, especially football, to read it. The setting of this book is in present-day Boston. The main character is Tommy Gallagher, a 12 year-old boy who loves to play football. The rising action of this book would be that Tommy’s father died because of a fire at a house that he was called to. Because of this Tommy’s sister, Emily, stopped playing the sport she was so good at. Tommy tried to persuade her to keep playing. Tommy kept playing football and kept making…
John Alvin Ray, or best known as Johnnie Ray, has an incredible story. Johnnie was a popular singer/songwriter back in the 1950’s. Sure, this is an accomplishment for him, but his songs alone weren’t exactly what made him who he was. Johnnie Ray had a past, present, and a future and he knew what and where he wanted to be a few years down the road, and made it happen.…
Toby Keith’s “American Soldier” demonstrates examples of pathos, ethos, and logos. The song explains a soldier’s feelings and responsibilities at hand. The emotions shown through the song are thankfulness, intenseness, and courageousness. The sound of the song is very soft in the beginning and picks up when he begins to talk about the duty he has. Ironically, the music change makes sense because he has to balance his time between work and family, and family is calming, while work on the other hand is intense. Toby Keith establishes credibility because he lives in America, knowing that freedom doesn’t come free, and the song is written in first person, describing when the songwriter went overseas. Toby Keith also establishes logos in his song…
Walk the Line, a 2005 film written by James Mangold, is a biography of Johnny Cash's life, from his days as a young boy to his days as a country music star (IMDb). Johnny Cash had always had a love for music, even as a child, but he never expanded on it, until he needed a way to support his family, which he felt he could do by becoming a musician. He had a dream to become a musician all his life, and by having a little push, he auditioned with his band and was able to make a record. Unfortunately, Johnny's "perfect" life was short lived, when he got tied up into dangerous substances, drugs and alcohol, and these things caused him to lose all that he held dear to him. By Johnny Cash making these horrible decisions, although wrong, they made…
Paul Bryant was born on September 11, 1913, near the birthplace of Johnny Cash in Kingsland, Arkansas. He was born to two hardworking parents, William Monroe Bryant and Dora Ida Kilgore Bryant. His parents had a total of twelve children, but sadly three died in childbirth. Paul of which was the eighth child in the lineup. Four siblings lived in the house with him, of which he was the youngest boy. Their home was…
Recording “Folsom Prison Blues” helped to bring Johnny back in good favor to the public eye. Saul then arranged shows for Johnny to play for promoters who lost all their money after he cancelled on them. He almost ended his comeback in May of 1968 when he and June honeymooned in Israel. This gave him the idea for writing songs about Jesus and the Holy Land.…
A. Johnny Cash is one of the most liked and well know musician of all time.…
Even though he was a black minority, he was able to make tons of money by speaking his mind in a radical way. He is a rag's to riches story coming from the Brooklyn, New York. His father abandoning him only made his character stronger in a way that it created a certain hate that he was able to put forth in his songs. He sold drugs to make ends meet but was able to make a real career out of rapping and later in some movies. He was so good that while he was in jail, for sexual abuse, his 1995 album, Me Against the World, debuted at No. 1. It went double…
He landed a deal with Starday Records, Pappy Daily as his producer and manager. Which would be a partnership that would last for years. He also got married to Shirley Ann Corley in 1954 and had two sons. Their sons names were Jeffery and Brian.…
The book ‘The Outsiders’ by S.E. Hinton is a story told from the perspective of a 14 year old boy named Ponyboy set in South West America. In the novel he faces social division, gang warfare, hatred and violence. One example is Dally is a hero because he looked after his friends when they needed him. In a way, all of the Greasers are pioneers in their individual ways, but some more than others. People are also heroes for different reasons. To some people it might be if someone does something courageous, for another person they might think that it is standing up for what they believe in, or even someone who stands up for their friends and will stick by them no matter what. All three of these views of what a hero is defined as is shown in the novel, which gives the book a real character in its self.…
At the beginning of the novel, from the reader’s perspective Spicer gives the impression of being a young boy, in particular with his refusal to eat after they have murdered Hale. “I’ll be sick...if I eat” The Boy then responds with “Spew then”, this suggests that Spicer has a weakness especially within the group. As well as this it implies that Spicer regrets or feels a large amount of emotion towards the act they have just committed unlike Pinkie who seems totally unfazed. However, as the book continues we learn that Spicer is an older man as we are told of his “spots” that appear as well as “upset...bowels”, his “carroty” hair and his “scarred” nose. The sympathy the reader felt before then changes to loathing, as these new descriptions create an unattractive image for the reader. As well as this his earlier weakness now comes across as spineless and almost pathetic. We also learn that Spicer used to be a Jew “but a hairdresser and surgeon had altered that”. This reiterates the point that Spicer is spineless as he can’t even stand by his religion unlike Pinkie who has very strong religious views.…
Music’s eternal shape-shifter David Bowie wonders if we could be “Heroes” if just for one day. Often cited as a pinnacle in David Bowie’s career, “Heroes” features some of Bowie’s most evocative lyrics and greatest show of his perfectly imperfect voice. Chugging forward with boundless energy the song builds up barriers of sound only to break them down a minute later. One of Bowie’s greatest achievements as a musician, the song is a perfect way to end a wonderful soundtrack. While Perks fans know the tunnel song was never mentioned in the novel, this song quietly plays in the background during the tunnel scene.…
"Inside Johnny Cash 's Folsom Prison." Npr.org. N.p., 18 Nov. 2005. Web. 10 Aug. 2012. <http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5018930>.…
‘Song of Hope’ is a poem written by Oodgeroo Nuccal (Kath Walker) an Aboriginal Australian. The piece is classified as Aboriginal Australian literature. It was published in the 1960’s. The purpose of the text is to give hope in a new beginning after the events involving the racial tension between the Aboriginals and the white settlers. The poem is directed to the Aboriginal people of Australia who suffered from these events.…
A comparison of recordings of Bob Dylan's "All along the Watchtower" by Bob Dylan and Jimi Hendrix offers a vivid case study of what Samuel Floyd characterizes as "the complementary oppositions of African- and European-derived musical processes and events." The song itself draws together elements of ballad and blues traditions; and the two recordings treat this synthesis in very different ways even as they share the common ground of late 1960s rock. Dylan's is a spare, acoustic folk-rock rendition, while Hendrix's is an opulent electric spectacle whose sonic and syntactic conception unpacks the latent drama only suggested by the original. In the process, Hendrix offers an alternative answer to the song's existential dilemma implied in its lyrics…