Girls Like Us Girls Like Us is an intimate portrayal concerning four girls who grew up all with different ethnic backgrounds and various forms of parental guidence. Anna Chau is Vietnames with strict parents and good beliefs‚ Lisa Bronca is a Caucasion Catholic‚ De’Yonna Moore is African-American with strong goals who lives with her Grandma and Raelene Cox is a young white girl who comes from a broken home with little parental guidence. Girls Like Us shows examples of structural functionism
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Leading the audience to realize what an impact “Like a Girl” can have on adolescent girls (Case study: Always #LikeAGirl). After watching what the young adults considered to be “Like a Girl” the commercial then shows little girls around the age of ten and what their response to what it is like to be a girl. All of the younger girls doing the task as intense as possible‚ they showed confidence and determination of what it is like to be "a girl". This part of the commercial pulls the audience in with
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I have often heard the description‚ “like a girl”. People use this phrase to make jokes and laugh at others. As far as I consider‚ it is totally unfair to girls. Last year‚ I went camping with my classmates. We brought tents‚ barbecue grills‚ food and fuel. To get to the camping site‚ we had to carry all the stuff by foot without the help of vehicles or equipment since the roads were quite rugged. On the way‚ everyone carried as much stuff as they were capable of. After a while‚ a thin boy put down
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Throwing a football When the football travels through the air for a long pass it always follows a curved path because the force of gravity influences the movement of the ball in the vertical direction. As the ball travels up‚ gravity slows it down until it stops briefly at its peak height; the ball then comes down‚ and gravity accelerates it until it hits the ground. Projectile motion is the path of any object that is launched or thrown and has an arched course (howstuffworks) For the football
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Be a Girl Because You Are a Girl “A girl’s confidence plummets during puberty.” In the “Like a Girl” campaign commercial‚ Always sends a message on vulnerability that during puberty words and stereotypes can have lasting effects on girls and their confidence. It is obvious throughout the commercial that a point is being made about women and their common stereotype. Even the women being interviewed know how and what the common response would be when asked to “do something like a girl.” This commercial
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“Like a Girl” Always‚ one of the largest corporations who produce feminine care products‚ debuted a sixty second advertisement during the superbowl. This ad concentrates on one of the things that‚ undoubtedly‚ every single person‚ regardless of gender has heard at some point in their lives: “You throw like a girl!”. The advertisement shows differences in how young women‚ boys and young girls perceive the phrase‚ “like a girl.” The Super Bowl commercial gained recognition for changing the conversation
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I had read an essay titled “Act Like A Girl” by Dominique Freeman. The essay explores the issue of gender roles in our society and families. Freeman tells her readers of events in her life when her mother would force ideas of what a girl should look like and act like upon her. Freeman considered herself a total tomboy‚ which is the opposite of what her mother wanted her daughter to be. I know of many cases when women are not being accepted as who they really are because they do not fit into the stereotype
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Social Loafing and Throwing Away Trash Social loafing occurs when people work together and when their “output” is combined leaving no one to feel solely accountable for the completed task. Social loafing occurs on many different types of tasks including ones requiring physical effort (Szymanski & Harkins‚ 1987). Due to social loafing effect we hypothesized that people in groups would leave behind more trash then groups of one to two people. We wanted to see if larger groups left more trash thinking
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Fight Like a Girl This essay will offer a feminist analysis of sexism in superhero comic books‚ a topic I explore in my recent podcast on female representation in comics. I will “examine how comic books reinforce or undermine the economic‚ political‚ social‚ and psychological oppression of women” As part of my research‚ I conducted a very unscientific survey where I asked the question‚ “Is there sexism in superhero comic books?" Not surprisingly most women I asked believed comic books are sexist
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As a young girl begins to go through changes in their minds and bodies‚ words can shape them in many ways. It is said that “A girl’s confidence plummets during puberty” (“#LikeAGirl” 00:01:27). Always #LikeAGirl‚ effectively encourages women and girls to be proud of their gender and to have self-confidence no matter what anyone says. In this commercial‚ the feminine hygiene company Always portrays the opinion of men‚ women‚ young boys‚ and young girls about what the phrase “like a girl” means. First
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