Monday, March 22, 2010

McLuhan: It's All Going According to Marshall's Plan

"McLuhan: It's All Going According to Marshall's Plan" by Mark Edmundson is a fantastic article with a lot of insight into our generation and the way the types of media are affecting us. Through reading about the depth experience and depth participation, I could not help myself but to think of a few of my own examples of this from 2010.

A perfect example of a role-playing game where one takes on the view and persona of an animation, is the game The Sims. With the newer versions of this game, you can actually make the Sim look so much like yourself, down to birthmarks, pimples and freckles. After creating a virtual person that can look identical to the real you, one then commands it to do things, as if they were living that life themselves. This really intrigues the player to be right in the game, as "one self-contained unit".





Another quote from the reading that reminded me of something from the 21st century was, "Some day, perhaps, a clothes shopper will be able to see, beamed into his living room, a three-dimensional image of himself in a suit before he buys" (66-67). Although I have not heard of this, I have heard of a game that allows you to upload a picture of your face, and then try on different styles and colors of hair to see how a new hairdo would look. Sounds pretty similar, and pretty scary. These interactive systems really get the player involved in the game and are extremely reflective of real life.




This all goes in hand with Edmundson's idea of perceptual numbing. With all of the types of video and computer games today, nothing phases us. If a baby is shown at two years old how to virtually play with a Dog on Nintendo DS, or is shown how to shoot people on Call of Duty at age three, by the time they are teenagers, nothing can surprise them. He is absolutely correct when he says, "...perceptual numbing may be the loss of our individual capacity to respond to anything but the most violent stimuli" (68). We have become so accustomed to the different types of games and all the violence found on them, that nothing causes a response anymore. Many kids and teenagers have a better time living their life through a virtual reality game than actually going out into the real world. And this is exactly what the biggest downfall of the 21st century generation is.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Week #9 Assignment

The independent news source I have found and will continue to use for this semester is the Star Ledger Newspaper, which is the largest newspaper in the state of New Jersey. It is based in Newark, New Jersey. I have always enjoyed reading this newspaper because it gives a good amount of information on what is happening all over New Jersey, while sometimes having different perspectives than the large ownership companies that seem to be everywhere today.

OWNERSHIP

The Star Ledger is owned by Advance Publications, an American media company owned by the Newhouse Family. They own over 30 different newspapers, different business journals, periodicals and magazines,some internet websites and even a few Cable television news channels. Advance Publications owns Condé Nast Publications, Parade Publications, Fairchild Publications, American City Business Journals and the Golf Digest Companies.

CREDIBILITY

The Newark Star-Ledger's daily circulation is larger than the next two largest New Jersey newspapers combined and its Sunday circulation is larger than the next THREE papers combined. It was founded in 1832 and has won the Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Reporting in 2005 for its coverage of the resignation of the Governor of New Jersey Jim McGreevey, after he confessed to adultery with a male lover. The paper awards the Star-Ledger Trophy each year to high school teams that end up as the number one team in their respective sport in the state of New Jersey. Overall, the newspaper has been around for a while and has always been ranked as one if not the best newspapers in New Jersey. It is also very credible for its large and well-known ownership.

CONTENT

The Star-Ledger is a daily newspaper reporting on news of all 21 counties in New Jersey. It contains the sections of: opinion, sports, business, high-school sports, obituaries, entertainment, and home and garden with columnists and staff blogs. There are also news sections by towns and by county. The Star-Ledger also has a website, where news can be found everyday, 24 hours a day. There are videos, blogs, photos and local updates.

MY COMPARISON

The Star-Ledger newspaper can be compared to The New York Post, owned by News Corporation. It is a newspaper that reports on the news for certain sections of New York and has the same type of sections and areas of news.