To some degree, this second vlog builds upon the issues explored in our first, "Millennial" — isolation, media consumption, the notion of moderation in a culture of excess, etc.
Hana Pesut, a photographer born
and raised in Vancouver, BC, began her portrait series titled “Switcheroo”
nearly two years ago. Since then, she has taken
hundreds of pictures around the globe and published a photo book describing the
process.
To participate in “Switcheroo,”
couples are required to take two pictures. The first is a simple couple photo.
The second is a photo in which the man and woman exchange clothes and mimic
each other’s previous stance. The result is more often than not a woman
power-stancing in a suit and a man balancing in heals and a dress.
“I think the project shows how far we've come
in regards to what is acceptable for men and women to wear,” says Pesut. “[N]ow
it seems that almost anything goes.” However, she does not want to assign a
specific meaning or gender issue to the series. “I still enjoy just hearing
everyone's own interpretations rather than putting an idea out there of what I
think it should be.”
That is the beauty of this portrait series. It may be
interpreted as a project criticizing gender politics, stereotypes, and the
changing boundaries of social norms within society. It also may be enjoyed as a
simple and quirky way for couples to reach a further understanding of each
other. What is your interpretation?
By Sam Watermeier Media, or any effective rhetoric, links the particular to the universal.
LGBT activist Ash Beckham did exactly that this week during a TED talk about coming out of the closet. "At some point in our lives, we all live in closets," she said. "No matter what your walls are made of, a closet is no place for a person to live." Beckham talked about coming out of the closet in a way I've never heard before. Her speech evokes a startling revelation — the fact that we are all living in closets of some kind. "Who can tell me that revealing you just declared bankruptcy is harder than telling someone you just cheated on them? Who can tell me that his coming out story is harder than telling your five-year-old you're getting a divorce? Hard is not relative. Hard is hard."
Through this discussion of repression and closets, Beckham took what is usually seen as a uniquely gay experience and made it a universal one.
Her speech inspired me to examine what I repress and to start being honest about my own demons.
For
the past five years, Ball State has brought its rendition
of The Rocky Horror Picture Show to Pruis Hall on Halloween night. Some
go for excitement, others go to figure out what the show is
about and hell, some people may go just to watch girls run around in
their underwear for two hours. But the show has much more to offer beneath its surface.
It gives viewers a chance to throw pre-conceived notions of
gender, sex, and individuality out the window.
The musical stage play, book and lyrics were written
by Richard O’Brien in the '70s as a humorous tribute to science
fiction and horror movies. However, to O’Brien, this was much more than
just a show. For him, this line from Dr. Frank 'N' Furter summarizes its larger message: “Don’t dream it, be it." In
1983, O’Brien was asked by CNN what that line really meant, to which he
replied: “It means realize your dreams, don’t let anyone tell
you that you can’t do something and be yourself…..we’re all freaks at
times, there is no norm…God made us in different ways thankfully and
that’s the somewhat childish message I’m trying to get across." And
that he did.
Another one of the movie's main messages is that sex should be perceived as enjoyable and not something to be
condemned. Some actually consider the show to represent different sides
of the sexual revolution. Rocky Horror satirizes sex in America by personifying
in Brad and Janet the two responses American society had toward the
sexual revolution of the 1960s and '70s. For example, Brad responds by
fighting even harder than before to stop the progression of sexual
freedom, to demonize homosexuality, to condemn sexual independence in
women, to blame all of America’s misconceptions, which are otherwise
healthy expressions of sexuality, as dirty and inappropriate. The other
half of America — Janet — responded with an almost manic sexual
celebration and a kind of aggressive experimentation that today may seem
outrageous. But if we think about it, is it really so outrageous for
sexuality to be over the top in today’s society? Not really. Through
advertisements and TV shows, sex and gender are everywhere, pushing limits everyday, and it’s not going to stop anytime soon.
Since the movie was released in 1975, it has become a worldwide phenomenon and a
stepping-stone in the LGBT community. This movie made it okay for people
who were considered “different” to be themselves which is why it is such
a cult classic to this day. The show explores American sexual hang-ups,
the excesses of the Sexual Revolution of the '70s, and the sometimes cruel myth of the American Dream. And because the show was created
entirely by British artists, it has the advantage of genuine objectivity
in its exploration and satire of these mostly American phenomena.
However, when it was first performed in America in 1973, many of the
people involved with the first productions of Rocky Horror said in
interviews that the subsequent American productions in Los Angeles and
New York made the film version lose much of what’s important about the
show — its grit, its confrontational directness, its
relationship with its audience — but it hasn't seemed to lose any of that.
One hundred Ball State students had to be turned away this year because there were
no more seats in the auditorium. That proves even more that this
show only gets better with age. Throughout the years this show has
expressed freedom and liberation no matter what your gender or sexual
orientation is. However, I didn’t really understand what that
meant…until I joined the cast. I went to see the show for the
first time during my freshman year at Ball State and I left the auditorium
saying to myself, “I need to be a part of this next year.” To me, it
seemed like a lot of fun to act that way. But as I did the show last
year and especially this year, I started to realize that most of
the cast, if not all of us, weren’t acting. For example, this year
during the pre-show I walked around with “free kisses” painted on my
chest, thinking to myself, “Oh, this should be crazy, fun and slightly
awkward, let's do it.” But as I was walking around the lobby giving
kisses to those who wanted them (I got 16 by the way), I didn’t find it
weird at all. In fact people praised me for it, but the comment that
really hit home was when a random stranger came up to me and asked, “So
you’re giving free kisses?” To which I replied: “Yes”. Then he asked:
“Are you sober?” I laughed and said “Yes” and then he just looked at me
and said not that it was weird, or odd, or "you’re going to get mono." He
looked me right in the eyes and said, “That’s beautiful.” Then he told
me his coming out story and how much this show meant to him. That was
the hit home moment, that’s when I realized that this is much more than
just a musical where people run around half naked.
It’s a place where people can come to be themselves, just for a few
hours and forget what society says is right and wrong. And if you were
to ask any of the cast to describe what we are I can guarantee you that
all of our answers would be the same: A family.
Producer Arik
Bernstein recently released the film Israel: A Home Movie. Shot between the 1930s and 1970s, the film features
home video clips of Israeli citizens, giving an intensely personal and
individual view of Israel’s history. “We spent between eight and ten years
collecting all of the footage we have,” says Bernstein. “We put little ads in newspapers, I pushed
myself onto every kind of radio show that I could, a lot of word of mouth.” In
addition to the home videos, those appearing in the videos and their family and
friends provide voiceovers to their clips. Some explain the situation in the
clip while others nostalgically comment on their family and friends’ looks or
even teasingly criticize the talents of the amateur cameramen.
Though it tells the history of Israel, the film turned out
very differently than Bernstein
expected. He states, “Israeli audiences told me that this was one of the
most depressing films they’ve ever seen.” Israel’s history is by no means a
tranquil one and the home videos capture that more fully than expected. A home
video of a relaxing day at the beach between friends tells a particularly
moving story.
Several shirtless men were enjoying the shoreline bordering
a placid sea. As they dig their canopy’s legs into the sand, they spot
something in the sky. “Suddenly they look up and they see an Egyptian jet
fighter… They don’t know what’s going on [and then] they realize that there’s
the surprise attack of the Egyptians and the 1973 Yom Kippur
War has just begun.”
The film quickly turns into a melancholic exploration of the
Yom Kippur War, capturing moments of confidence and despair. “The film goes
from hope to war, from hope to war…” says Bernstein. “It shows in a very personal way, a kind
of cycle that doesn’t end.” Not only is Israel:
A Home Movie a film about Israel’s past, it is a film reflecting the state
of the country at the present moment and, unfortunately, a very likely portrait
of Israel’s future.
We often view history as a vast and untouchable something
that is beyond us. This is by no means true, in fact it is nearly the opposite
of what defines history. Family, friends, and strangers are history. History is
individual stories, interwoven and intertwined throughout time, place, and
culture. These home videos show raw and close history unspoiled by
sensationalism and touched by living memory. People define history. People
control these waves of hope and war, just as people suffer them. The impact and
value of a single person, a family, an entire world of people is limitless. We
have power, both good and bad, beyond measure.
The horror genre has been around forever, and
from the looks of things, it isn’t ready to go anywhere just yet.
This year has seen the second remake of
Carrieas well asInsidious: Chapter 2, You're Next, The Conjuring, V/H/S/2,Evil Dead, The Last Exorcism Part II, Mama, and more.
Television
shows like The Walking Dead, American Horror Story, and The Hollow grace our TV screens every week, picking up higher
ratings than other shows outside the horror genre.
One could argue that horror causes a stronger visceral reaction than other genres. It sends chills down our spines and makes our neck hair stand tall. It also produces a win-win scenario, feeding our curiosity for danger without putting us in it. There's something universally appealing about being scared from the comfort of our chairs in a theater with friends. Perhaps in this age of so much simulated reality (Facebook being the
major example), that idea of wanting to experience something without
real physical harm makes horror even more popular now.
As long as
fans continue to thirst for blood hungry vampires, vicious werewolves and
psycho murderers that never seem to die, you can expect for the horror genre to
be around for a long, long time.