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Showing posts from 2017

Netflix and Kill with Lady Macbeth

Image source:  https://www.goldstar.com/events/chicago-il/netflix-and-kill-tickets With Netflix there is endless streaming of your favorite movies, TV shows, miniseries, and more. There must be something to suit everyone's taste, right? Let's find out if there is really something out there for everyone. Let's pick a person and see what they would watch. That person doesn't even have to be real. Let's say....... Lady Macbeth, what would she watch on Netflix? Here are the recommendations: Recommendation #1: Reign Right off the bat this may seem to be an obvious choice. A queen of Scotland? Sounds like Lady Macbeth to me. Reign follows the rise to power of Mary Queen of Scots. She arrives in France at the age of fifteen, and is set to marry Prince Francis in order to unite the kingdoms of France and Scotland under a treaty. However, Mary finds dark forces against her, when Nostradamus has a vision that Prince Francis will die, and the cause of h...

No One Man Should Have All That Power

Image credit:  www.imdb.com/title/tt2884018/ "Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely." - Lord Acton Shakespeare would have likely agreed with this statement to a slight extent. Shakespeare would have likely believed that the prospect of power, and the quest to grow one's power is what corrupts, not the power itself. Shakespeare presents this idea in many of his plays, Macbeth and Hamlet are the two I can think of offhand. In Macbeth , the idea of the quest for power corrupting an individual is easily seen through Macbeth's drive to get the crown, while ideas of power not corrupting are present through Malcolm and Macduff, one a son of Duncan, and the other a thane of Scotland. The quest for power is also present in The Lion King , which is based on the story of Hamlet, in Scar's corruption due to his greed and desire for power. In Macbeth , corruption in the quest for power is present through the rise and fall of Macbeth, and the u...

This is Gospel...

This piece entitled "Reliquary Casket with Scenes from the Martyrdom of Saint Thomas Becket" (original image can be found here ) was made by an unknown artist around 1173–80 A.D. The medium of this piece was a Gilded silver with niello and a glass cabochon set over a tinted foil, over top of this latched case. The dimensions on the casket are 5.5 x 7 x 4.7 cm on the outside. This box was made during the rule of King Henry II of England, and is of British make. The box likely held a relic of Thomas Becket, the English saint who was martyred after his death at the hands of four of Henry II's knights at the Canterbury Cathedral. His martyrdom represents his struggles with the king over the separation of the rights of the monarch and the rights of the church. Represented in this piece are multiples scenes of Thomas Becket's martyrdom. It represents the style of decorating items, particularly personal items, with artwork of religious events or figures. ...

The Canterbury Tales & Jane Eyre Freebie

Picture found here Well this is quite the predicament, freebie.

Seven Deadly Sins

Carl's Jr and Hardee's have been known for their ads depicting models and lightly dressed women eating their food in creatively sexual ways, and this ad is no exception. The ad is by the fast food restaurant Carl's Jr and was televised during Super Bowl XLIX in 2015. This advertisement in particular depicts model Charlotte McKinney walking through what appears to be a general marketplace. Throughout the advertisement, conveniently angled camera shots make it appear as though the model is not wearing any clothes while she talks about being "all natural." In the advertisement the viewer watches as men turn their heads and look at her with lustful eyes, assuming that they are looking at her. At the end of the video the viewer is shown the model's full body and it is revealed that she was wearing a bikini the whole time. What the men were supposedly staring at was the burger she had in her hands and the "all natural" concept that she was talking about...

What's in a name?

My name is Christopher Vogel. My first name is Greek in origin and roughly translates to " Christ-bearer ," however I do not think that this name makes me special. I was not named Christopher because my parents had some religious attachment or believed that I would always "carry Christ in my heart." My parents decided on the name Christopher because they wanted a name that could be shortened into a nickname, such as Chris, but could also be used as a formal name once I grew up. I do not think that I have done a very good job at representing what my name means, as I have not been very religious since the 7th grade. When I was younger my OCD was much more severe, and many of my fears that came with this illness were rooted in religion. I felt as though I had to give up religion to feel better, and so I did. I have not carried Christ in my heart like my name would suggest, but I am also rarely called Christopher anyway. Typically my peers and even most other people ...

Blog Post 1: That Time We Looked at Wing Young Huie's Work and The Handmaid's Tale

(This image is from photographer Wing Young Huie's blog under the category "We are the Other (2012-2013). Click here to check out more of his work, and click here to see this photo on his website.) At first glance, what I noticed was the two people sitting at the wooden table with chalk boards holding messages, presumably written by the person holding them. When I first read the boards, I assumed that the only messages the boards had were the ones written on them. By this I mean that I thought the boy holding the board on the right side of the picture had chronic depression and was making a statement that depression was more than just sadness. The girl holding the chalk board to the left of the boy, at first glance, merely appears to be saying that she prefers to be called African-American over the term "black." I notice the picture is in black and white, possibly to highlight contrast in shade or to emphasize a duality of light and dark, white and black...