Visual Storytelling Attempt 1

https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1MiXQEn7oda-NbSm_q1tAcGx_WqrVdftX8KMqMBEt3SM/edit?usp=sharing

So recently I have been learning about how visual storytelling has become a crucial aspect of media, and decided to try it myself! My experiment is a story based off of 10 pictures I took starring my sister (Sarah) and the daily life of the teenager.

 I decided to attempt to portray how important social networking has become in society today. As the story can tell you: everything that Sarah does, she documents. When she makes lunch, she “Instagrams” the food she made. When she is watching Television shows, she proceeds to mention it on FaceBook. When studying, she “Tumblrs” about the difficulty of doing homework. Even when she is going to sleep, she “Tweets” Goodnight to her followers.

I guess I chose this topic because lately, this is the average amount of privacy that the teenager chooses to have. Every single thing Sarah does, she tweets/instagrams/facebooks about it because using social media is almost an essential part of society today. I once asked my sister why she documented everything, and her response was rather intriguing:

“Why wouldn’t I document everything about my life?”

Looks like Big Brother has some competition now: Little Brother (friends, family, society). The new Brother to fear in this generation.

–Samia Nasir (:

PressPausePlay & the Future of our Digital Era

The number one benefit of information technology is that it empowers people to do what they want to do. It lets people be creative. It lets people be productive. It lets people learn things they didn’t think they could learn before, and so in a sense it is all about potential…

-Steve Ballmer

 

The rise of a new and rapidly forming digital technology has had an enormous impact on our culture. It’s easier to make music, movies, art, and all of a sudden, there is really no such thing as a specific expertise or a set of grounded guidelines to classify you as an artist. In fact, anyone can be an artist in this generation.

After watching PressPausePlay, I must say I feel as though we are definitely in a fast paced generation, in which somehow, somewhere along the way we are running to keep up with the technology, the culture, and the “next big thing”. My initial reaction to this film was: “whoa!” I honestly guess I do realize how fast society is moving along with technology, and it took me a few moments of reflection to comprehend how much things have changed just over five years. One minute its Lizzie Mguire, the next its Selena Gomez or Miley Cyrus (and so forth). The amount of Iphones and Apple products released in half a decade can make your cell phone ancient, and amazingly, the productivity of these goods do actually make your stuff seem ancient. We are moving so fast.

This film really attacks an important concept of art, addressing whether everyone should really have the ability to be an artist. Should everyone have the chance to create music, videos (so forth) and distribute their work? There is definitely a lot more noise: to Google “good music” or anything vague might mean over 6 million results of people on a global scale trying to get others to acknowledge their work. And of course as mentioned in the film, not everyone is talented (believe it or not). In my opinion, after reflecting over this topic, I really can adhere that there is no right or wrong answer. Should everyone get a chance to be an artist? I think yes. Is everyone talented enough to do so? I’m not so sure. But I do wonder (as that one specific woman in the end also mentions): will there be a stable ground in this revolution? Or will it always be like this: a fast paced digital era in which what comes just comes and what goes, well, goes. I guess I personally enjoy the experience of living in an era where one day, the next big thing could even be you.

 —Samia Nasir

The Actions behind Nicki Minaj’s “Endorsment of Romney” Debacle

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The crazy spectacle question which has plagued the internet: Did Nicki Minaj endorse Mitt Romney? Some say no, and some say yes.

Well the answer is none of above.

Nicki Minaj’s actions and lyrics are only a certain pressing problem in society. In a recent music video called “Mercy” on a Lil Wayne dedication mix tape, Minaj rapped ““I’m a Republican, voting for Mitt Romney, you lazy b—— are f—ing up the economy,”.

Of course, this punched up the public sphere. Millions of comments and death threats were thrown at Nicki, huge tantrums, deadly FaceBook posts, & of course the Twitter feed sky rocketed. So then Nicki exposed that she was NOT endorsing Romney, but tweeted that was actually just “creative humor”.

The question here is not whether Minaj endorsed Romney or not, but rather why on earth it is important whether she does or not, and WHY she pulled up those lyrics in the first place.

PopDust’s featured photo to portray Nicki endorsing Romney

Nicki Minaj is a mainstream pop culture artist, an icon, who represents American society. Her music airs on every channel and she is supposedly a representation for African American women in our U.S culture. Did Nicki know that her rap lyrics would affect us so strongly: of course she did. 

Her actions are always intentional. Everything she does, every song she raps is intentional. She knew that her rap would not go unnoticed!

Why is Nicki Minaj at the pinnacle of her career? They say its because of her music, and yet it is her music which causes all of us to burn with fury and bang up the Twitter stream. She needs the publicity, its what makes her who she is today. Imagine if Nicki did absolutely nothing controversial…what would she classified as then? That’s right, boring.

It really doesn’t matter whether Minaj endorsed Romney or not, because she is JUST a rap artist who is trying to bring more publicity to her uprising career, and some heat for the elections coming up.

In the Civic Youth voting trends phamplet, it was estimated that “the last two election cycles (’06 midterm and ’04 presidential) saw increases in the young voter turnout rate, signaling a more engaged young adult population. This change, coupled with advancements in communications and Internet technology, and reinvigorated get-out-the-vote efforts targeted at young people, were early signs that young people would be more involved than ever in the 2008 election…”. 

Ever since the evolution of media, there has been a raise in youth voting, and politicians sure are smart and discreet about it. Would it be so surprising if this was a political plan the entire time? Maybe Obama knew that an African American rapper endorsing Romney was going to bring outrage, and hence operated the scene to bring youth in through anger and vote. He is known for attracting and associating with the youth, so its not as far fetched as one would think.

Our youth really needs to step up and look beyond the picture. A headline shouldn’t captivate everyone and automatically overflow our social news feed. Instead, we should look into the headline and use a bit of this uncommon feature called common sense. We need to hone our critical thinking skills and try to actually process the stuff we read before we throw the death threat. Just some basic questions for your future analyzing: Why would Nicki endorse Romney? What will she get out of it? What will the politicians get out of this? Is Nicki Minaj really worth listening to if her supposed response is that it was all just “creative humor”?

Okay, maybe not the last question.