The People vs. Larry Flynt Essays

  • Argumentative: The People Vs. Larry Flynt

    1023 Words  | 3 Pages

    often times is hidden for that same reason because the person doesn’t want the terrible information to be found. The People vs. Larry Flynt gave a fake sense of good in a person without showing the whole person. When looking into Larry Flynt there were mixed opinions between the masses. Some said he was a wonderful guy while others said he was a horrible smut peddler. Larry Flynt exploited and abused his first amendment right. The opposition thinks differently; they believe that he is a crusader

  • Summary Of Larry Flynt's The People Vs. Larry Flynt

    1181 Words  | 3 Pages

    speech or of the press, or the right of people peaceably to assemble and to petition the Government for the redress of grievances.” So, this right is given to us as Americans we should be able to say and do as we please. Yet, what the amendment fails to leave out is that we are not allowed to infringe on our fellow Americans rights to do the same. In, The People vs. Larry Flynt, Larry took the First Amendment right to a new level. When examining Larry Flynt, there were mixed opinions between the masses

  • The People Vs Larry Flynt Case Study

    1313 Words  | 3 Pages

    I. Introduction The 1996 movie, The People vs. Larry Flynt, is a story about Larry Flynt, owner of Hustler Magazine, getting in trouble with legal issues due to his magazines containing sexual explicit content. Larry had previous history of owning many strip clubs throughout Ohio, which initially led him into producing these magazines. People throughout the country attempted to stop Larry from producing these magazines saying that it violated many “community standards” but that didn’t stop

  • Hustler - Censoring a Film about Censorship

    3819 Words  | 8 Pages

    [1] The People vs. Larry Flynt celebrates America for “being the strongest country in the world today only because we are the freest,” as Flynt once said. The problem is, that while the film triumphantly exhibits the (seemingly obvious) “evils of censorship,” it hypocritically censors out the most controversial parts. The film champions free speech yet is not able to visually depict the potentially harmful material that the First Amendment defends. The content in Flynt’s Hustler magazine absolutely

  • People V. Larry Flynt

    1380 Words  | 3 Pages

    movie of focus, ‘People vs. Larry Flynt’, is a film by Milos Forman which stars Woody Harrelson as Flynt. Larry Flynt is the president and publisher of Hustler magazine. Hustler is sort of the Mad magazine of written pornography which was started in the early 1970’s. The interest for me was seeing how this movie depicts the sexual exploitation of women in the sex industry with a specific look at how the material devalues women. The movie starts out in 1952 with a young Larry Flynt along with his younger

  • The People V Larry Flynt Summary

    1662 Words  | 4 Pages

    The People v. Larry Flynt In the film The People v. Larry Flynt, there are several notable court cases that tap into the issue of free speech. The main speech that caught my attention was the Hustler Magazine v. Falwell. Throughout this paper I will show an understanding of the issues in this particular case, including the speech issues, arguments that support the speech, arguments that suppress or punish the speech, issues I agree with in the case, and how the case may be different in a different

  • Larry Flynt: Confronting Sex and Politics in America

    4006 Words  | 9 Pages

    Larry Flynt: Confronting Sex and Politics in America What has changed in the media and political culture? Why is exploitation of sex and politics on front burner of the American agenda? The private matters of the President were once just that — private matters. Now they are published and are accessible to the American public by way of the Starr Report (http://CNN.com/starr.report/)and the mainstream media. The impeachment of the President symbolizes the pinnacle of the integration of sex and

  • Drawing the Line on the New Censorship

    644 Words  | 2 Pages

    the ban ... becomes, in effect, the blind one, the one at the center of the ring in the game of blind man's bluff." But the new landscape of ideas and their control leaves many people queasy and uneasy about media, morality, and responsibility. If censorship is wrong and impossible, how then to address the issue of people and companies that use media irresponsibly? Here's how I see it: It's appropriate to criticize media and products, movies, books, writings - whatever you consider offensive,

  • Cincinnati vs Mapplethorpe

    3470 Words  | 7 Pages

    Cincinnati vs Mapplethorpe READER DISCRETION ADVISORY This pop culture memoir contains sex, lies, greed, perversion, murder, deceit, infidelity, drugs, sex, immorality, scatology, ambition, equivocation, character assassination, slander, blasphemy, aspersion, betrayal, distortion, racism, ungodliness, sodomy – and that’s just the critics of Mapplethorpe. '>-The first page of Jack Fritshcer’s book, Mapplethorpe: Assault with a deadly camera. So I am asking myself, what is it about this guy Mapplethorpe

  • Kurt Cobain

    1584 Words  | 4 Pages

    constant references to suicide and drugs, suicide was the obvious explanation for his death. Kurt put it best when he said, "I'm thought of as this pissy, complaining, freaked-out schizophrenic who wants to kill himself all the time." (Bozza) To many people, Cobain just joined the club of rock stars who self-destructed. Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, Jim Morrison, and Brian Jones set the precedent. The Seattle Police Department confirmed the conclusion everyone had already made; Kurt Cobain committed suicide