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Interpersonal Communication Chapter 7
Interpersonal Communication Chapter 7
Interpersonal Communication Chapter 7
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The movie Mean Girls portrays several interpersonal communication concepts. Cady Heron grew up in Africa and was homeschooled by her parents. When she is sixteen, her parents decide to move to the United States, where Cady enrolls in public school for the first time to begin her junior year of high school. Two students that are considered outcasts, Janice and Damian, befriend Cady, and soon they decide that it would be funny for her to join the populars girls clique, known as “The Plastics”. The Plastics are a group of three mean girls that are feared by their school, but everyone also aspires to be one of them. They come up with this plan for Cady to pretend to be one of them so that she can learn all of their secrets and report back to Janice
and Damian. Eventually Cady gets caught up in being a plastic and starts to act just like the girls that her and her friends hated in the beginning. The first concept that is represented in this movie is culture shock. Cady grew up in Africa, where she learned their social norms and values. At the age of sixteen, she is forced to move to America, where their social norms are significantly different. Her first day of high school, she attempts to sit with the African American students at lunch, she greets them by saying ,“Jambo!” They all look at her like she's insane. They aren't very accepting of her, and she soon learns from Janice and Damian that all of her fellow students are separated into different cliques, and she's having a hard time understanding where she fits in. Another interpersonal element represented in this movie is referent power. Another concept that is represented in this movie is image. Once Janice, Damian, and Cady decide that it would be a good idea for Cady to join the plastics, Cady must pretend to be this conniving mean girl so that she can gain the plastics’ trust so they will let her be apart of their clique. Gaining their trust means that she will eventually learn all of their secrets and she can begin to slowly ruin their lives, just like her, Janice, and Damian planned. She needs to manage this image so the plastics won’t figure her out.
The movie Napoleon Dynamite is filled with key concepts such as, perception, self-concept, identity, and conflict skills. The story line is that of a teenager, Napoleon, and his quest to find who he is and where he belongs. At the start of this movie napoleon is very alone and doesn't seem to have anyone by his side. He is bullied and often beat up by a popular boy in school. Napoleon, over time finds a group of people who understand and except him. Pedro and Deb both show kindness to Napoleon and help him to face his fears. Near the finale of this movie, Napoleon has the courage to preform a dance solo in front of the whole school in order to help his friend, Pedro, win the place of school president. Many interpersonal communication concepts
An anonymous person once said “The most miserable people are those who care only about themselves, understand only their own troubles and see only their own perspective.” In other words if someone is selfish and does not care about other people’s feelings is someone who is usually miserable in their lives, if all they see is themselves and views only their side they are blinded by their character and personality. In the play Othello by Shakespeare the villain Iago suffers from wanting more power which drives him to destruct other people’s lives along with his own. In the movie Mean Girls by Mark Waters Cady Heron suffers from wanting to fit in and be apart of something which makes herself the villain in many parts. Cady Heron and Iago’s character
The film Mean Girls is about a young girl, Cady Heron, born and raised in Africa by her zoologist parents, who were also her homeschool teachers for sixteen years. When Cady moves to the United States, she enrolls in a public school for the first time. Here she realizes that high school students have the same hierarchy as the animals she observed in Africa. The lowest ranking group in this high school hierarchy is the outcasts, who also happen to be Cady’s first friends in the U.S. The highest on the high school food chain are the “plastics”. The “plastics”, are the most popular girls in school. The plastic’s notice Cady’s charming personality and stunning good looks and invite her to join their clique. In order to avenge her first friends,
The movie Crash examines the interpersonal communications that exists between different groups’ of people. In this film, characters are highlighted by the contact that occurs when disparate people are thrown together in large urban settings. Crash displays extreme instances of racism and shows how the thought, feeling, and behavior of individuals are influenced by actual, imagined, or implied presence of other human beings. My analysis will focus on Social Cognition and how people process, and apply information about other people and social situations.
Blue meth? This is what the TV series Breaking Bad is shaped around. First, I will be discussing why I chose Breaking Bad to analyze. Secondly, I will discuss the topic of communicating verbally with Walter and Jesse. Thirdly, I will see how they managed conflict and power. Fourthly, I will look at Walter White's relationship with his friends. Fifthly, I will see how listing actively played a role in Breaking Bad. Next, I will dissect Walter and Jesse's relationship in the workplace. Lastly, I will see what this means for communication as a whole.
Adolescent egocentrism can occur when teenagers think they have an imaginary audience or think people are more concerned with their appearance and behavior than they really are. In the movie Mean Girls, Regina George, Gretchen Wieners, Cady Herron, and Karen Smith are referred to as the "plastics" by their fellow classmates because of their self-absorbed personalities and glamorous looks. They have a book titled "The Burn Book" in which they talk about everyone in the school in a very nasty way. They believe that these people are concerned with how they look and act at all times. Gretchen Wieners said, "I'm sorry that people are so jealous of me...but I can't help it that I'm so popular." In the beginning of the film, Cady has a very humble personality in which her true friends admire. However, as the movie progresses Cady begins to think that everything she does is important to all of he...
The movie main character is Cady Heron who is a homeschooled girl. Her and her family lived in Africa for 15 years. They return back to the states and place Cady into a public school for the first time. Cady meets her classmates and finds a few good friends the introduce her to a group of girls called the Plastics. She ends up joining the plastics with the motive of bring them down because her new friend don’t like them very much and thought it would be funny. However, she eventually gets assimilated into the group of three unkind girls and starts to be just like them.
The movie Bridesmaids has been my favorite movie since the first time I viewed it, with just the perfect amount of humor and real-life difficulties to satisfy. After I started learning about interpersonal communication I realized how many of my personal relationships use the concepts we have discussed as well as how I have used the concepts while becoming who I am now.
In the film The Breakfast Club there are various social psychological theories and concepts that describe the inner selves of the characters. The characters in the film are initially perceived in a certain manner by each other because of knowing the way they behave in school and the type of people and environment they surround themselves with in school. However one detention on a Saturday brings these characters together and throughout the film their true personalities and behaviors start to reveal themselves by means of social psychological theories and concepts. The characters individually and as a group display their personalities through theories and concepts of social psychology. At the very start of the film, one of the concepts displayed is the acceptance type of conformity. The principal assigns the characters (students) to complete a task and because he is a figure of authority, the characters accept having to complete the task by the end of the day without any attempts to alter that. One of the students, Claire Standish, is revealed to display the concept of narcissism, which is unfortunately a dark side of herself. This is evident as Claire claims that she is popular and loved by her fellow schoolmates and seems to care and showcase her rich and beauty too much. She is, as her detention-mates discover, full of herself. In addition this also shows signs of the spotlight effect theory which can relate to Claire in that she believes that her schoolmates look at her and pay so much attention to her appearance add rich, spoiled-like behavior. Another character to show a theory of social psychology is Allison Reynolds. In the film, Allison is a character with an introvert personality, although she also displays strange and...
When I first read Neil Gaiman’s “How to Talk to Girls at Parties” I thought it was about two boys that stumbled upon a party where the girls turn out to be aliens. Vic was the self-confident, good looking teenager, at ease with the girls and Enn was the more intellectualtype and felt very awkwards around girls. These aliens are actually representations of the human aspect of life.
In the film Mean Girls, teenager Cady Heron was home-schooled in Africa by her zoologist parents. When her family moves to the U.S., Cady finally gets a taste of public school and learns a vital lesson about the cruelty involved in the tightly knit cliques of high school. She eventually finds herself being drug into a group of “the worst people you will ever meet”, The Plastics; and soon realizes how they came to get their name.
It’s common knowledge that women are more creative at building social networks and breaking down communication barriers. In fact, though women’s mode of communication has often been dismissed as ‘girl talk,’ such skills can go a long way in the business and office setting. How come? Studies suggest that this unique form of interrelating with friends and peers that’s unique to women results in positive effects because it focuses on intimacy.
Mean Girls is a comedy film aired in 2004 this film captures the influences on lifespan development during adolescence. The main character Cady Heron was home schooled in Africa and now she must transition into high school where she is tested in different areas of her development. Throughout the film she becomes known as the new girl who is trying to figure out her self-identity. Cady integrates herself into a clique of girls known as the Plastics, soon enough Cady understands why they are known for their name. The Plastics run the school by the norms they have created and must always be followed otherwise it will lead into exclusion from the group. In order to be socially accepted social norms determining attitude, behavior, and status must
“Imagine my ass, just warning you. She can’t be trusted. She’s no good, the heart is black as night, I know her, Garland, I’m telling don’t go down there and get played by her. She’ll double cross your ass in a New York minute.”
One of the strongest human desires is the feeling of needing to fit into a certain group. Just think about it. When you were in high school, there were so many groups that you partook in, or wanted to be in. A staple of this example would have to be from the movie Mean Girls, and how Cady wanted to become a part of some girls who were known as “the Plastics.” They were skinny, rich girls who were known for their beauty by the student body. I’ve watched the movie multiple times and can never figure out who came up with the claim that they were the “most beautiful girls in school.” Now that I am thinking about it, that is where we are wrong. As humans are evolving, so are our standards of beauty in women. So, the real question I am trying to answer is what is beauty?