Mabel Simmons Essays

  • Madea Family Reunion Sparknotes

    775 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the stage play Madea’s Family Reunion, Tyler Perry stars as the lead actor, Mabel Simmons (Madea). Madea, the matriarch of the family, is charged with hosting her family for a funeral, a wedding, and a family reunion all in one weekend. The quick-to-speak Madea has to defend, teach, preach to, and admonish her family while dealing with each drama that presents itself. This play begins and ends with religious expression as a forte. One of the first lines comes from Mr. Brown, who says “everybody

  • Overpaid Argumentative Essay

    1005 Words  | 3 Pages

    Argumentative Paper Only 18 NFL players have made over 100 million dollar. The NFL makes 25 Billion dollars a year. Is it fair to the athletes, considering they are the face of their leagues?Athletes earn what they deserve. Not all athletes get paid millions of dollars a year, and those that do aren’t all selfish. I like the reasons you made Not all athletes get paid hundreds of millions of dollars in their career. The average salary is 5 million dollars a year, this might be a lot, but they

  • Russell Simmons Case Study

    1103 Words  | 3 Pages

    investors. They also generally live in run down areas, with poor schooling and less access to successful people. One entrepreneur who has hurdled over all the barriers and became extremely successful is Russell Simmons, the co-founder of Def Jam Records. Biography of Russell Simmons Russell Simmons was born in Queens, New York, on October 4, 1957. Growing up in Queens, he spent part of his adolescent years as a street hustler. During his middle school years, he sold marijuana and was even a member of

  • Coming Back to Life in the story The River Styx Runs Upstream

    801 Words  | 2 Pages

    It’s a universally know truth that death is certain and people cannot live forever. In the story The River Styx Runs Upstream, the author Dan Simmons predicts and interprets the way our lives would be different if that fact was altered. Simmons’s story describes the way the society and people would function if people were brought back from the dead. The title of the story is ironic since rivers run downstream and not upstream and it’s also not coincidental that the river Styx is a river which according

  • Examples Of Words Over Weapons In Tom Sawyer By Mark Twain

    1309 Words  | 3 Pages

    than any punch or kick could, and they do not always fade with time. One book that describes just how hurtful words can be is Odd Girl Out, a book that looks at aggression in girls in society, by Rachel Simmons. Simmons looks at how mean words can stick with someone even after many years. Simmons herself was bullied in eighth grade by another girl named Abby who talked behind her back, and convinced

  • Concience of Guilt vs a Guilty Concience

    660 Words  | 2 Pages

    Conscious of Guilt VS A Guilty Conscience Conscious and Conscience are two words that may sound the same and be familiar in definition but have two totally separate meanings. The differences are shown in definition and criminal example. Webster Dictionary defines Conscious as “Possessing knowledge, whether by internal conscious experience, or by external observation; cognizant; aware; sensible.” Webster Dictionary quotes -Milton as saying “Satan had no answer, but stood struck with guilt of his

  • Minors and the Death Penalty

    991 Words  | 2 Pages

    A.     Should the death penalty be given to minors? The two groups against this issue, are the religious and medical groups. They believe they are too young to know what they have done. The medical groups believe adolescents are less developed than adults and should not be held to the same standards. . The opposing side, held mostly by state officials, feel if they are old enough to commit the crime they, old enough to get the punishment, including death. B.      The very first execution of a minor

  • Roper V Simmons Case Study

    1474 Words  | 3 Pages

    In the United States Supreme Court case of Roper v. Simmons of 2005 the Supreme Court ruled in a five to four ruling that the death sentence for minors was considered “cruel and unusual punishment,” as stated by the Eighth Amendment, according to the Oyez Project online database. Christopher Simmons, the plaintiff, was only seventeen at the time of his conviction of murder. With the Roper v Simmons, 2005 Supreme Court ruling against applying the death penalty to minors, this also turned over a previous

  • Roper V. Simmons Case Study

    1049 Words  | 3 Pages

    morning,  17 year old Christopher Simmons, 15 year old Charlie Benjamin and 16 year old John Tessmer met at the home of 29 year old Brian Moomey. Moomey drove the three teens to the house of 46 year old Shirley Crook. Tessmer refused to go with them and ended up going back to his house. Simmons and Benjamin went to the back of Shirley Crook’s house, found a window and cracked it open. When they reached though to unlock the back door and entered the house, Simmons turned on the hallway light. The light

  • Juvenile Death Penalty Case Study

    933 Words  | 2 Pages

    juveniles is the landmark court case Roper v. Simmons. The background facts of the case began in 1993, when

  • Roper v. Simmons: An Examination of the Supreme Courts Role

    2549 Words  | 6 Pages

    Roper v. Simmons is a perfect example of the evolving role of the Supreme Court, the sources the Supreme Court used to reach the ruling in this case is quite questionable. While I agree with the Supreme Court about protecting the younger citizens of America the Supreme Court must have the law to back up their ruling. Though in this case they do not the Supreme Court used a combination of foreign policy, moral decency, and state laws as the legal foundation for this decision. None of these things

  • Juvenile Death Penalty

    3657 Words  | 8 Pages

    worlds apart, to the same standards and punishments in the justice system? Until Roper v. Simmons in 2005, the justice system did just that, treat the actions of 16 year old with the same consequences as if they had been committed by an adult. In Roper v. Simmons the United States Supreme Court declared it unconstitutional to sentence a juvenile under the age of 18 to the death penalty. Before, Roper v. Simmons, in Thompson v. Oklahoma it had been decided that only those under the age of 16 could not

  • United States Supreme Court in the Case of McCarve v. North Carolina in Accordance with the Eight Amendment

    1113 Words  | 3 Pages

    Does the motion filed in 2001 by the U.S. Supreme Court in the case of McCarver v. North Carolina address the concerns of the Eighth Amendment? Does it properly demonstrate that the execution of mentally retarded individual who has been convicted of capital crime is a direct violation of this amendment? Does the motion filed in 2001 by the U.S. Supreme Court in the case of McCarver v. North Carolina address the concerns of the Eighth Amendment? Does it properly demonstrate that the execution of

  • The Pros And Cons Of The Juvenile Justice System

    1193 Words  | 3 Pages

    their juvenile courts end at fifteen or sixteen years of age, instead of seventeen; in addition, other states try about 55,000 more juveniles even though they were within the ages for their juvenile jurisdiction (Feld, 2008). Roper v. Simmons Christopher Simmons, seventeen years old in 1993, planned to murder

  • Death Penalty For Juveniles Essay

    1192 Words  | 3 Pages

    The death penalty should not apply to juveniles because young offenders should be given a second chance, it is considered cruel and unusual punishment and many juveniles are still too young to comprehend the consequences of their actions. They don’t think about the decision they make now may have a big impact on their lives ahead of them. Juveniles are offenders who committed their crimes before tuning eighteen. Juveniles tend to live in the present. There have been many court cases with the controversy

  • Case Study: Rumsfeld V. Padilla

    1039 Words  | 3 Pages

    6. Rumsfeld v. Padilla 542 US 426 (2004) Donald H. Rumsfeld was the petitioner, while Jose Padilla was the respondent. Jose Padilla returned from Pakistan in 2002; he arrived in Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport. It was there that Padilla was detained by the Department of Defense until determined if he was an “enemy combatant” in terms with al Qaeda. It was said by the FBI that Padilla’s presence in the US was to create terroristic attacks. Padilla was moved to a military brig located in South

  • Analysis Of The Film Ethnic Notions

    1034 Words  | 3 Pages

    In class, we watched a film called Ethnic Notions. In this film, it brought to light how devastating and powerful images can be. Due to exaggerated images and caricatures created pre-civil war era of black men and women, stereotypes were created and have negatively affected the black race in society. Caricatures, such as the Sambo, Zip Coon, Mammy, and Brute, have unfortunately been engrained in the minds of generations. So much so their stereotypes still persist today. The Sambo, Zip Coon, Mammy

  • Tyler Perry Research Paper

    976 Words  | 2 Pages

    very well-known for all of his works. Perry is a director that can really grab ahold of anyone attention and combine it with learning a life lesson. Tyler Perry has many plays he went on not only to director, but to star in as women known as Mabel “Madea” Simmons. Tyler Perry has numerous films and still working to produce more. I Know I've Been Changed is the first major successful play from famed Gospel playwright Tyler Perry. It is about critical issues including child abuse and rape and how they

  • Minstrelsy in the American Film Industry

    2527 Words  | 6 Pages

    The minstrel show is considered by many as the first American form of musical theatre (Bordman, 2010). However, the tradition of minstrelsy, in various forms, dates back to well before Thomas Dartmouth Rice first jumped Jim Crow. In the sixteenth and seventeenth century, it was common for actors to darken their faces for dramatic effect, as illustrated by Shakespeare’s Othello (Strausbaugh, 2010). It could be said that minstrelsy continues to be alive and well today, in the form of reality television