...To: PeTA Cc: Brenda Martin From: Ashley Burns Date: September 10, 2011 Subject: Analysis of Pamela Anderson PeTA ad Human VS. Animal Introduction Men and women are exposed to advertisements every day, weather they think they are or not. Unfortunately, there are more and more that goes against women and degrades them. The design features of this PeTA ad uses and focuses of female stereotypes, in order to persuade men and women to become a vegetarian. There are ways this could be portrayed as a stereotypical ad, from the model, to how she is sitting and what she is wearing, or even with what the text says, to the color choices. Description The ad was smaller when it was pulled it up on the internet, but the model is Pamela Anderson. There are limited colors of white, blue, black, and the skin and hair color of the model. It is obvious that she is trying to be sexy in every aspect. It looks as if she is sitting on a bed. She is wearing a revealing two-piece blue bikini, slightly showing some cleavage, and her hair and make-up are done, which pulls attention to the look on her face. Clearly, the look she is trying to go for is innocent. Also, her body is sectioned into parts just as a cow’s body would be when processed for meat. The text also plays a big part in this ad. Along the top of the ad it says: “ALL ANIMALS HAVE THE SAME PARTS,” and “HAVE A HEART, GO VEGETARIAN,” which surprisingly matches the color of her bikini...
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...typecasts through the media. In the movie Borat Sacha Baron Cohen portrays a man named Borat who is a Kazakstani reporter. He is sent by the Kazakh Ministry of Information to gain a better understanding of American culture and bring his findings back home. Borat and his advisor Azamat played by Ken Davitian set off to New York City. They face culture shock and are bewildered by the big city. Borat being moved from a very Gemeinschaft country to a Gesellschaft one causes him to be very touchy with strangers. The people whom live in New York City put off his behavior as a folkway and are less than pleasant to him and he starts to lose hope. Then one night while channel-surfing in his hotel room, he discovers the beautiful Baywatch babe Pamela Anderson. He is now determined to go to California marry Anderson and find the true essence of America. On his rode trip there he has many encounters with "typical" Americans. There are three types of stereotypes in the movie Borat. The first way Borat classifies against people is through the way Borat himself thinks. He believes; Jews are scary, blacks are cool, and women are pea-brained sex machines. In one scene Borat is forced to stay at a bed and breakfast owned by a homely Jewish couple. He and his partner Azamat are terrified and are unable to stay the entire night. In this scene Borat has an obvious font and back stage. His front stage as being calm and reserved and his back stage at being terrified. The second way Borat promotes...
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...Casey has always been a bit of an animal nut and if she joins PETA in the future, it would not be much of a surprise. However, she is often taking medications and using beauty products just like every other girl. She has recently been trying to change the meds and beauty products she uses or stops using them altogether because of her concerns with animal testing. The benefits of the medications were very obvious as well as with the beauty products to an extent but that didn’t matter to her. Casey said that “I can’t take something that has been cruelly tested on countless animals just so I can make myself feel a little better.” The results of not taking the prescribed medications were almost immediately apparent with Casey being all but bed-ridden yet still refusing to take the “tainted meds” as she called them. There are a lot of people who feel the same way that Casey does about animal testing. The core of the issue is pure ethics and what people believe to be right and wrong. Every year there are countless numbers of animals that suffer from being used in the clinical testing with some dieing during the testing process. The majority of animals in the test are not protected by the Animal Welfare Act since it doesn’t protect mice, rats, birds, and fish which make up about 95% of the total animals used in research. Even if the product passes the animal testing stage, that doesn't necessarily mean that it is safe for humans nor do the tests reliably predict the results in human...
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...Pamela has been four times, each ending in divorce. Her first marriage was 1976-1977. She and her first husband, Robert Richardson, divorced due to incompabilty. She married her second husband, Clarance Muszyski, 1978-1980. From this union in 1980 a daughter was born, Ricki Thompson. Her third marriage was to Rick Cedars from 1982 to 1995. She states that the marriage was godo at frist then he became both emotionally and physically abusive. Her fourth marriage started in 1995 and ended in 2000 due to incompabilty. They were better off friends than husband and wife. She and her second husband are still friends. Pamela has remained single since her last divorce. Pamela attends church regularly. She attends Otterville Baptist Church once a week....
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...Pamela Bone, an American author, once said, “I’m not afraid of being dead. I’m just afraid of what you have to go through to get there”. Pamela Bone is a pro-euthanasia activist in addition to being an author. She like many others who support euthanasia ended her life by using drugs to allow her to have a peaceful, euthanasia death. Pamela was experiencing pain and prolonged suffering as a result of a brain tumor. Pamela ‘s death is quite similar to Lennie’s in Of Mice and Men. Like Pamela, Lennie was suffering greatly and was relieved of this suffering by their death. There was a plethora of hurt that lied ahead of Lennie. In Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, George killing Lennie was a euthanasia act that was an attempt to protect him from...
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...CV - Pamela Sue Jenkins Pamela Sue Jenkins BSN, RN, CPEN Home Address Work Address 119 Fieldcrest Drive 1600 Rockland Road Cochranville, PA 19330 Wilmington, DE 19899 610-998-0615 302.651.4183 E-mail: pedrn1985@gmail.com pjenkins@nemours.org Academic Preparation 2012 – Present Master of Science - Leadership Wilmington University & Education Wilson Graduate Center 31 Reads Way New Castle, DE 19720 1985 Bachelor of Science – Nursing Lebanon Valley College 101 N. College Avenue Annville, PA 17003-1400 1982 – 1985 Diploma in Nursing Bryn Mawr School of Nursing 130 S. Bryn Mawr Avenue Bryn Mawr, PA 19010 1980 – 1982 Associates Degree – Nursing Lebanon Valley College 101 N. College Avenue Annville, PA 17003-1400 Licenses DE Registered Professional Nurse (multi-state) L1 – 0036388 PA Registered Professional Nurse...
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...In Pamela Cooper-White's chapter Suffering, she puts out all the big question in discovering what and how suffering pans out in the context of theology. Because according to Pamela, "Suffering is the starting point of all pastoral and practical theology". For the sound of the word literally directs to an inhalation full of pain, suffering means pain, anguish in all possible senses. But suffer is not a phenomenon. As it is said that "suffering is the meaning that we make, or attempt to make of our pain" (Cassell 1991; Sulmacy 1999). Pain, therefore, is always tranformed into suffering in our mind for that it has its own 'holistic meaning' as we try to make sense of pain. Yet a suppression of this process may lead to serious complications and...
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...Antonio had pondered all day whether to return Pamela Eltroy’s phone call. If she’d called about the case, he would have called her right back. But instead, she’d asked him to take her out to dinner. Although he thought her very beautiful, she was linked to a murder case, be it by a few degrees of separation, but nevertheless, part of the suspect pool until ruled out. He could, he thought, justify it if while at dinner he gathered information about the case. And since Maddie was busy tonight, she’d agreed with him it was a good opportunity for them to learn more about Ken Rankin, so he’d called her back. Now on his way to pick her up, he crossed the Francis Scott Key Bridge and took the shortcut through Rosslyn via the underpass tunnel, following the directions she’d texted him. She stepped out of the elevator in the lobby as he rolled to a stop. The doorman outside was swift and opened his car door to let her in....
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...The fact that female and male bodies are being portrayed in provocative ways, explain the nudity that are now becoming the norm on tv, magazine, and in our everyday fashion. It has become some kind of sexual objectification. If objectification is the procedure of speaking to or treating a man like an object, then sexual objectification is the procedure of speaking to or treating a man like a sex item, one that serves another's sexual delight. You see here, these picture are meant to stimulate one mind into sexual imagination. By definition, articles can be purchased and sold, and a few pictures depict ladies as ordinary items. Conflating ladies with nourishment is a typical sub-classification. For example, Pamela Anderson's sexualized body...
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...(c) An extract from a novel by Samuel Richardson, Clarissa, 1740. vol. 1, Letter VIII. The novel is written entirely as a sequence of letters. 5 10 15 20 25 30 Feb. 15. In the evening, WHAT my brother and sister have said against me I cannot tell; but I am in heavy disgrace with my father. I was sent for down to tea. I went with a very cheerful aspect; but had occasion soon to change it. Such a solemnity in everybody's countenance! My mother's eyes were fixed upon the tea-cups, and when she looked up it was heavily, as if her eyelids had weights upon them, and then not to me. My father sat half-aside in his elbow-chair, that his head might be turned from me; his hands clasped, and waving, as it were, up and down; his fingers, poor dear gentleman! in motion, as if angry to the very ends of them. My sister sat swelling. My brother looked at me with scorn, having measured me, as I may say, with his eyes as I entered, from head to foot. My aunt was there and looked upon me as if with kindness restrained, bending coldly to my compliment to her as she sat; and then cast an eye first on my brother, then on my sister, as if to give the season (so I am willing to construe it) of her unusual stiffness. Bless me, my dear! that they should choose to intimidate rather than invite a mind, till now not thought either unpersuadable or ungenerous! I took my seat. Shall I make tea, madam, to my mother? I always used, you know, my dear, to make tea. No! A very short sentence...
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...Pamela Hendrix is a hard-working mother of six. While pregnant, Pamela was working at Frito Lay. Pam was a stocker for the company. The job of os stocker is to go to the assigned stores, bring in the products from Frito Lay from the back, and add more to the selves. Simple enough but something was different this time. Last year around end January, early February Pam was doing the normal thing she did. Moving products from the back to their correct shelving units, adding more to the empty spots along the shelves, packing up, then heading off to do more on her 18 hours days. Only, Pam was not only struggling with these tasks but she was seven months pregnant with her newest addition, Letty Elizabeth. The hours at each store were torture...
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...and attitude regarding social class and status are closely related in Richardson’s ‘Pamela.’ Pamela manages to preserve her virtue in spite of the pressure placed upon her by the country squire Mr. B, who is especially difficult to refuse because of the difference in social class between them. Pamela is at a distinct disadvantage. During the time in which the novel was written, the European culture gave precedence to males. A female servant was considered lower-class and would have found it extremely difficult to disobey her male master. Such is the case for young Pamela. Trapped in his mansion, she should be an easy flower to pluck. However, showing strength of will uncharacteristic to most females in her situation, Pamela succeeds to preserve her virtue throughout the entirety of the novel. Despite Mr. B’s many attempts to seduce her, Pamela never once gives in to his sexual advances. She continues to do so even after she discovers the love she has for him and refuses to sleep with him until they have married. “And I will say, that to see so much Innocence and Virtue, so eminently rewarded, is one of the greatest pleasures I have ever known.” (346) Mr. B, an influential and wealthy man, should have no problem ordering his servant around. He is an older man, well-respected among his peers. It is simple for him to use his money and his social status to obtain his desires. However, Pamela rejects his offers of power- servants of her own to order around- as well as money and...
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...Learning to Win: Sports, Education, And Social Changes in Twentieth-Century North Carolina published by Pamela Gundy focuses on the state of North Carolina and discusses issues such as race, gender, and class that are controversial in education and athletics. Grundy combines many different aspects throughout her book by using stories of other people to explain her central point. Grundy uses personal stories from coaches and athletes such as Walter Lingle, John C. Lendon, and David Thompson. In doing so the book contains an abundance of historical information which is not always shared with the public. The book is neither for or against combining sports and education but just states the facts and different sides of the story. This book holds...
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...Team Case 1 – Pamela Jones: Former Programming Manager Team 4 Problem Identification: Symptoms/Key Indicators 1. High employee absenteeism, employee turnover, and work overloads 2. Errors made by programmers, poor work habits 3. Workers being under-compensated due to economic constraints 4. Pamela unable to advance from the “junior role” 5. False and misleading promises by management 6. Pamela not empowered to discipline her subordinates without head office approvals 7. Poor workplace flexibility Underlying Problems Above are a few symptoms and indicators that can be categorized into three underlying problems – lack of motivation; low job satisfaction; and poor organizational environment and weak organizational culture. Lack of motivation and low employee job satisfaction is evident from the high rate of absenteeism and employee turnover. The employees are under compensated for the amount of work they're doing which has further decreased their overall job satisfaction and motivation, as can be seen from the increasing number of errors the programmers are making as well as their poor work ethics. Furthermore, junior employees did not have the opportunities to advance within the organization. Promises given by management created unrealistically high expectations for future rewards, but when the rewards were not given, job satisfaction was greatly affected. An inflexible and disempowering workplace are weaknesses within the company’s environment and culture that require improvements...
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...Many Human beings have a hard time reconciling with this concept. Transmigration, though it is accepted in many religions, can be difficult to understand. An article by Pamela M. Allen, John A. Edwards & Winston McCullough attempts to separate the concept of transmigration from the law of karma. In their article, “Does Karma Exist?: Buddhism, Social Cognition, and the Evidence for Karma” they use psychology coupled with the mind only school of Buddhism to explore the idea. The article claims, “Karmic effects should be observable within a current life and that karma is a concept that is dissociable from that of reincarnation.” (Allen, Edwards & McCullough, 6) They further claim that “the notion of karma should not be confounded with that of reincarnation” because Buddhist doctrine states that kamma can “ripen” in a single lifetime (Allen, Edwards & McCullough, 6). By putting karma into the span of one life, the article...
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