The moment the trailer of “Miss Representation” was aired on the 2011 Sundance Film Festival Official Selection, the social media broke out with significant flows of reaction. By portraying female characters as sexual symbols, vulnerable victims, short-tempered and aggressive individuals, the film raises concern toward the harsh effect on how young women see themselves in the modern society. The main concepts of the film are introduced with significant statistics of the social media’s popularity, alternating with empowering taglines and rhetorical questions. As a documentary, the workpiece combines itself with various interviews, featuring successful and reputable female individuals. Under the analysis method of rhetorical discussion, the art …show more content…
Patriotism is one of the unique and effective approaches that the North American country tend to value and treasure the most. According to Dr. Martha Lauzen, “by showing statistics about how far behind the United States is as far as female influence in politics and gender equality, in general, the filmmakers are trying to evoke a sense of shame from the audience,” indicating the core value that the Founding Fathers has established. The question that remains to the audience is the undeniable position of the United States on the global stage of superpower, and yet the gender inequality is still relatively high. Moreover, under the analysis of pathos approach that the documentary portrays, “Miss Representation” is full of attempts to appeal to the audience’s emotions. Pathos is the art of aiming the attentions on the core values and beliefs of the target audiences, striking to establish an imagined sympathy. The establishing shots of the film are the mention of the narrator toward her unborn daughter, in which associate with the fears of her child to be growing up in the world that tends to under-evaluate women. The discovery of having a baby girl is the sole motivation for her to start making a change in society and the perception of media toward the female significance. The pathos approach is an appeal to anyone who has a girl children or desire to have a daughter, hoping that changes will be made throughout the revolution of the younger and potential generation of the U.S. Countless of events happen before and after the appearance of the documentary, and people are keep fighting for the right of women to be recognized by the standard of the
In Miss Representation, many female actresses, news anchors, politicians, directors and producers talk about how females suffer a lot of social, political and economic inequalities in today’s society. There are double standards against women in magazines, on TV, in movies, the news, politics, and the workplace. The media is an influential part of modern culture. When women are portrayed as objects for men to use -- never as the protagonist or president -- and when female news anchors are objectified, this will cause girls of all ages to begin viewing themselves as objects. Girls grow up in a world where their voice does not count; where our culture does not embrace them in all of their diversities, where
Jennifer Siebel Newsom’s documentary, Miss Representation, shows that the media’s impact on the American discourse of women’s bodies, women in power, and the same standards of what women should be. Newsom effectively convinces the audience of Miss Representation that how mainstream media contributes to the misrepresentation of women in influential positions by having limited portrayals of women through the use of interviews from influential people, several statistics, and appealing to emotional sense.
The Miss Representation documentary film by Jennifer Newsom explores how media contributes to the under-representation of women in influential positions. This message is portrayed by delivering content through media and technology as well as advertising partial and/or often degrading interpretations of women. The consequences are becoming more and more dreadful. In today’s world, composed of a million stations, people will tend to do more and more shocking things to break through the crowds. They resort to violent, sexually offensive, or demeaning images. Jean Kilbourne, EdD, filmmaker, Killing Us Softly Author and Senior Scholar Wellesley Center’s for Women states, that “it creates a climate in which
Feminists that approach analyzing popular culture proceed from a variety of theoretical positions that carry with them a deeper social analysis and political agenda. Popular culture has been a critical part of feminist analysis. “Cultural politics are crucially important to feminism because they involve struggles over meaning” (Storey, Intro 136). Analyzing a piece of pop culture through a feminist viewpoint, whether it be a music video or any sort of media, opens up a broader discussion about the structure of our patriarchal society and the ways in which politics are constantly portrayed and
The Netflix documentary Miss Representation by Jennifer Siebel Newsom explores how the media contributes to influence the young girls and boys in America. Every day in America we are showed this unrealistic look of what the so-called perfect image of women is supposed to be from the TV shows we watch, the movies we see, to the magazines we read, to the online social media outlets we visit. This documentary shows the negative effects it's having on teenage boys and girls in America, Miss Representation interweaves between the stories of teenage girls, telling their own experiences and how the media has portrayed the image of women to them. They share their stories from pressures they feel they have to live up too from how the media shows them
The documentary's narrative through-line is Jennifer S Newsom herself, who begins with her telling her story in a calm, semi-sad voice. Born out of anxiety, worry and stress about the world she was bringing her little girl into, the film begins with Newsom telling of her past struggles in life caused by body-shaming, assault, and eating disorders. Newsom uses her pregnancy as the jumping off point for inquiry into the system. Already, the documentary grabs the attention of mothers or mothers-to-be or anyone for that matter. Her story offers some comfort and relief to viewers who may or may not have gone through what
There are many ways how to get your point across, whether it be by telling a story or stating facts or simply showing a picture. When I analyzed the documentary “Miss Representation” The speaker did great in making this serious issue very informative and interesting for the intended audience. The main argument of this documentary is that the speaker wants to make sense of the women equality issue to her daughter and her generation. The video is very well structured and educational because the way the speaker used her personal experiences, other people in the video’s experiences and the way images and clips were used to describe and give examples of how women are wrongfully being treated in the media.
Media influence is one of the most powerful economic and cultural forces today. By deciding who gets to talk, what shapes the debate, who writes, and what is important enough to report, media shape our understanding of who we are and what we can be. You could go to a film, switch on the TV, tune in to the radio, turn the pages of a magazine, or surf online. Regardless of your choice of media, you’d have a good chance of encountering stereotypes that perpetuate gender discrimination. The “Miss Representation” documentary film written and directed by Jennifer Siebel Newsom exposes how mainstream media and culture contribute to the under representation of women in positions of power and influence in America.
Women often appear with glamorous image on advertisements, movies. However, there are also a lot of pictures to make women soured and routine such as women in the party, velvet erotic games, etc. By taking advantage of beautiful pictures, sexy women in the media seems to make the value of women become simply. People have acknowledging that women typically only have to dep, sexy, attractive, and space for recreation. Indeed, they hardly enhance the value of women. I am really shocked to find that most of social media is making people less interested in the intelligence, curved bar, and a lot of good things that women had not simply outward beauty. The media just give people that the public wants to. The film really makes the viewer think about the true value of women in the media and society. In addition, the film effectively appeals to the audience’s emotions and empathy. Throughout the film, the writer mentions her unborn daughter and her fear of whether her daughter “could grow up to be emotionally healthy and fulfilled given our moder culture.” She mentions that becoming pregnant and discovering her child was a girl is the reason she started looking to make a change in the way society and media sees women. This is an appeal to anyone who has a daughter or wants to have a daughter. They hope that people will want to make changes, just like the narrator did, for the future of the
Can you imagine what females could accomplish if they spent as much time volunteering to local charities as they did worrying about their physical appearance? So many dreams, goals, and aspirations are thrown away because of something as simple as low self-esteem. The film Miss Representation focuses on that exact social issue. Various people come together in this documentary to tackle the matter of gender stereotyping through the media. We will cover gender stereotypes, the role media plays in shaping them, and what can be done.
Miss Representation is a documentary that was recently found and recommended on Netflix for a crucial message the Author was displaying, about Media having a well built implementation towards today's society, therefore the powerful implementation is also conveying content that is altering our society, altering politics, altering National discourse and vigorously altering teens and younger adult's brains, lives and emotion.
| My analysis included a thorough discussion of how media represents the group and what affect that has on our society.
As a queer person living in a heteronormative, binary driven wasteland where ‘freedom’ is conditional and exclusive, Miss Representation wasn’t at all surprising or revolutionary. Of course this is simply a personal opinion. However, to truly be critical of ‘rebellious’ documentaries, one needs to have the ability to trade in their own personal reality for an unbiased, yet intersectional reality, or at least understand that their own reality isn’t everyone’s reality. Miss Representation meets their racially-inclusive and sexuality-inclusive requirements by interviewing minimal people of color and a single ‘out’ queer person. This documentary disregards the experiences and expectations of non-white women, queer women, trans women, and non-christian women.
The movie trailer of Miss Representation starts with the quote by Alice Walker, “The most common way people give up their power is by thinking they don’t have any.” The white background makes the quote easier to see. At the beginning part of the trailer, the appearance of the video is serious. The instrumental music and the presentation, which contains the statistic facts, create the sadness and seriousness of the video. This video is showing is that it portrays videos and pictures from the early 1990’s to the late 2010’s.
The message that was presented in the video “Miss Representation” was that the media is a powerful tool to shape the world. However, the media has been utilized not for the benefit of human being instead in the most negative way that anyone can possibly think of. It has indeed shape the representation of women globally in this generation. It degenerated the name of woman and what they are capable in this world whether they are use for political, and/or economical. The trailer for Miss Representation presented this powerful message through the usage of a video of selected people being interviewed about feminism and the cruelty that they endure during the twentieth century. This highly sensitive message in the video of Miss representation is