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The Power Of Mass Media In Gillian Flynn's 'Gone Girl'

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In modern society, mass media is an unavoidable influence on our daily lives. Humans are reliant on mass communication and information for everything: work, education, entertainment, and much more. In her novel Gone Girl, author Gillian Flynn uses the thrilling story of Amy Dunne and her husband, Nick Dunne, who is accused of her murder to illustrate how much power mass media has over the general public’s judgement and opinions, despite their increasingly common dishonesty. In Gone Girl, the media runs with stories that have little substance for the sole purpose of grabbing public attention, they use their power to alter public perception multiple times and push their own agenda, and they create public personalities for people that do not match who they truly are. Contemporary media stations are willing to run with any story as long as it will get them views and therefore money, even if the story has little to no substance. This is seen multiple times in the novel Gone Girl. At an volunteer search event for his missing wife, Nick Dunne is approached by Shawna Kelly. Shawna, a middle-aged woman, shows up to the search event but clearly is only there to attempt to flirt with Nick. Shawna goes through a few minutes of small talk, which Nick is visibly not interested in, before forcing him to take a selfie with her. Nick describes her feelings towards Shawna: “I wanted to smack her, right then, the obliviousness, the girliness of her: trying to get an ego stroke from the

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