Behind the Scenes of a NBA Game. For my senior project I’ve decided to learn more about the behind the scenes work of a professional basketball game. From this project I will learn more about the business sides of sports and also see how everything operates. I would like to know what has to happen in order for the game to run smoothly and properly. I find this topic interesting because I am a big sports fan and I am hoping to pursue a career involving sports. I am interested in what happens
Romeo and Juliet Scene Summaries I, i Sampson and Gregory, two servants of the Capulet family, were walking down the streets of Verona. Both of the were talking badly of the Montague family. They see two servants of the Montague family coming their way. They both start talking about fighting strategies. Than Sampson bites his thumb at the Montagues. They all start to fight. After that Prince Escalus arrives and commands them to stop fight or the penalty will be death. After this happens
Act V, Scene i Analysis: The scene opens with a gentlewoman and a doctor, who are discussing the condition of Lady Macbeth. `Lady Macbeth reenacts conversations that she had with her husband on the nights of Duncan and Banquo’s murders. She repeats the statement she made to Macbeth earlier, that: ‘what's done cannot be undone’ (V, i, 65). This line previously appeared to suggest that they should carry on with their lives as normal, it now seems to suggest that they can never be normal again.
Act 2 Scene 5 For this scene I chose the song “What Goes Around…Comes Around” by Justin Timberlake. I chose the song because it talks about a woman breaking up with a man and the man saying that she’s going to deserve whatever comes at her because she did something bad which means that something bad is going to happen to her. A quotation from the song that proves this is:”What goes around, goes around, goes around Comes all the way back around.” This is basically a song about karma and it talks about
Mise-en-scene is essentially made up of two major visual elements. Design (purpose, or planning to show how the look of the object will be) and Composition (The nature of something’s ingredients or constituents). While exploring the mise-en-scene of blood simple, I decided that the way it is set up at the beginning is the most important part in setting up the plot. In the beginning of the film we see seven shots with a voice over on each of them. In the first shot, the camera is at a low angle,
The Los Angeles nightlife scene is a lot different than the New York and general East coast scene. With that said, the Supperclub Los Angeles nightlife offers its own unique experience. Here’s why: Bar hopping is logistically more difficult. Sure, in places like Hollywood, Venice, or Santa Monica there are a few bars in the area. However, generally, bars are twenty minutes apart on average and it’s far more difficult to bar hop which makes the bar hopping scene less prevalent overall. As a result
voice-over from the father character about his experience with the engagement and wedding preparation, however in these parallel sequences the voice-overs are not used to the same extent nor to the same end. Neither scene contains any sound besides dialogue and voice-over, and the 1950 scene only uses one instance of voice over throughout. The aforementioned line about lying is the only exclusive insight into Stanley’s experience, and although this could imply that the behavior he shows following this
theatre has been an entertainer for years. This leaves no question as to why Lurhmann pays tribute to such a master and a great gene. In sequence 14 in Romeo and Juliet, entitled Romeo Sneaks Back In, Lurhmann takes a new angle to the famous balcony scene. There is a long shot of the Capulets’ balcony by the pool and Romeo in the middle ground. The lighting is dark as it suggests secrecy. Romeo triggers the motion lights and the setting is instantly brightened. Cut to a high angle, medium close up of
accurate dialogue, revealing diegetic sound, alternating character perspective, and exposing scene composition. Director Clarence Brown faced directorial obstacles that led him to develop a symbolically representative style
Introduction The scene of a major emergency or disaster may appear chaotic and disorganized, with early responders and supplies moving about with no visible direction or coordination. However, each individual usually has a specific duty or role which they are assigned, and their efforts play a critical part in the initial response phase after an event takes place. Successful response includes proper management as well as having an appropriate number of trained actors and supplies involved at