Monday, November 29, 2010

Mark Wahlberg Talks to Animals

“Mark Wahlberg Talks to Animals” is a sketch from the television show Saturday Night Live. Saturday Night Live is a sketch comedy and variety show that airs, live, every Saturday night at 11:30 pm ET. It is currently in its thirty-sixth season and has consistently been shown on NBC. SNL parodies political and popular culture themes and is extremely hilarious. It has won 21 Primetime Emmy Awards, inducted into the National Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame, and listed as one of Time magazine’s “100 Best TV Shows of All-Time.”
Andy Samberg is the actor that portrays Mark Wahlberg in this sketch. Samberg has been performing on Saturday Night Live since 2005. He is a part of the comedy troupe The Lonely Island, along with Akiva Schaffer and Jorma Taccone, which created and starred in the popular SNL Digital Shorts “I’m on a Boat” (featuring rapper T. Pain) and “Lazy Sunday.”
One of my most favorite parodies is “Mark Wahlberg Talks to Animals.” In this sketch, Andy Samberg impersonates the famous actor Mark Wahlberg. “Mark” goes around to different animals, including a dog, donkey, chicken, and a goat, and talks to them. He asks them questions or comments on things like, [to the dog] “So you’re a dog, right? What’s that all about?” [To the donkey] “You’re a donkey, I like that. You eat apples, I produce Entourage.” [To the chicken] “Hey chicken, how’s it hangin’? A lot of people want to eat you, but I just want to talk to you, okay?!” [To the goat] “I like your beard. I had a beard like that in The Perfect Storm, did you see that movie?” Samberg satirizes Wahlberg’s Boston accent in this sketch as well, and always tells the animals to “say hi to your mother for me, alright.”
The writers’ of SNL chose to have Samberg’s character, Mark Wahlberg, talk to animals in this manner to create a parody of Wahlberg’s movie The Happening. In that movie, Wahlberg’s character starts talking to a plastic plant because the plants in were giving off toxins that were killing people. He was telling it that he and his friends were just going to use the bathroom and leave, but then he realizes that he’s talking to a plastic plant. The parody works out very well because it’s incorporating Wahlberg’s traits with funny lines and animals.
I think that this sketch is fantastic. It has my favorite Saturday Night Live actor, Andy Samberg, parodying one of my favorite actors, Mark Wahlberg, with his full Boston accent, and it even has animals. This scene is one of the best SNL sketches that I have seen. It’s funny even if you haven’t seen The Happening. I love quoting it too. If you haven’t seen it, you should look it up on youtube or hulu because it is hilarious. Actually, here's a link if you have some time to watch http://www.hulu.com/watch/37753/saturday-night-live-mark-wahlberg-talks-to-animals

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Monroe's Life and Warhol's Prints


            The works of Andy Warhol and Marilyn Monroe are known widely throughout the country. Andy Warhol began his artistic career after he attended Carnegie Institute of Technology, now Carnegie Mellon University, where he studied commercial art. He moved to New York, drawing shoe advertisements and album covers. Warhol became a leading member of the pop art movement during the 1960’s. His one man art exhibition in the Ferus Gallery of Los Angeles marked the debut of pop art on the west coast. He produced a wide range of art that included paintings, photographs, films, and prints. Warhol founded “The Factory,” a studio where he gathered a variety of artists, ranging from writers and musicians, to work and hang out. Some of his work was completed there but it also was home to underground parties. Valerie Solanas, a feminist and a part of “The Factory” group, attempted to murder Warhol on June 3, 1968. Warhol barely survived but lived on to February 22, 1987 when he died in his sleep of a cardiac arrhythmia.  
            Marilyn Monroe was America’s leading lady in films during the 1950’s. Appearing, and starring for the most part, in around thirty films, Monroe became famous and a public sex symbol. Some of her most notable roles are Lorelei Lee in “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes,” Rose Loomis in “Niagara,” Sugar Kane Kowalczyk in “Some Like it Hot” and Pola Debevoise in How to Marry a Millionaire.” Monroe’s personal life has been plastered throughout the media ever since she made it big. Her marriages to police officer James Dougherty, baseball player Joe DiMaggio, and author Arthur Miller were scrutinized, along with her reported affairs with President John F. Kennedy and his brother Senator Robert Kennedy. Although she was known for her dumb blonde personality, Monroe had a deeper side. She wrote personal notes and poems that showed her intense emotions. One specific poem calledLife” portrays the side of Monroe that was hidden from the public.
            One of Warhol’s most popular techniques of creating prints was silk screening, where he could easily mass-produce his art and make variations of the same print with different colors. The silk screen print of Marilyn Monroe is one of Warhol’s most memorable prints, along with Campbell’s soup can, Elvis, and Coca Cola bottle. There are many variations of the Marilyn Monroe screen print located at the Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh; the most popular one is a set of nine different versions in a three by three box. It’s the same picture of Monroe, from a publicity shoot for the film “Niagara,” but with different color adjustments, for example, one has her hair yellow and her lips black and red, while the one next to it has her hair white and her lips blue and yellow. The colors of the backgrounds change with the colors of Monroe as well. Warhol chose to do a screen print of Monroe because she intrigued him. He had the ability to depict her as incredibly beautiful in some of the prints or show her darker and more mysterious side.
            Monroe’s poem “Life” is relatively unknown to the public, along with all her poetry. Life, included in the recently published book of Monroe’s work “Fragments: Poems, Intimate Notes, Letters,” describes Monroe’s feeling about how there are different directions in life, up and down. She says “Life, I am of both your directions,” meaning she has had her ups and downs, but this poem specifically talks about the downs. The repetition of the line “hanging downward the most” suggests that Monroe has had rough times in her life. Monroe exudes a somber tone through “Life.” The metaphor “strong as a cobweb in the wind” demonstrates weakness and loss of hope. “Life” shows a strikingly deep side of Marilyn Monroe.
            Andy Warhol decided to do screen prints for a certain purpose. Warhol chose to do a screen print, as opposed to any other kind of art technique, of Marilyn Monroe because he gained the ability to mass-produce images and became emotionally detached from his artwork. “The silk screen technique was ideally suited to Warhol, for the repeated image was reduced to an insipid and dehumanized cultural icon that reflected both the supposed emptiness of American material culture and the artist’s emotional noninvolvement with the practice of his art.Repeating the image of Monroe created a cultural icon that portrayed America’s material focus in society while he didn’t have to put much effort into the pieces. His noninvolvement with this artwork allowed him to focus his talents on other artistic ventures and bring himself to fame.
            Marilyn Monroe chose to write a poem for a specific reason as well. She didn’t have any other outlets to explain her deeper feelings. Constricted to being seen as dumb, her poem “Life” shows that she has a brain and can use it for more ways than just memorizing lines. Unlike Warhol, Monroe used her poetry to become more emotionally involved and become more comfortable with art, she had serious stage fright. Her poetry also portrays a different side of Monroe unseen by her film audiences, which is like how Warhol is able to show different tones and emotions by using different colors and shades on Monroe’s print. Monroe was able to describe her emotions through a different outlet other than acting, where she was only able to become emotional through different characters lives instead of her own. Her personality that was rarely seen is portrayed through this poem, like how Warhol’s true feelings toward cultural icons is shown through his screen prints.
            The screen print of Marilyn Monroe by Andy Warhol and the poem “Life” by Marilyn Monroe properly show that people may seem deep when they are shallow and the opposite seem shallow when they are deep. Monroe explains her feelings towards her life and life itself thoughtfully while Warhol mass-produces an image of an American sex symbol with ease and emotional detachment. Both artists succeeded in their fields and are recognized for their many different talents. Although being different Warhol and Monroe have similar qualities and their art complement each other.



Annotated Bibliography
“Andy Warhol.” Encyclopedia Britannica. 2010. Encyclopedia Britannica Online. 05 Nov. 2010. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/635864/Andy-Warhol I found this source from the library database. It gives most of the background information I found on Andy Warhol. Where he was born, brought up, attended college, lived and worked is in this article. This article tells a lot about the pop art movement.
“Marilyn Monroe.” Encyclopedia Britannica. 2010. Encyclopedia Britannica Online. 04 Nov 2010. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/390235/Marilyn-Monroe I also found this article from the library database. This gives background information for Marilyn Monroe. There is tons of information about her films but nothing about her poetry or deeper side so I had to look elsewhere for that.
McQuade, Donald, and McQuade, Christine. Seeing & Writing 4. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2010. Print. Seeing and Writing 4 is the text book required for my English class. It told me what to compare and contrast for these two works of work.
Monroe, Marilyn. Life. Fragments: Poems, Intimate Notes, Letters. MacMillan, 2010. I found this website by doing a basic search on Google. It’s an article about a newly published book of Monroe’s poems, notes, and letters that haven’t been published before. It shows her deeper, intellectual side.
Warhol, Andy. Marilyn Monroe. 1967. Screen Print. Andy Warhol Museum. I found this website by doing a basic search on Google, too. It’s about Warhol’s screen prints and why he likes to do them, the emotional detachment aspect. It also told of the museum dedicated to him and other works that he has done.

Monday, November 8, 2010

The Bagel by David Ignatow


            David Ignatow is a poet from the New York City area. He started his professional life as a businessman but then switched to poetry. Ignatow taught at numerous colleges and universities including New York University and Columbia University. Throughout his career he received many honors for his writing, within these include a National Institute of Arts and Letters award, Shelley Memorial Award, and two Guggenheim fellowships. Ignatow lived to the ripe, old age of eighty-three when he passed away in 1997.
            The poem The Bagel is written in the first person. It describes a scene of a man stopping to retrieve a bagel from the ground. The bagel subsequently starts rolling away from the man in the wind and down the road. The man becomes incredibly frustrated that he cannot attain this bagel and unfortunately starts rolling down the street as well. This similar rolling of the man and the bagel flips the man’s mood completely and he cheers up.
            The Bagel is not only about a man and bagel rolling down the street together but it has an underlying meaning of conformity. The man is annoyed that the bagel is rolling away from him but once he starts rolling like the bagel he becomes happy. The bagel is analogous to society and the man starts out different than the whole. His mood drastically increases when he is the same as the group, the bagel, and it’s because he finally fits in. Ignatow reassures his readers that it is ok to do what everyone else is doing as long as it makes you happy, so if a bagel is rolling down the street and you start rolling too; it’s ok if it makes you happy. Whatever floats your boat, bagel man.
            Ignatow shows his reassurance by changing his tone throughout The Bagel. In the beginning the man is annoyed that he’s different. He shows this annoyance through the first two thirds of the poem. After he joins in with this glorious rolling, the man and the tone of the poem change to cheerful. Since he’s doing the same thing as the bagel and he doesn’t have to chase the fad anymore it makes the whole poem happier. This crazy bagel creates such problems but then it creates such joy.
            I liked this poem tremendously. It has great imagery and a great sense of humor. Imagine a bagel rolling down a street followed by a man doing the exact same thing! It would be hilarious. Every time I read this poem, I laugh because it is just so ridiculous. I also like the meaning behind it because I tend to follow the crowd and having The Bagel make that ok makes me feel good.