What’s all the NOISE!?

Another Perspective: Metrolinx

 

You’ll find most of the information you need to answer the following questions at this website; www.metrolinx.com

 

1)         What 3 images do you see on the home page for this web site?

 

2)       What do these 3 images imply that Metrolinx is involved in?   

 

3)         What does FAQ stand for?

  

4)         What is Metrolinx’s mandate (what are they supposed to do)?

 

5)         Who give Metrolinx their power or authority? 

 

6)         Why do you think Metrolinx changed their logo last spring? How does this affect their new image?

 

7)         What are two ways you can have your comments heard by Metrolinx?  

 

8)         What barriers might some people face to making their comments and concerns known to Metrolinx?    

  

9)         What is the role of a board? You might need to check an outside source for this information if you don’t already know the answer (try wiki).

 

10) Go to www.metrolinx.com/thebigmove/metrolinxboard.html and take a look at the Metrolinx board.  Who is missing from this picture? Whose voices might not be represented by this board?

                                                                                                              

 Bonus Questions:

What do the endings on the end of a web site address (url) stand for;

.ca      ___________________________

.org    ___________________________

.com   ___________________________

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What’s all the Noise about!?

 

Go to www.cleantrain.ca and click on FAQ to answer the following questions;

 

 

1)     What is the Metrolinx Project?

 

2)     How many trains are expected to run past Pelham Park everyday?

 

3)     What are the 3 main concerns about the project?

 

4)     Should I be concerned about the impact of the diesel fumes on children?

5)     How many people live along the train route (corridor)?

 

6)     How many times louder are Pile Drivers than the safe level of noise, which is 75 decibels (dB)?

 

7)     What are the vibrations of the Pile Drivers compared to on the Richter Scale?

 

8)      Will an extra station be built for people in the Carleton Village area?

 

9) What can I do to have my concerns about the Metrolinx project known?

10) IF YOU WANT TO, YOU CAN WRITE TO;

     THE PREMIER OF ONTARIO, DALTON McGUINTY,

     YOUR MPP, TONY RUBPRECHT,

     AND DEBORAH MATTHEWS, MINISTER OF CHILDREN AND      YOUTH SERVICES TO LET THEM KNOW WHAT YOU THINK.

   

IT’S VERY EASY – JUST FOLLOW THE LINK at www.cleantrain.ca; click on 4th of May Clean Letter Day; scroll down to open the word doc. letters to all of the politicians listed above.

    SIMPLY ADD YOUR NAME TO END OF THE FORM LETTERS.

    WRITE YOUR ADDRESS AS CARLETON VILLAGE P.S.,

    PRINT OUT YOUR LETTERS AND I WILL MAIL THEM ON TUESDAY.

    

   

YOU’LL BE MAKING YOUR POINT OF VIEW KNOWN TO THE PEOPLE WHO ARE MAKING BIG DECISIONS ABOUT YOUR NEIGHBOURHOOD!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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TV TurnOFF Week April 20-26

 

Did you know that it is TV TurnOFF Week? What’s this you ask?

This is a week dedicated to Thinking Critically about TV. – to evaluate the role television plays in kids’ lives; What are kids watching? Is screen time replacing sports, socializing or outdoor fun? Does your family have house rules about TV? What are the messages that you are being bombarded with while watching TV?

Some Quick Facts

In Canada, watching TV is a daily pastime for 75 per cent of boys and girls in grades 3-10. 

 

 

Forty-eight per cent of those students have their own TV set and 35 per cent have their own VCR.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Kids’ take on Media, 2003

 Recent data shows that TV viewing is declining in young people. Viewers aged 12 to 19 watched an average of 12.9 hours a week of TV in 2004, two hours less than in the year before. This may be due to increased time spent playing computer games or on the Internet.

Source: Statistics Canada, 2006

 

 

 

Please answer the following questions using FULL sentences. Point form is not acceptable.

Remember to explain your thinking for level 4 answers.

You do NOT have to complete it at home. Use your class time wisely and you should be able to get it done in 2 class periods.

 

1)    Do you think that you view more television than we really need each day?

 

2)    Think about your TV viewing habits over the course of an average week.  

-How many hours each week do you watch television?

-Are there any days in which you watch more TV than others?

-Do you attempt to budget your television viewing?

-Make a list of programs you and/or your family watch in a week.

 

3)    With whom you discuss the TV programs you watch? Parents? Family? Friends?

 

4)    If you were to give up television for a week, which programs would you miss the most?

-Are some programs more important than others?

-Are there television programs you would consider to be too important to miss, even for a week?

 

5)    Can you think of reasons why watching television could be necessary or helpful for people? 

6)    What type of television programs would you list as beneficial or important, and why? 

7)    Why do you think it’s important to teach kids about the problems with watching too much TV?  

8)     Do you think cutting out television entirely would encourage healthier lifestyles?  Do you know anyone (families) who doesn’t have a TV?  

9)    Why do we, as a culture, feel like we must watch television on a regular basis (for example to schedule our lives to watch the same program week after week, or watch re-runs of the same episode we have seen before?)

 

10)                        What do you think the following quote means? Explain your thinking!:

 


The remarkable thing about television is that it permits several million people to laugh at the same joke and still feel lonely   T.S. Eliot

 

Bonus Question:

Who do you think started TV TurnOFF week and whose Point of View do they represent?

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Find a sentence from a graphic novel on-line.

Write the sentence as you find it.

Write the sentence that you’ve chosen again in 6 different ways;

1-All in  BIG CAPITAL LETTERS

2-In small CAPITAL LETTERS

3-Using italics

4-Writing the words in bold

5-Change the text (lettering or typeface) into another language

6-Writing the words in another way, of your choice

For each of the 6 text types, explain what you think the text says or conveys to the reader (ask: what might the author be trying to say by writing this way?)

 

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For those who are interested in finding out more about Shepard Fairey and his art work click on his link below. 

http://obeygiant.com/

Or watch the video again:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qc3Egjpna8I&feature=related

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A brand is a trademark or label that is associated with a particular product. A Brand is Symbols, characters, logos, and even the product itself.

Click on this website below.  See if you can guess which companies the logos or brands belong to.

 http://www.media-awareness.ca/english/resources/educational/overheads/alcohol/brands_symbols.cfm?RenderForPrint=1

To see if you are right:
1. For the brands that mixed words and symbols, did you need the words to recognize the brand?

2. Which of these brands are associated with products aimed at kids and teens?

3. Which of these brands are associated with more adult-oriented products?

4. Were you able to identify brands for adult products as easily as you could brands for young people?

5. Do you have positive feelings about any of these brands? Which ones?

Comments 16 Comments »

Media                                     Monday March 9th, 2009

 

 

Go to Nelvana.com to answer the following questions

 

1)     What is Nelvana Studio’s address?

2)     Who do you think we should contact there to see if we can visit them?

 

3)     What are CORUS’ 5 Core Values?

4)     Which of these values is also a TDSB character development character?

5)     How many jobs are currently available in Toronto?

6)     What is the name of the children’s book company that also owns Nelvana?

7)     When was the book publishing company started?

 

Ruby Gloom

1)     What are 3 juicy words to describe Ruby Gloom?

2)     What is the BIG theme of her show?

 

 

Di-Gata Defenders

1)     What are the underlying BIG ideas of this show (in your own words)?

2)     What 3 things changed Lord Nazmul from fighting the forces of good?

 

 

Flying Rhino Junior High

1)     What is the BIG idea of the episode “Quit Buggin’ Me?”

 

 

Comments 20 Comments »

Media                                     Monday March 9th, 2009

 

 

Go to Nelvana.com to answer the following questions

 

1)     What is Nelvana Studio’s address?

2)     Who do you think we should contact there to see if we can visit them?

 

3)     What are CORUS’ 5 Core Values?

4)     Which of these values is also a TDSB character development character?

5)     How many jobs are currently available in Toronto?

6)     What is the name of the children’s book company that also owns Nelvana?

7)     When was the book publishing company started?

 

Ruby Gloom

1)     What are 3 juicy words to describe Ruby Gloom?

2)     What is the BIG theme of her show?

 

 

Di-Gata Defenders

1)     What are the underlying BIG ideas of this show (in your own words)?

2)     What 3 things changed Lord Nazmul from fighting the forces of good?

 

 

Flying Rhino Junior High

1)     What is the BIG idea of the episode “Quit Buggin’ Me?”

 

 

Comments 8 Comments »


1. Drinking is a risk-free activity.Budweiser: Pour

Ads that present drinking as a risk-free activity deliver messages that it is okay to drink large quantities of alcohol.

For example, when advertisements for light beers say they are “less filling,” they’re not really talking about losing weight – they’re saying that because they’re less filling, you can drink more.

Jim Bean: There is no disagreement that arm wrestling can't resolve.Drinking in ads is portrayed as both natural and distinctive, taking place on yachts at sunset, not at kitchen tables in the morning.

All signs of trouble and any hint of addiction are avoided at all costs. There is no unpleasant drunkenness, only high spirits.

Ads like these tell alcoholics and those around them that it’s all right to be obsessed by alcohol, to consume large amounts of it on a daily basis and to have it part of any activity.

2. You can’t survive without drinking.

Macallen: Lead a more colourful life“Lead a more colorful life,” is what Macallen drinkers are promised when they drink that brand of Scotch.

Jim Bean: Not only do you guys wear the same outfits, but occasionally even the same makeup.Messages such as this want us to believe that our real lives are dull and boring. We need alcohol in order to free ourselves and experience a richer, more interesting life.

Ads that tell us we can’t survive without alcohol make the act of drinking a cause for celebration.

“Real friends. Real bourbon.” For Jim Beam drinkers, alcohol is just as important as friendships and relationships.

An ad for Michelob beer says, “Pour a Party” – just open that bottle and your life will be fun.

Ads such as these are dangerous for people who are problem drinkers. Many alcohol dependent persons believe that alcohol is essential for life, that without it they will die – or at best be condemned to a gray and boring half-life. These ads, and many others like them, confirm these beliefs by telling these people that they need alcohol to make life worthwhile and exciting.

Royal Crown: The end of a perfect day.3. Problem-drinking behaviors are normal.

“The end of a perfect day,” is how a Royal Crown ad puts it. If you believe this ad’s message, then you believe that alcohol makes everything perfect – and that drinking is something you do every day.

Many alcohol ads actually promote problem-drinking behaviors. In the Royal Crown ad, symptoms of alcohol dependence such as the need for a daily drink, are portrayed as normal and desirable.

The messaging in “Smirnoff half day off” implies that it’s acceptable to drink to the point where you miss a half day’s work.

Smirnoff half day off.

Other slogans that present drinking as “your own special island” or “your mountain hideaway” capitalize on the feelings of alienation and loneliness many alcoholics experience. Such ads encourage solitary drinking – one of the classic signs of trouble with alcohol. They also distort the tragic reality that problem drinking increases – rather than lessens – those feelings of isolation.

4. Alcohol is a magic potion that can transform you.

SKYY BlueAlcohol advertising often links alcohol with the attributes and qualities that problem drinking destroys. Happiness, wealth, prestige, sophistication, success, maturity, athletic ability, virility and sex are common themes in alcohol ads.

For example, alcohol is often linked with romance, but researchers have found that people with drinking problems are seven times more likely to be separated or divorced.

Such ads often target young people, women and people of colour, since members of these groups often feel powerless and are eager to identify with “successful” groups in our society.

Bud LightThese ads sometimes connect “prestige” beverages with the aura of the rich and powerful or liberated.

Ads and products aimed at young people deserve special mention – especially when you consider the fact that many kids start drinking in junior high school. Cartoon and animal characters such as Spuds MacKenzie and Anheuser-Busch’s canine mascot are not as innocent as they appear. In one Christmas campaign, Spuds appeared in a Santa Claus suit, promoting 12-packs of Bud Light beer. In the summer of 1990 he was cavorting with ninjas, drawing on the popularity of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles movie, a big hit with younger children.

Ads that portray drinking as a passport to adulthood, coupled with “bridge drinks” such as “alco-pop” malt beverages and alcohol-based jello, can be very successful lures for young drinkers. 

5. Sports and alcohol go together.

Michelob: Loose the carbs, not the taste.Drinking alcohol actually decreases athletic performance. But numerous ads, such as this one for Michelob Beer, imply that sports and alcohol go together.

Other types of ads that connect sports and drinking include sponsorship of sporting events and sports television or endorsements by sports stars.

Molson Canadian HockeyNot only do these ads make alcohol part of playing sports, they also feed the impression that booze is an essential part of watching sporting events. “It’s just not football without something to pass around” says an ad for Scotch.

 

6. If these products were truly dangerous, the media would tell us.

Most media are reluctant to bite the hand that feeds them (advertisers spend $2 billion annually on advertising and promotion). Media coverage of the “war on drugs” seldom mentions the two major killers, alcohol and nicotine. From the coverage, one would assume that cocaine was the United States’ most dangerous drug. However, while cocaine, heroin and other illegal drugs are linked to about 20,000 deaths a year, alcohol contributes to at least 100,000 and cigarettes more than 390,000 deaths a year in that country. (In Canada, the figures are 8,000 and 45,000 respectively.)

Although many media feature occasional stories about alcohol problems, they usually treat these as personal problems and focus on individual treatment solutions. Reports that probe alcohol’s role in violence and other chronic problems are rare, and the role advertising plays in encouraging alcohol use is almost never discussed. 

Budweiser7. Alcoholic beverage companies promote moderation in drinking.

Many consumer awareness campaigns downplay the very real problems associated with alcohol abuse. For example, this moderation ad from Budweiser displays a “True or False” quiz, with “The majority of college students drink 2 or fewer drinks a week” as one of the statements. The ad’s tag line is “Guess what? Every one of these is true. Most importantly, college students are making responsible choices about drinking.” This statement contradicts research findings concluding that binge drinking on college and university campuses has reached “epidemic” proportions.Budweiser survey: True or False?

In a second campaign, Budweiser assures parents that “kids listen,” implying that the situation is under control: as long as you tell your children not to drink, they won’t.

Molson: Plan ahead. Don't drink and drive.Most of these programs are designed to encourage young people not to drive drunk. They do not, however, question drinking to excess. As long as you’re not the one behind the wheel of a car, it’s okay to get drunk.

Budweiser: basket weavingWe might be better off without these “responsible drinking” campaigns, which are often just platforms from which the industry can promote myths and damaging attitudes. For example, one program by Miller beer defines moderate drinking as up to four drinks a day (low risk drinking in Canada is defined as no more than two drinks a day). Another Budweiser awareness ad equates not drinking to “basket weaving,” implying that being sober is boring.

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www.media-awareness.ca/english/resources/educational/handouts/alcohol/advertising_and_alcohol.cfm
Advertising and Alcohol
Adapted from “Deadly Persuasion: 7 Myths Alcohol Advertisers Want You to Believe,” by Dr. Jean Kilbourne. This article originally appeared in the Spring/Summer 1991 edition of Media & Values.  Adapted, with permission, from the Center for Media Literacy (www.medialit.org).  Absolut Magic.
“Absolut Magic,” proclaims an ad for a popular vodka. “Paradise found,” headlines another. “Fairy tales can come true,” says a third.

These are the myths the alcohol industry wants us to believe. Messages such as these want to convince people that alcohol is magic. These ads tell us alcohol can make us successful, sophisticated and even sexy. Without it, life is dull, ordinary and boring.

Everyone wants to believe in happy endings. But as most of us know, for many people alcohol is more like a horror story than a fairy tale. We are surrounded by messages that drinking is fun, sexy, desirable and harmless. It’s easy to identify these messages when they appear in advertisements and commercials, but we also get less obvious messages from other media – in films, music videos, television shows, sporting events and even songs. This is because many media companies depend on alcohol advertising for a large share of their profits. As a result, alcohol use is often glorified in the media, and alcohol problems are seldom seen.

Alcohol is related to parties, good times, celebrations and fun, but it is also related to murder, suicide, car accidents, unemployment and child abuse. Of course, you never see alcohol’s negative side in ads. Advertisements are created to sell products, so it makes sense that advertisers are going to promote only positive messages about drinking. But when the product is the nation’s number one drug, people should pay attention to the negative side.

Bubweiser UK welcome pageMost people know alcohol can cause problems. But did you know that 10 per cent of all deaths in the United States – including half of all murders and at least one quarter of all suicides – are related to alcohol? It costs more than $100 billion each year to deal with the negative consequences of drinking in that country.

Meanwhile, the alcohol industry in the U.S. spends more than $3 billion a year on advertising and promotion to make sure drinkers keep spending money on alcoholic beverages. Problem drinkers and young people are its primary targets.

Of course, the alcohol industry disagrees with this claim. Over and over again, alcohol industry executives state that they are not trying to create new or heavier drinkers. Instead, they say, they only want people who already drink to switch to their brand and to drink it in moderation. However, many researchers who study alcohol advertising disagree. In fact, they believe the opposite – that alcohol advertising is specifically designed to recruit new, young users and to promote heavy consumption of its products.

 

Did You Know?  10 per cent of drinkers consume over 60 per cent of all the alcohol sold

 

 

 

Indeed, telling people to drink moderately doesn’t make good business sense for the alcohol industry. If all drinkers did drink moderately, alcohol companies would lose nearly half the income earned from sales of beer, wine and spirits. 

In fact, if every adult in North America drank according to the U.S. federal guidelines for what is low-risk drinking (which is no more than two drinks a day for a man and no more than one drink a day for a woman), alcohol industry sales would be cut by 80 per cent. Although the alcohol companies claim they want people to drink “responsibly,” the truth is that “responsible” drinking would destroy them.

It’s unlikely industry executives want this to happen. In fact, research has shown that advertisers deliberately target heavy drinkers and create ads designed to appeal to them. As with any product, the heavy user is the best customer. But when the product is a drug, the heavy user is often an addict.

Young Prospects

Not all problem drinkers are alcoholics, and not all teenagers drink. But teens who do drink are more likely than adults to binge drink, making young people a lucrative market for alcohol producers.

According to the 1989 National Institute on Drug Abuse survey of high school seniors, 33 per cent of students reported they had consumed five or more drinks on one occasion over the previous two weeks. [Over one half of Grade 12 students, who drink in Ontario, consumed five or more drinks at least once in the past month.]

 

Consider this:  The most widely used illegal drug in North America is beer, since it is the drug of choice for young people. Underage drinkers account for 12 per cent of all alcohol sales.

 

 

 

 

The primary purpose of the mass media is to deliver audiences to advertisers. In fact, magazines, radio stations and TV stations work hard to attract advertising dollars from all kinds of companies, including those that sell alcoholic beverages.

Cosmopolitan readers drank 21,794,000 glasses of beer in the last week.In the ad shown here, Cosmopolitan is trying to convince the alcohol industry to advertise alcohol in its magazine. The ad reads:

“Cosmopolitan readers drank 21,794,000 glasses of beer in the last week … Isn’t it time you gave Cosmopolitan a shot?”

One of the main symptoms of alcohol dependence is the denial that there is a problem. In general, as a society, we tend to deny the problems associated with alcohol – and advertising encourages this denial. It may be impossible to prove beyond all doubt that alcohol advertising affects whether or not people drink, but it clearly affects attitudes about drinking. Ads for alcohol contribute to an environment of social acceptance of high-risk drinking and denial of related problems.

Questions

  1. What are some of the myths promoted by the alcohol industry? 
  2. In addition to commercials, what are some other ways that the media sends us messages about drinking? 
  3. What are some of the negative consequences of drinking?
  4. What strategies are used in alcohol ads to sell us products?
  5. Who are the primary targets of alcohol ads?
  6. According to alcohol companies, why do they advertise?
  7. What would happen to the alcohol industry if people consumed only “moderate” amounts of alcohol?
  8. According to the article, what is the primary purpose of mass media?
  9. How do ads contribute to attitudes about drinking? 
  10. What solutions does this article recommend?

 

 

 

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