Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Favorite Song

Favorite Song of 2013/2014: My favorite song from 2013-2014 would be Mirrors by Justin Timberlake. This song is pretty sappy but I liked it because of it has an interesting analogy of comparing someone you love your other half so it's like you're looking into a mirror.

Favorite Oldies Song: My favorite oldies song would be Dreams by Fleetwood Mac. I really like the band Fleetwood Mac and this is one of their iconic songs and one of my personal favorites.


Justin Timberlake - Mirrors

Fleetwood Mac - Dreams


Sunday, October 18, 2015

Magazine Proposal

Name: S.O. (Sweetness Overload)

Concept: My magazine will showcase the many different variety of sweets available to eat. The variety of delectable sweets in the magazine include chocolates, candy, cake, etc. 
The magazine will also have articles on how to make certain sweet foods, stories about sweet foods, the origin of certain sweets, etc.

Readers: Any person interested in or loves to eat delicious sweet candy and chocolates. Also, people who are interested in cooking and baking sweet foods. The income range will be from middle to high ranged individuals or families. 

Other Competitors: There are many candy and chocolate catalogs out there that would be considered competitors. There is also a magazine called "Candy Industry" who would instantly become our competitor if this magazine were to get started. 

5 Advertisers: There would be many candy and chocolate companies who would love to be invested in our magazine. Some examples would be Hershey's, Ferroro Rocher, Lindt, Haribo, and Nestle. 

5 Potential Articles: 

- The 5 Greatest Types of Candy Ever Invented
- How to Make a Killer Pound Cake
- The Creation of the Gummy Bear
- The Lie Scientists Tell You about Diabetes.
- A Healthy Way of Consuming Sugar



Sunday, October 11, 2015

Books: The Catcher in the Rye

In high school, I had a pretty hipster English teacher. He always assigned his classes interesting books that were controversial in their time. One of the books he made us read was The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger. This book was very controversial at the time of its publishing. A schoolteacher in Ohio was fired for assigning the book to his class (but later retained his job after winning his appeal). A community of people protested against the book in Ohio, calling it "antiwhite", and protested for the banning of the book from school curriculum. Later in 1980, the murderer of John Lennon showed this book as evidence and reasoning for his crime. Personally, I really enjoyed this novel. The story's protagonist is a teen boy coming into adulthood. He runs away from his private school and his predetermined future to spend three days exploring the streets of New York discovering along the way the true nature of the world around him which he had been so sheltered from. I think this book is a perfect read for students in high school, but I can understand why it was so highly protested because there are certain "discoveries" the protagonist finds on his journey that I think children would not quite understand the concept of. Also, there's like one F-bomb in the entire novel which of course protesters latched onto and allowed them to slap a vulgar language label on the novel. For me, going through the typical rebellious phase of my life in high school, the novel really connected me with the protagonist and I often found myself thinking about what I would do or say in the situations he was put into. I think the book is great because it underlines the motifs of self discovery, teen angst, etc. that many high school-aged people can relate to. Overall, I'm really glad my teacher assigned this book for me to read and I recommend it for people who have not read the novel yet.

amazon link (the book's super cheap): The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger