Try to think of all the things $200,000 can buy. $200,000 can buy a house, multiple cars, food for the homeless, a four year college education, or a birthday party for teenage girls like Sophie Mitchell, star of MTV's hit reality show My Super Sweet 16.
Sophie and other girls are showcased on MTV’s hit series. Their parties are filled with extravagant things like $2,000 cakes, concert type entertainment, and venues, such as New York City Clubs. As Lola Ogunnaike, a writer for the New York Times writes in her article, MTV's 'Super Sweet 16' Gives a Sour Pleasure, “The show follows a simple but wildly successful formula: (1) kid makes a series of high-priced demands (a fireworks display, a helicopter ride, perhaps a harem of belly dancers); (2) parents capitulate and cough up the cash; (3) kid gleefully humiliates the uninvited; (4) something goes awry; (5) kid has a meltdown and repeatedly refers to self in the third person; (6) party miraculously comes together, and kid is presented with an automobile before his salivating, less fortunate peers.”
The show draws a large audience because the lives these teenage girls and boys lead are so different from everyday life. Most 16 year olds have a birthday cake and a few friends over for their 16th birthday party. These teens on the other hand have grand entrances on elephants, $1,000 bracelets are party favors, and limonene service for all of the party guests.
When asked about her party, which cost around $180,000, Sophie replied, “Unless they were crazy or hated their child, any parent who was financially able would do it,.”
Article Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/26/arts/television/26swee.html?_r=1&pagewanted=2&oref=slogin
Image source: http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2006/04/26/arts/26swee190.jpg
Thursday, October 23, 2008
Sweeet 16...
Posted by Jess at 10:31 AM 3 comments
Monday, October 6, 2008
"An Illicit Fag Behind the Toilets"
Allen Newton writes in his blog "Over the Fence,"
"I was a bit of a goody-two-shoes at school when it came to sex, drugs and booze (although I may have made up for it in latter years), but I wonder how different it is for kids at school these days than it was in the late 1960s and early 1970s when I was at school. I finished my high school years at Governor Stirling in Midland, renowned, certainly then, as one of the Metropolitan area’s rougher schools, but even then I can’t recall being exposed to drugs. And as for sex parties! I surely would have remembered them.
No, the worst I can recall of my circle of friends, was an illicit fag behind the toilets, a sly tipple of mum and dad’s sherry and skipping school classes down by the Swan River. It wasn’t actually a life of debauchery. Reading this stuff about booze-fuelled sex romps, drug binges and boys hiring strippers makes me wonder if school life has changed or was I just living in some naive world of my own"
Jas of Perth comments:
This may be a typical reaction for most, but it was the comment by Scotchy of Perth interested me the most.
To those of you who think we are spoiled little kids getting money from our parents for alcohol you are severely mistaken. Just because a person goes to a private school doesn’t mean they have it easy money wise, there a large number of people who struggle with money issues at the school."
This touches upon a very important point in today's culture: the role of media. In many cases media can misrepresent both situations, such as the war in Iraq, and people, such as Scotchy of Perth. Media plays a very important role in the perception of various people, and ultimately the way they are viewed. For example, Gossip Girl is a very popular tv drama in today's socitey. This show portrays the ritzy New York City lifestyles characters like Blair and Serena experience. Both are extremely wealthy, and gallivant around New York City without a care. Below is an clip from this popular television show. Just from this 2 minute and 6 second clip, it is easy to see how this show helps to support the various stereotypes thought about wealthy teenagers.
http://blogs.news.com.au/perthnow/overthefence/index.php/perthnow/comments/are_these_kids_so_bad/
Blog Source: http://blogs.news.com.au/perthnow/overthefence/index.php/perthnow/comments/are_these_kids_so_bad/
Video Source: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JAQGTs9YIh4
Posted by Jess at 5:10 PM 1 comments