Fall From Grace: Creative Project 3

They say that in great times of failure, success arises from the ashes. After forgetting to have a basic outline for class, our group was asked to leave the room. Completely distraught and ashamed, we started to brainstorm ideas. After a series of ideas, we decided to showcase what just happened to us: getting kicked out of class.

Our sound clip focuses on the variety of emotions throughout this incredibly embarrassing transition. We begin with jovial music as students enter the classroom. There is an upbeat feeling of content. The music transitions to tense and dramatic when the teacher enters the classroom and reaches a moment of silence when the teacher asks for a status on the project. It then transitions to more angry music as the teacher discovers our error. This also applies to a broader context of the truth about errors, misjudgement, and/or mistakes coming to light. Whether publicly or privately, an angry response is expected.

We ourselves are also angry with ourselves for our lack of attention. After that, the music becomes more repentant as we realize our huge error. Beethoven’s Fur Elise is perfect to demonstrate a feeling of sadness or melancholy. The voices of famous falls from grace are heard including Anthony Weiner, Bill Clinton, Tiger Woods and 50 Cent’s unpublished Ghetto Quran. The clip ends with inspirational music with as a glimmer of hope or positive outlook on our future. We feel that our transition was very relatable to our audience as its a struggle that many face (also, we all fell from grace on that noble day).   We hope you enjoy our creation.

Nabil Ahmed Khatri, Kevin Parakattu, Evans Charles Augustin

Works Cited

Antagonist. FreePlayMusic, n.d. MP3.

With the Black Hole. FreePlayMusic, n.d. MP3.

Cent, 50. Ghetto Quran. 50 Cent. N.d. MP3.

DetzEminem “Cleanin’ Out My Closet” (Acoustic Cover)Online Video Clip.
Youtube. Youtube. 20 Feb. 2012. Web. 15 Nov. 2013.

President Bill Clinton – Response to Lewinsky Allegations. University of Virginia: Miller Center of Public Affairs. 26 Jan. 1998. Television.

Tiger Woods’ Full Apology Speech. CNN. 19 Feb. 2010. Television.

Weiner: ‘Don’t Know What I Was Thinking’ CNN. 6 June 2011. Television.

Youtube Audio Library, orch. Für Elise. By Ludwig Van Beethoven. 1810. MP3.

The Era of Consoles

LINK TO ARTICLE

It’s 2013. The first NES (Nintendo Entertainment System) was released in 1985. Playstation was released in 1994, and the first XBox was released in 2001. Not the first consoles by far, these three consoles represented a development into the new generation of video game consoles. These systems made video game consoles more common on a retail and consumer level, and more accessible to the public at large.

Many people would argue that video games are not art by any standards. Although inside the scope of this classroom, as we’ve seen with past articles, the general consensus is that anything can be art, and by extension video games. But in the outside world, many forms of non-traditional art can be seen as just that: non-art.

This article discusses the place of the consoles in this modern era of smartphones, and smart computers, and smart tablets, and smart watches, and smart gadgets. The writers start with a bold statement: “THE video game console is dead.” It’s almost as if they are announcing it to the world. Such a blunt and powerful statement for a geek at heart whose early forms of artistic and literary expression were through video games, on the medium of video game consoles. It hurts…

The writers argue that video games consoles can no longer exist as simply video game consoles. They are competing in an ever growing market of games. The next generation of video game consoles, Playstation 4 and the Xbox One, are competing to be entertainment systems. It’s ironic that the Playstation 2 once posed a threat to the computer entertainment system, but today, it’s the advent of personal computers and personal mini-computers in our pockets (smartphones) that threaten these new generations of consoles.

My question to you is: what does the demise of the video game console era propose for video games? Personally, I see a distinction between the games I’ve played on video game consoles and a game of Temple Run or Angry Birds. Some of my earliest literary and artistic pursuits (of course were books) but after that were in fact video games. Games like Metal Gear Solid, Kingdom Hearts, and Final Fantasy had complex and well written plots that required critical thinking and analysis skills to play and comprehend. In an essay I read for English class titled “Hidden Intellectualism” by Gerald Graff, he argues that mainstream academia has often dismissed and smothered practices and pursuits viewed as anti-intellectual. One of my favorite games, Metal Gear Solid provoked strong ideas about different social, political, and economic themes including but not limited to warfare, technology, genetic engineering, religion, peace, race, engineering, history, weapons, life and death. Below is a brief trailer to one of the games. Notice how it seems to be telling more of a story rather than mindless entertainment (which can also be considered art :] )

Source:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/15/arts/video-games/sizing-up-the-playstation-4-and-xbox-one.html?pagewanted=1&ref=arts&_r=0
Hidden Intellectualism if you are interested