Friday Night Lights: A Town Essays

  • Should Student Athletes Be Allowed In Schools

    1193 Words  | 3 Pages

    I shot two hundred baskets every night before I went in for dinner over the summer, not because I enjoyed I it, but because my mom wouldn't let me inside If I didn't. My life was consumed by the game of basketball. I remember when I used to admire everything about the gym; the smell of the hardwood floors, the sound of the rubber basketballs smacking the ground, the sweat shimmering on the court, the harsh yellow lights gleaming down from the ceiling. It made my fingers tingle, and a rush of adrenaline

  • Friday Night Lights Essay

    923 Words  | 2 Pages

    Friday Night Lights by H.G. Bissinger is a story about a football town. The name of the town is Odessa. It is a small town on the west side of Texas and football is the only thing that matters. Bissinger gives the reader a glimpse of what life is like at an area high school called Permian. Very few towns are obsessed with sports like Permian and Ringgold when it comes to sports programs. In this essay, Permian and Ringgold sports will be compared by their programs and values that they place on sports

  • Brief Summary of Friday Night Lights by H.G. Bissinger

    1037 Words  | 3 Pages

    Friday Night Lights Friday Night Lights is a non fiction book written in the late 1980’s and very early 1990’s. The book was written by H.G. Bissinger. H.G. Bissinger is an American author and is from New York City. Major Characters: James “Boobie” Miles: The star fullback of the Permian Panthers, who got injured in a pre-season game before their 1988 season. Athletic: Boobie was recruited by many colleges to play football because he was very good. Regretful: Boobie regrets playing in the pre-season

  • Friday Night Lights by H.G. Bissinger

    1110 Words  | 3 Pages

    H.G. Bissinger’s Friday Night Lights brings to mind the cold, autumn nights of 1988 where a town, just like any other rural town in America, was brought together in such a raw and emotional way. From the rise and fall of Boobie Miles to the push for the playoffs, it is clear that 1988 Odessa was swept up in the glory of football to replace the grandeur of the 1950s, which seemed to deteriorate throughout that hectic decade. While a modern reader may view Bissinger’s masterpiece as a tale from a dated

  • Friday Night Lights Rhetorical Analysis

    915 Words  | 2 Pages

    A town, a team, a dream. Friday Night lights document the 1988 football season of Permian High School in Odessa, Texas. Bissinger explores the various themes of the novel and uses conceit to colorfully describe the contrasting attitudes towards sports and academics. In the small town of Odessa bases Fridays nights in the fall are dedicated to Permian football. As a result of the obsessive attitude towards football a ridiculous amount of pressure is thrusted upon the coaches and players. Bissinger

  • Friday Night Lights Compare And Contrast

    922 Words  | 2 Pages

    anything else on television these days. Set in the small town of Dillon, this west Texas town in “Friday Night Lights” is the type of place where football is worshipped and often depicted as a religion, much like how the rest of the great state of Texas is portrayed by the general population. But with all due respect to God, it might even be more than that. Peter Berg created the television series in perfect harmony to the film Friday Night Lights, an adaptation of a novel itself, which he also directed

  • Friday Night Lights Essay Topics

    1011 Words  | 3 Pages

    FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS In the book Friday Night Lights by author H.G Bissinger, there are various themes circulating around, However, the theme of racism overwhelms the majority and provides sufficient insight into the social hierarchy and social structure of the town of Odessa, Texas. The book overlooks a group of high school students dedicated to playing football and their struggle with identity, culture, and race. Race not only affects social problems within the book but also psychological, economic

  • Friday Night Lights

    864 Words  | 2 Pages

    Friday Night Lights Is High School football a sport, or is it more than that to some people? Recent newspaper headlines include such items as coaches abusing student athletes; fathers of athletes murdering coaches, and mother’s disabilitating cheerleading candidates to assure their daughters make the cheerleading team. In Odessa, Texas high school football is a major contributor to the society of a small town in Texas society. Every Friday night, 50,000 people fill the stadium to see high school

  • Friday Night Lights Book vs. Movie

    592 Words  | 2 Pages

    Friday Night lights Is High School football a sport, or is it more than that to some people? I’ve learned that the book is more sociological, which means that it focused on our human society of racial issues and also emphasizes the economy and the divide between the wealthy residents of one city versus the more working-class denizens of another are all subjects that are given an in-depth examination. This is more of the main or focal point of the whole book and in not so much in the movie. Although

  • Texas High School Football is an Obsession

    698 Words  | 2 Pages

    not only themselves but the alumni and town of Odessa, Texas is a lot to ask from a young adult. There is a continuous pattern in Friday Night Lights that passion is not always a good thing. The town’s expectations of the team cause the school personnel and coaches to sacrifice the players’ overall wellbeing in return for a successful football team. Although the town of Odessa is unified and sustained by its love of Texas High School Football, Friday Night Lights provides insight into how damaging a

  • Friday Night Lights by H.G. Bissinger: The Fate of the Team

    535 Words  | 2 Pages

    those who participate but the members of the community in which they participate. These effects can be positive, but they can also be negative. In the book Friday Night Lights, H.G. Bissinger shows that they are often negative in communities where high school sports “keep the town alive” due to the social pressure. In this way, Friday Night Lights gives insight into the effects of high school football being the backbone of a community, revealing that the fate of the individual football players are inadvertently

  • Book Report On Friday Night Lights

    793 Words  | 2 Pages

    “Life really ain’t worth livin unless you got a High School football team to support” Bob Rutherford speaks for the entire town of Odessa when he states his opinion on Football. In the small Texas town the Permian Panther football team is all they have, and all anyone cares about. Friday Night Lights is the perfect read for any teen is high school, specifically any high school football athlete. The book shares the story of the Permian Panther football team. The book has various main characters, Bobbie

  • Racial Tensiona and Low Expectation on Black Athletes in Football

    1219 Words  | 3 Pages

    In Odessa, an oil-rich town in West Texas, there is a line that separates the two races of blacks and whites. They called it “the American version of the Berlin Wall – the railroad tracks that inevitably ran through the heart of town” (Bissinger 91). The tracks are the symbol of the barrier, tension, and attitude that stand between the two races. To the Odessan whites, African Americans are often considered extraneous, with few hopes and dreams to follow. It is also a common part of everyday language

  • Friday Night Lights by Buzz Bissinger

    906 Words  | 2 Pages

    ends for people. But while it lasts, it creates this make-believe world where normal rules don’t apply. We build this false atmosphere. When it’s over and the harsh reality sets in, that’s the real joke we play on people’” (Bissinger xiv). “Friday Night Lights” shows the darker side of high school football. Players are taught to play games to win, and thats all that matters. Football players are put under a tremendous amount of pressure, almost enough to be considered unfair. Even though football

  • High School Sports

    796 Words  | 2 Pages

    Texas are spending millions of dollars on sports complexes. He also writes”coaches in some areas are making close to $90,000 a year without teaching a class”. A school in Texas by the name of Permian high scho... ... middle of paper ... ...ate the night before the mid-term instead of studying and he bombs the test. As a student athlete in high school this has happened to me before and now that I look back at it I wish I would’ve studied. Nevertheless, I feel that sports should greatly benefit a child's

  • Research Paper On Friday Night Lights

    1152 Words  | 3 Pages

    through his role as Dr. Billy Kronk on Chicago Hope. Since then, Berg has moved on to producing episodes of Friday Night Lights and the movies Hercules, Hell or High Water, and many others. He has also directed movies such as Friday Night Lights, Hancock, Deepwater Horizon, and Patriots Day. As a director, he is said to be quite the character,

  • Friday Night Lights Essay On Identity

    1275 Words  | 3 Pages

    and goals, as revealed in both Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian and a film Friday Night Lights. Although both Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian and Friday Night Lights are about teenagers who try to overcome one aspect of their identities by facing the reality, the Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian is focused on overcoming pressures related to race, while Mike in the Friday night lights is focused on overcoming the pressures related to family

  • High School Friday Night Lights

    857 Words  | 2 Pages

    them. There are many conflicting opinions on whether high school sports are a positive or negative influence on a student’s life. Athletics in high school can have an effect on the community as a whole. In H.G. Bisssinger’s highly regarded Friday Night Lights, high school football is accurately portrayed as the most important thing in Texas; it receives much more attention than academics. Football players are often treated like celebrities; yielding confidence, and at the same time creating pressure

  • Masculinity In Friday Night Lights

    958 Words  | 2 Pages

    The T.V. series Friday Night Lights ran from 2006 to 2011 and portrayed a small town in Texas where football reigns and fulfills both a social and cultural void for the small Texas town known as Dillon. The main character of the show Eric Taylor holds the position of head football coach for the East Dillon high school. A position which brings power and respect, consequently with power brings with it scrutiny under the eyes of the public. The show in its first couple seasons shows the stereotypical

  • High School Football Case Study

    618 Words  | 2 Pages

    1950 and 1985. The two towns, which to this day are very stereotypical high school athletics town, formed one of the fiercest rivalry in Iowa sports. This matchup was talked about for months in advance, stores would close, the visiting town would vacate to occupy the hosting one, and even those with no affiliation to either town would show up for the game. If you ask any of the Grinnell players from that era, the greatest part of their career, was playing under the lights for record crowds every