Ken Carter Essays

  • Motivation In Ken Carter

    1977 Words  | 4 Pages

    basketball team called Richmond Oilers is the worst team in which no players exhibit any respect to each other and have no discipline to act. They only won 4 games last season and lost the rest of all games. With the retirement of the former coach, Ken Carter, who played for this school in 70s and held several school record, takes over the head coaching job position. Upon the arrival, he obligates that all players who want to stay in the team must sign in a contract with him which states that they must

  • Ken Carter: The Coach Carter Basketball Team

    780 Words  | 2 Pages

    Coach Carter the movie is based on a true story with a great management leadership concepts. Samuel L. Jackson plays the role of Ken Carter. Ken is offered employment to instruct the basketball team at his previous high school, Richmond High. He appropriated the position of basketball coach in order to try and expand the neglected community of Richmond. Nevertheless an even more important aim of his was to inspire and lead the student athletes on their basketball team. He makes the athletes sign

  • The Power of Teamwork in Coach Carter

    1479 Words  | 3 Pages

    presence automatically liberates others”. - Timo Cruz Introduction The movie Coach Carter is an American Drama based on a true story of a Basket Ball coach and his team from Richmond High School. Coach Ken Carter portrayed by Samuel L Jackson and directed by Thomas Carter. Coach Ken Carter was a successful basketball champion athlete during his school days. Before accepting the job as a coach for his old high school Ken Carter use to run a sporting goods store successfully and was planning to open another

  • One Person Triumphs, We All Triumph

    1515 Words  | 4 Pages

    IGN Entertainment called it, “Inspirational, Gripping, and Entertaining.” The Movie Guide summarized it as “an entertaining, morality lesson.” Six years later, Coach Carter still captivates the minds of audiences as the frontrunner of underdog movies and joining the top tier of movies. Winning 3 awards and receiving 10 nominations for best director, lead actor, and best female breakthrough performance, was an incredible tale that touched the audience’s emotions and evoked the feeling of the victims

  • Coach Carter: Teamwork

    986 Words  | 2 Pages

    can work together and teach each other things such as self-respect and self-confidence, you have teamwork. When everyone is struggling, why not help each other out? Coach Ken Carter in demand of respect and commitment transforms a group of teenage boys into a group of young men in the movie Coach Carter. The fact that Coach Carter had transformed this group of boys is not why I enjoyed this movie. My interest moves more towards how he transformed these boys. He taught these boys to value themselves

  • Emily Prager's Our Barbies, Ourselves

    551 Words  | 2 Pages

    Emily Prager's "Our Barbies, Ourselves?" In the essay 'Our Barbies, Ourselves,' Emily Prager explores the history of the Barbie doll and talks about the Barbie doll itself. Prager seems convinced that the Barbie doll was an object created by a man and that Barbie reeks of sexuality, sexual innuendo and serves as the anti-feminist embodiment of every man's fantasy. In her own expressive and persuasive modes to fashion an essay designed to persuade the reader that the Barbie doll is a twisted

  • Ken Schroeder's Barbie Doesn’t Add Up

    1129 Words  | 3 Pages

    Barbie Doesn’t Add Up In the Article “Barbie Doesn’t Add Up,” the author Ken Schroeder states that Barbie dolls were just dolls that gave young girls false ideas of what they should be and look like as they get older. This article was written in the Education Digest in 1992, which helps understand why the author talks mostly about Barbie’s intelligence. The main audience of this article is directed towards parents of young girls in particular. The author is not very persuasive in the article about

  • Media. Lowering the self-esteem of many.

    633 Words  | 2 Pages

    impossibility to obtain. This type of media is affecting how we see ourselves. ... ... middle of paper ... ...r Counterpart Ken he was designed in a censored manner without genitals. Emily Prager wondered why Ken’s genitals were not there but Barbie was designed with a giant bust. These dolls give not only an unrealistic idea of a perfect women, but also show that Ken was dignified enough to be censored but not Barbie. The Barbie franchise unknowingly shapes young girls identities and how they

  • Theme Of Barbie-Q By Sandra Cisneros

    749 Words  | 2 Pages

    overall. For instance, "Your Barbie is roommates with my Barbie, and my Barbie's boyfriend comes over and your Barbie steals him, okay? Kiss.”(14) At that point the two girls engage in a fight due to the two wanting the same male doll which they named Ken. Making the best of what one has is truly a great thing. The girls in this story show that life for them is more about "needing what you've got" than "getting what you need." These young girls do well with this idea. Their social class which is described

  • Hippie Barbie

    1052 Words  | 3 Pages

    perspective. It is inferred that the speaker is a female Barbie specialist, who reflects her knowledge by using the popular Barbie doll as the main character. Throughout the poem, she gives key points that have female perspective; for instance, kissing Ken, thinking about having mixed-race children, and walking a poodle. She establishes a story-telling tone, which introduces Hippie Barbie as a real woman. The speaker is trying to address to all Americans that know deeper into Barbie doll life. By using

  • The Pros and Cons of Barbie

    981 Words  | 2 Pages

    Those perfect days as a child when your countless days were filled with playtime. The time to set up those houses and dress the dolls up, and act out the future. “Through their play Barbara imagined their lives as adults. They used the dolls to reflect the adult world around them. They would sit and carry on conversations, making the dolls real people” (Ruth Handler). As a young child, it is all you look forward to in your future: being successful and confident, loved and cherished. Many dolls were

  • The Disturbing Sexualization of Young Girls

    2257 Words  | 5 Pages

    woman is supposed to be accepted. The way the corporate media and society make this body image they want women to have starts in a very early stage in a woman's life without them knowing. There are these childhood movies, such as Disney, Barbie and Ken dolls, programs such as Netflix, teen magazines, and the most common source of them all, the internet. There is a need that all human beings have no matter what they believe. Jonathan Haidt mentions in one of the chapters of his book, The Happiness

  • James S. Hirsch’s Book, Hurricane

    1825 Words  | 4 Pages

    Hurricane, the author describes how Carter was wrongfully imprisoned and how he managed to become free. Hirsch tells about the nearly impossible battle for Carter and his friend John Artis for freedom and justice. Both, Carter and Artis, were convicted of a triple homicide, and both were innocent. The book raises the importance of, and questions, the writ of habeas corpus. Carter used a writ of habeas corpus to get a federal trial. Many question the legality of Carter going into federal jurisdiction

  • G. Carter Bentley

    1035 Words  | 3 Pages

    G. Carter Bentley’s practice theory is a popular approach in understanding how ethnicity is constructed and ethnic identity is maintained. Here we shift from boundaries to focus on people’s patterns of experiences, both objective and subjective. Bentley draws on Bordieu’s concepts of "habitus" and "practice". Bordieu argues that the objective conditions, mediated by systems of symbolic representations, generate in different persons dispositions to act in different ways (Bentley

  • Gender Roles in Angela Carter's The Company of Wolves

    812 Words  | 2 Pages

    Wolves In her transformation of the well-known fable "Little Red Riding Hood," Angela Carter plays upon the reader's familiarity. By echoing elements of the allegory intended to scare and thus caution young girls, she evokes preconceptions and stereotypes about gender roles. In the traditional tale, Red sticks to "the path," but needs to be rescued from the threatening wolf by a hunter or "woodsman." Carter retells the story with a modern perspective on women. By using fantasy metaphorically and

  • King Tutankhamun and His Treasures

    1369 Words  | 3 Pages

    importance and beauty of certain pieces found in his tomb, will be discussed in this essay. King Tutankhamun’s tomb was the prize that archaeologist Howard Carter sought out for in the Valley of the Kings. Carter was running out of time and also the Earl of Carnarvon’s patience. Disappointed for years by Carter’s discoveries, Carnarvon told Carter to not apply anymore for the renewal of his excavating concession. Only by his pleading and offers to pay the cost himself if nothing were found convinced

  • Character Analysis of Mr. Carter in John Collier's Thus I Refute Beelzy

    1674 Words  | 4 Pages

    Character Analysis of Mr. Carter in John Collier's Thus I Refute Beelzy In many stories, the protagonist is often described as the hero or the "good guy" of the work. In John Collier's short story, "Thus I Refute Mr. Beelzy", this is not exactly the case. Mr. Carter, the "I" in the title, is a cruel, selfish father, who is locked in a struggle with the invisible "Mr. Beelzy" for the love and soul of his son, Small Simon. Mr. Carter enjoys possessing power and being in control. He is used

  • The Anthropic Principle Of 'John Cartles Anthropic'

    535 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Anthropic Principle In the early 1970s, Brandon Carter stated what he called "the anthropic principle": that what we can expect to observe "must be restricted by the conditions necessary for our presence as observers" (Leslie ed. 1990). Carter’s word "anthropic" was intended as applying to intelligent beings in general. The "weak" version of his principle covered the spatiotemporal districts in which observers found themselves, while its "strong"

  • Coach Carter Ethos

    780 Words  | 2 Pages

    Coach Carter; a Man on a Mission Coach Carter is a true inspirational story about a coach who was able to turn a whole basketball program around and help a group of young men succeed throughout high school and even on to college. It all started out with a man named Ken Carter, a man who was well known in the town of Richmond, California. He was a two sport all American and he holds records for the most assists, rebounds, and points at Richmond High School and he has lived there all of his life,

  • Overview Of The Movie Coach Carter

    1507 Words  | 4 Pages

    basketball team with the gun in his waistline, but only to witness his cousin slaughtered from across the street. This is a scene from the award-winning movie, Coach Carter, as well bit of the struggles Coach Ken Carter faced and overcame while on his way to coaching his team to the high school state championship game. Coach Carter, which won 3 awards and received 10 nominations for best d... ... middle of paper ... ... the high school basketball team to graduate from college. The championship