Lauren Graham Essays

  • Sigmund Freud's Psychoanalysis and the Characters in Amy Sherman-Palladino's Gilmore Girls

    1339 Words  | 3 Pages

    Amy Sherman-Palladino, the creator of Gilmore Girls, essentially wrote the show about nothing. After not having a job for years, Sherman had writer’s block. On television, everything she saw seemed the same, identical characters and paralleling plots, she desired to create something different. Once, she had visited the small town of Washington, Connecticut and loved the “everyone knows everything” idea. So she thought, “Why not make a show about it?” After tweaks by the production company, Gilmore

  • Mother-Daughter Relationships In Carrie And Gilmore Girls

    1638 Words  | 4 Pages

    Adolescence is the point in a person’s life that plays a vital role in the formation of the man or woman they are to become. Not every journey or experience is the same, but every girl and boy has to go through it to officially be ushered into the adult world. For a young lady, the most important thing in her journey to womanhood is her mother. The mother plays the role in guiding her daughter through her adolescent experiences in a healthy way. She is able to use her experiences to teach her daughter

  • Analysis of Shoeless Joe by by W. P. Kinsella

    1639 Words  | 4 Pages

    so Ray did not get to spend much time with him. Ray had always longed to see his father again and this dream came true when he built the field. Others had unquenchable dreams like Ray. Archibald Graham never got to bat in the majors, and that was what was missing in his life. When Archie Graham came to Ray’s field, he found the thread that tied the meaning of his life together. Eddie Scissons also had an unrealized dream, all his life he had lied about himself being the oldest living Chicago

  • Hannibal: The Book by by Thomas Harris and NBC Series

    1914 Words  | 4 Pages

    This is partially why I chose to do this show for this essay. I’ve been watching the show since day one, and there is something about it, the atmosphere, the cinematography, the dialogue, but most importantly the chemistry between Hugh Dancy’s Will Graham and Mads Mikkelsen’s Hannibal Lecter. Everything comes together so perfectly it was apparent from the first episode that Hannibal is show that will develop a loyal following of fans who will fight for its survival. What makes Hannibal unique is that

  • Red Dragon by Thomas Harris

    1713 Words  | 4 Pages

    Red Dragon by Thomas Harris The novel Red Dragon by author Thomas Harris has 454 pages and I have divided them into 4 sections. The first section of this book will be

  • Thomas Graham Essay

    619 Words  | 2 Pages

    move is through effusion. The formula for the rate of effusion of gas molecules was developed by a chemist by the name of Thomas Graham in the 19th century. December 21, 1805�September 16, 1869. Thomas Graham was born in December of 1805 in Glasgow, Scotland. His father was a workman who desired that his son enter the Church of Scotland. However, Graham became a student at the University of Glasgow in 1819, where he became interested in the field of chemistry. He left the university

  • This is My Design: An Analysis of Hannibal and Red Dragon

    1915 Words  | 4 Pages

    the characters in the novel Red Dragon by Thomas Harris. Additionally, the film Red Dragon is based off of the same novel. So, why these mystery artifacts? First and foremost, because they share a nearly identical list of characters including – Will Graham, Dr. Hannibal Lecter, and Special Agent Jack Crawford. Both the television show and the movie also have classic crime show characteristics – both begin with attempting to solve a crime. Both of these articles fall into the suspense/mystery genre,

  • Scene Analysis of Alfred Hitchcock’s Film Shadow of a Doubt

    1253 Words  | 3 Pages

    Scene Analysis of Alfred Hitchcock’s Film Shadow of a Doubt Alfred Hitchcock’s film Shadow of a Doubt is a true masterpiece. Hitchcock brings the perfect mix of horror, suspense, and drama to a small American town. One of the scenes that exemplifies his masterful style takes place in a bar between the two main characters, Charlie Newton and her uncle Charlie. Hitchcock was quoted as saying that Shadow of a Doubt, “brought murder and violence back in the home, where it rightly belongs.” This

  • A Comparison of Two Versions of The Big Sleep

    1511 Words  | 4 Pages

    A Comparison of Two Versions of The Big Sleep The Production Code attempted to censor sex and violence in film of the 1930's and 40's. Instead of impairing, it encouraged directors to use artistic ideas and integrity to surpass the viewers' expectations -- actively involving them in the film despite Hollywood's censorship. Howard Hawks is one such director who used the restrictions of the Production Code to his advantage. His screen adaptation of the Raymond Chandler novel The Big Sleep

  • The Big Sleep - The Movie and The Book

    1320 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Big Sleep - The Movie and The Book One would think that it would be quite easy to adapt a novel to a screenplay; after all, what is there to do but turn the dialogue into lines and description into set design? However, common sense, aided by the horrifying number of absolutely awful adaptations, dictates that it simply is not that easy. When moviegoers have problems with a film adaptation of a book, their complaints tend to lie in the tendency of the creators of the film to change elements

  • The Influence of Memories on Selfhood

    1586 Words  | 4 Pages

    Memories generate a breakdown of an individual’s selfhood. In addition, memories embody unmistakable repercussions on the self. In the book Mind readings an Anthology for Writers by Gary Colombo, there are several essays that reveal how memories evoke individuals to doubt their ideas of selfhood. “The Inheritance of Tools” by Scott Russell Sanders, Sanders writes concerning his father’s passing and the strategies that he implements to survive his grief. “The Brown Wasps” by Loren Eiseley, Eiseley

  • Ralph Lauren Research Paper

    732 Words  | 2 Pages

    On October 14th, 1939 Ralph Lauren was born in the Bronx of New York City. Ralph is currently at the age of 76. He is the third child out of four children and his parents are Frieda and frank who were Ashkenazi Jewish immigrants who fled Belarus. Ralph and his brother Jerry changed their names to Lauren at the ages of 16 because they were constantly teased at school. The Brand he established known as polo is now part of an international empire. His brand includes fragrances, home furnishings, luxury

  • Kate Spade Benefits

    1292 Words  | 3 Pages

    Like many, young women in the city life of the fashion capital of New York, Kate Brosnahan Spade had high hopes to become a well known and respected fashion designer. Today she is a well know fashion designer but didn’t have the easier start in the fashion industry with the changing of brand names. Her fashion empire rose from handbags, accessories, clothing, to stationary, and home appliances sold at not only Kate Spade stores but department stores, and Bed Bath and Beyond. Building a company in

  • A Comparison of The Big Sleep and L.A. Confidential

    1639 Words  | 4 Pages

    style from two different cinematic periods and compared them against to attempt to highlight the similarities and differences that will inevitably be present. The two films I have chosen are ‘The Big Sleep’, made in 1946 with Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall, and ‘L.A Confidential’, made 41 years later in 1997 - with a stellar cast including Kevin Spacey, Kim Basinger and Danny De’Vito. I chose these two films as they both originated from books; Raymond Chandler’s legendary ‘gumshoe’ Phillip

  • Simpleton Kindness

    701 Words  | 2 Pages

    Simpleton Kindness When people go to extremes in the name of selfless kindness, or in the case of Lloyd and Harry from Dumb and Dumber, when people who are motivated by attraction, desperation and kindness, go to extremes, more often then not something good happens in the end. Hollywood has a long standing tradition of lauding the bumbling hero who, though misguided, saves the day with little more than a kind heart and a strong will. Two examples of goodness conquering all are Tommy Boy and Dumb

  • Lauren, Hannah and Cancer: A Short Story

    555 Words  | 2 Pages

    grew silent and she whispered one word. Lauren had cancer. I had trouble focusing at school the next day. All I could think about was that my best friend might die. For as long as I could remember, it had always been Lauren and Hannah, the two best friends. I wondered if it could be just Hannah, the girl who lost her best friend. Going back to school, facing the curious stares was one of the hardest things I had done. I could only imagine how Lauren felt. The next few days were hard, we tried

  • Animal Rights And Ethical Issues In The Fashion Industry

    661 Words  | 2 Pages

    Animal rights are a fragile issue that goes back and forth between people often with so many different beliefs and ways of viewing things. A major question in animal rights is; are animals entitled to the possession of their own lives and their everyday basic needs? With opinions on this topic based on research and tests, opposers to animals having rights over their life are not taking into consideration that animals live just like us humans but we cannot physically communicate with them. It is

  • Comparing The Big Sleep-Characterization Of Vivian And Carmen

    805 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Big Sleep - Characterization of Vivian and Carmen in the Movie and the Book   The characterization of Vivian and Carmen changes drastically depending on whether you are reading the book or watching the movie. The production code forces the women in the movie to become more socially acceptable-Carmen was not crazy and Vivian was not blatantly seductive. Changes that the production code forces on the characterization of the women causes the movie to be somewhat lack luster. The

  • Visual Essay Analyzing and Interpreting of Ralph Lauren Romance a Love Story, A Fragance Ad

    683 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the September 2013 issue of Vogue magazine Ralph Lauren Romance A love Story featuring women’s fragrance by Ralph Lauren displays in a series of photographs the stages of falling in love. Analyzing the contents of the photographs the images are presented in a form of puzzles which at first seem jumbled and at the end it materializes as a whole construction of a life that they have built together. In observing the photographs, it depicts the typical conventional manner in which boy meets girl and

  • Antigone And Pilate Dead

    1397 Words  | 3 Pages

    Sophocles’ Antigone and Toni Morrison’s Pilate Dead share similar characteristics: an intense and almost strange sense of family, a general disregard for written law and courage in the face of death. To compare Antigone and Pilate, however, one cannot lose sight of the inner drive in these women. Antigone fears the power and wrath of the gods, while Pilate only fears disappointing her dead father’s ghost. Family is such a large part of both of these stories. The very first line of Antigone makes