Paris Hilton Essays

  • Paris Hilton: The Eigth Deadly SIn

    1361 Words  | 3 Pages

    Paris Hilton: The Eighth Deadly Sin Pride, envy, anger, avarice, sloth, gluttony, lust, and Paris Hilton. The seven deadly sins and Paris the heiress have combined to overtake pop culture as we know it. It may be a coincidence this blond bombshells favorite number is seven, but in the pubic eye Paris is the epitome of such sins. Who blames her? She’s famous, wealthy, beautiful, human, and everywhere you look. From the television, to movies, magazines, books, clothing lines, and even armature video

  • Characteristics Of Paris Hilton

    856 Words  | 2 Pages

    the Hilton Hotels, but we all don’t know about Paris Hilton. Paris Hilton is a businesswoman, model, actress, singer, and DJ. She is the great-granddaughter of the founder of Hilton Hotels. Paris Hilton has done a lot within the 36 years she has lived so far. A modern-day tragic hero is a person of noble birth with heroic or potentially heroic qualities. Paris Hilton is a modern-day tragic hero because she has had a downfall but has overcome that to be where she is today in life.     Paris Hilton

  • The Vanity of Celebrity Fame: "Sunset Boulevard" and Celebrity Reality Shows

    2358 Words  | 5 Pages

    for his/her reputation created by the media. The phase of stardom is slippery, and media may choose to represent celebrities varying from exaggerated admiration to mockery. The three texts chosen, movie "Sunset Boulevard", feature article "Over the Hilton" and television show "Celebrity Uncensored Six" are texts presenting different perception of celebrities than their usual images - either corrupted by the encircling media, overloads oneself with self-indulgence, or just mocks celebrity in a broad

  • The Aspects Of The Acting Career

    927 Words  | 2 Pages

    aren’t so good at their job, but are famous. So is fame the same as celebrity or notoriety? From the few examples I’ve given you, is has been established that fame is the same as notoriety, meaning well known for a bad quality or deed. Look at Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan. The media made a representation of them that they are known for. Therefore fame is undeniably a media creation.

  • Critical Analysis of "Jimmy Choo Shoes" ad

    832 Words  | 2 Pages

    something special about Jimmy Choo shoes. Is this company really tying to sell you the shoes, or trying to sell you the name? I recall watching an interview with Paris Hilton, and she said that she loved Jimmy Choo shoes and that she has “x” (some large number) pairs of them. Since we are such a media-based culture, if we hear Paris Hilton wears Jimmy Choo shoes, then they must be great! With such a high price, how can the middle class person even afford a pair? With all of these things taken into

  • America Underclass

    1194 Words  | 3 Pages

    status. In addition, advertisers often use people in the entertainment business to model their products so that the viewer may purchase the product. For example, when mimicking the purchases of hotel heiress, Paris Hilton one may believe, “If I buy this, I’ll look cool just like Paris Hilton!” The fact that this method is usually successful is a product of the anxiety felt by lower and middle class families. For those reasons, it is likely that Domhoff’s statement that the upper class “creates respect

  • Paris Hilton Tragic Hero Essay

    862 Words  | 2 Pages

    Everybody knows of the Hilton Hotels, but not everybody knows about Paris Hilton. Paris Hilton is a businesswoman, model, actress, singer, and DJ. She is the great-granddaughter of the founder of Hilton Hotels. Paris Hilton has done a lot within the thirty-six years she has lived so far. Paris Hilton is considered a modern-day tragic hero. A modern-day tragic hero is a person of noble birth with heroic or potentially heroic qualities. Paris Hilton is a modern-day tragic hero because she has had a

  • Tale of a Dysfunctional Family

    631 Words  | 2 Pages

    Even though Dee and Maggie are sisters, they have very different opinions about how the world is. Dee moved away from the county to live in the big city, whereas Maggie still lives with their mother. Dee has also gotten her way and expects it from her family constantly. She's a very attractive, educated, and successful young woman and radiates confidence. Maggie has always been sheltered by her mother and is very shy and introverted. A fire that happened around twelve years ago has left Maggie's

  • Levels of Fame

    927 Words  | 2 Pages

    Being famous for the wrong reasons is just the same as not being famous at all. What is the point of being famous if anyone can do it? The current definition of famous is being known by many people, which is way too broad for a definition. If everyone were to go by that definition then I would be considered famous. Meghan Daum really hit the nail right on the head when she said, “Not so long ago you had to make a pretty strenuous effort to become well enough known to register as famous” (Duam 512)

  • Watching the Game at Neyland Stadium

    1295 Words  | 3 Pages

    for your team. The ushers at all the gates allow pom poms, signs, face painting, noise makers, and anything else you can think of. The first thing you do when you reach the stadium is search for a parking place. Although the price to park at the Hilton motel is fifteen dollars, yo... ... middle of paper ... ... buy on a fun, lazy night. Amazingly, when I am at the stadium, I also see a lot of people I know even though I am two hours away from home. Everyone loves Neyland Stadium. I love the

  • Jackson Hole

    1100 Words  | 3 Pages

    states in the country. When we got out there we were all very impressed by the appearance of the city. This was obviously a tourist town. When we found the hotel we were impressed by the huge glass windows and cedar siding. It looked more like the Hilton than a Best Western. We checked in and were shown to our rooms. After bringing in all of our things, we went straight to bed knowing that we had a huge day ahead of us, not knowing how huge it was really going to be. After a great night of sleep

  • The Outsiders by S.E. Hilton

    1006 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Outsiders” takes you through a journey of struggle, violence, and death. It examines the life of a recently orphaned young man born into poverty confronted with the prejudices that he could not change. He struggles with the many conflicts between the lower class and the upper class youths. The Outsiders focuses on the life of Ponyboy Curtis who has two brothers, Darry and Sodapop, which belong to a group of young people that were called greasers. The Greasers defined as a group of hoodlums

  • Analysis of the Representation of Women in Magazines

    708 Words  | 2 Pages

    Many teenagers see her as a role model and would like to become her as they grow older. The twenty something’s ideology is to be rich with as little effort as possible and this is represented through Paris Hilton. With being the great granddaughter of Conrad Hilton, the owner of the Hilton hotels, she was born into wealth. Many young women would like to be her; doing occasional modelling and being rich enough to live a life of luxury. The middle aged magazine reflects the more realistic

  • Summary of James Hilton's Goodbye, Mr. Chips

    1352 Words  | 3 Pages

    “still had those ideas of dignity and generosity that a frantic world was forgetting.” He embodies the pre-War world and its values. In the very middle of an era that was witnessing an unregulated attack on all of the West’s institutions and values, Hilton created Mr. Chips, it represent the conservative ideal—providing a bridge of memory to all that is beautiful and good and decent in our past, just in case, in our zeal to create a perfect world, we forget the qualities and accomplishments which give

  • Use of Polarization in Goodbye, Mr. Chips

    660 Words  | 2 Pages

    Opposites attract.  James Hilton uses this fact in Goodbye, Mr. Chips to create tension in the story; however, he makes greater use of this polarization to develop the character of Chips.  Mr. Chips and Katherine Bridges may be viewed not only as opposites but also as arguments.  Hilton uses thesis in the form of young Chips and antithesis in the form of Katherine Bridges to arrive at synthesis, the personality and character of the mature schoolmaster. Hilton portrays young Chips as lacking

  • An Analysis of Hilton's Lost Horizon

    1064 Words  | 3 Pages

    lifted like a curtain; time expanded and space contracted" In James Hilton's Lost Horizon, the reader is promptly enticed to trek along with Hugh Conway and the three other kidnapped passengers, Charles Mallinson, Miss Brinklow, and Henry Barnard. Hilton commences his novel by utilizing the literary technique of a frame. At a dinner meeting, friends share their insights into life, and eventually, from a neurologist, and friend of Conway, evolves the story of Conway's exotic adventures. Apparently

  • The Utopian Philosophy of Shangri-La in James Hilton's Lost Horizon

    869 Words  | 2 Pages

    satisfactory. Life has many troubles including death, pain, and suffering. It leaves little hope. There are ways in which people can live to have a good life. This method of how a person should live is viewed differently thoughout the world. James Hilton represents this combination of ideas and cultures in the novel, Lost Horizon (1933). This novel tells the tale of four distinctively different people retreating from a war zone. In their retreat they are kidnapped and taken by plane deep into the

  • The Effects of Globalization on the Tourism and Hospitality Industry

    1766 Words  | 4 Pages

    The word ‘tourist’ first appeared in the English language in the early 1800s (Cooper & Fletcher, 2005) and in this very century the first hotel was opened in London. By the end of next century Thomas Cook had offered the first inclusive tour to the Paris Exhibition and by 1872 steam was harnessed to power ships when the first round the world tour was organised. A backward glance reveals that tourism started early and has since evolved significantly with the change in technology, the government in

  • An American In Paris

    1072 Words  | 3 Pages

    An American in Paris Once upon a time there was an American man named Jerry Mulligan who lived in Paris. When he was discharged from the army he decided to become a painter and continue to live in Paris so he could just paint and study art. Paris is a place that a painter or artist is inspired. This is why Jerry loves it so much. Jerry lives 2 floors above a café in a little cramped apartment. But he is not complaining, he is lighthearted and fun. Jerry is popular with the children on the block

  • How Photography represent Paris in the Nineteenth Century

    1987 Words  | 4 Pages

    Photography represented Paris in three major ways. The new technology influenced a new way of painting where the artist began capturing their subjects in action versus a still portrait pose. And with the Daguerreotype being available to everyone in the public, it was becoming easy to travel to Paris for events. The regular working class people and artists to go to Paris to see the city and bring imaged back home. And finally, because of how photography represented Paris, the tourism industry began