Sunday, February 18, 2018

Assignment 21: OB-STA-KELS – oh Brother Where art Thou (College)

We love obstacles.  When other people are facing them that is.  But where and who would our heroes be if they didn’t face any obstacles.  The same can be said for us.  Our obstacles shape who we’ve become and who we are becoming.
The lessons we take from obstacles we encounter can be fundamental to later success. Recount a time when you faced a challenge, setback, or failure. How did it affect you, and what did you learn from the experience?
OR

Describe a problem you've solved or a problem you'd like to solve. It can be an intellectual challenge, a research query, an ethical dilemma - anything that is of personal importance, no matter the scale. Explain its significance to you and what steps you took or could be taken to identify a solution


Minimum of 150 words - due Sunday, March 4th at 11:59 pm


March 25th is the last day to make up blogs 20-22

Monday, February 12, 2018

Assignment Twenty – Jessica Ewing

How to: Write Poetry

As you can probably tell, I'm in a creative mood right now, and all I can think about is writing and, more specifically, poetry. So here's a step-by-step process to write some modern* poetry!

(DISCLAIMER: This is not a perfect guide. You will not get perfect poetry out of this. I admit my own faults and I am not claiming to be a master poet. These are just some tips and tricks that I follow when I write my own poetry)

*"Modern" in this case means pertaining closer to the styles of Atticus, Rupi Kaur, and Amanda Lovelace, those being styles that do not depend upon a rhyme scheme or other common poetic techniques such as iambic pentameter.


1. Think about a topic that interests you.

This is usually the hardest part, as this can pertain to a wide variety of topics. It can be anything from a physical subject, such as a hobby you enjoy or a movie or a sport, to a more abstract concept, such as emotions or philosophical questions. But in all honesty, anything can work to make a poem.

2. Narrow down your topic.

Now that you have your main subject, try to think of something specific within that subject that you could write about. If you're talking about a hobby, such as acting, what about it would you like to write about? Maybe the feeling of camaraderie you share with your cast mates, or that thrill you feel just before walking onstage on opening night. Try to make it as specific as possible.

3. Use figurative language to explain your topic.

What can you compare your idea to? Something to help your reader relate to your idea. Use imagery, similes, metaphors, whatever you want to your disposal to help explain your idea in simpler terms. For example, with the camaraderie idea from earlier, comparing your friendship with your cast mates to the strength of a pack of wolves.

4. Write out your comparison plainly.

The thing with a lot of modern poetry is that will come across as very obvious and straightforward until you look at it closer. In this case, you want to write down your idea as bluntly as possible. With the camaraderie idea from before, the easiest way to write it out would be to say "The friendship between me and my cast has the strength of a pack of wolves."

5. Simplify it.

This is different from writing it out plainly. This is now turning to use as few words as possible to convey your idea. Conciseness is key. You're writing a poem, not a novel. Verbosity is unnecessary (I mean, unless it's the style you're going for in your poem, which, by all means, go for it). To continue with our example, simplifying it could be shortened to "Our friendship is as strong as a pack of wolves." Feel free to make it more convoluted, too. It'll only add to the "mystery" of the poem.

6. Put it in a cool format

Now that you've got the poem down, it's time to put it in an aesthetic format style. A lot of modern poetry likes to split up the formatting to just a few words a line, so your poem could end up looking like this:

Our friendship
is as
strong
as a pack of
wolves.


And there you go! How to write 21st-century poetry in just 6 easy steps!



**If you want a real example of some of my actual poetry (sort of as an example that it doesn't have to be super short), here you go:

i wanted to
learn
how to
fly.

but you
clipped my
wings
and now here
i am,
stuck on the
ground
while you're off
soaring the
skies.

Assignment Nineteen – Jessica Ewing

"Don't do something because someone else loves it. Do it because you love it." -Jess Maichel

When I first started writing full-length stories, novels, if you will, in sixth or seventh grade, none of my friends were very interested in anything I had to write. A lot of my encouragement came from one or two friends I met online through my writing, and that was about it.

Around eighth grade, my enthusiasm had begun to die out. I didn't feel as inspired, as motivated to continue writing my stories, though I'd already become too invested in them just to give up. I didn't know what to do, so I consulted my friend, Jess, who was a senior in high school at the time and enjoyed writing (and still does) more than I do. 

I told her I felt discouraged, let down that no one was interested in anything I was writing. It felt like no one cared about my talents and that if they weren't valuable to anyone else, I should just give it up.

She told me that was ridiculous, first of all, and that I should do something not because other people tell me they like it, but because I enjoy doing it. That's what a hobby is. Something you enjoy doing. If you don't enjoy it, don't do it. But just because you aren't getting the encouragement from your friends that you want, doesn't mean you should just give it up.

Assignment Eighteen – Jessica Ewing

1. What is the number one item on your bucket list before you finish high school?

Before I graduate high school, my main goal is to finish the current poetry book I'm writing and write and complete another one. I started in December, and my end goal is to have 208 total poems across the two books. As of right now, I have 58 written, so I'm a little over a quarter of the way done. This doesn't seem like a huge accomplishment in comparison to other bucket list items, such as starring in a school play, but it's a personal goal of mine as writing is a very large part of my life and poetry is something that I've become rather attached to, particularly over these last couple of months.

2. What is the number one item on your bucket list before you finish college?

Before I finish college, hopefully I will have gathered up the courage to finally come out to my family. I'm not listing this as a goal for the end of high school, because I simply know as a fact that that's not going to happen (it's just not safe), but once I'm out of the house and taking care of myself, I believe I'll feel at least a bit more comfortable with the idea of coming out to my family.

3. What is the number one item on your bucket list before you finish living?

Before I die (wow, that's a really weird thing to think about, I don't like thinking about dying), I hope to publish a full-fledged novel. This is sort of the second stage (well, probably more like the third or fourth) of my writing life, following the completion of those aforementioned poetry books. I haven't made a lot of progress on this one, mostly just outlining and sketching ideas, but I'm determined to complete this goal within my lifetime. Leaving behind a legacy of fiction that other people will enjoy in future generations, that's something that has always inspired me, and I really hope that comes to fruition.

Assignment Seventeen – Jessica Ewing

My review of Lady Bird (2017):

https://www.rottentomatoes.com/user/id/977107596/

Assignment 17 - Ben Sanner

Had trouble with Rotten Tomatoes so here is my review of Thor Ragnarok.:

I was really disappointed with this movie as well as eerily satisfied. It went too fast, throwing in way too many new components in too little time. Loki didn't seem to even have a point in the movie- I was highly disappointed seeing as he is one of my favorite characters. They portrayed him as an idiot who is easily defeated, and predicted. Not to mention the idiocy of the Lord made of fire- I don't even see fit to know his name. Thor easily beat him in the begininning of the movie, yet somehow the creature was powerful enough to defeat the goddess of death. Besides all of my nit-picking about the plot and character development the kid in me loved this movie and loved seeing Thor and his band of partners win in the end with an almost satisfyingly un-satisfying ending.

Assignment 18 - Ben Sanner

1. The thing I would most like to accomplish before high school is done is a combination of two things, with the first being academic and the second being athletic. Relating to the former I would like to gain my goal score on the ACT of a 32 (I a currently at 31), and relating to the latter I would like to see our soccer team at Henry Clay win the state cup in my senior year.
2. Before college the thing I would like to cross off my bucket list is a very big deal. I would like to find a major. Now I know I still have time but that deadline is fast approaching and I do not know for sure what I would like to do. I am open to a career in aviation but I do not know if I want to pursue  it or not.
3. Become a Billionaire and have a wife and babies.

Assignment 19 - Ben Sanner

The best piece of advice I have ever received was from Michael Scott from "The Office" when he uttered the phrase K.I.S.S. or Keep It Simple Stupid. This may seem shallow from the outside but it can be used in almost every situation by just stepping back and keeping it simple. No need to over complicate something when a much easier outcome is attainable by doing the simple thing. To be more specific sometimes high school can be stressful, whether it be with drama or difficult classes. The reoccurring phrase continuously pops into my head and I know all will be okay if I take one step at a time and not get caught up in the hype. This also can help when socializing with others for example, it is easy for one to deaden a conversation by rambling on and on about who knows what, when instead you can peak the conversation by getting out quick points to liven  the conversation up.

Assignment 19: Katie Chen

I consider myself an artist. I'm also pretty messy when it comes to creating art. So that means when I'm painting I tend to rush and work fast. As I was working on an oil piece I accidentally reached for red instead of blue for the sky. Without paying attention to what my brush just dipped in to, I immediately applied the red paint to the sky. I then realized I had made a huge mistake. What started as cool, serene painting now had a large blob of red in the sky. Thinking that I had ruined the painting, I got ready to start over. My art teacher told me to continue with the red and add more vibrant colors to it, instead of just starting on a new painting. So I added yellow and orange and turned the tranquil scene into a dramatic, dynamic piece. This painting is one of my favorites. If my teacher hadn't told me to continue, even if I had made a mistake, I wouldn't have created that painting.

Sunday, February 11, 2018

Assignment 19: Olivia Klee

"Are you mad? Well, you've got the same pants to get glad in."- Papa Klee

While this may be the most annoying, redneck line my dad ever repeats to me, I have to admit it's true. It usually comes in the times when I'm tired, frustrated or angry about something insignificant.  Most often it gets blurted out when I've been asked to do a bunch of chores around the house or when someone has inconvenienced me enough to make me want to scream. I think what my dad is really trying to say is that you are in charge of your own happiness. You can let the little things nag at you, or you can brush off the minor problems and fix your eyes on the bigger picture. He's not saying that you should act as a doormat, rather that a person should worry less about temporary unpleasantness. If you focus on the "end result", another phrase he likes to employ, then you will feel less threatened by the bumps in the road.



Assignment 19- Doug Vaughan

"The past is the past its unchangeable you just have to accept that and carry on" this was advice was given to me after the death of my Grandpa. It was a few days after he died, I was so sad I didn't want to do anything that is when my dad told me this advice. He made me realize that bad things happen in life all the time but everything else keeps going. At the time he told me I had two options one continue sulking and grieving or overcome the depression and live my life. This advice has helped me with depressing tragedies as well as dumb mistakes I've made, sports losses, things that break, and stuff just not going my way. Instead of reliving and depressing in the past have been more focused on how I can make the future better and more enjoyable for me and everyone else.

Assignment 18: Katie Chen

High School: My main thing I want to do before I finish high school is to create a series of artworks that fit together. While I have been creating art for years and probably have dozens of paintings and drawings lying around, none of them really go together. Most paintings and drawings are done with the purpose of practicing a technique or experimenting with new mediums. Before high school, I would like to create multiple pieces that are cohesive and tell a story.

College: In college, I want to figure out what I want to do with my life. Currently, I have a pretty vague idea of what I want my life to become, but I'm not 100% certain. So in college, I want to be able to know what I'm doing in my future.

Life: My life goal is to learn how to read and write in Chinese. While Chinese is my mother tongue, and I grew up speaking it as a kid, I never learned how to read and write Chinese characters, and that remains as my biggest regret to this day. So as a goal in life, I want to be able to read and recognize characters so that when I do go back to China, I can read and write to my family.

Assignment 18: Eli Wrinn

To be honest, my main goal until the end of high school is to figure out where I want to go to college, and my main goal until the end of college is to figure out what I want to do for a living, so those two aren't very interesting. Although, another goal is to continue either my sports career or my music career for as long as possible. The only real interesting one is my life bucket list. And honestly, I don't really have a clue, this question sort of caught me off guard. I definitely want a family, although I might want to wait a little longer that usual to start raising it, I want to spend my twenties and probably even my early thirties doing things that are on my bucket list...which I am coming up with right now. I don't have any specific travel goals although I would be happy with a job that requires travel. Actually, I'm sure space travel or some form of it will be much more easily accessible at some point in my life, so I might like to do that:to escape Earth'sgravity just one time. I guess I would also like to continue learning things as long as possible, through reading books or some other method, but by the time I am old, I want to have such an understanding of the world that when I pass away, I won't be hungry for knowledge, I will be at peace.

Assignment 18- Doug Vaughan

1. My number one item on my bucket list getting out of High School is creating as many memories and friends as possible. Everyone of my friends and family members that are in college tell me multiple time to enjoy High School. Most adults tell me it was the best time of their lives. Many tell me about how they regretted not doing things in High School, I don't want that to be me. If these are the best days of my life I want to live them to the fullest.
2. In college I would liked to have interned at Disney World. All my life I have wanted to become a Disney World Cast member. When I found out I could intern there over a summer I got so exited as I could extend my knowledge through a college internship while fulfilling a childhood dream of mine.
3. I would like to retire early and relax. I would love to spend my final days of life with my family watching Netflix, playing video games, jamin' to early 2000's hits, all while snaking on some scrumptious pizza and cookies. All this with out a care in the world.

Olivia Klee: Assingment 18

1.) Before I finish High School, I want to go to Haiti. Not because I particularly enjoy the smell of raw sewage or find piles of trash appealing, but because I want to bring the Good News to Haitian students my own age in the form of games and loud music. My friends who have been to third world countries say they always get more than they give, and maybe selfishly, I want the same to be true for me. I want to be broken in a way that makes me appreciate the things I have and the people I am surrounded by more than when I left.
2.) In college, I want to use my knowledge to actually discover something. I am sick and tired of performing the mundane experiments to gain lab experience only to confirm the conclusions of one thousand other students who have taken the class in previous years. Right now I don't understand enough higher level biology to design my own experiments in the areas that interest me, but by the time I graduate college I will have a first-author paper if it kills me.
3.)  This may sound cliche, but I want to save a life before I die. Just one, really. I've got some movie worthy scenarios formulated in my mind where I walk right out of med school and perform surgery that repairs a kid's heart or resuscitate a homeless person on my way to work and still make it on time, but I don't really care how it happens.


Assignment 17: Megan Meadors

https://www.rottentomatoes.com/user/id/977106205

Assignment 17- Doug Vaughan

Over the break I saw Star Wars the Last Jedi here is my review.
https://www.rottentomatoes.com/user/id/977106143/ratings

Olivia Klee: Assignment 17

Review on Rotten Tomatoes:

https://www.rottentomatoes.com/user/id/977106153/

Assignment 19: Eli Wrinn

"Question everything." I have heard this advice from many places and honestly, I can't confidently say where I first heard it exactly. I know for sure it was in "Cosmos" with Neil DeGrasse Tyson, and that may well be where did first hear it. All I know is that it represents a mindset that I try to take with me throughout my life. It applies to so many things, for example, in Seminar last year, I learned to vet sources. If you've seen a study that says a product is really useful for many different reasons, chances are, the company that makes the product funded the study. If you see something that's low fat, it's probably high sugar. Also, something that greatly affected me and my "question everything" mindset was my world history class with Mr. Wise last year. It was really influential and showed how much we take for granted because all in all, in the world history lens, our civilization is such a small period of time. When Mahatma Ghandi was asked in the 1900s what he thought of Western Civilization, he said, "I think it would be a pretty good idea." You can always find someone to support an idea, question everything.

Assignment 18: Megan Meadors

High School: Among several things on my bucket list for high school, I would say the biggest goal I have before I finish High School is to pass all of the AP exams I take. I’m not planning on taking the exams for every class I am taking, but for the ones that I am taking, I want to be able to pass it.

College: On my bucket list for College, I hope to be able to study abroad for a semester. I participated in an exchange to France over this past summer, and I hope that I can go back one day. I really want to improve my French skills and continue to use them later in life.

Life: Also in life I would like to run a marathon one day. I hope that one day I can train and work up to being able to run long distances again and reach that goal.

Assignment 19: Megan Meadors

For the past three years, I’ve been a part of the Henry Clay theatre department. Though I wasn’t sure of my abilities as an actress, I found that my favorite part of being in theatre is working as the Stage Manager. I’ve never exactly thought of myself as being good at what I do, but I’ve always tried my best to give helpful notes and to carry out my responsibilities to the best of my ability.
Recently, during the award show season I got a text from a friend about how there’s not many good female directors and encouraging me to stick with directing. Now for most people, this probably doesn’t seem like a big deal, but it’s really stuck with me. It gave me a little more confidence that I was doing something right and has helped me figure out what I wanted to do with my mentoring project and it has helped me figure out what I want to major to be in college.

Assignment 19- Brennan Cegelka

“Happiness is the ultimate goal” -Dad. I don’t know if my dad stole this quote from anybody but he’s the one that told me so I’m going with it. This advice changed my outlook on my life. Happiness: true fulfillment, is so difficult to attain. So often people are seen going to jobs they hate or partaking in something they don’t enjoy but why? We are so fortunate to have a blank canvas. Our chance to create whatever we desire. We have an abundance of tools and brushes to mold our creation. Because of the Internet we have an abundance of information to pursue our desires in whatever field imaginable. If we are in a career simply for the sake of money, we will work to keep on living in order to keep on doing something you don’t like doing. Which is absurd. You will become trapped in a cycle of simply surviving, not living. Pursue your happiness whatever it may be.

Assignment 18- Brennan Cegelka

1. A year and a half. That’s how much more time we have of high school. How do we make the most of it? Before I finish high school what do I want to accomplish? I always hold fun in the highest esteem and I tend to have the most fun competing. So for my high school bucket list I want to make it to the regional championships in “Not one, not two” -Lebron James, but three sports. First, baseball. I’ve defiantly spent the most time perfecting my game in this sport and if the baseball team were to compete for a regional championship, it would speak volumes of the hard work we’ve put in over the past seasons. The next two sports are individual. Swimming, and Golf. I was one second away from making the Regional Championships this year in my first year swimming and I intend to continue to improve. Golfing is a relaxing sport where I can put my mind at ease. If I am able to enjoy myself and be successful at the same time, that is a good high school experience.
2. College. College seems to loom over the heads of Juniors as we make our final push into adulthood. My focus has been geared at getting into college not what to do when I actually get there. I guess what I look forward to the most about college is the chance to study abroad. I have never been across the atlantic ocean and the opportunity to immerse myself into another culture sounds exhilarating.
3. Finishing life? I’m sixteen Mr. Logsdon. What will I be known for? Being adventurous. I want to go to every continent in the world. For the majority of human existence we barely go outside where we are born, but thanks to modern technology and the “luck of the draw” to live in America, we as Americans have the unique opportunity to travel the globe. If I can say I’ve been to every corner of the world, I’d say I lived a pretty cool life.

Assignment 17- Brennan Cegelka

Quentin Tarantino. A controversial director to say the least. Known for the abundance of blood and gore in his movies, this director has a distinct presence on the screen. The first films I saw by this director is the classic film “Pulp Fiction” arguably the most popular movie he’s made. The second film I saw was “Inglorious Bastards”
Comparisons: Both movies have a clear Tarantino mark on them. The violence is evident in the first scene of the movies. Pulp Fiction’s first scenes conclusion is the beginning of an attempted robbery of a restaurant. While in “Inglorious Bastards”, the more tense scene ends with a jewish woman running for her life. Both movies don’t roll any punches back with main characters dying in pulp Fiction (Vincent), and in Inglorious bastards. However my favorite part of Tarantino films is the full circle call backs to the beginning of the movie. For example, in Pulp Fiction the opening scene is in fact the final scene with the two main characters of Vincent and his partner stopping the robbery discussed. In “Inglorious Bastards” Brad Pitt’s character gives a call back to the beginning of the movie discussing “scalps” of the Nazis killed.
 Contrasts: Although the movies both have the same director, they are full of differences. For instance, “Inglorious Bastards” is more of a fantasy period piece, while Pulp Fiction is a modern piece that challenges the traditional formula of movie making. “Pulp Fiction” jumps from story to story and shows how they intertwine throughout. And it is not until the final act where the loose ends wrap to make a true present of a movie. “Inglorious Bastards” however, follows the typical movie arc but set during WWII. The two films although starkly different satisfy and entertain.

Assignment 17: Eli Wrinn

https://www.rottentomatoes.com/user/id/

Assignment 19- Elizabeth Piper

"Every minute you waste in doing nothing just remember that someone is getting smart somewhere else"
This quote is hanging up in my grandmother's quilting room. One day when I was smaller I asked her about it. I wondered why she put it up. She told me that it was to remind her that you can't just sit around and wait to get better you have to actually do it yourself because there will be people everywhere working hard and you just have to work harder.
Now that I am in high school and I am constantly competing to get into the best programs and set myself up for success in the future, I am always thinking of this quote.
I used to always blame my situation or I would come up with every excuse in the book for why I wasn't doing as well as others. Now because of this quote and what my grandmother told me I know that only I can change the outcome. This quote has made me more determined and more motivated to try and get things done. Now I know that the only way I can achieve my goals is to work out and just work harder than the competition.

Assignment 19- Sam Underwood

Assignment 19. 

Theater has always been a big important part of my life. I adore it. Every part of it. So it wasn't a hard decision for me to decide to audition for GSA. The thought of spending all of my time for three weeks performing is exciting, so it isn't surprising that I was incredibly nervous the night before I had to turn in my audition tape. I was sitting in my room pouring over the video of myself acting. I texted my friends asking what they thought of it. One of my close friends, Erica, told me to "let my passion show not my nerves." It immediately calmed me, helping me focus on showing them what I love and thinking less of the competition. Since then, I feel that her advice has come to mind in multiple other areas of my life. I'm a rather nervous person, so putting that aside can be hard. 

Assignment 18- Sam Underwood

Assignment 18. 
The number one thing that I want to do before I finish high school is write something I'm proud of. My mentoring project consists of me writing a book of poetry and prose. I'm excited by the idea of getting to sit down and write everyday, so I hope that the product is something I am proud of. What I hope to do by the end of college is study and become more knowledgable in Biology. Ever since I was a kid, I have enjoyed Biology. I'm excited to study and really push myself as a student in college. I also hope to become a more confident adult. I want to learn to be independent. In life, as cheesy as it sounds, I want to be happy. If that means settling down and having a family so be it. I want to feel truly content and happy before I die (an idea shared by many others.) 

Assignment 17- Sam Underwood

I did a review of "Lady Bird".
the link for this review is:
https://www.rottentomatoes.com/user/id/977105974/ratings

"Over Winter break, I went to see the wonderfully funny and thoughtful movie Ladybird. It tells the story of a young teenage girl and how she navigates her rough relationship with her mother. I feel that this was a part that made the movie very relatable to it's audience. Ladybird was an amazing movie! I loved every second of it. A beautiful, sentimental, commentary on what it is like to be a teenager. I loved the portrayal of Lady Bird and her mother. The entire movie was wonderfully shot and directed, very pleasing to watch. I was not surprised when this movie won several Oscars, it was very deserving of these awards. I feel that this movie is a wonderful movie for any age. I had both my parents watch it they both thoroughly enjoyed it. If you are contemplating seeing this movie, I urge you to watch it. Watching this movie will be a decision you won't regret." 



Assignment 19: Luke Taylor

People often tease me for being in high school band, I can see where they are coming from. We're easy to pick out with instrument cases or the huge flock of us in the yellow hallway in the morning. But one the best pieces of advice that I've ever received was delivered to me in band class. On the board every week the directors and student leaders put inspirational quotes on the board, one week an aphorism stood out to me. It was from Thomas J. Watson, a successful business man from the early 20th century, that read "If you want to achieve excellence, you can get there today. As of this second, quit doing less-than-excellent work." This hit home with me because I am guilty of getting lazy and not putting all of my effort into what I am doing. This can be applied to anyone's life, if you are tired of getting sub-par results, stop giving sub-par effort.

Assignment 19: Anne Nombe

This isn't really a piece of advice that was given directly to me, but while I was surfing Quora I came across this really good thing to keep in mind that I bookmarked.

Basically, it says that we shouldn't be so judging of others, especially for the things we don't judge ourselves for. For example, when someone is late to class, we might assume they were skipping, when really they were late because they had a flat tire or had to bring their sibling to school. And as another example, when someone says something stupid we might attribute it to their stupidity, when really, it was just an honest mistake. I always like to keep in mind that you never really know what's going on inside a person's life, and a single mistake doesn't say anything about them. We're all human, and we all do these things. It's best not to judge people when you don't know the whole story.

Assignment 18: Anne Nombe

The one thing I'd like to do before finishing high school is figure out how to write Swahili. I can speak it, but whenever my relatives text me, I can read a lick of it. I know it'll be hard to do, but with my trusty DuoLingo app, I hope I can recognize the written words better. I also want to learn German through it as well, as I have a friend in Germany who I'd love to send a letter to in her native tongue.

The one thing I'd like to do before finishing college is get a dog. I know that's a weird thing to say, but I've always wanted one, and once I move out of my parents' house (well, if they let me actually leave) I'd love to get one.

Lastly, the one thing I'd like to do before dying is learn how to play piano. I already play an instrument (viola), but my whole life I've only wanted to play violin and piano. Violin isn't that hard for me to do if I take time to actually go over the notes, as they're in a different clef, but I have no clue how to piano.

Assignment 18- Elizabeth Piper

High School:
My main priority for high school is to get accepted into the University of Pennsylvania. It has been my dream to get into this school since freshman year. I have been working at it for three and a half years now and I would love to get that acceptance letter. I hope my dream comes true and hopefully I will be able to cross it off of the bucket list.

College:
My number one item for college is to find my specific path in life. I have a rough idea of what I want to do, but I want to figure out exactly what I want to do for the rest of my life before I graduate from college. As of now, I know that I want to go into international business. However, I'm not sure what I want my specific career to be. Hopefully I will figure it out before graduation day.

Life:
My number one item on my bucket list is to travel to every francophone country. There are around 30 countries spanning from our neighbor Canada to Europe and even Africa. I would like to visit all of these places and stay there long enough to learn about the culture and really see what it is like to live there.

Saturday, February 10, 2018

Assignment 18- Andrew Rogers

1. I really would like to receive the Medallion at the end of my high school career. I have worked so hard in the Academy and I would really appreciate something to reward all of my hard work. I want to successfully deliver my AP Research paper and get a very good scholarship to Freed Hardeman University.

2. I would love to go study abroad before I finish college. I've never been outside of the country so going to Europe with friends while being able to continue my studies would be an incredible opportunity. As someone who is very interested in world history and the connections between North America and Europe,  I would love to travel and see those effects first hand.

3. Before I die I want to travel to the United Arab Emirates. Abu Dhabi is one of the most unique cities in the world. In my endless conquest to find the fastest and tallest roller coaster to ride I have conquered almost everything in the United States from the tallest and second fastest roller coaster in Kingda Ka to the tallest giga-coaster in Fury 325. However, I have yet to ride the fastest. That title belongs to the Formula Rossa roller coaster at Ferrari World in Abu Dhabi. With a top speed of 149 mph, I've been dying to go ever since it opened, and hopefully, I'll make it before I die.

Assignment 19- Andrew Rogers

Whenever someone asks me what the most influential piece of advice I've ever recieved my thoughts first go so a small, relatively unimportant portion of advice. "Don't put your hand in your pockets." Yep. That's it. Don't put your hands in your pockets. To most of you that seems increadibly stupid and a useless piece of advice, but it matters where the advice came from. One of my Dad's best friends for many years, Brandon Rader (a name that means nothing to you) is who it came from. He travels multiple times every year around the world doing mission work in foreign countries. I don't talk to him alot and this conversation we had is the only one I'd had with him in the span of about 7 months. He told me to never put my hands in my pockets because around the world that usually signifies untrustworthiness. I had never thought about it before, that something so simple and innocent for us in America, had implications that I had no idea about. It allowed me to step back and consider how every culture interacts and the careful consideration we must all take in dealing with people. This small piece of advice changed how I percieved the world, and I am thankful that I can now understand other people's culture better than I did before.

Assignment 18 Luke Taylor

High School
1. Graduate High School and Get Into college
2. Become Decent at coding
3. Become swole like Nathan Boshard
4. Figure out what I want to do in College
Graduating High School and Getting into a pretty good college will always be on the top of my list while in high school because that has been a goal of mine since starting school. I'm not shooting for an Ivy League or anything, but I would like to go to a pretty good school so I can network and meet the a lot of people which is important in the Tech industry.

College
1. Find out what I want to do for the rest of my life
2. Meet a lot of new people
3. Become extremely good at piano
4. live in somewhere besides Lexington Kentucky
The whole point of going to college is to discover who you are as a person and figure out what you want to do for the rest of your life. Once I figure that out, I will try to put myself in the best position possible to accomplish my purpose.

Life
1. Live long enough to see all the Marvel Cinematic Universe movies and the Star Wars remakes
2. Figure out a way I can give back to the community
3. Have set foot on all 7 continents (6 if Antarctica melts)
So, through out my life two things have been consistent: my love for Star Wars and Comic books. So if i can manage to see all the new Star Wars and Marvel movies that come out, I'd consider that a life well lived. But I might be here for a while because Disney is gonna milk both of those franchises dry.

Assignment 19: Sam Clark

Perhaps the best piece of advice ever bestowed upon my grateful figure was to “blow harder.” My middle school band teacher, Mrs. Begley, was a canonized saint, fully endowed with miracle-making abilities. Her simple, yet beautiful, instruction molded the minds of middle school musicians, turning disjointed notes into resounding symphonies. We played all the classics: “Ode to Joy,” “Fanfare to Power,” “Trombones on the Housetop.” Such notes still ring in my ears, reminding me of a time not yet forgotten. The whole school loved Mrs. Begley. We still do. Her cry to “blow harder” grew ever-louder as the years passed, urging us onto greatness. Mrs. Begley’s advice was not just a musical appeal; it was an instruction to try harder, to reach onward into the limitless possibilities.


So yes, Mrs. Begley, I’ll blow harder. I’ll do it just for you.

Assignment 18- Sam Clark

High School:

Chief among my wishes for high school is to have the truth of the Star Wars franchise revealed to the general public. And what is this truth? This stunning flash of insight? Namely, that Kylo Ren will turn to the light and Rey to the dark. Now, though I saw not the latest installments of the series, notable Star Wars experts (Luke Taylor and Christopher Beebout, P.H.D), believe fervently in my claim. I believe this is a modest request to ask the universe, and hold confident that it will be fulfilled.

College:

As for college, my opinions remain a bit more murky. Considering the high level of uncertainty as to my university, I chose not to stride along the personal route, but upon the national. My bucket list goal is to help turn the Senate blue in 2019 and 2020. This is the only way environmentalism will ever be sustained, and thus the proper way to go.

Life:

I aim to see the Star Wars franchise (at least in its current, zombified-mouse form), come to an end. Sometimes we must let go.

Assignment 19: Maggie Anderson

The most memorable piece of advice I have ever gotten was to get the bad things, like chores or homework, out of the way first. My mother taught me this when I was a small elementary schooler, just starting to have homework and chores, and it has stuck. this does not mean I always follow this advice, however. I often intend to, but then I'm lazy. I cite every time I have stayed up doing Cornell notes or key terms the night, or early morning, before they're due until I could no longer read the textbook. The one way I have consistently followed this advice is with respect to dinner. Though I no longer have a child's distaste for vegetables, I rarely like them as much as the main meal and I still despise a few. This has led to them being the first things I eat at any meal, before I've even touched the main component. This manifests itself the most with salads. I don't hate salads, but it seems like my family has them with at least five dinners a week. I usually go into the kitchen after the salads have been made but while the rest of the dinner is cooking and eat my salad with my hands then. This drives my father crazy. But hey, I'm just following my mother's advice.    

Assignment 18: Maggie Anderson

High School:
1. Get my driver's license.
2. Go to a school dance.
3. Get into a good college.
4. Get a summer job.
5. Figure out what I want to do in college.
   Getting my driver's license comes first because it's the sort of thing that won't happen if I don't constantly think about it. Activities that require travel and effort tent to get put off. I say I'll do them soon and suddenly it's been months. For this reason, I had my father take me out of school early on my sixteenth birthday to get my permit, because I didn't want to delay it and I knew if I put it off at all, school would be out by the time I actually got around to it.

College:
1. Figure out what I want to do after college
2. Make friends.
3. Study abroad.
4. Improve baking skills.
    Figuring out what I want to do after college is on the top of my list because it's something I really need to know before I finish. Right now, I'm bouncing between multiple careers. I also need to find out what I want to study, and those things should go hand in hand.

Life:
1. Go to Arnaud's Restaurant in New Orleans and order the dessert Strawberries Arnaud.
2. Own a house.
3. Dedicate a room of said house to being a library.
4. Learn about making glass.
   Strawberries Arnaud costs $3.95 million. It has multiple, expensive components, including wines and fruits. It also comes with a sort of happy meal toy: a 7.09 carat pink diamond.
 One reason I want to get this is that I believe I will be the first (it's the worst selling dessert in New Orleans) and because I want to know if they actually have a diamond on the premises. I find the idea of the busboy sprinting to the nearest jewelry shop hilarious. This is also my least probable goal.


Assignment 17: Maggie Anderson


I watched All the Presidents Men and The Post. They both portray the Washington Post’s coverage of major news stories during the presidency of Richard Nixon. The former is about two reporters covering Watergate and is based on a book written by the reporters directly after. The latter was made recently and tells the story of the Washington Post’s coverage of the Pentagon papers.

            The biggest difference between the two movies is the focus of the movie. During All the President’s Men the entire movie is spent following the two reporters as they write the story, talk to editors, or interview people. There is no time spent on other people or other situations. In The Post, however, the focus is more split. Part of this is due to the separation of the main characters. Woodward and Bernstein work together throughout their move, but Kay Graham is more removed from the newspaper, causing the movie to have to shift back and forth. This provides for more interactions with other people as well as a variety of events and situations.

             The cast is also larger in The Post, as the plot revolves around an effort by the entire staff, particularly at the upper levels. All the President’s Men revolves around an effort solely by Woodward and Bernstein, and the rest of the staff, with the exception of Ben Bradley, barely make appearances, and they hinder as much as they help. There is also absolutely no mention or appearance of Kay Graham in All the President’s Men even though it is set less than a year after The Post. This could partially be due to her being less involved in Watergate than she was in the Pentagon Papers, as the paper didn’t seem to care about that coverage at the time as much. The decision to run publish the Pentagon Papers was a potentially illegal act that required judgement calls by anyone with any power at the Washington Post, as the New York Times had already been to stop by a federal judge. The coverage of Watergate was much less contested, partially because the White House was denying involvement, partially because nobody but Woodward and Bernstein thought there was anything worth reporting, and partially because the newspapers had won their Supreme Court case after the Pentagon Papers, giving them an assured legal right to print whatever they felt it necessary to print.

            Smoking also play a large role in both movies, but movies, but I perceived it in a different way. As both movies are set in the late 60s/early 70s there is a great deal of smoking, realistically portraying the behaviors of the time. However, I found that it came more naturally in All the President’s Men. There was definitely more casual smoking, which is a shock to somebody living in today’s anti-smoking culture. But it seemed to fit perfectly and didn’t continuously stand out. This could partially be due to the fact that it was made at the time, so the actors and director didn’t have to try so hard to insert it. They probably smoked throughout the making of the movie, on and off camera. The Post, however, doesn’t achieve this level of nonchalance. There is less smoking, but every time it seems to stand out more and seems artificial, like it was put into the scene by somebody trying to make a point about how much people smoked then. It probably was. One part of The Post that seems most realistic is a scene in which the editors have met at Ben Bradley’s house to go over the recently acquired Pentagon Papers. After having spent the morning isolated in his closed off living room, Mrs. Bradley comes to bring them lunch. She opens the door to a gray cloud made by about five people smoking throughout several hours. It is an extreme example, and is mostly in the movie for laughs, but it seem like the most natural, and realistic, evidence of smoking in the movie.     

            Overall, I preferred The Post. It was aimed more at the modern public. As All the President’s Men was created shortly after Watergate, it doesn’t hold up as well, though I found both movies to be quite excellent.

Sunday, February 4, 2018

Assignment 20: How to …

Hide not your talents, they for use were made. What's a sundial in the shade?
--Benjamin Franklin
Ben makes a good point. For this week, put your gifts and skills on display by developing a "how-to." Choose something that you have a level of expertise in and explain step by step how it is done.

No repeats though! If two people are both really talented at making ice and one beats the other to the post on "How to make ice..." then, second person - you need to reflect upon your other talents.

So, stop standing in the shade and astound us!

Oh, this can be a video blog that you create.


Minimum of 150 words - due Sunday, February 18th at 11:59 pm

March 25th is the last day to make up blogs 20-22

Saturday, February 3, 2018

Assignment 17: Sam Clark

https://www.rottentomatoes.com/user/id/977088095

Review of Wonder Woman

Assignment 17: Luke Taylor

https://www.rottentomatoes.com/user/id/977043158/

Caution Spoilers
But if you haven't seen the movie yet that's just disappointing (Sam Clark).