Friday, April 10, 2020

The Comparison Of The TV Family To The Everyday Real Life Family Can T

The Comparison of the TV family to the everyday real life family can take many avenues to explore, but I'll try to keep it as basic as possible. First I'll break down the animated TV family The Simpsons, and then I'll break down a real life middle class family that I know all to well. Introduction I. The Simpsons; Father, Mother and three children. The various daily problems they encounter in their middle class suburban lives. a) The Father. Hopeless fool. Everything he attempts turns into total chaos, from his job, home life, to hanging out with his buds. b) The Mother. Hard working sensible women trying her hardest to maintain some form of sanity in her insane world. c) The children. The broad spectrum from the rowdy to the innocent. II. The real life middle class family Father, Mother, and three children. The somewhat different, but similar problems they encounter in their real middle class suburban lives. a) The Father. Typical father figure trying to juggle a million things at once. b) The Mother. Homemaker and confidant', going in every which direction to fulfill everyone's needs. c) The children. Intelligent know it all's. Been there done that attitude. Conclusion To summarize the we look at the comparison of the American Family portrayed on TV and the real life family living in the in the suburbs. Now we must wonder if our friends and neighbors see our families as The Simpsons or as well-adjusted functional members of society. The Comparison of the TV family to the everyday real life family can take many avenues to explore, but I'll try to keep it as basic as possible. First I'll break down the animated TV family The Simpsons, and then I'll break down a real life middle class family that we might know all to well. The Simpsons: a family that consists of a father, mother and three children. The various daily problems they encounter in their middle class suburban lives. Makes you wonder if this is the typical American family, is this an impression though the media that the rest of the world gets. I hope not, but I have seen some families that could be runner-ups. They fit the bill so closely you'd swear they were the same. So now let's break the family down into their units. The Father, a hopeless fool. Everything he attempts turns into total chaos, from his job, home life, to hanging out with his buds. Everything that Homer sees, touches or even hears just gets turned around 180 degrees. He basically just bumbles his way through life with one misadventure after another. You must wonder how he stays alive. Is Homer an accurate portrayal of the typical American father and husband? Some might say yes, but I think the majority will disagree and say no. The Mother. Hard working sensible women trying her hardest to maintain some form of sanity in her insane world. Basically raising four children (yes, I would label Homer as a child). She tries to be the sensible one in the household. She definitely has her hands full. To me she seems to lacking a brain cell or two to let Homer get away with the stuff that he does. Although she tries to maintain a semblance of rule in the house, things just don't turn out as she hopes. The children, a broad spectrum from the rowdy to the innocent. From the grade a student who never does wrong, the rowdy in trouble all the time kid and lastly sweet little toddler that seems to be just there. Yet these children could be an accurate portrayal of most of the children in American society. The real life middle class family Father, Mother, and three children. The somewhat different, but similar problems they encounter in their real middle class suburban lives. From work, school, doing homework, cooking (thank the gods for the microwave oven) and to the after work and school activities. Trying to fit a 48-hour day into 24 hours. The hustle and bustle of real life is a more accurate portrayal of your typical family then what the media displays in the Simpsons or any other type of sit-com family. Now let's look at what I believe is the typical functional family. The Father, typical father figure