On Thu, 5 Jun 2003 07:11:35 -0700 FRANTZ, SUE [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote.
I have a student this quarter who could make a living as a writer. In
fact,
I'm pretty sure he could give Dave Barry a run for his money. I just
graded
his last exam, and he wrote the answer to the second essay as a rap.
Tipsters:
I'm looking for media examples (TV, movies, song lyrics) of the use of specific
Psychology related terms or references that one would probably not understand
without taking a Psych class. A somewhat dated example is an episode from
Northern Exposure that makes reference to Kitty
Hi Linda. I'm reminded of Phil Hartman's Anal Retentive Chef from
Saturday Night Live of a number of years ago. Although the term anal is
used by just about everyone, it's my contention that only psych majors
would really understand all of the nuances of Hartman's characterization.
-- Mark
At
Hi again,
To follow Mark's suggestions, actually Saturday Night Live is probablya great source of psychology humor. There is also Chris Farley's motivational speaker, and a number of good skits about prejudice and stereotyping - probably from all decades of the show. Check your local video
Hi linda,
a little differentbut also available on ebay I believe.
Pinky and the Brain in an episode called,
Pavlov's Mice:
The mice attempt to steal Russia's crown jewels during a lunar eclipse.
Jim
Jim Matiya Carl Sandburg High School
131st and LaGrange Road
Orland Park, IL 60462
This is also dated, but there was a group in the 80's called Pavlov's
Dog whose album was called At the sound of the bell
Linda Walsh wrote:
Tipsters:
I'm looking for media examples (TV, movies, song lyrics) of the use of specific
Psychology related terms or references that one would probably
At 11:22 AM 6/9/2003 -0500, you wrote:
>Tipsters:
>I'm looking for media examples (TV, movies, song lyrics) of the use of specific
>Psychology related terms or references that one would probably not understand
>without taking a Psych class. A somewhat dated example is an episode from
>Northern
How about the song We do what we're told (Milgram's 37) by Peter
Gabriel.
Ironically, Peter Gabriel has often used this song as a sing-a-long at
concerts.
we do what we're told, we do what we're told
we do what we're told, told to do
we do what we're told, we do what we're told
we do what
Thanks Joe: Yours is the only response I received to that portion of my
query.
Joe
Joseph J. Horton Ph. D.
Faculty Box 2694
Grove City College
Grove City, PA 16127
(724) 458-2004
In God we trust, all others must bring data.
-Original Message-
From: Joe Marrone [mailto:[EMAIL
My personal favorite is the fact that most movies/TV shows say It's psychsomatic,
it's all in his/her mind. Psychsomatic illnesses are real. The term they should use
is somatoform disorder
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I like Pink Floyd's song Brain damage
You raise the blade, you make the change, you rearrange me til I'm sane. You lock the
door, throw away the key. There's someone in my head but it's not me.
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let me add a few from TV movies:
Tonite's rerun of Will Grace she said, I'm sublimating my rage at you
with cheesecake.
Bill Ted's Excellent Adventure--they bring Freud back and he encounters
a corn dog at the water park. Hilarity ensues.
Good Will Hunting--good examples of transference.
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