When is it okay to judge people based on appearance? Most of us have been judged at some point or another. It is very difficult to restrict oneself from gathering information about a person. It is something all humans do. Shannon Hale once said, “Many times I have learned that, you never judge a book by its cover. Like people, it is the inside that counts.” The quote states that we humans make a judgment based on appearance before getting to them and potentially become friends. In the movies “Mean Girls”, “Let 's Be Cops” and “The Outsiders”, a demonstration of when it is okay to judge people based on appearance is present.
In the movie Mean Girls, there was a focus on the appearance. A new student Cady from Africa immediately makes two new
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In this film, two friends Ryan and Justin with struggling careers go to a college reunion party dressed in police uniforms. They realized that just wearing the uniform gain respect and attention from people everywhere they go. Next day Ryan begins watching videos on how to be police officers and finds a used police car on eBay. They wanted to continue and became involved in the more dangerous situation. One of them being two guys running around the store with a shovel. While the ending story consisted of dealing with mafia wanting to take a store and corrupt police officers delivering confiscated guns to the mafia. When Justin and Ryan were in big trouble and a real cop came to help but luckily did not turn them in. This story shows how much clothes can influence people’s perspective on …show more content…
In the movie Mean Girls, Cady became very similar to the Plastics and her friends turned away from her. While the movie Let’s Be Cops reveals by how much people act differently due to the image presented to them, so Ryan and Justin decide to continue impersonating cops. Furthermore, there are two sides of town with completely opposite communities described and shown in the movie The Outsiders. Those three cases illustrate that we cannot restrict our mind from gathering information on surroundings or people, but we can give them a chance. There are limitations, supposing that it leads to harm in any
He sees that a near by neighbor hood was attacked. Everyone was killed. They think it was done by a rogue military group because they were attacked with military grade weapons. They prepare to defend
In Gary Soto’s short story “The Talk” he reveals how society values appearance way too much. The main characters discuss about how their appearance affects their self-esteem, mindset, and their future jobs. The characters start out discussing their appearance and call themselves ugly, “We were twelve, with lean bodies that were beginning to grow in weird ways. First, our heads got large, but our necks wavered, frail as crisp tulips” (par.2). The boys talk about their appearance as if they were really awkward when in reality they probably don’t look like the way their describing themselves.
This quote shows that she made an assumption by just seeing my appearance. The girl saying this had never talked to me before so she didn’t know what I was truly like. This made me realize that it doesn’t feel good to be judged based on what you look like. Now, I try not to judge people based on appearance and for their personality. In conclusion, I have judged people and have been judged based off of appearance.
People shouldn't be judged from the outside, but rather on the inside. The new recruits had a long day of physical labor, and Tai had made all of the work easier by working smarter not harder. While the recruits are relaxing, Chiko is thinking to himself, “...spiky hair even more untidy… tanaka paste on his face making him look like he had a disease. Mother always told me not to judge people by their appearance. She was certainly right in Tai’s case”(Perkins 53).
In all sorts of books, authors use different strategies to convey emotions and other details about their characters. The Crossover and The Outsiders are no exception, and use similar tactics as well. In The Crossover, the main character, Josh, who loves basketball and has been playing it with his brother, JB, his whole life, faces emotional stress when JB gets a girlfriend and his dad’s health issues are becoming worse. In The Outsiders, the main character, Ponyboy, is trying to live his life as a greaser when he and his friend Johnny get caught up in a murder and fights. In both of these books, the authors use similar tactics, such as descriptive language and dialogue, to convey the growing identities of the characters and themes of books
Characters and people in reality may possess some characteristics that reflect the presumptions
In the book Uglies by Scott Westerfeld, It doesn’t matter if someone is ugly or if they are pretty; treat people the same it doesn’t matter how they look. On page 6, the author Scott Westerfeld said "Of course, Tally was nothing here. Worse, she was ugly. But she hoped Peris wouldn’t see it that was. Wouldn't see her that way.
No one should be stereotyped with just their appearances or how they may speak and are judged by
Self-image influences one's behavior because one does not want to appear socially unacceptable, which would harm one’s self-image as a consequence. In S. E. Hinton’s young adult novel The Outsiders, Cherry Valance, a popular Soc, expresses reluctance about initiating a friendship with Ponyboy Curtis, a greaser. Cherry admits, “‘Ponyboy…I mean…if I see you in the hall at school or someplace and don’t say hi…it’s not personal or anything’” (45). As a Soc, Cherry would sooner maintain an unblemished reputation than foster a relationship with Ponyboy, anxious at the prospect of other Socs seeing them together.
Realistically, someone’s outside appearance will not necessarily match their insides, and unfortunately, it is human nature to judge someone or something by its outside appearance. However, as relationships and bonds form between people, they’ll learn more about one another and rid themselves of preconceptions they may have initially had. This theme is prevalent in “The Rosie Project” by Graeme Simsion. Although it's natural to have preconceived notions of someone based on their physical appearance, an individual's insides may completely differ. As relationships develop between people, they gain a deeper understanding of one another and shed preconceptions of each other that they may have had initially.
Movie Summary: In the movie Mean Girls, Cady Heron is experiencing her first year in school despite being 16 because her parents are research zoologists and homeschooled all her life since they were in Africa on an assignment. Consequently, she had very little contact with people her age let alone western culture and was not aware of the dealings of high school or adolescence in general. As can be expected it was hard for her to adjust to this new life where adults don’t trust her and she is restricted by unfamiliar rules. She feels lonely until she becomes friends with Janis and Damian, who guide her and teach her about all the cliques in the school.
It’s not of what is taken from getting to know a person, but of what he/ she is assumed to be like. Even in the happy ending every little girl dreams to happen to her, stereotypes and misconceptions exist. Women are not to be looked at only from the nurturing side of them, there is more to a woman’s use than to prepare a meal, take care of children and submit to their husband and stereotypes and misconceptions are to blame. When meeting new people the first thing noticed is how one looks or the way he/she portrays themselves.
End of Watch Review In the movie “End of Watch”, directed by David Ayer, Officer Taylor (Jake Gyllenhaal) and Zavala (Michael Peña) aren’t your everyday ghetto cops. Officer Taylor is filming his police life for the art elective he is taking for pre-law. The numerous hours they spend together in their cruiser, constantly bickering and bantering, has formed a deep friendship and brotherhood. They have even earned the respect of some local gangs by prioritising the rule of the “street” over the book of the law.
Essay paper assignment II “It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye.” This quote is largely a summarization of one of the core themes of the book, namely the inability to tell truly important things about something, a person for example, by just their looks. When the eye alone is used, it leads to a false or incomplete version of a person, the appearance but not the substance. The opposite of this quote, using appearance as a metric to determine the worth of a person, is the core drive behind racism and sexism, and one of the drives behind ethnocentric thought.
Firstly, If you just someone by their looks, it is like judging a book by the cover. You are no better yourself if that is what you do. People can vary in so many ways, and that should be a reason to not judge them. The person being judged may have been in a war and lost part of their face, but you went and thought they were grotesque.