Thursday, 11 June 2009
Podcasting vs Blogging
What Is Blogging?
Wednesday, 10 June 2009
Description Of Arctic Monkeys Cover

Tuesday, 9 June 2009
Social Network Takeover
Don McCullin
Thursday, 4 June 2009
Goth's Blamed
The media encourage the belief that if a goth kills someone it’s because they are a goth and it’s the music they listen to that is at fault.Yet if someone who listens to mainstream music and fits in with the so called normal people kills someone its not there music or scene to blame.
They say if a person self harms, it’s the music they listen to that promotes the idea. Why is this? If someone has the desire to kill someone, surely it’s nothing to do with what social scene they are involved in. The lyrics of Marilyn Manson, Slipknot and My Chemical Romance have famously been blamed for promoting self harm and evil, but if you listen to the lyrics of these bands, a lot of their songs try to show how to escape from such feelings and offer another way out. It’s as if the media are looking for an excuse.
One of the biggest British stories linked to this idea was the murder of Jodi Jones in June 2003. Her boyfriend at the time, Luke Mitchell, was convicted of the murder. When the case went to court the kind of music he listened to and clothes that he wore were brought up and put forward as part of the blame for the murder.
Another famous incident was when the Daily Mail called My Chemical Romance a “cult suicide” band. This outraged fans and caused them to march in protest to the newspaper for putting forward this idea to oblivious readers.
So why is alternate and goth music blamed for so much that goes wrong? A lot is linked to the Columbine High School Massacre murders in 1999, where two students shot and murdered 15 people before killing themselves. It transpired they were big fans of Marlyn Manson. Ironically, far from being an evil devil worshipper, when asked what he would have said to the killers, Manson replied: "Nothing. I would have listened, because no one else did."
Tommy Wilson
Wednesday, 20 May 2009
Ansel Adams
