Media Analysis -- Your Media Analysis is due this week. For this assignment, you will conduct a sociologica This analysis focuses on the 2006 film Bordertown, which starred Antonio Banderas, Jennifer Lopez and was directed by Gregory Nava. The movie was widely panned by critics, and received limited publicity in the U.S. Such adversity was largely due to the political nature of this film, which widely depicted a series of brutal, unsolved murders (which were still prevalent during the time the film was made) of young women -- from mid-adolescence to their early 20's -- in Mexico's Ciudad Juarez. There is a reporter from Chicago who travels to Juarez specifically to write a story about these occurrences, and the major media outlet that she writes for (The Chicago Tribune) refuses to publish the story. Despite the fact that the star witness for the story has her life threatened to cooperate with the Tribune, the story is never published because all of the murdered women were working for U.S. funded factories in exploitive labor situations (Bordertown, 2006). The film ends with the reporter quitting the Tribune...
And labor-cheap countries like Mexico, and educates people (Schaefer, 2010) about this phenomenon. The boons benefit both the U.S. And the Mexican governments and are a direct result of the somewhat dubious North American Free Trade Agreement. This agreement is primarily used for U.S. based corporations to implement factory systems in Mexico, most typically those right across the border in locations such as Ciudad Juarez, which are extremely exploitative for the local (and mostly female) laborers. The film serves as a means of education, and possible mobilization of the masses, about this issue.Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
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