Cordia’s basketball team deals with individuals from their community who were being rationally profiled. In the film “Us against the world” filmed by Mario Diaz, directed by Trent Cooper and Coury Deeb, reveals how the players were relocating from their homes to play basketball at Cordia. The players leaving their homes were trying to escape violence and dangerous neighborhoods. Cordia’s basketball team used basketball to uncover racial profiling in a racist community.
Cordia High school is in Knott county in eastern Kentucky. The community throughout the whole film was surprisingly unsupportive of the boys and how far they were making it into their season. After winning the state championship and league, the boys continued to get no support. Their coach, Rodrick Rhodes faces some discrimination. Kids from the other other schools were dressing up gorillas and attending games like that. Everyone was against Rodrick and his team because they were unbeatable. The black kids on the team managed to ignore everything and keep going. However, this leads to one of our main character Oumar .
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He is the tallest player on cordia’s team. Oumar is from africa. Oumar is full Muslim. In Africa people are getting killed and hung because of discrimination. Oumar came to eastern Kentucky to live a better life. He left his home when we was 13 years of age. Oumar’s background ties into others on the Cordia basketball team. Momo comes from a broken home in New York. he does not talk to his dad and his brother has been shot three times and lives on the street. Momo is the quickest to give up on the basketball team. Cordia’s basketball team considers him a leader and the team’s best player. In some parts of the film, momo causes the team to be unsuccessful. Momo is mentally and physically soft due to all the discrimination he grew up with. The boys leave their families to get away from gangs and
Read my book Hoop City Detroit, a suspenseful drama about a boy named isaiah. A sharpshooter drafted to a top private school to play basketball. His tremendus ball playing skills gets him straight from jv to starting varsity, but his teammates are not very supportive because isaiah lives in auburn hills, the wealthiest neighborhood in detroit. Although that is not the only problem he must overcome, his family is falling apart because of divorce. Will Isaiah be able to rise above the taunts from teammates and opponents?Will he be able to overcome the deconstruction of his
He plays until it gets dark and starts as soon as the sun comes up. His mom dyes and he doesn’t tell anyone. So he’s living on his own, stealing things to get by. One day he decides he needs a new pair of sneakers for the season and goes to the Footlocker on the other side of town. When he try’s to steal them he gets caught. This forces him to either go to a group home, or get adopted right away. The Lawton’s adopted him. They are very nice but Jayson isn’t accepting them like he should. He starts off hating his new school and his new teammates. Soon he gets along with them and meets a friend named Zoe. Zoe is really nice even when Jayson is mean. Soon Jayson and Zoe are dating and Jayson finds out that Zoe’s parents want her to be perfect. A couple of weeks later Jayson over hears Zoe’s mom talking about how Jayson is a thief and a drug dealer. The thief part was right but the drugs were not. Zoe didn’t talk to him again. This made Jayson focus on basketball just so he didn’t think about Zoe. He won the league championship against his old team in the final
Most people don’t realize that the media play up the stereotypes and gender roles that are out there. We don’t realize that the movies and television shows we watch feed into the stereotypes and gender roles that we believe in. Remember the Titans, directed by Boaz Yakin, tells the story about a high school football coach, Herman Boone, attempting to integrate T.C. Williams High School in Alexandria in 1971. Boone coming to T.C. Williams High School really upset many parents and students. When the parents of the football players found out he was going to be helping the head coach, Bill Yoast, many were fuming with anger. Why? Because he is African-American. Parents did not want their children playing African-American children in sports or sitting next to them in classrooms. This movie is based on a true story and the film challenges everything we claim we know about discrimination and racism in school.
A film “Glory Road”, based on a true story features a coach, Don Haskins, who is a basketball coach for the Western Texas Miners. The movie takes place in 1965, Haskin is going against the society’s standards of leading African Americans players to play basketball in college. At the beginning of the movie, Don Haskin struggles to build a good basketball team because no players want to play at a no name school. He doesn’t care about skin color like the society does, but instead, he wants to recruit good players and he looked around for African-American basketball players because he wants to win the NCAA finals and he knew they wouldn 't get recruited and he had limited scholarship offers. In one scene, Haskins is being interviewed by a
The physical side is at one time they did love each other because kids were born. The shared activities are the fact they have children and they still do things as a family.
For instance, when Lyle, one of the team member, said he wasn’t a sir, Coach Carter responded: ‘’Oh, well, are you a madam?’’ (10:15), which made the boys laugh. In addition, he used girls name from his past, like his sister Diane or his childhood sweetheart Delilah, to teach some game strategy. The Coach’s humor motivated the team and made the practices more entertaining. With his retort and his funny side, Ken Carter really knew how to make basketball be a little more
Jordan's mother reported, "he has not expressed any suicidal thoughts to her." Jordan's mother informed the team Jordan is verbally and physically aggressive towards everyone in the family. Jordan's mother's shared, "Jordan tells her he wishes she would leave and he hates her." Jordan is physically aggressive toward his younger sister despite his mother redirecting him several times. Jordan's mother denied, "she has seen any major improvements from Jordan." Jordan's mother acknowledged, "sometimes he can be a sweet kid and there are those other times when he refuses to do listen and following directions." Jordan's mother informed the team Jordan's relationship is strained with both of his sisters because
The Richmond High School, located in the poor area of Richmond city, held a graduation rate of 50% for their students. Out of that percentage, only 6% of those who graduate go to college. Conveniently located in western Contra Costa county, where every one out of three black men between the ages of 18-24 tends to get arrested, the youths of Richmond High are 80% more likely to end up in prison than college. Coach Carter is based on a true story of coach Ken Carter and the Richmond High basketball team. The year was 1999 when Richmond High hired a new head coach for their underperforming basketball team. Ken Carter is an alumnus who played on the team himself and even earned records for the school. He took the position upon seeing how rude and disrespectful the athletes were against other player and themselves. The youth of Richmond were slowly progressing towards an inadequate lifestyle. Something had to be done and Carter knew exactly what to do. His coaching philosophy concentrated on shaping his players to become more than just athletes, Carter aims to enrich their lives which in turn will shape them into better human beings. Although viewed as unconventional by the community--even made the headline for preventing his players from practicing and canceling a game during an undefeated season until they improved their grades--his philosophy led the youths toward a life that were supposedly impossible to achieve.
From 1789 through 1800, the United States was greatly involved in foreign affairs. The nation had just been established, and the early United States was greatly influenced by foreign affairs as a result. International affairs even pushed the young nation to the brink of war. The young United States would attempt to become neutral, however international countries would be influencing in the nation issues, including politics.
Coach Carter is a sports drama film based on a true story about a former record holding Richmond High School basketball player, Ken Carter, who returns to his high school to coach the current juvenile players. At the first practice of the season, Coach Carter immediately acknowledges that the players are rude and disrespectful toward their superiors and he decides to require each player to sign a written contract that states that they have to maintain certain regulations and follow many rules throughout the year, in and outside of the classroom to be able to play on the team. He feels that the players are not disciplined enough and that they would not survive life or have a successful future outside of playing basketball, so the contracts are intended to teach the team discipline, structure, and leadership skills on and off the court. The lead protagonist, Coach Carter, faces many difficulties in this movie.
The film wasn’t about that 13-0 record and winning a state championship, but the struggle that came with it and all the hardships they had to deal and get past. Racism, prejudice, compassion and love were all key aspects of this film as shown. The racism, prejudice of the team when they first met was severe and had been changed. The love and compassion came as the team grew to become one unit and love each other and be able to become something more powerful than they could be by themselves.
One of the hottest competitors at the 2002 Olympics at Salt Lake City was 129-year-old Apolo Ohno. His event was short track speed skating, Americans were pinning their hopes on this young man for more than one reason. They wanted a U.S. win, of course. But just as important, a medal at the Olympics would be a personal victory for Apolo. Apolo's mother left the family when he was one-year-old he was raised in Seattle by his father, Yukio. Yukio has his parenting work cut out for him. In day care, Apolo climbed over the fence, as a latchkey kid, he didn't always come home. He sometimes disappeared on weekends. He hung out mostly with a bad crowd. The father and son fought constantly Yukio considered sending Apolo to military school. At the same time, Yukio kept trying to get Apolo interested in some activities, such as choir, swimming, and in-line skating. Nothing worked until Apolo was watching the 1994 Olympics. A new event was introduced: short track speed skating the boy was 11 years old, and he was hooked.
This movie is about a little boy and girl that grow up together; they fall in love with the game of basketball and each other. They didn't really get along as they grew up because the boy, Q, didn't think it was ok for girls to play ball. They go through a series of trials and they separate and find their way back to each other. In the end he realizes she is the one for him. This is seen in our society today because when you do something you love, there are others that love it to. These two characters have that connection between the two of the one thing that they love. They didn't let "love for the game" stand in the way of "true love".
This paper will analyze the film Remember the Titans through a social psychological perspective using principles that are depicted throughout the film. This film takes place in Virginia during the segregation years. One African American coach is picked to be head coach at a school in the suburbs. His team is forced to play with another team that is all white males. Both coaches and players have to go through many difficult trials and tribulations. At first the teams show out and let eachother know that they don’t like each other but in the end become good friend in spite of the segregation. This paper will analyze this film through the social psychological principles of racism, conformity and
Coach Carter is a 2005 movie which was based upon a true story. The movie underlines the social structure and stratification of life in the American ghetto. The theme of the movie is the outcome of such societal boundaries on this group of students who play basketball; how it outlines their life, affects their social life and also their life goals. The movie depicts a Structural-functionalist of society