When I watched the show with sound, I found out that the husband and wife was not the parents to the three children in the show. They were their uncle and aunt. The children were the husband's sister's kids. However, the relationships that was between the adults and the children resembled a parent/child relationship. A situation in the show that I misinterpreted when I watched the show without sound was when the husband and wife were talking and the oldest girl was in the room setting the table and was listening to them talk. The first time I watched it, I thought they were having an argument, and all the while trying to not let them the girl hear it. However, when I watched it the second time, I realized that they were not argueing they were discussing what to do about the boy, and they were trying to not let the girl hear them. Through this assignment, I learned so much about communication, nonverbal communication especially. A person displays so much about what they are trying to convey to someone else. Nonverbal communication is just as vital as verbal communication.
References
Wilmore, L. (Creator). (2001). The Bernie Mac show [Television series]. Los Angeles, CA: Fox Broadcasting Company.
I enjoyed reading your post. I watch that show all the time. That show is easy to misinterpet especially without sound. If it was me watching the show for the first time, I would have also thought that the man and woman were the parents to the three children. Nonverbal communication is easy to be misleading and you can't judge something without hearing voices.
ReplyDeleteHi Rachel,
ReplyDeleteI have learned so much about communication this week! I really enjoyed learning about the nonverbal cues. I did not realize how revealing non-verbal cues can be. Wasn't it hilarious to see how some of our assumptions about the shows were incorrect?
Magretta