Preview

Personal Narrative: The Sonoran Desert

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
746 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Personal Narrative: The Sonoran Desert
“Whatsoever things are true…”

The Sonoran Desert is a magical place where springtime flowers bloom and die, but desert weeds know no end. It was there, in the sweltering heat of southwest Arizona, long before I could even comprehend the meaning of the word, that I had an epiphany. Eight years-old, immersed in the collected works of John Grisham, I voraciously consumed tales of common men overcoming seemingly insurmountable odds to persevere in spite of tremendous obstacles. Perhaps it was the immense desolation or simply the innocent naivety of a child, but his words gave me the courage to dare to dream dreams others deemed not possible. So enraptured was I that my interests in tennis, advanced mathematics and tae-kwon-do soon found themselves shuttled to dormant recesses of my brain. Hoping to squelch what he was sure was nothing more than a childhood infatuation; my father took me to the movies to view an adaptation of one of Grisham’s novels. And as I sat in air-conditioned bliss,
…show more content…
This fact became all too evident during production of my first feature film which proved to be a grueling endeavor fraught with legal obstacles. I soon discovered that even blessed as I am with an innate ability to multi-task, a law degree was an essential missing element I lacked in order to make order of the often disordered world of film production. Negotiating contracts with individuals, corporations and unions and explaining the mitigating effects of tax incentives and risk to investors; these are but a few aspects of the film industry for which an entertainment law perspective is vital. With the knowledge gleaned from studying law at a top-level institution like Northwestern’s Pritzker School of Law, I will overcome these obstacles and realize my ambitions while strengthening my skills as a dealmaker, producer and ultimately a studio

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Going to Southern California, no one would think of packing an umbrella. Why would they? California is in the middle of a drought. When someone thinks of California, they think of baby blue skies and palm trees along the streets. But, of course, the weekend my family decided to visit Disneyland, Universal Studios, and SeaWorld is the weekend Southern California experienced what the local news called a “tropical depression.”…

    • 877 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    One significant experiance in my life has been my dad being in the Millitary. My dad was in the Millitary for a short time of one year before he decided it wasnt for him. But in that one year we moved two times. We moved from my hometown of Anacortes Washington to California. I started school and things werent that bad, I made friends and had a park right across the street from my house! life was good. But then we had to move again, to Arizona. We moved from sea side California to the Arizona Dessart. This is where I was really challanged, I didnt make friends as easy as the first move. We moved from a spacious town house with a park to a tiny appartment with no backyard. I distanced myself from my parents and everyone else in my family, I…

    • 242 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    We knew we had a chance, we knew we could do it, it was a matter of when. This was one of those moments for most people that when you are in it you don’t realize how big it was until your out of it, but we weren’t most people.…

    • 174 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    I have gone to Camp Sierra Vista for the past eight years of my life. Camp has taught me many things. How to be myself, how to work well with others, how to have fun, and mainly how to be a leader. I was never really one to be a leader of a group at school, but at camp, I was.…

    • 447 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    America Vs Texas

    • 1181 Words
    • 5 Pages

    It is visually represented in its cinematography, with writing and acting it brings its stories of whimsical imagination and harsh truths to life and gives composers the chance to write the iconic scores that viewers never forget. At the root of every film is a hardworking group of people who simply wanted to bring their thoughts to life and learned how to work together to make that dream a reality. The United States of America has a very special relationship with the film industry. American film is part of the national identity that all American’s share and should be a point of pride for everyone in the country. It is culturally one of our nation’s greatest achievements, with the potential to be remembered historically as one of humanity’s great artistic mediums and continues to get better as more platforms are created to give as many filmmakers of all backgrounds a voice. Deeper within the context of American film culture, it is apparent that every state has a unique contribution to the nation’s collection of great cinema. Texas has had its ups and downs when providing a budget for film industry tax rebates and the future of the program is uncertain. In the face of adversity from lawmakers who care little about film and seek to defund it, Texas film will only continue if the outcry to preserve authentic Texas filmmaking is felt and a desire to be competitive with other states in film production incentives exists within the Texas legislature. Otherwise, the neighboring states of Louisiana and New Mexico or other emerging film states, like Georgia and Kentucky will continue to outplay Texas in attracting movie producers. However, Texas could potentially step up and become a major participant in incentivizing the production of film in the nation. But, before that can happen, Texas lawmakers have to be convinced that supporting the local film industry is beneficial to the state’s economic growth. Only if…

    • 1181 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    America has come to represent ideals such as wealth, happiness, and freedom. Immigrants travel to America in search of the American Dream, constructed of these hopes, although the majority of foreigners and natives alike never discover it. Various American novelists comprehend this unachievable desire and explore its depths in books that have now become classics. Among these novels are John Steinbeck's _Of Mice and Men_ and the same author's _The Grapes of Wrath._ In the first, two men with the names Lennie and George roam California in the 1930's, hunting for ranches to work on. However, Lennie is mentally ill and always provokes trouble, driving the two companions to become fugitives until the next rural occupation. The American Dream motivates the two men; their version being a homestead with crops and rabbits, until George reluctantly shoots and kills Lennie. In the latter novel, the Joad family is forced off their land and into California in pursuit of work and ultimately their vision of settling down in a white house with oranges. The family works efficiently and arduously, but remains in the miserable, poverty-stricken state in which they began. In his novels _Of Mice and Men_ and _The Grapes of Wrath_, John Steinbeck exposes the American Dream as unattainable through his settings, symbolization, and characters.…

    • 1072 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The tapping on the wood door was enormous in the silence. Shocked out of my solitude, I pushed myself up from the couch and heaved open the door. Silhouetted against the light was a dark-haired woman with a girl clinging to her skirt. I knew who she was. My landlady had told me about the woman I had seen picking up mail at the post office. She'd called her "The Prize."…

    • 1724 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mexico Personal Narrative

    • 1198 Words
    • 5 Pages

    At the age of two my parents made the long and devastating journey to bring me and my siblings to the United States from Mexico. They sought for a brighter and better future for us and fought tooth and nail to give us the world they didn’t have growing up. Ever since I had stepped foot on U.S soil I never had the chance to go back. The sacrifices that permitted me to be able to attend school for free and giving me a better head start than I would’ve had if we’d stayed couldn’t mask the effects of the move. I didn’t grow up being enriched by the colorful culture that Mexico has, I missed out on the opportunity to share moments with my family from abroad, and fought the struggle of trying to blend in, in an environment that was so different…

    • 1198 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    “I’ll wait here,” I said, looking at the large, familiar building in the distance. “I’ll feel better if he doesn’t wait here by himself.” My mom nodded and started driving Ms. Lara, her co-worker back to her car at the Alamo Dome.…

    • 909 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    It was a simple beginning to a beautiful day in Albuquerque, New Mexico. The dry morning air brought a wealth of warmth to my tired skin. "Today is a day of opportunity," I thought. I would hopefully be entering the work force after a long battle with unemployment. I was excited because my days were filled with nothing but boredom and my mind was occupied with nothing but despair. Hopefully, today would be the day that I left my past behind me.…

    • 729 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    It was December 2010 and my family and I were planning to go on a trip to Mexico in December for Christmas break because me and my siblings were out of school. We were packed our clothes and ready to leave. We were waiting for my uncle to come to our house so we could go and get ready to leave. We left Houston around 8pm, and my uncle drove the Nissan Frontier truck and we went straight to 59 south towards Victoria. When we got Laredo around 12 am, we took a break at a corner store to put some gas in the car and buy something to eat, then we were ready to go. It was a long trip, I had needed to stretch my legs out. After we got our snacks, we left the corner store, and we headed straight to the border line. I…

    • 941 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    On Saturday April 13, 2013 I was walking through the parking garage on the USAA campus in San Antonio, TX to start my 4 hour work shift, I began to go through the turnstile and seemingly startled awake a bat. This bat began to fly and squeal in fear. It darted at my head getting caught in my hair a couple times. I started to scream and flail my arms about trying to fend off the nocturnal flying mammal in fear. During what seemed to be forever I was able to unlock the turnstile and exit the entry way but not before rupturing two discs in my neck. This incident caused quite the turn of events in my life. I had been working for USAA for 3 years and truly loved it there. I also lived in a beautiful apartment with my mother and two children and…

    • 764 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    It was a surprisingly warm night during the summer. Everyone in the house was sound asleep in their rooms except for me. I was watching a show on the laptop in my room when out of nowhere I hear a bone chilling scream from the neighbor’s house next door. Before I knew it I was out of bed putting on my shoes to see what was happening. When I opened the front door I saw a bunch of other neighbors turning on porch lights to see what was going on too. What I saw next I could never un-see, it was the sweet old man that lived next door crouching over his blood stained wife. The problem with this image though is what he didn’t do. He wasn’t crying over her body in sorrow, nor was he standing in shock, instead his face was covered in blood and…

    • 1311 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Imagine being stripped away from everything you knew: your childhood friends; cousins you thought you'd always have with you, and places you called your second, third, or even fourth home. That is exactly what I went through when my family decided to move to Albuquerque, New Mexico. What's different about my experience was that it wasn't necessarily the move that flipped my world upside down but everything that happened in between. I was an awkward, shy, midget-like twelve-year-old when my family and I lost our home during the California money crisis. From that point on it was like a tumbling circus act. My parents ended up losing their jobs until finally my dad moved to New Mexico; leaving me and my family for almost a year. The last thing…

    • 1561 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    In his 1939 novel The Grapes of Wrath, author and journalist John Steinbeck uses intercalary chapters to show the causes of the events in the narrative chapters and their broader implications upon the California migrants (edsitement). Chapter One shows the transition into the Dust Bowl and the farmers’ responses to these changes. Chapter 29 shows the changes caused by the California winter rains and the migrants’ responses to these changes. Steinbeck uses parallelism and inversion in his first and last intercalary chapters in order to emphasize the cyclical nature of the problems and the resilience of migrants during the Dust Bowl.…

    • 1198 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics