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Sunday, October 16, 2016

Gender Stereotypes on Television

I chose to write about the telly evidence Greys Anatomy which airs on ABC, Thursday nights at 9.00 pm. As a future spontaneous surgeon, this is the only show on television that I watch, frankincense I decided to dissect it as a sociologist would meditate it. Even though I have never gainful attention to the gender stereotypes of this show, view that the show is about liveing(a) interns and attending doctors in the pretended Seattle Grace clemency wolfram Hospital, I decided to re-watch and honor the first two episodes of this show which air on sue 2005 and the last two episodes which aired seven years afterward on October 2012.\nThis show takes erupt in Seattle Grace Mercy West Hospital in Seattle, Washington, where daily lives of operative interns and residents ar exposed. Most of the time, the show was narrated by Dr. Meredith Grey, a young smashing looking surgical intern, who was hired by the hospital, where she gradually evolved into a seasoned doctor along w ith her co- hired interns. She and her co-hired interns, Dr. Cristina Yang, a burnished Asian descent American, Dr. George OMalley who was mocked by his peers due to freezing in the operating room on the first day of the job, Dr. Izzie Stevens, a gorgeous intern who was nicknamed model , and Dr. Alex Karev who is dismissive with his coworkers and patients, were assigned to work under Dr. Miranda Bailey, a cosmopolitan surgeon. After OMalleys death and Stevens departure, which happened in the later seasons, they were replaced by Dr. capital of Mississippi Avery and Dr. April Kepner, in the sixth season. The surgical department was primarily oversee by Dr. Richard Webber, who was eventually replaced by Dr. Derek Shepherd, and later Dr. Owen Hunt.\nAfter guardedly analyzing the show, I decided to raise four findings where three of them were on gender and one on race and ethnicity. The first grounding I tested was that women were non as worthy to sportswoman major characters as were men. gibe to the te...

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