Black-ish
The show that I decided to watch is
called Blackish on ABC.The episode I watched was "Daddy Dre Care". I wanted to watch the show but missed the first season so I want to wait until I get time to start from the beginning.
I presume the
characters in the show are related. By their actions, I assume that the man and
woman are married with four children and that an older woman also lives with
them in a beautiful house. They have a close-knit family where the father works
at a large company where he is one of the owners. I think the Mom is a nurse or
works in a hospital because she is wearing hospital scrubs. I presume the older woman lives there or is
just visiting the family.
Feeling and expressing based on the nonverbal behavior you
are observing while sound is turned off
In this week's plot by their
actions, the family looks like they are all getting sick one by one starting
with except for the father. The father is spraying stuff down around the house.
He's washing everything down and wearing a mask. He looks like he is trying to stay
away from everyone but is forced to take care of the house. The older woman is
the first to get sick; next is the children and finally the mother. The keep
showing pictures of the older women eating some food at a party she attended. Next, they switch to one of the children
eating some of the food that the older woman brought home. I am presuming that
they have food poisoning and that everybody ate some of the food except for the
father.
For some reason, the mother and what I presume is her mother are put in
a separate room from the children and stay in the same bed. From their actions
it seems It seems they are very close, and it’s a time when they care catching
up on some lost moments from the mom’s childhood. They are confined to the bed
and can’t move around the house like the children. They are sharing pictures,
talking, laughing and relaxing while battling their sickness.
Meanwhile, the
father is is trying to keep the house clean things around the house and seems
to be bonding more with the children by his actions.
Everyone is starting to get better,
and the mom finally gets out the bed and come downstairs. She sees that the children are fine and is
smiling at what is going on. The children are all laughing and having fun in a makeshift
tent that Dad made downstairs. She is smiling because the dad is rolling around
with the children in the tent.
In the
end, Mom and Dad are sitting on the couch, and I presumed she was showing him
that her temperature had finally broke, and she was feeling better. The father
was smiling, so I presumed he was happy that it was finally all over.
What assumptions did you make about the characters
and plot based on the ways in which you interpreted the communication you
observed?
I did make the right assumption that
the father had to take care of the family because they were all getting sick
but I had the plot entirely wrong. I thought that they had food poisoning by
their actions, but they were all coming down with the flu. The father never had
to take care of the house. It started with who I now know is the father’s
mother, not the mother’s mother. To my surprise, I misread what I thought
were a mother and daughter reminiscing about old times while they were sick.
The mother and grandmother do not get along but are confined to the bed
together. They start to talk more and learn things about each other. They start
to develop a mutual respect for each other. We
can all be around each other and really never know each other if we don’t
share information
The
children depend on their mother to do a lot of things for them and are not accustomed
to being taken care of by their father
My "aha" moment was at the end of the show where I thought the Mom and Dad were smiling because the children seemed to be happy and she was amazed that the Dad had taken over her responsibilities. In reality, they were hugging because Mom had just told him that she was pregnant and that is why she was sick, not the flu.
Would your assumptions have been more correct if you had been watching a show you know well?
My assumptions would have been better because I would know the background of each character and the history of how things happen of the show.
What
I have learned.
Nonverbal communication is worth a
thousand words. It reinforces verbal
communication and sometimes it sends mixed signals. It is important to
recognize our nonverbal communication i.e. facial expressions, gestures and eye contact that we make can be
stronger than verbal communication when we are interacting with other people.
References:
O'Hair, D., Wiemann, M., Mullin, D.
I., & Teven, J. (2015). Real
communication (3rd. ed). New York: Bedford/St. Martin's.
Unknown author (n.d), Retrieved 14
May 14, 2014 from www.facebook.com
I enjoyed reading your blog this week and I have never heard of the show you picked but it does look interesting. I don’t get to see new shows that much now that I have a baby but this show looks interesting and I’m going to look into it. I found that this week’s blog was very unique by learning how watching someone communicates without hearing the words. I would say that without hearing the person’s voice we can assume things by their body language and facial expression on how they feel and we could be right by it or wrong. One thing that came to my mind is I wonder how people that cannot hear and speak sign language to others because I found it hard to really see how someone felt by not hearing them communicate. I would say it would be interesting to try to observe someone that does speak sign language and get their point of view by how they take people’s expressions and body language.
ReplyDeleteHi Anita,
ReplyDeleteI also enjoyed your blog post this week. I haven't seen this show either, but have seen commercials for it and thought it looked funny. I thought it was so interesting that you were so close to getting the plot correct, as there were several times in the family sitcom I watched where I was very close to the actual plot. I think it's easy to think we know what's going on through body language in family situations, since we're all so familiar with them, but both our posts indicate that we will likely be "off" somewhere!
Thanks for your post!
Best,
EmmaLee
I regularly watch the show Black-ish. You read them pretty well based off of actions. The mother and father are very high strung along with the Grandma. It really is amazing how much body language can tell a story
ReplyDelete