Hoover Challenger : Jersey Shore review

Entertainment

Jersey Shore review

February 2010

MTV’s most recent reality show includes six fist pumping, over- tanned Italians that are thrown in the same house with little responsibilities leaving time for everything they’ll regret later in their life.

Jersey Shore has become a topic of talk as viewers experience firsthand the life of 20 year- olds with names such as ‘The Situation’ and ‘Snooki’. The whole plot of the show revolves around club-hopping, fights they repeatedly engage in, who they bring home, and the unforgettable hot tub.

This show is pointless and it reflects how a young adult shouldn’t live their life.

The women dance half covered on barstools at nightclubs. A normal night is one in which they engage in a few punches with other pathetic people who have nothing better to do with their lives.

The men obsess over their chiseled chest and “gelled up blow” hairstyle. They prowl the nightclubs looking for the easiest girl to bring home. Their lack of respect for women is sleazy. I really won’t feel bad for them when they’re 50 and their l ooks are gone, and they’re living alone.

What surprised me was the lack of secrecy the gang had. They hid nothing including their goal of bringing as many people of the opposite sex home. I personally think they are desperate for attention, even if it means not being taken seriously all across the nation.

In just a few episodes the partygoers were able to accomplish more than many people do for all their years in high school or college.

I find it amazing how these people don’t learn from their mistakes, or how they don’t regret their actions enough to leave the party scene and actually make something of their lives. After getting arrested or getting pounded by someone else, they insist on living the same life. Do they have a conscience?