Three Viable Topics: Which to Choose?
Posted: Thu Jun 24, 2010 1:59 pm
Getting ready to start drafting and I've narrowed it down to three possible topics. Honest opinions on which ideas suck least would be really appreciated. Thanks guys.
1. Basic story of my life
I grew up in a pretty impoverished rural area, single mom who got pregnant at 15, dad left, food stamps, all that jazz. I read a lot as a form of escapism when I was younger, worked at BK throughout HS (wasn't as cool back then, no funnel cake fries or RIBS WITH REAL BONES), got full ride to college, waitressed throughout college, saved $$$ from kissing butt and shucking oysters at restaurant, moved to NYC after graduation, got good job here (legal assistant briefly then left to be an assistant at hedge fund). Basically, I was always SO ashamed of my upbringing until recently (a trip abroad helped, cliched, but it did) where I've come to appreciate certain facets of my unideal (I won't say shitty) background. All in all, I'm pretty proud of what I've accomplished--just being able to live alone in NYC, pay my own bills and rent, send some money home to mom, have real health and dental insurance for the first time in...forever, makes me content with with my life to date, but I'm ready to get back to work, so to speak, and let law school own my ass.
Pro: This is is my pure, unadulterated life story.
Cons: Worried it's too sprawling a topic and too "snowflake syndrome-y." Honestly, if I wrote this I would NOT make it all "wah, look at all my faux-adversity" but more "I'm a hard worker, I do not expect things to be given to me without merit, and I am proud of where I am from and what I've achieved as a result"
2. Something more academic
In undergrad, I spent a semester in Prague and ended up writing my dissertation on the Sudeten German issue (Czechs exiled them after WWII for a variety of interesting reasons). The issue is many of these people and their relatives have been wanting to reclaim their "heimat" or homeland (the connotation is actually extremely different than how we'd interpret homeland) because they still feel especially connected to it, and of course the Czechs aren't buying it, won't budge, etc. Anyway, I'd like to craft a story about my interesting experiences talking to some of the Sudeten Germans about their own interpretations of heimat, and relate it back to my own mixed feelings about my "heimat." I also volunteered at an orphanage there and that itself made me reflect on my relationship with my mother and my connection to my area/physical home, aside from just being an incredibly FUN and genuinely awesome experience.
Pro: It's a unique idea and if executed properly could showcase my more academic side as well as my personal side.
Cons: One of my friends said this was "too controversial" because of its connections with Nazism? Also, too dry? Hokey?
3. I used to do stand-up comedy, created/wrote a comedy webseries that got picked up by a production company.
I would kill to work in entertainment law (yeah, almost impossible, I know) for a variety of reasons, but these two are a large part of my interest in EL. I remember pouring over the surprisingly huge contract I had to sign when I relinquished my rights to the webseries, and I really found the entire process fascinating. I have such a desire to do work that allows me to be tied to the entertainment industry, but also allows me to work in law.
Pros: Honest connection to why I want to practice law
Cons: Could easily sound retarded, everyone claims to be an "artist," more special snowflake syndrome, etc.
Thanks guys!
1. Basic story of my life
I grew up in a pretty impoverished rural area, single mom who got pregnant at 15, dad left, food stamps, all that jazz. I read a lot as a form of escapism when I was younger, worked at BK throughout HS (wasn't as cool back then, no funnel cake fries or RIBS WITH REAL BONES), got full ride to college, waitressed throughout college, saved $$$ from kissing butt and shucking oysters at restaurant, moved to NYC after graduation, got good job here (legal assistant briefly then left to be an assistant at hedge fund). Basically, I was always SO ashamed of my upbringing until recently (a trip abroad helped, cliched, but it did) where I've come to appreciate certain facets of my unideal (I won't say shitty) background. All in all, I'm pretty proud of what I've accomplished--just being able to live alone in NYC, pay my own bills and rent, send some money home to mom, have real health and dental insurance for the first time in...forever, makes me content with with my life to date, but I'm ready to get back to work, so to speak, and let law school own my ass.
Pro: This is is my pure, unadulterated life story.
Cons: Worried it's too sprawling a topic and too "snowflake syndrome-y." Honestly, if I wrote this I would NOT make it all "wah, look at all my faux-adversity" but more "I'm a hard worker, I do not expect things to be given to me without merit, and I am proud of where I am from and what I've achieved as a result"
2. Something more academic
In undergrad, I spent a semester in Prague and ended up writing my dissertation on the Sudeten German issue (Czechs exiled them after WWII for a variety of interesting reasons). The issue is many of these people and their relatives have been wanting to reclaim their "heimat" or homeland (the connotation is actually extremely different than how we'd interpret homeland) because they still feel especially connected to it, and of course the Czechs aren't buying it, won't budge, etc. Anyway, I'd like to craft a story about my interesting experiences talking to some of the Sudeten Germans about their own interpretations of heimat, and relate it back to my own mixed feelings about my "heimat." I also volunteered at an orphanage there and that itself made me reflect on my relationship with my mother and my connection to my area/physical home, aside from just being an incredibly FUN and genuinely awesome experience.
Pro: It's a unique idea and if executed properly could showcase my more academic side as well as my personal side.
Cons: One of my friends said this was "too controversial" because of its connections with Nazism? Also, too dry? Hokey?
3. I used to do stand-up comedy, created/wrote a comedy webseries that got picked up by a production company.
I would kill to work in entertainment law (yeah, almost impossible, I know) for a variety of reasons, but these two are a large part of my interest in EL. I remember pouring over the surprisingly huge contract I had to sign when I relinquished my rights to the webseries, and I really found the entire process fascinating. I have such a desire to do work that allows me to be tied to the entertainment industry, but also allows me to work in law.
Pros: Honest connection to why I want to practice law
Cons: Could easily sound retarded, everyone claims to be an "artist," more special snowflake syndrome, etc.
Thanks guys!