The (500) Days of Summer Analysis

All the links: https://linktr.ee/edmundhyde Word Salad is a light-hearted look at pop culture through the lens of left politics. This episode is on (500) Days of Summer - the iconic rom-com that either changed the genre forever or completely left it in the mud. But is Tom really the villain of the film? How can we relate this to ideas of the "best life"? And is it still okay to fancy Joseph Gordon-Levitt? Find out the answers to some of these questions, except the last one, because I'm trying not to think about it, by watching the video you are ignoring in order to read this description here. TW: anxiety, depression Kissing Ancaps by Patricia Taxxon https://patriciataxxon.bandcamp.com/a... Rockafella by Patricia Taxxon https://patriciataxxon.bandcamp.com/a... Original music by Edmund Hyde​ Sources: Neustadter, Scott and Weber, Michael H., 2009. (500) Days of Summer. Dune Entertainment. Ayoade, Richard, 2011. Submarine. Warp Film. Beyazit, Eda, 2011. Evaluating Social Justice in Transport: Lessons to be Learned from the Capability Approach. Transport Reviews (31:1), pp. 117 - 134. Sen, Amartya, 1980. Development as Freedom. Oxford, Oxford University Press. Wiseman, Eva, 2009. Is there such a thing as "the one" - and what happens if you lose her? The Guardian. 16 August. Wiseman, Eva, 2023. How Long Should You Wait For Someone You Love To Notice You? British Vogue. 17 November. (500) Days of Summer was produced by Dune Entertainment and distributed by Fox Searchlight Pictures. This video uses (500) Days of Summer clips for the purposes of study, criticism and review which is Fair Dealing under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 (UK). Submarine was produced by Warp Firm, Film4, and the UK Film Council. It was distributed by Optimum Releasing in the United Kingdom and The Weinstein Company in the United States.. This video uses (500) Days of Summer clips for the purposes of study, criticism and review which is Fair Dealing under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 (UK). Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976 (USA), allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favour of fair use.