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Blondes 'to die out in 200 years' BBC News- World Edition…
Blondes 'to die out in 200 years' BBC News- World Edition September 27th, 2002
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Playing devils advocate
With pop culture stigma and ideology blondes may be seen as more of “head turners” in their attractiveness. Giving rise to such sayings a “blonde bombshells”. This would lend one to think that due to the social attractiveness to blondes, their ability to find partners, reproduce, and give give birth to blonde children with he possibility of the gene would remain as it has over the years.
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What is my opinion about the issue, what caused me to form that opinion?
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I don't foresee blondes actually dying out in the future. I was curious about the recessive gene issue presented in the article and did a little research and from what I read, that is not likely to happen to a gene just because it is recessive
How could using a balance in research and reporting tactics have made a difference in the outcome of what was reported
There could have been better scientific evidence preseneted to support the argument made in the title
Reporter could have presented through showing statistics in recessive genes in humans and the decline of those throughout the years (even though from what I have read this is not what happens with recessive genes).
The reporter could have also used a different headline that un-natural blondes are killing off the popularity of natural blondes, instead of having such a misleading headline.
The tactic the reporter used with such a stark and bold statement in the headline, then almost proving their headline argument wrong later on in the article; was more of a manipulation, I felt, to gain reader’s attention.
The reporter could have presented statistical and scientific evidence showing how recessive genes, even though they are recessive, remain in human genetics over the years