A majority of the population thinks they want the traditional American dream the cliché of a picture-perfect life, dream job, and the beautiful home. What we truly long for is freedom from our government. Pop culture mirrors this through movies and media. Such as themes like the collapse of the government, the rebirth of the American dream, and end of the world scenarios. Pop culture reflects these fears that private and public entities will turn on our society. Many Americans may have viewed the government as a source of comfort. It had provided them with services such as health care, a stable economy, security, and the ability to prosper (Cantor 281). Since the World War two era, we as a society have lost our trust in our government system. …show more content…
America is known as a place you can be anything and anyone. For the most part, this remains true today, but the America dream is undergoing some changes. What once was held at high value is becoming less appealing. We live in a society where it's essential to have a source of income that’s just how life is. Countless of movies and TV shows portray this fantasy which a man or women have everything they need and want, but feel some void in their lives. Characters in these situations often quit their jobs and go travel the world, become full-time parents focusing on their family, or do what they feel is fulfilling. Overall, they are searching for deeper meaning larger than themselves something different from living in same boring routines and life revolved around money (Seger 369). Ordinary Americans cannot live out their true dreams and hope they once held for themselves because often they just don’t pay the bills or offer security. We live cursory through these apocalyptic shows presenting extreme conditions where modern technology doesn’t exist, the government is dissipated and relying on survival skills to survive. Even though faced with many challenges they seem to be happier without all the modern advances and traditional American dream (Cantor 286). We live in a culture that values how much money we earn rather what is truly important to us like family and our true