Many people would say a circus does not represent professional because of the way the carnies look and act. Circus performers wear clown make-up, make jokes, and do dangerous stunts. Even though carnies do not fit the stereotype, which is having a businesslike attire and a serious attitude, they are still considered professional. The term professional describes the standards, education, and training that prepare people for their role. The Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey: Built to Amaze commercial showcases professionalism through skill, knowledge, training, and customer service. Professionals put customer service first; they make a customer feel like they had a good experience. The speaker of the commercial makes several statements that represent customer service. The speaker states the circus was engineered for excitement and custom built for family fun. The commercial shows a clip of a father and two daughters. One of the daughters has and amazed look on her face; while the other daughter is laughing. It also shows a scene of a group of children dancing with their hands in the air. The speaker also states that parking is free and they offer snacks and vendors. This shows they think about their customers and put them first. …show more content…
One clip shows a man dressed in a black and red outfit with sticks, one in each hand. The man is pointing the sticks at ten tigers that are standing on their hind legs. The tigers are waiting for commands from the man with the sticks. Another clip showed three women, each on an elephant. The women are dressed in a blue and pink dress with their hair in a bun. They appear to be balancing on the elephant’s back, with one of their legs in the air. The carnies in these clips show they have the knowledge to handle wild animals and to train them to execute stunts
Attention: The commercial grabs the viewer’s attention by having a baby as one of the actors. First the viewer might have thought that the man was asking his boss for a day off. In reality, the man was asking his son for a day off.
Many people enjoy the new car smell just as much as the actual new car. In today’s society there is a wide variety of companies and different brands to choose from. Companies have to advertise their products in a way that would stand out to the intended audience. The commercial for the 2017 Lexus LC adequately persuades its target audience, which is both male and female teenagers and adults, to take an interest in their product.
In 2013 Dodge Ram Trucks made a commitment to raise one million dollars for the Future Farmers of America. Dodge deemed 2013 to be “the year of the farmer” (Christian posts). During the fourth quarter of Super Bowl forty-seven Dodge aired a two minute and forty-two second tribute to the American farmer. The commercial “Farmer” was a slideshow that depicted American agricultural life. A speech given by Paul Harvey was used to narrate the tribute. As the commercial begins Paul Harvey’s name is printed onto a picture of a solitary cow standing in a frozen field. Then a picture of an old church is displayed and Harvey’s first words are: "And on the 8th day God looked down on His planned paradise and said, 'I need a caretaker!' So, God made a farmer”
The commercial takes place at a Dairy Queen restaurant with a father and son having the DQ Honey BBQ Glazed Chicken Strip. Father states he used to love going to sports bars for Honey BBQ Chicken. I feel that the commercial is attempting to appeal to the football fan because BB Chicken is one of the favorite foods eaten while watching the game or tailgating. Although the company is using the commercial to invite everyone to purchase their product, I believe they are particularly targeting the sports fan by showing it on the sports network. After all their slogan is, “DQ Fan Food not fast food.”
Persuasion is found all around us there is always someone trying to persuade you into doing something. For the Nabisco’s Oreo Commerical they are trying to persuade you to buy their cookies. To get their viewers to buy their product they use rhetorical principles. Within the Oreo commercial they use a question which do you like better, the cookie or the cream. The 2013 Super Bowl Oreo Commerical is effective for all ages of viewers.
It has been proven that smoking is bad for one’s health and affects your life in a bad way. Through this commercial it is represented well in that aspect of the effects of smoking. The commercial, “In the Way” was inspired by the fact that people smoke though it is bad for you. It is about how a group of teenagers are in a band though their lead drummer keeps on leaving to take a smoke but the cigarette was seen as a small man, who is a bully to the drummer forcing him to go outside multiple times to take a smoke and stops the whole band from being able to practice. Throughout this commercial there are deeper meanings from different aspects that are coming from the video like the audience, purpose, content, creator’s
This commercial has an upbeat feel to it while simultaneously advertising its product effectively. The commercial tries to cover a wide range of audiences. It tries on emotional levels to connect with multiple individual and does a very good job in portraying examples in their situation. This commercial definitely advertises its product effectively. It was timed well, and it used quality examples of rhetorical analysis throughout the entire
In this generation businesses use commercial to persuade different types of audiences to buy their product or to persuade them to help a certain caused. If you analyze commercial you can see how certain things play a major role in the success of a commercial. The ad I decide to analyze as an example is the commercial snickers used during the Super Bowl in 2010;”Betty White”-Snickers. This commercials starts off with guys playing a game of football with an elderly women know as Betty White. As Betty White tries to play football she is tackled to the ground. Her teammates refer to her as Mike when they come up to her to ask why she has been “playing like Betty White all day”. This helps inform the audience that Betty White is not actually playing but instead represent another teammate. As the guys keep arguing Mikes girlfriend calls her over and tells her to eat a snicker. Betty White takes the first bite and then suddenly a man appears in her place ready to finish the game. At the end of the commercial the statement "You're not you when you're hungry" is shown followed by the Snickers bar logo. What this commercial is trying to show is that hunger changes a person, and satisfying this hunger can change you back to your normal self. They use different types
Creators want their commercials, tv shows, movies or articles to draw the audience in. They strive to get your attention using ethos, pathos and logos. A Nike commercial with LeBron James as the star did just that. The commercial about following through with your dreams and becoming big out of nowhere is spine chilling and inspiring.
The commercial emphasizes an altruistic parent-child relationship throughout. It shows all of the incredible ways a father sees his daughter grow through her first years of life and the impact she has on him. Using this relationship coupled with the nostalgia-inducing music played throughout the commercial provides the audience with a feeling of saudade that shapes the advertisement.
Advertisements are all over the place. Whether they are on TV, radio, or in a magazine, there is no way that you can escape them. They all have their target audience who they have specifically designed the ad for. And of course they are selling their product. This is a multi billion dollar industry and the advertiser’s study all the ways that they can attract the person’s attention. One way that is used the most and is in some ways very controversial is use of sex to sell products. For me to analyze this advertisement I used the rhetorical triangle, as well as ethos, pathos, and logos.
This is a compare and contrast rhetorical analysis paper focusing on a print billboard advertisement and television commercial. The billboard advertisement is centered on a smoking death count, sponsored by several heart research associations. In addition, the television Super Bowl commercial illustrates how irresistible Doritos are, set in an ultrasound room with a couple and their unborn child. The following paragraphs will go in depth to interpret the pathos, logos, and ethos of both the billboard and the television advertisements.
In June of 1904, as reported in the New York Times: Come on out here, Hattie, and give us a tune, It was “Billy” Snyder, keeper of the elephants in the Zoological Gardens, Central Park, New York, who spoke nonchalantly and in his most ordinary tone of voice, while twenty children craned their necks wondrously across the railing. It was “Hattie” the champion trick elephant of the world and the great pet of the children of New York City. Youngsters surprisingly viewed these otherwise threatening, menacing creatures as friends. It would seem that children developed such a close relationship with the animals that each beast was given their own individual personality and characteristics.
...y they did this was by using hyperbole to such a point so as to make something stylish appear ludicrously funny. The repeated exposures to the service throughout the commercial also aids in selling the service. The time slot and channel for this commercial was also strategically planned so as to get the maximum exposure to the intended audience. There was no attempt to hide the blatant advertising. This was clearly meant to be seen as a commercial. However, the ethics were a bit on the shady side so as to make the deal seem better than it really was. The small print of the details makes it appear as though the company is trying to hide the truth and is shown only because it is mandatory. The rhetoric of this commercial is in short stating this commercial is meant to sell a service to young people through a comedic commercial while hiding the negative ethics.
Companies have rhetoric in their advertisements. The goal is to persuade a watcher or listener into believing that their brand of a certain product is the best. This in turn will make people want to buy the product. When it comes to advertising for a product, the majority of people see it as a concept that is both simple and harmless. As Chidester points out, through the eyes of popular culture as religion, the product associated with the advertisement is considered to be a fetishized object.