Advertisements show up everywhere in our lives. Whether you’re on the computer, watching TV, driving down the road, or reading propaganda you are observing advertisements. They are constantly altering our opinions and they do this with three simple tactics. Ethos, logos, and pathos, people have been using the rhetoric system from 1,000 years ago, literally because the rhetoric approach was created by Aristotle. It has with stood the test of time and is still the best tactic to convince people to do something. That advertising and marketing uses rhetoric and is pretty successful. I will be analyzing Ram’s “God made a Farmer” commercial and explain how each aspect of rhetoric was used and what was so effective about this commercial.
Ram’s commercial about why God made a farmer first aired on super bowl Sunday 2013. The commercial started off by looking over a field and the narrator starts by says “and on the eighth day god looked down on his planned paradise and said ‘I need a caretaker’ so God made a farmer”. The commercial carries on from there showing only pictures of farm land, animals, farm equipment, farmers and families. The farmers are of all colors, ages, and sexes. While the pictures are rolling the narrator is still talking in the back ground, explaining all the reasons God created a farmer. He needed someone, “willing to sit up all night with a newborn baby colt, watch it die, dry his eyes and say ‘maybe next year’… will finish a 40 hour week by noon Tuesday and then paining from tractor back, put in another 72 hours… somebody who’d bale a family together… sign and reply with smiling eyes when his son say that he wants to spend his life doing what dad does”. Then at the end shows the Ram’s truck logo and also the FFA ...
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...k most people would want to buy things American made versus overseas goods if they could. This same argument could also support the ethos in this ad. Ethos is what makes the ad creditable. The fact that Ram trucks is the once that is promoting the god made a farmer commercial is pretty creditable. They are owned by Dodge and like I said an American own and made business. People typically think good thoughts when those to brands come to mind. That’s why this commercial uses emotional fallacies and pathos to its adventive.
So yes Ram did a great job with the “God Made a Farmer” commercial. They cover the rhetoric aspects of advertisements very thro and also your fallacies to support the argument even more. The emotional appeal is what really sold the commercial and the fact that it was aired on super bowl Sunday when pretty much the whole nation was watching TV.
One of my favorite commercials to watch is the Chick-Fil-A commercials. Their commercials are very ironic but at the same time interesting and entertaining. The main purpose of their commercial is to persuade an audience to go and buy their product or maybe convince an audience to come back again and buy more of their product. They are able to influence their audience through the use of rhetorical elements. Rhetorical elements include: the rhetor, discourse, audience, and rhetorical triangle. Their commercials don’t necessarily target one particular audience, they incorporate different ideas into their commercial to target different audiences such as families, and football fans.
As the ad begins it shows a beautiful farm with stables and pastures. Then it goes to the farmer looked through a barred window wearing a Budweiser hat. Then you see what he is looking at, a baby foal sitting in the hay after being born. The foal is slightly skittish when the farmer approaches him. You can see the trust start to form as the foal allows the farmer to hold and pet him as he is bottle fed. You can see the bond start to build. It goes ahead in time and the foal has ground and lets the farmer walk him around,
through today's ads which eschew rational arguments for symbols and imagery playing directly to our
Advertisers all have one goal in common, that is an ad that is catching to a consumer’s attention. In today’s fast paced society there are so many selling products and charities. As I exam the advertisement for the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty for Animals (ASPCA), I will show how they use the pathos, ethos, and logos – also known as Aristotle’s Theory of Persuasion.
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 described in Scholes composition is a “well-known Budweiser commercial which tells…the life story of a black man pursuing a career as a baseball umpire” (Scholes, p. 620). Scholes feels that this commercial elegantly proves his theory that video texts can hold a viewer captive and control his thought pattern through the use of visual effects, narrativity, and of course, cultural reinforcement. The commercial itself tells the story of a young black man, working as an umpire in the minor baseball leagues, risen from the provinces, having overcome great racial tension throughout his life, who “makes it” as he is accepted by a white manager after making a close call during a game.
In 2010 the ASPCA (The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals) came out with a commercial that would shock the advertisement industry. The effectiveness of this commercial is proven, simply by watching the reactions of the commercial’s viewers. For those who have never seen the video it has a very sad and morose tone to it. The commercial begins with showing pictures and videos of suffering animals with the song “Angel” playing in the background. While this is going on the narrator of the commercial (Sarah McLachlen) is softly talking about the suffering and abuse that these unfortunate animals go through. Through many different rhetorical techniques the viewers are many times brought to tears after watching this commercial. When thinking of pieces of Rhetoric that demonstrates the use of pathos, the first thing I think of is this commercial. The sole purpose of this commercial is to emotionally compromise the audience until eventually the viewers will donate money to the cause. This video is so affective at completing this goal because of the way it connects to the viewers, and the way it uses many different methods to attack the viewer’s emotions.
Other commercials, according to Solomon, thrive on fitting in. The Chevrolet commercials have a slogan that makes one feel to be American, one must by American. Chevrolet's slogan is 'The Heartbeat of America.'; Car commercials also have targeted markets also. For a truck commercial, they will show a truck getting all dirty and going through an obstacle. This is targeted towards men because most men find these things appealing. For a luxury car commercial the mood or the commercial is nice and pleasant, the car is on a country road (representing one driving to there country home). These cars were once targeted towards upper class people, but now they are targeted towards everyone according to Solomon. A commercial strives on the ever so enduring drive for Americans to have better things and climb up the social status ladder. Marketers know this, so they place normal, average, everyday looking people in their commercials to let middle class people know that they can have the car, too.
Most advertisements as the ones I mentioned above use at least two or more appeals to persuade their intended audience to buy the product donate money, go see a movie, go to a restaurant, or switch brands. The use of logos seems to be the most effective way to promote something, by giving the facts and logical reasoning people are more likely to want what is being offered. Commercials have a short amount of time to engage the audience in their product. The use of rhetorical appeal helps to keep the audience’s attention to the details of the commercial and to make them think about what is being shown or heard. The presentation of the commercial needs to leave a memory with the audience to make them want to learn more about the product or try it
In everyday life we are bombarded with advertisements, projects, and commercials from companies trying to sell their products. Many of these ads use rhetorical devices to “convey meaning [,] or persuade” their audiences (Purdue OWL) . Projects, such as the Dove Self-Esteem Project uses native advertising in their commercials, which refers to a brand or product being simultaneously and indirectly promoted. In this essay, I will analyze the rhetorical devices, such as ethos, pathos, logos, and kairos, as well as the fallacies corresponding to each device, that the Dove Company uses in their self-esteem project .
Advertisements across the globe are becoming more and more violent. In a recent PETA ad, it depicts a naked woman with a meat diagram on her, as seen on pigs and cows. In this ad it reads “ALL ANIMALS have the same parts. Have a heart. Go vegetarian.” This ad is degrading towards a woman because the advertisement is directly comparing her to an animal. PETA is taking their advertisements to a whole new level in the wrong direction. In society people do not consider themselves animals. In fact, being called an animal is an insult to many people. For PETA to comment that this woman is an ...
The commercial takes place during the British Revolutionary War, setting the audience back in time, an allusion into the past. It makes the audience feel like we worked hard to get where we are today in this country, and that without the brave soldiers fighting hard against the redcoats, we would be nowhere. The redcoats flee in fear when George Washington and others drive Dodge vehicles straight towards them. Consequently, leaving the audience in awe. Dodge uses George Washington as the main character in their commercial for more more reasons that you can count. For one, they use it because he was the first President of the United States of America, so in fact he is considerably credible. He also embodies true patriotism; a proud general, man, and leader of this amazing country. The commercial depicts that when George Washington drives courageous through the meadows charging towards the redcoats, he has no fear because he has the roar of the Dodge engine to scare them away. In doing this, the audience is able to connect with George Washington’s power and strength to make them feel proud to be an American, driving an American Dodge Vehicle. Throughout the commercial, ironically a calm violin is being played while all the fighting and cars are viciously trudging
Along with capital letters flowing throughout the passage, we notice some strong choices in diction. When adding “GOD BLESS AMERICA.” the viewers have something they can fully relate to in the ad. They connect with the ad now because they are able to understand that it is not a foreign country problem. This is a right here in our country, our cities, and our neighborhoods problem.
The first thoughts one would have when hearing about a Monsanto ad is food. Monsanto is a huge corporation that deals heavily with making GMO products. Looking at this ad though, one notices that the food has next to no real purpose in the ad. In fact, it is blurred out, with only the people engaged in conversation being in focus. “Advertising often sells a great deal more than products. It sells values, images, and concepts of love and sexuality, romance, success, and, perhaps most important, normalcy” (Kilbourne 101). This is precisely what Monsanto is doing, completely disregarding their actual product and selling the values of
The ad product I am going to talk about is for Nike in the snow season, the famous athletic clothes sport brand. It’s obvious that Nike had been one of the most famous sport clothes brand all over the world and that’s because of many reasons such as, their cloth quality, the variety of clothes styles and the attractive colors and phrases they use on the T-shirts. And Nike of course consider as one of the oldest sport cloth brands it was founded in January 25, 1964. They reached the highest sales earnings in 2012 which was almost (2.223 billion US$) and that wasn’t strange for a huge successful clothes company like Nike.