The Visual Magic Of Comics Rhetorical Analysis

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I enjoyed listening to Scott McCloud’s speech, The visual magic of comics, I especially enjoyed the fact that he shared such a personal story. Scott McCloud shared that his father had faith in him, in his abilities as a cartoonist, even though he had no evidence if Scott was a great cartoonist due to being blind. This is something that McCloud described as blind-faith, not being able to physically see something but have faith that it is working out the way you picture it working out in your head. Comics have their own unique visuals. You have so many things thrown at you, you have the cartoons, the text, the textures, and colors. There is so much going on, but people are still able to focus on the big picture by bringing all these different components together to understand one message, one story.

My favorite talk out of all the ones I watched this week was Danielle Feinberg’s, The magic ingredient that brings Pixar movies to life, the reason behind that is because I was fascinated by how lighting can make such a huge difference in graphics. It feels like magic, being able to control and add lighting to a graphic that is in a computer system, the science behind it is very interesting to me. The images that Feinberg demonstrated in her talk really …show more content…

It makes sense how advertising is a great way for companies to make money, and one of the benefits that come from that is that these companies are able to serve everyone in the world without having to worry about what places have money and what places don’t have as much money. Now, Google has grown tremendously throughout the years so I would like to hear if what Sergey Brin and Larry Page had to say still remains consistent till now. Does Google still value that they are able to provide services around the world without having to worry about people’s social

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