Visual – Lily4Pres

Hoop | Child Car Safety | Ad Council

0:01 : The first frame of the advertisement depicts two young children of dark complexion. The camera seems to be at the children’s eye level, a couple feet in front of them. In the background, we can see what seems to be their house and the front lawn that accompanies the house. The house has a blue siding with white siding around their windows. From what is in the frame, we can see the house is a one story, also has two pillars outside the front door to support an awning. On either side of this awning, the front of the house borders some well developed bushes or tall plants. Directly leading from the front door to the two children is a brick laid pathway. The front lawn is kept very neat, seems to have been mowed recently. The only thing we can see on this lawn is the back half of a wagon on the left side of the frame. At the back of the frame, we can see a bush splitting across their lawn to divide their lawn from their neighbors. Giving off the vibe of a very typical, suburban area and suburban house layout, we can assume that the frame is being shot from the driveway that we cannot see. This would leave the driveway on the right side of the house with the majority of the lawn being on the left. The children standing on the edge of the lawn sharing the driveway.

The child on the left is a female who is holding a basketball in her right hand. She is wearing a scrimmage vest. also known as a pinnie. We can make the assumption that she is either coming home from a basketball practice, about to leave for a basketball practice, or is playing basketball outside. Under her pinnie she has a grey t-shirt with a rainbow we can at the top of the pinnie’s collar. From the size of the basketball in her hand, roughly 3/5 of her torso, we can assume she is somewhere between 6-8 years old. She has a short afro with a headband pushing the hair off her forehead. She is also chewing a piece of gum. Her eyes are fixated on something above her, simultaneously above and behind the positioning of the camera.

The child on the right is a male who is leaning on a bicycle. The boy is a about half his head shorter than what we can assume to be his sister to his left. However, he is slouching over to lean on the bike, so he is presumably a little taller, similar to his sister in height. He’s wearing a plain navy shirt with what looks like grey sweatpants or sweat-shorts of some sort. He has a short buzzcut. His eyes, like his sisters, are fixated on something above and behind the positioning of the camera.

0:06 : When the frame switches, we are enlightened that the two kids were indeed sitting at the edge of the lawn, bordering a concrete driveway. The camera has moved to the front of the driveway, revealing the rest of the house and two other figures in the driveway. These figures are presumably the mother and father of the two children. The mother is standing about 5 feet to the right of the younger brother, the mother is wearing a red and white plaid shirt with a pair of blue jeans. She is also fixated towards the same thing the two children are fixated towards. What they’re focusing on is, presumably the father, standing on top of a three-step stool eye level with a basketball net.

With the rest of the house being shown, we can see the garage which happens to be open. Revealing a grey van alongside a few bikes. With the house being shown, we can also change our previous assumption that it was a one story house, to the fact that it is a two story house.

0:09 : After a few seconds that show an interaction between the father and the other three where he seems to be boasting about the basketball net which he seemingly fixed. The net then collapses. The backboard comes off the hinges and crashes into the ground. The daughter jumps back in fright while her brother grits his teeth in disappointment. The only emotion on the mother’s face happens to be disappointment. The father, still standing atop of his stool is frozen in shock after the hoop he was just boasting about has been destroyed once again. The backboard lands right side up, pretty much staring at the camera at the front of the driveway. The frame stays like this for five whole seconds, for emphasis on the disappointment of what just occurred.

0:16 : The frame changes to a close-up of the daughter who goes on a brief monologue. With the captions on, she compares her father’s love to help her out with her net to his love with his marriage. This lead’s into a new animated frame.

0:23 : This frame is animated. The backdrop is sky blue with a small logo in the center. The logo is of a kids car seat with a seatbelt on. Under this logo, is a URL to NHTSA.gov/TheRightSeat. Through this URL and knowing it a government produced advertisement. The connection between what we just saw and their end-goal seems clear. The father went through much work to fix this basketball net for his daughter and his son. In the end, through the efforts of his love, the net still didn’t suffice for their needs. If the father is willing to put this much effort into making his children happy, he should be able to put what looks like little effort into the correct car seat to protect his children. The government producing this child safety ad makes us believe that they want to keep their children safe. No government would advertise the opposition of child safety. The link is short, giving off the vibe that it will be very simple to go this site and follow the steps there, that will presumably lead to finding children the correct car seat.

0:28 : The last frame of the video brings us back to the view of the driveway with the broken hoop on the ground. The mother who seemed to be overwhelmed with disappointment, walks away back into the house. Although this might be a stretch, this scene could possibly reference his wife leaving him if he failed to protect his children with the correct car seat (build the hoop).

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Open Strong – littlecow24

Every day, millions of people listen to music for around 4.5 hours. Listening to music is a universal thing that you can do during any daily task, such as showering, brushing your teeth, cleaning the dishes, and even more. Something as focus intensive like working on a paper or doing math can be done while listening to music. Music is an essential part of many people’s lives, impacting them in very positive ways. The performance of an individual, in terms of homework, when listening to music will become much higher depending on what kind of music is playing.

Music has lived within people since they were born. When thinking of music, your mind goes to a song that comes on the radio, or going to watch a symphony perform. As a society, we have had music around for a long time, using it as a source of entertainment. In The Role of Music in Everyday Life: Current Directions in the Social Psychology of Music, Peter J. Rentfrow claims, “Music is a crucial element of everyday life. People spend hours listening to it and billions of dollars buying it.” Music has a major influence on people’s daily lives, but the music world is much deeper and more complex when you look into it.

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Open Strong- strawberryfields4

Each day, millions of impressionable children are sent to school by loving parents, whose blind faith in the educational system of our country is betrayed in the health classroom. In this setting, their children are poisoned with the toxic dietary advice spewed upon them by educators who are not sufficiently trained in the field of nutrition. Yet, school districts continue to create curriculum centered on a common goal of weight loss, in a misguided attempt to combat childhood obesity. The gross overgeneralization that a low calorie diet is a healthy and sustainable lifestyle for all is merely fuel for the ever growing epidemic of eating disorders that plague today’s youth. 

Although it may seem counterintuitive to teach children that eating sweets is an important part of a healthy lifestyle, this concept is exactly what needs to be incorporated into health education curricula throughout the country. School districts have a long history of prioritizing the war against obesity. While still relevant, the pendulum has now swung in the other direction. Childhood and adolescent eating disorders are currently at an all time high and deserve the same priority that has been given to childhood obesity for years. School districts must be held accountable for properly creating and implementing instruction in nutrition education that teaches moderation and balanced, nonrestrictive eating habits. 

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Visual Rewrite- kingofcamp

Visual Rhetoric Argument—kingofcamp

*Important Note* Describe what is happening in great detail AND THEN judge WHY the director chose to show these images using PATHOS, LOGOS, and ETHOS

[0:01 Seconds]

            In the first second of the ad, viewers are introduced to a family leaving from the front door of their suburban (what seems to be) neighborhood. As the lens slowly moves outwards, the mother of the assumed family is carrying a young toddler along with a transparent cup containing some type of liquid. The liquid that resides in the cup isn’t specified as viewers are overwhelmed by the chaos of the family. On the mother’s right (the viewer’s left), the father of the assumed family carries an abundance of children’s toys, a stroller, a diaper bag, and a cup himself. Behind the father, and hardest to see, there is another child who looks down below, out of the lens view. Most notable, is the video’s professionalism contrasting the family’s overwhelming presence.  

            The director chooses to use ETHOS in the first frame of the ad. By using ETHOS, viewers are reassured credibility firsthand as the camera work is professional and the state of the video is clean-cut. The use of ETHOS in the first clip is a warm welcome to viewers, as viewers can trust the source this ad comes from—by looking at it’s visual appearance.

[0:02 Seconds]

            As time moves along, so does the lens angle. In the second clip of the ad, the video’s perspective shifts drastically. Now viewers have an apparent view of the family and the chaotic state they are presumably in. This outward perspective reiterates the point that the family is not orderly, like most parents of young children. The external point of view better helps viewers understand what is going on in frame. As the second clip suggests, the family is leaving their home trying to go somewhere. That “somewhere” is not specified, and viewers aren’t sure if that “somewhere” will be specified.

            Once again, the director uses ETHOS to demonstrate the source’s, which in this case is “Ad Council”, credibility. Predominantly, the director uses the family’s character to persuade its audience members. As inferred, the family is a bit disorderly, having young children, but there is a sense of reliability that the family carries. As most parents can probably relate, either now having young children or once having young children, life can get messy having young children, causing chaos. The visual appearance is still clean-cut, convincing viewers that this source is reliable and real.

[0:03-0:04 Seconds]

            Within these short two second clips, viewers are given a close up of the mother and are quickly brought back to an external point of view. This brief close up of the mother causes confusion and curiosity for viewers. Questions such as, “Why is the mother being pinpointed?” and, “Why is this interaction so brief?” naturally arise. As the camera closes in on the mother, viewers can clearly tell that the mother is looking at something out of frame. Again, viewers do not know what this “thing” the mother is looking at which causes curiosity and wonder. After this brief internal perspective, the lens is brought back to an external point of view. Viewers are back to where they started, seeing the family of four leaving their home walking towards the lens. The only difference being, now the father looks to be either scolding one of his children (who walks and is not carried by the mother) or is talking to one of his children. Viewers are not sure what is being said exactly which arises more curiosity.

            These short two-second clips are packed with PATHOS. The use of vivid emotions created by the family also spark emotion radiating from viewers. The clearly expressive family denotes personal curiosity and wonder within viewers. There isn’t much context in these two frames, which the director does purposely. The lack of information, the lack of ethos and logos, forces viewers to solely rely on their intuition—their PATHOS.

[0:05-0:06 Seconds]

            After shooting from a further perspective, the lens focuses on the little girl walking next to her father. The little girl is clearly in her own head, not consciously aware of the world around her, as most kids tend to be. Viewers note the little girl tugging on a blue and green baby toy that rests on the diaper bag the father carries. She keeps tugging on this toy, trying to get what she wants. Not in a selfish way but more innocent and care-free type of way. In the next frame, 0:06, viewers are exposed to a drastic change in the little girl’s attitude, becoming more aggressive in her pulling and tugging. Eventually this aggression leads to the beginning of the father dropping, the stroller that is tucked away underneath his armpit.

            In these frames, the director chooses to use PATHOS once again. The little girl’s attitude is clearly noticeable and cannot be missed (as the close up shows). The use of, once again, vivid emotion glorifies the aggrieved tone of these two seconds.

[0:07 Seconds]

            This short second unpacks a lot of action and detail. Within this second, the father visibly drops the stroller from his grasp. As viewers take that in, the lens immediately moves from the whole family, though the focus suggests viewers should keep eye on the father, to the mother again. Back to the mother, in this personal close up, she looks clearly distressed and to be yelling something to the father. By viewing the mother from such a personal point of view, the audience knows that the mother’s focus is on the father dropping the stroller.

            The director uses PATHOS in this one second clip. Not just the little girl, but the mother and father are highlighted to be full of emotion. Viewers become aware that the use of pathos is pivotal to expressing key messages. This one second clip reiterates the messiness of the family an enhances the idea that the family is struggling to pay attention and to stay orderly.

[0:08-0:10 Seconds]

            These three seconds of the ad show a lot to viewers. In the first second of the selected section, second 0:08, the lens drops back to showcase the entire family’s struggle. In this frame, the little girl who caused the father to drop the stroller looks directly at him. Meanwhile, the father continues to struggle with juggling everything in his hands. Besides him, the mother is highlighted in this frame. Like the father, the mother too struggles with carrying all this added weight (physically not metaphorically though we can argue that point too). The mother is clearly in a state of distress as her improper posture tells the viewers. In second 0:09 the lens is back to a close up of the mother. Her telling face calls attention to her panic. Mouth wide open and eyes not focused, the mother struggles to hold everything. Second 0:10, the close up changes from the mother to the father. In this frame, the father to not only tries to regain control of the stroller but also begins to loose grasp on the diaper bag.

            The director uses PATHOS within these three seconds. These three seconds are heavily packed with emotion which draws attention to the family’s struggle to “keep it together.” Both the parents and the children are expressive in their emotions which persuades viewers to pay attention and consider the outcome of what may happen next.

            *Worth mentioning* Before frame 0:08, the father looked to be holding either a soft pretzel or hot dog bun in his mouth (to further prove the point of being disorderly). After second 0:07 the soft pretzel or hot dog bun is no longer in the father’s mouth. By adding this, viewers can infer that within that second, 0:07-0:08, the father had dropped whatever was in his mouth.  

[0:11-0:13 Seconds]

            Within these three seconds, a lot happens to the family. In the first second, 0:11, the frame changes twice. The first time, the lens captures the whole family from their left side. Within this shot, the mother is bent over, holding her child, struggling to walk normally. Next to her, the father is upright looking directly at his daughter who still tugs at the blue and green baby toy. The little girl’s demeanor is much calmer but there is a hint of selfishness. The next frame, still at second 0:11, the lens focuses on the farther who now is trying to take a bite of something—which looks to be either a soft pretzel or hot dog bun (again). As the father takes a bite, he is struggling to keep everything together.

            The next second of the video, 0:12, the lens changes perspectives yet again. This time, showcasing the entire family as a whole. In the back, the father struggles to hold onto the stroller, yet again. In front of him, is the mother and two children. The little girl who was previously tugging the toy now walks in front of her mother, holding her one hand behind her head. The last second, 0:13, the lens shifts angles and viewpoints. Viewers are now positioned ground level, focusing on the fathers shoes and lower body (specifically his legs). In this frame, viewers are aware of the father, of course, but more specially, in the background, there is a car which is blurred.

            These three seconds are jammed with PATHOS and ETHOS. Beginning with pathos, once again, viewers are drawn to the family’s expressive emotion. Ethos is now also being implied within these three seconds, specially second 0:13. In this frame the viewers are focused on the fathers shoes but just ahead of him, the car is blurred in the background. The subtle hint of the car implies that Ad Council and its reasoning for this specific ad, is a credible source by showcasing the car in the background.

[0:14-0:16 Seconds]

            The pace starts to pick up during the duration of these three seconds. Seconds 0:14-0:15 highlights the little girl, who previously was tugging at the baby toy. The little girl is quite open and expressive, featuring a happy smile and auras of joy. It is during second 0:16 where the lens changes. Viewers are now placed on the side slightly behind the car—capturing the entire family. During this second, the little girl who was just highlighted previously, drops her personal toy.  

            These three seconds are again packed with PATHOS and ETHOS. Pathos because of the little girl’s expressive mood palette, which viewers quickly pick up on and later ethos because the lens includes the car which affirms the source’s credibility.

[0:17-0:20 Seconds]

            Within these four seconds, the lens changes perspectives a total of four times. In the first second, 0:17, the mother, while holding her baby, places her cup on top of the car. The lens changes when it hits second 0:18. This second features the little who and her father. As the father waits for the door to open, the little girl stands and watches the car door, “magically slide open.” In the last two seconds, 0:19-0:20, the perspective changes two times. In the first half, the lens is focused on the mother holding her baby, a personal close up. In the second half, the angle is shifted from outside to inside of the car. The frame highlights the father buckling his child into her car seat.

            These three seconds use ETHOS and LOGOS. Viewers are now well aware of the source’s credibility by showing the car. But how can viewers trust Ad Council’s credibility? By using logos. The father strapping his child into her car seat is a bold argument. The argument being that “we [Ad Council] are going to showcase our credibility by using all these logical devices and by showing this car, now to prove that point, we are going to have the father buckle his child, proving our very point.”

[0:21-0:24 Seconds]

            The four seconds of the video ties up the commercial beautifully. In the first second, 0:21, the lens hyper focuses on the father buckling his child. This again is a bold argument, using logos, logic. The logic here is, “buckle you children to prevent disaster.” Viewers may ask, “and how do you prove your point?” The point being, make sure your children are buckled up in a car because it will prevent disaster. How Ad Council proves their point is genius. By showcasing this “disorderly family” and reading between the lines, this family foreshadows what could happen. It would be “a disaster (or mess)” if the family were to get into an accident and lose their children all because their seatbelts weren’t buckled.

            In seconds 0:22-0:23, the little girl who was buckled in by her father, spills, what seems to be popcorn, everywhere. These two seconds use pathos, causing the viewers to either feel maybe joyful or laugh at the little girl’s mess. In the last second, 0:24, the lens hyper focuses on the mother buckling the baby into the car seat. This second also uses ethos and logos. The same logic, which deserved the father’s actions, can be applied to the mother’s actions.  

Link to video:

Posted in Visual Rewrite | 3 Comments

Visual— kingofcamp

Visual Rhetoric Argument—kingofcamp

*Important Note* Describe what is happening in great detail AND THEN judge WHY the director chose to show these images using PATHOS, LOGOS, and ETHOS

[0:01 Seconds]

            In the first second of the ad, viewers are introduced to a family leaving from the front door of their suburban (what seems to be) neighborhood. As the lens slowly moves outwards, the mother of the assumed family is carrying a young toddler along with a transparent cup containing some type of liquid. The liquid that resides in the cup isn’t specified as viewers are overwhelmed by the chaos of the family. On the mother’s right (the viewer’s left), the father of the assumed family carries an abundance of children’s toys, a stroller, a diaper bag, and a cup himself. Behind the father, and hardest to see, there is another child who looks down below, out of the lens view. Most notable, is the video’s professionalism contrasting the family’s overwhelming presence.  

            The director chooses to use ETHOS in the first frame of the ad. By using ETHOS, viewers are reassured credibility firsthand as the camera work is professional and the state of the video is clean-cut. The use of ETHOS in the first clip is a warm welcome to viewers, as viewers can trust the source this ad comes from—by looking at it’s visual appearance.

[0:02 Seconds]

            As time moves along, so does the lens angle. In the second clip of the ad, the video’s perspective shifts drastically. Now viewers have an apparent view of the family and the chaotic state they are presumably in. This outward perspective reiterates the point that the family is not orderly, like most parents of young children. The external point of view better helps viewers understand what is going on in frame. As the second clip suggests, the family is leaving their home trying to go somewhere. That “somewhere” is not specified, and viewers aren’t sure if that “somewhere” will be specified.

            Once again, the director uses ETHOS to demonstrate the source’s, which in this case is “Ad Council”, credibility. Predominantly, the director uses the family’s character to persuade its audience members. As inferred, the family is a bit disorderly, having young children, but there is a sense of reliability that the family carries. As most parents can probably relate, either now having young children or once having young children, life can get messy having young children, causing chaos. The visual appearance is still clean-cut, convincing viewers that this source is reliable and real.

[0:03-0:04 Seconds]

            Within these short two second clips, viewers are given a close up of the mother and are quickly brought back to an external point of view. This brief close up of the mother causes confusion and curiosity for viewers. Questions such as, “Why is the mother being pinpointed?” and, “Why is this interaction so brief?” naturally arise. As the camera closes in on the mother, viewers can clearly tell that the mother is looking at something out of frame. Again, viewers do not know what this “thing” the mother is looking at which causes curiosity and wonder. After this brief internal perspective, the lens is brought back to an external point of view. Viewers are back to where they started, seeing the family of four leaving their home walking towards the lens. The only difference being, now the father looks to be either scolding one of his children (who walks and is not carried by the mother) or is talking to one of his children. Viewers are not sure what is being said exactly which arises more curiosity.

            These short two-second clips are packed with PATHOS. The use of vivid emotions created by the family also spark emotion radiating from viewers. The clearly expressive family denotes personal curiosity and wonder within viewers. There isn’t much context in these two frames, which the director does purposely. The lack of information, the lack of ethos and logos, forces viewers to solely rely on their intuition—their PATHOS.

[0:05-0:06 Seconds]

            After shooting from a further perspective, the lens focuses on the little girl walking next to her father. The little girl is clearly in her own head, not consciously aware of the world around her, as most kids tend to be. Viewers note the little girl tugging on a blue and green baby toy that rests on the diaper bag the father carries. She keeps tugging on this toy, trying to get what she wants. Not in a selfish way but more innocent and care-free type of way. In the next frame, 0:06, viewers are exposed to a drastic change in the little girl’s attitude, becoming more aggressive in her pulling and tugging. Eventually this aggression leads to the beginning of the father dropping, the stroller that is tucked away underneath his armpit.

            In these frames, the director chooses to use PATHOS once again. The little girl’s attitude is clearly noticeable and cannot be missed (as the close up shows). The use of, once again, vivid emotion glorifies the aggrieved tone of these two seconds.

[0:07 Seconds]

            This short second unpacks a lot of action and detail. Within this second, the father visibly drops the stroller from his grasp. As viewers take that in, the lens immediately moves from the whole family, though the focus suggests viewers should keep eye on the father, to the mother again. Back to the mother, in this personal close up, she looks clearly distressed and to be yelling something to the father. By viewing the mother from such a personal point of view, the audience knows that the mother’s focus is on the father dropping the stroller.

            The director uses PATHOS in this one second clip. Not just the little girl, but the mother and father are highlighted to be full of emotion. Viewers become aware that the use of pathos is pivotal to expressing key messages. This one second clip reiterates the messiness of the family an enhances the idea that the family is struggling to pay attention and to stay orderly.

[0:08-0:10 Seconds]

            These three seconds of the ad show a lot to viewers. In the first second of the selected section, second 0:08, the lens drops back to showcase the entire family’s struggle. In this frame, the little girl who caused the father to drop the stroller looks directly at him. Meanwhile, the father continues to struggle with juggling everything in his hands. Besides him, the mother is highlighted in this frame. Like the father, the mother too struggles with carrying all this added weight (physically not metaphorically though we can argue that point too). The mother is clearly in a state of distress as her improper posture tells the viewers. In second 0:09 the lens is back to a close up of the mother. Her telling face calls attention to her panic. Mouth wide open and eyes not focused, the mother struggles to hold everything. Second 0:10, the close up changes from the mother to the father. In this frame, the father to not only tries to regain control of the stroller but also begins to loose grasp on the diaper bag.

            The director uses PATHOS within these three seconds. These three seconds are heavily packed with emotion which draws attention to the family’s struggle to “keep it together.” Both the parents and the children are expressive in their emotions which persuades viewers to pay attention and consider the outcome of what may happen next.

            *Worth mentioning* Before frame 0:08, the father looked to be holding either a soft pretzel or hot dog bun in his mouth (to further prove the point of being disorderly). After second 0:07 the soft pretzel or hot dog bun is no longer in the father’s mouth. By adding this, viewers can infer that within that second, 0:07-0:08, the father had dropped whatever was in his mouth.  

[0:11-0:13 Seconds]

            Within these three seconds, a lot happens to the family. In the first second, 0:11, the frame changes twice. The first time, the lens captures the whole family from their left side. Within this shot, the mother is bent over, holding her child, struggling to walk normally. Next to her, the father is upright looking directly at his daughter who still tugs at the blue and green baby toy. The little girl’s demeanor is much calmer but there is a hint of selfishness. The next frame, still at second 0:11, the lens focuses on the farther who now is trying to take a bite of something—which looks to be either a soft pretzel or hot dog bun (again). As the father takes a bite, he is struggling to keep everything together.

            The next second of the video, 0:12, the lens changes perspectives yet again. This time, showcasing the entire family as a whole. In the back, the father struggles to hold onto the stroller, yet again. In front of him, is the mother and two children. The little girl who was previously tugging the toy now walks in front of her mother, holding her one hand behind her head. The last second, 0:13, the lens shifts angles and viewpoints. Viewers are now positioned ground level, focusing on the fathers shoes and lower body (specifically his legs). In this frame, viewers are aware of the father, of course, but more specially, in the background, there is a car which is blurred.

            These three seconds are jammed with PATHOS and ETHOS. Beginning with pathos, once again, viewers are drawn to the family’s expressive emotion. Ethos is now also being implied within these three seconds, specially second 0:13. In this frame the viewers are focused on the fathers shoes but just ahead of him, the car is blurred in the background. The subtle hint of the car implies that Ad Council and its reasoning for this specific ad, is a credible source by showcasing the car in the background.

[0:14-0:16 Seconds]

            The pace starts to pick up during the duration of these three seconds. Seconds 0:14-0:15 highlights the little girl, who previously was tugging at the baby toy. The little girl is quite open and expressive, featuring a happy smile and auras of joy. It is during second 0:16 where the lens changes. Viewers are now placed on the side slightly behind the car—capturing the entire family. During this second, the little girl who was just highlighted previously, drops her personal toy.  

            These three seconds are again packed with PATHOS and ETHOS. Pathos because of the little girl’s expressive mood palette, which viewers quickly pick up on and later ethos because the lens includes the car which affirms the source’s credibility.

[0:17-0:20 Seconds]

            Within these four seconds, the lens changes perspectives a total of four times. In the first second, 0:17, the mother, while holding her baby, places her cup on top of the car. The lens changes when it hits second 0:18. This second features the little who and her father. As the father waits for the door to open, the little girl stands and watches the car door, “magically slide open.” In the last two seconds, 0:19-0:20, the perspective changes two times. In the first half, the lens is focused on the mother holding her baby, a personal close up. In the second half, the angle is shifted from outside to inside of the car. The frame highlights the father buckling his child into her car seat.

            These three seconds use ETHOS and LOGOS. Viewers are now well aware of the source’s credibility by showing the car. But how can viewers trust Ad Council’s credibility? By using logos. The father strapping his child into her car seat is a bold argument. The argument being that “we [Ad Council] are going to showcase our credibility by using all these logical devices and by showing this car, now to prove that point, we are going to have the father buckle his child, proving our very point.”

[0:21-0:24 Seconds]

            The four seconds of the video ties up the commercial beautifully. In the first second, 0:21, the lens hyper focuses on the father buckling his child. This again is a bold argument, using logos, logic. The logic here is, “buckle you children to prevent disaster.” Viewers may ask, “and how do you prove your point?” The point being, make sure your children are buckled up in a car because it will prevent disaster. How Ad Council proves their point is genius. By showcasing this “disorderly family” and reading between the lines, this family foreshadows what could happen. It would be “a disaster (or mess)” if the family were to get into an accident and lose their children all because their seatbelts weren’t buckled.

            In seconds 0:22-0:23, the little girl who was buckled in by her father, spills, what seems to be popcorn, everywhere. These two seconds use pathos, causing the viewers to either feel maybe joyful or laugh at the little girl’s mess. In the last second, 0:24, the lens hyper focuses on the mother buckling the baby into the car seat. This second also uses ethos and logos. The same logic, which deserved the father’s actions, can be applied to the mother’s actions.  

Link to video:

Posted in Visual Rhetoric | Leave a comment

visual rewrite-ZeekdaFreak

Within the first second we are shown milk and being poured into a glass bowl of cereal, it portrays an average morning that starts with breakfast. In the second second we see a man in a robe looking into the milk carton because it seems to be empty. Simultaneously, hey girl, who is most likely’s daughter, is dancing around kitchen. In the third second the screen flashes to a woman doing laundry, but in second five we seen that it is also the father doing laundry. His son walks up to him with a concerned look draped over his face. In second six and seven the father realizes that he accidentally died the family’s clothes pink. In seconds eight through ten it is shown that the family is making dew and making the best out of a slightly embarrassing situation, but they are happy to do this as they are all bearing smiles while they buckle up their seat belts.

This makes me and for that the commercial is portraying little inconveniences as an entirely trivial because the safety of the family is imperative. This is shown in the car we’re all family members are happy buckling up because as long as their families okay everything else is too. This is also shown when the father experiences a minor problem with the amount of milk left in the house. Him seeing his daughter so happy made that inconvenience trivial because he knew his daughter’s safety and happiness was well fortified, thus making him happier than if he had milk in the first place.

Child Care Safety l Hustle Spanish :15

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visual-ZeekdaFreak

Within the first second we are shown milk and being poured into a glass bowl of cereal, it portrays an average morning that starts with breakfast. In the second second we see a man in a robe looking into the milk carton because it seems to be empty. Simultaneously, hey girl, who is most likely’s daughter, is dancing around kitchen. In the third second the screen flashes to a woman doing laundry, but in second five we seen that it is also the father doing laundry. His son walks up to him with a concerned look draped over his face. In second six and seven the father realizes that he accidentally died the family’s clothes pink. In seconds eight through ten it is shown that the family is making dew and making the best out of a slightly embarrassing situation, but they are happy to do this as they are all bearing smiles while they buckle up their seat belts.

This makes me and for that the commercial is portraying little inconveniences as an entirely trivial because the safety of the family is imperative. This is shown in the car we’re all family members are happy buckling up because as long as their families okay everything else is too. This is also shown when the father experiences a minor problem with the amount of milk left in the house. Him seeing his daughter so happy made that inconvenience trivial because he knew his daughter’s safety and happiness was well fortified, thus making him happier than if he had milk in the first place.

Child Care Safety l Hustle Spanish :15

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Open Strong- Frogs02

Obesity kills 2.8 million people each year. In this case, death is not a decision, it is determined by a family’s bloodline and genetics. Obesity is often attributed to poor dietary habits and a lack of physical activity, but the truth behind it is more complicated. Humans don’t always have the choice of whether or not they are obese. It can be genetic. Obesity is a medical condition in which excess body fat has accumulated to an extent that it may have a negative effect on health. The result of this is the complex processes by which the body converts food into energy—it can also be influenced by chemicals in the environment (over which we have limited control) and genetics (over which we have no control). More than ⅓ of U.S. adults have obesity. Overweight and obesity kill more people than underweight.

Obesity is death. Whether or not the life choices each person has made, can always lead to obesity and it WILL kill. Obesity is hardly a choice. It is a medical condition in which excess body fats have accumulated to an extent that it may have a negative effect on health. There are absolutely no positive effects on obesity. Evidence on obesity is showing the benefits of physical activity for breast and colon cancers. The growing epidemic of obesity provides a challenge to clinical practice and the implementation of guidelines for the management of weight. Physical activity, body size, and metabolic efficiency are related to total energy intake. It is difficult to assess the independent effect of energy intake on cancer risk. Obesity can be a choice for only some. The choices don’t last forever, but the negative health effects do. Obesity kills.

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Safer Saws – SpookyGhost

  1. “home woodworker invented an ingenious device that stops a table saw blade within 4/1000ths of a second of contact with human flesh”. Claims that the device does indeed work and stops the blade almost instantly upon contact with flesh. This is an evaluative claim because it evaluates the effectiveness of this device, and is being supported by the inventor. The claim is reasonable but hard to visually prove without risk of injury. In order for companies to actually buy into the claim there should be should be some sort of safe test preformed with results rather than just a statement that it works.
  2. “to date, none of his thousands of customers has suffered an amputation or serious injury from blade contact”. This claims that Gass’s device has worked for the 1000s of people that bought into it after he put it on the marketplace. At first this sounds great but of the 1000s of people that bought into it, how many of them actually got themselves into a situation in which the device saved them? That statistic would be far more helpful then the given statistic. This is a Quantitative claim because it states a number of people that bought the product and how that number of people did not get injured.
  3. “it is similar to seat belts or air bags in its effectiveness at eliminating serious bodily harm”. This devices effectiveness to safe people is matched up with the effectiveness of seat belts and airbags. This analogy claim compares the device to seat belts and airbags in effectiveness, but shows no proof that it actually is as effective. The reader still lacks any proof to this claim.
  4. “injuries are negative in themselves; they cause downtime; they cause increases in worker compensation insurance premiums; they harm the shops reputation” This is a factual claim. It lists the effects an injury in the workplace and why it would be crucial for companies to get their hands on this device to make safer saws. This claim is effective because no matter what the numbers say about the device it makes an undeniably claim that any extra safety in the workplace would help.
  5. “Self-employed craftsmen are more likely to consider any attempt to regulate saw safety as needless government intervention, and saw manufacturers object that the increased cost to produce safer saws, plus the royalty they’ll have to pay to Steve Gass, will double the cost of cheap hobbyist saws that sell in the $100-200” This is a casual claim as it predicts statistics about the price and who would consider buying it needless of government intervention. This claim effectively places a scope for who would buy it but fails to state why this group would buy it.
  6. “Meanwhile, a miter saw user recently won a large settlement from sawmaker Bosch by arguing that the manufacturer had failed to employ available safety technology that would have prevented his injury. Whatever the merits of his case, sawmakers now fear this first case will multiply out of control. They hope alternatives like better and more acceptable (less likely to be disabled or discarded by users) safety guards will satisfy the Consumer Product Safety Commission’s warnings that regulation is being considered.” This is an evaluative claim because of the evaluation of the situation at hand, and the effects it will have on the future. This claim is effective because not only does it give the reader an example to work with, it makes a clear argument on why the example will effect decision making when choosing whether or not to buy into a safer saw.
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Open Strong-lokiofasgard

Sunscreen thrives through its natural deception. The manufactures will claim that it protects your skin from the sun but fail to acknowledge the effect it has on your skin. Sunscreen does not allow your skin to consume the benefits from the sun nor does it allow your skin to fend off the sun on its own. This will make your skin weak and dependant to sunscreen while in the sun even for a short time. Your skin will be stronger and healthier if it is able to absorb the beneficial rays of the sun and learn to fight off the harmful rays on its own.

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