Rhetorical Analysis: Dear Fat People

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Being a Good Listener. As a good audience… Being concentrated. Listening carefully. Responding properly. Evaluating objectively.
Advertisements

PRESENTATIONS: WHAT MAKES FOR A SUCCESSFUL PRESENTATION? PRESENTATIONS: WHAT MAKES FOR A SUCCESSFUL PRESENTATION? PRESENTED BY: ILDIKO HORVATH For reference.
Today’s goals Evaluate the final class media project
Media Literacy. Purpose To gain an understanding for the role that media plays in our lives To be able to analyze various forms of media text To make.
Short Story Unit A. The theme in a story is its underlying message, or 'big idea.' what critical belief about life is the author trying to convey in the.
Effective Public Speaking Chapter # 1 The Academic Study of Public Speaking.
What is rhetoric? What you need to know for AP Language.
STEPS FOR PASSING THE AP RHETORICAL ESSAY 4 Components 4 Components 1) What is the author’s purpose? What does the author hope to achieve? 1) What is the.
Day 16 Objectives SWBATD analysis by identifying an author’s implicit and stated assumptions about a subject, based upon evidence in the selection. Language:
Chapter 2: Thinking and Reading Critically ENG 113: Composition I.
Reading At Home Yearsley Grove Primary School
Elements of Non Fiction
AUTHOR’S pURPOSE and Satire.
The rhetorical triangle
By Santiago Anllo and Agustín Rizzolo
Rhetorical Analysis.
Reading Literature Welcome to this presentation about the top 5 big ideas your child will learn in the first quarter of fifth grade. Top 5 Big Ideas Your.
Why am I making this video? Who is going to watch it?
CHAPTER 7 REFLECTING IN COMMUNICATION
CRITICAL ANALYSIS Purpose of a critical review The critical review is a writing task that asks you to summarise and evaluate a text. The critical review.
SAT Notes: Please get out your notebook and turn to the writing section. We are taking notes today.
Film openings: research.
Media Literacy ENG2D Fairbloom.
What Journalistic Writers Should Know About Social Media
Questions 2 and 3 Identification and Analysis
RHETORIC.
Posters Analysis.
What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?
Media Images How does media reinforce stereotypes, hypersexualization, hypermasculinity and gender norms? Antigonish Women’s Resource Centre and Sexual.
Introduction to Advertising
An Introduction to Rhetorical Appeals
National 5 essay writing
Rhetoric = The Art of Persuasion
A Single Story jonathan peel jls 2016 Sunday, 11 November 2018.
A Single Story jonathan peel jls 2016 Sunday, 11 November 2018.
How to navigate the world of argument & persuasion.
Entrepreneurial Journalism
Rhetoric = The Art of Persuasion
Recap of Aristotle So Far…
Watch the following clip from the film “Independence Day”, as you watch jot down notes on the following questions… Speaker- Who is the speaker? Subject-What.
Introducing the Ideas One of Six Traits:
Rhetoric = The Art of Persuasion
Specimen Test Review 1/22/2017.
Introduction to Play Analysis
Communication.
Language of Composition
Let’s Write a Memoir.
Media Images How does media reinforce stereotypes, hypersexualization, hypermasculinity and gender norms? Antigonish Women’s Resource Centre and Sexual.
Neo-Aristotelian Criticism
Appeals, Rhetorical Devices, Style, Diction, Syntax, and persuasion
Give 5 facts about having a positive attitude
The main idea or underlying meaning of a literary work
SOAPSTone.
Rhetoric.
The Rhetorical Situation and Appeals
Overview of Group Presentations & Counterarguments
Component 1 Critical Reflection
RHETORIC.
Rhetorical Strategies: Ethos, Logos, and Pathos
Chapter 4: Writing a Rhetorical Analysis
They Say, I Say Chapter 1 and 12
How writers use language to influence the reader
WARM-UP – P. 27 in your notebook
Media Literacy.
Rhetorical Strategies
How to Write a Character Analysis
‘The Telegram’ Critical essay May 2011.
9th Literature EOC Review
Writing Types and Strategies
Focused skill week 1 task 2 Work 2
Presentation transcript:

Rhetorical Analysis: Dear Fat People ENG 202 // Taylor Lutz

In “Dear Fat People,” one clear aim of the video, as the name suggests, is to send a particular message about people who are overweight. The creator Nichole Arbour explicitly states in her video that she hopes her “tough love” will help to encourage “fat people” to make better choices. Although the video’s suggested aim is to help overweight people, rhetorically, this video plays on many negative devices in order to power this message. Aside from this “surface” aim, there is also the aim of Nichole Arbour herself. The sensitivity of the subject, coupled with the manner in which the video’s humor discusses this subject, seems to be a recipe for controversy. Therefore, another aim of “Dear Fat People” was likely exposure for the creator herself. The goal for Nichole may have been to stir people up enough and create a conversation around herself in a way that would further her career as an entertainer. AIM

One prominent rhetorical move in “Dear Fat People” is at the very beginning of the video. First, Nichole introduces the topic that she is talking about and even recognizes that she is probably going to get “hate” for it. However, before she goes into her discussion, she makes a correlation between fat people and zombies that deviates into a short talk about The Walking Dead. Although this deviation might seem natural and conversational, the link to a pop culture reference attempts to break the tension surrounding this topic and initially introduce the type of humor that will be imparted throughout the entire video. Rhetorical Devices

As the video continues, Nichole frequently “disclaims” her discussion by attempting to align herself with certain discriminated groups. This move is important in that Nichole attempts to create a sense of commonality and compassion with certain groups while simultaneously ostracizing another. Furthermore, this move both served to strengthen and weaken Nichole’s ethos appeal. The editing technique used in “Dear Fat People” seems to serve a purpose as well. Not only does it separate the multiple personas that Nichole uses in her video, it also further attempts to break the tension surrounding this topic; the fact that the camera angle keeps changing – along with other variables – serves to create a stronger sense of disconnect between the speaker, the audience, and the issue. The editing takes away some level of sincerity, creating a space where the sensitivity of the topic is not consistent with the manner in which it is being presented. Rhetorical Devices

Nichole uses her personal experience at an airport in order to present an “idea” of the “fat person.” Although she discusses a specific instance and a specific set of people in her video, the picture she paints of them only further abstracts the way in which “fat people” are talked about in the video. Without first abstracting them, Nichole would have been unable to talk so negatively about “fat people.” This is one of the techniques implored to elicit an emotional response. The way that Nichole talks about “fat people” is designed in such a way that produces a strong emotional appeal, albeit negative. Rhetorical Devices

As the title of the video would suggest, the intended audience of this video is “fat people.” Additionally, Nichole Arbor disclaims in her video that she is only speaking to certain types of overweight people - the ones that she feels deserve this type of shaming. However, the actual audience of this video was much broader, reaching over 10 million views on YouTube. The influx of responses from this video were not only from people who were overweight, but a variety of people speaking from a variety of different vantage points. Many responses came from people who identified on some level with the classifier, “fat.” Furthermore, the responses to Nichole’s video were nearly all aimed not necessarily at the message, but rather the way in which the message was delivered. Audience

Shawn Halpin’s response video to “Dear Fat People,” characterizes a specific type of response that Nichole’s video elicited. In his video, Shawn reacts and “analyzes” the video in its entirety; he goes through line by line and responds to what Nichole says. Shawn Halpin’s video is interesting because it, in many ways, uses an ironically similar type of degrading humor as that in “Dear Fat People,” which in that case is largely geared at discrediting Arbour as a comedian and criticizing her as a person. Additionally, this video has been citied as a way to see “Dear Fat People” in full, without giving Nichole Arbour’s YouTube channel more views and possibly furthering the profits and exposure she’s received from posting this video. Responses Another popular type of response to Nichole’s video is represented in videos like that from boogie2988, which has over 1.5 million views. This video is primarily engaged not in judging Arbour’s character, but rather responding to the message and the method with which it was delivered. Although every response video is unique, many of the responses to “Dear Fat People” seemed to be elicited by a kind of offense to Nichole's video that was rooted in an individual story or experience.

After “Dear Fat People,” was posted, the video quickly received a large amount of exposure. Nichole Arbor was criticized for her “humor,” and the video ultimately received bad publicity. The video, which has received over ten million views since it was uploaded five months ago, now has both the comments section and the ‘Like’ and ‘Dislike’ buttons disabled. However, if Nichole’s real aim for this video was to get exposure – then rhetorically it functioned extremely effectively. For Nichole, this video put her on the map and made her “relevant” – a goal for most entertainers. Additionally, there is also the financial gain that goes along with this type of viral video. That being said, Nichole’s exposure as a comedian might not have benefited from this upload; the video did not appear to “sell” her comedy in a way that resonated with her audience. Instead, Nichole’s video resulted in a massive response on social media, specifically YouTube, with the reactions, responses and parodies that followed her upload. Furthermore, “Dear Fat People” prompted an enormous conversation surrounding body positivity and fat shaming. Affect