The In Crowd

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    who wins over the crowd. Let’s compare and contrast both sides of the two speeches. The strategy Logos, Ethos, Pathos, and Karos was used in both speeches and each speech used it differently. Finally, the outcomes of both speeches to the crowd are very different from each other. Each speech was very thought out and read greatly. However, Antony came in as the winner of the crowd. The reason why he did was because he moved the crowd emotionally as Brutus just told the crowd why they did…

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    Jay Z Role Model

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    backstage watching the crowd scream and cheer for Jay Z decided that I could no longer handle watching the crowd of concert goers stare in awe of him. I needed to be front and center stage to experience what they were seeing and to witness one of the notable greatest rappers of this generation perform live. I inched my way through the crowd to now be a spectator. I found the perfect spot, but little did I realize it was right under the crane that was projecting the image of the crowd on the big…

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    used rhetorical questions and pathos to persuade the crowd into joining him defeat Brutus and Cassius. In William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, Mark Antony was given the chance to make a…

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    Antony is a master of rhetoric, so it comes to no surprise that he was able to convince the crowd that they must kill Brutus and the rest of Caesar´s killers. To sway the crowd to his side Antony used several forms of rhetoric, and he was able to slip into their minds and convince them of what he wanted. Right off the bat Antony approached the crowd respectfully and fairly, demonstrating perfect ethos, and then he went on to try and jab at the people with emotional strategies, attempting to draw…

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    It only takes a handful of sarcasm to make a crowd go mad. In the play “Julius Caesar” by William Shakespeare, Marc Antony does just that. In the play Brutus and the conspirators have killed Caesar. At first the group does not want Caesar’s best friend Antony to speak at his funeral because they are afraid he will trash talk them, but Brutus allows him to with a few rules. At Caesar’s funeral Antony gives a speech that persuades the crowd to join his side instead of Brutus’. He does it in a very…

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    the story Julius Caesar(the main character) is stabbed to death by his "friends". Cassius convinces Brutus that Caesar must die, putting the story in motion. The resolution of the plot is when Anthony and Brutus deliver there speeches in front of a crowd of plebeians to explain the tragic death. These speeches relate to the conclusion because they both come together in explaining the main concept of the play. Brutus's speech was started off very calm which wasn't right because he was talking to…

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    manipulates the crowd. He does this a little bit differently than everyone else. He basically uses reverse psychology or a rhetorical question to get the desired answer from the crowd. He doesn’t ever tell the crowd what they should think. Instead, he presents his opinion in a way that the crowd has to decide for themselves, but little do they know it’s what Antony wants all along. Then, Antony uses Pathos to appeal to the crowds feelings. At one point, he even makes the crowd weep, and this…

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    job is to engage the crowd with fun, madcap antics, such as shooting off team t-shirts into the crowd from an air cannon, wanders through the crowd monkeying around with the fan’s along with their children. The tradition however, comes at the end of the sixth inning, another more baffling mascot emerges, and walks out toward second base. The crowd of approximately 4,000 fans goes wild, as this mascot makes its way to second base to meet up with a child picked from the crowd. This mascot, is the…

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    on the target. The crowd--enormously full of young adults--roars. The crowd has become quiet--only the sounds of their breaths are heard. O’Connor pushes the bow back for release, takes a few seconds to position correctly towards the target, and releases. O’Connor did not want only to hit the target, but his main concern was the bull’s eye. The crowd’s eyes were glued to the arrow as it flew past them like a cheetah catching its prey. After the arrow hit the target, the crowd exploded like a…

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    situation and that they were only acting in self-defense. In reality, the opposite is true. So let us review the events of that fateful day. A crowd gathered to protest the unfair Townshend acts that, as you know, have placed taxes on common goods like tea, paper, glass, lead, and paints. A British sentry called for backup dealing with the crowd. At this point, the crowd started throwing snowballs in protest and one young man had become -in the eyes of the Red Coats - a little too rowdy. A…

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