Preview

A Rhetorical Analysis Of Print Advertisements

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
532 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
A Rhetorical Analysis Of Print Advertisements
Shona de Souza November 9, 2006

Composition 101 Professor Fisichelli

Print advertisements are used to persuade consumers to buy a specific product. There are several different strategies used to persuade the consumer audience. An effective and eye catching way to get the attention of consumers is to use a celebrity. Audiences may idolize and look up to celebrities, and it is more likely for them to pay attention to an advertisement with a celebrity in it rather than an ordinary person who is not well known. "Got Milk" advertisements are found all over. They are found on bill boards, television commercials, and magazines. This "got milk" advertisement was found in Essence magazine; a magazine which is mostly read by women in the black community. This first thing you see in this ad is the sexy lean machine and professional tennis player Serena Williams. She has high status in the black community as well as others, and what makes her appealing is her tight looking strong body. This "got milk" advertisement promotes the buying and drinking of low fat and/or fat free milk. The medium sized white bold
…show more content…
It makes the white bold letters stand out to catch your attention. The color of the letter also represents the color of milk. Serena Williams' legs reflect of a whitish glare, and this can be used to infer that she has strong bones from drinking milk. The net draped around her left shoulder, and the tennis racket in her left hand tells the sport she plays. This is helps the viewer understand what it was that she was winning titles in. In the right hand of Serena Williams is the milk glass in the shape of an hour glass. The shape of the drinking glass represents and helps emphasize Serena Williams' desirable hour glass figure. The advertisement may suggest that you too (the consumer) can also get this hour glass figure by the drinking of low fat and/or fat free

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Many people do not like the idea that celebrities are in advertisements. Sue Jozui in her passage, argues that having celebs in advertisements is misleading and insults intelligence of the audience. She supports her argument by giving examples, like questioning why they think that someone will buy a suv just because some attractive famous person is pretending to drive it to get paid. The authors purpose is to persuade her audience to boycott this kind of advertising so people are not mislead anymore. The author establishes a kind of sarcastic tone for her audience, the people watching these advertisements. Jozi's argument is agreeable because most celebrities do not give an honest opinion and some advertisements may mislead people.…

    • 437 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Sue Jozui in her passage, about how advertisements use celebrities that are famous and known worldwide to talk about how the items they are representing are so well even though they might not even use it. The author supports her argument by first stating that the audience is supposed to take the celebrities word for how the product functions. But if you think of it they might just be doing it for the money and extra fame they'll get. she continues by stating that people should trust store brand items as much as they trust the big name products. The authors purpose is to tell consumers of products not to trash items because celebrities are not endorsing the product so that consumers would understand.The author Sue Jozui an annoyed tone for the…

    • 200 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ford displayed an advertisement for their future plans with eye grabbing scenery, as well as filling the audiences heart with joy and sympathy. This is not another boring vehicle commercial but has a connection with all of the viewers. 2017 Ford Go Further successfully convinces the american public to trust the vision of the Ford company, and their plans to become more mobile in the future.…

    • 639 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout the commercial the ASPCA logo is placed on the screen in bright orange. Research shows that “orange is the combination of the top two attention-getting colors… It is generally an underused color, yet if used in an advertisement and other competitors in the area doesn’t use the color in their advertisements, the advertisement that did use the color orange could experience higher readability… orange is a motivating color” (“Best”). The creator wanted the logo to grab the audience’s attention throughout the…

    • 519 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The image above was created by the Bangalore traffic police in India. The main purpose for the creation of this advertisement is to advocate against talking on the phone and driving, it uses many rhetorical devices including Aristotle's three appeals - ethos, pathos, and logos - that he believed made a convincing argument. The picture is directed to any person who drives and talks on the phone and shows how dangerous the act really is. The photographer Mallikarjun Katakol and the graphic designer Vinci Raj demonstrate the danger by manipulating their audience’s emotion by having blood splatter out of the phone and placing the blame on the spouse who called the person who was driving. You can see how the illustrator is placing the blame on the spouse from the only words on the picture reading “Don’t talk while he drives”. Where most talking and driving commercials place the blame on the driver,…

    • 515 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “Killer Fries”, a printed visual by Greg Slater, was commissioned for the American Heart Association in 2011. This advertisement attempts to get the attention of Americans by associating French fries, or fast food in general, with death that can be caused by bullets from a gun. With vibrant colors, familiar items, and a strong message, this American Heart Association advertisement is able to catch the attention of its viewers.…

    • 633 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Two letters talking about the same thing, have different views on advertising in schools. One says it is good the other says it is bad, but how does the tone of both letters effect the persuation?…

    • 236 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    I would say that this ad uses some rhetorical appeals effectively, but lacks some as well. For example, it uses very strong pathos. Having the child looking into an empty fridge that looks very run down and not well kept. There is not a single food item in it. Also, the setting of the picture looks like it is not a well-kept area. The walls are very dirty and water stained, there is trash laying in front a dirty barrel, etc. The little boy in this picture also looks very malnourished. He has no shoes on, and little clothing, just a tank top and some shorts. I believe the author of this article chose this picture on purpose because it is going to emotionally effect mothers, those who love children, those with families, etc. This is ad will force…

    • 342 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    325 million gallons; the average amount of beer consumed every year for America’s classic sporting event, the Super Bowl. When it comes to advertisements, beer companies pay between 1-500 million dollars per year to showcase their product. The bulk investment for beer companies advertisements go toward events with high numbers of spectators. Given the correlation of advertisement investment and high grossing sale revenue during the Super Bowl, one can argue the advertisements as effective. If not so, then why invest so much? Dos Equis, Heineken, and Budweiser utilize camera orientation, props, and models/celebrities as a means to persuade consumers to purchase their merchandise. Targeting men, these advertisements play on a male’s desires and…

    • 1267 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Compare and Contrast

    • 801 Words
    • 4 Pages

    In the magazine Woman’s Day they put an ad that is family oriented. There is a mother and daughter and they are holding a happy meal and looking happy. The daughter has dark hair and it’s in pigtails with a red ponytail. She is wearing a strip shirt with a red trim with blue jeans, with a necklace that’s yellow and red and a couple bracelets that are red. The mother has dark hair, it’s curly. She is wearing a white shirt that has red flowers and a green cardigan with blue jeans and silver earrings. There is a white background with black text that tells you what buying a Happy Meal from McDonalds will do and what it goes to. The ad looks naturally lit, not to bright and not to dark. Underneath the text is two pictures, one of a mother and daughter and the daughter is sick and the other one is of the Ronald McDonald house.…

    • 801 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Advertising is everywhere. It’s on television, the internet, radio, magazines, posters, billboards… every place we go. Everything is advertising. Advertising has shot up and dominated the market, becoming one of the most successful and ever-growing industries in the broad career field spectrum. I find that one of the most interesting aspects of advertising is that you can advertise anything. Anything. The possibilities are limitless. The PeTA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) ad that I selected to analyze proves that advertisements can open a new perspective to consumers, and aren’t just for selling a product or service, but a lifestyle.…

    • 902 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A pregnant mother walks into frame and is placing sharp pins into an infant’s changing pad, as the scene changes she sharpens knives to hang from the infants mobile. The scene changes a few more times showing the mothers actions such as pouring poison into a baby bottle, inserting a child’s fork into an electrical socket, and laying a snake in the infant’s stroller. The scene changes one more time, the mother is sitting on a couch caringly stroking her stomach as she brings a cigarette to her mouth and then sits an ash tray on top of her stomach. This advertisement leaves viewers with the phrase “A mother can be her baby’s worst enemy” and the words of the Cancer Society of Finland explaining that ten thousand babies are at risk because of smoking during pregnancy as well to encourage mothers to quit smoking. This advertisement is trying to convey the dangers of smoking with showing “equivalences” of the same dangers of other hazards. Using a rhetorical analysis of this advertisement will create a further understanding of the argument that is being presented, the application of the canons of rhetoric, and its appeals regarding ethos, pathos, logos, and kairos.…

    • 911 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    "Got Milk" Free Speech

    • 1321 Words
    • 6 Pages

    These milk advertisements are intended to promote the health benefits that milk provides to consumers. The 2013 Super Bowl commercial featured Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson and his search to find milk. The commercial begins with him looking in the fridge and finding an empty container of milk. He then hurries out of his apartment in search of the milkman and encounters several people that are in desperate need of his assistance. He ignores all pleas for help including a little girl’s cat stuck in a tree, a group robbing a bank, a circus that has broken out on the streets and even an alien invasion. It is not until he gets back to his apartment, serves his little girls’ breakfast, and has a glass of milk for himself that he leaves to start saving the city.…

    • 1321 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    People see all of the good he does and think “I wish I could be like him”. He is a very admiral being and someone who could definitely be a role model. When people take a glance at this advertisement they will think, “Superman drinks milk, so maybe I should so that I can be strong like him,” or something to that effect. The author tries to persuade the audience to drink milk by depicting someone who is well respected in the ad because people tend to be persuaded easier when there is a “celebrity” involved. Superman is a trustworthy person. He saves people’s lives and fights crime and evil. The author tries to also persuade the audience by honesty. People know superman’s character and they know what type of person he is and they know that he wouldn’t lie, so they will believe in most anything that he…

    • 839 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In conclusion, the “got milk?” campaign is a very persuasive work of advertisement. It uses Logos, Pathos, and Ethos in its persuasion very effectively to target its specific viewing audience. Although it does commit a few logical fallacies, it attempts to base itself more realistically than the majority of ads. The ad would do its job of persuading me to drink milk, or at least give up the habit of drinking sugary drinks, in order to be healthier and leaner. If anything, this ad persuades us to reevaluate our nutrition in order to be better human…

    • 827 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays