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I Never Had It Made Figurative Language

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I Never Had It Made Figurative Language
Both the text, “I never had it made” and the PBS review, Jackie Robinson: an inside look, have some similarities and differences. Both the excerpt and video mention how important the world series was to him, but even though that is one similarity, the excerpt talks about of people of such importance to him for example, Rachel, his wife, and Branch Rickey. PBS’ video talks more about Robinson’s private life or his life before baseball. Before he broke the color barrier, Jackie Robinson fought in the military for America. Even though the only war Jackie fought was against racism, Robinson did fight at Camp Hood in Texas. The text is an autobiography unlike the video that is a biography. The video was not just about Jackie, Ken Burns an associates …show more content…
In “I never had it made, most of the figurative language used was metaphors, for example, “eye of a hurricane” means the middle of a hurricanes where the wind isn't as strong. Jackie really means he was safe for a little bit in the middle of the baseball season. Another example of figurative language is in paragraph 4, where Jackie says in the text “money is America’s God” he means that money is as important to Branch Rickey as God. The third metaphor I noticed was in paragraph 11 where Robinson writes, “..no hang ups about my being black.” Talking in 1st person, Jackie describes how some white children didn’t care that Jackie had a different color of skin, they only cared that he was a good and kind player. Unlike the excerpt, the video talks about more than one figurative language type. Ken Burns describes Jackie as a model citizen who not only talked the talk, “he walked the walk”. In addition to the pictures shown in the video, they went with various topics relating to people other than Jackie Robinson. The PBS video showed photographs of the soldiers integrated and not integrated. Then the compared Rosa Parks with Jackie using similes. Apparently, Jackie refused to sit in the black section of the bus almost a decade before Rosa Parks. This helped spark the MLK marches. Not only is figurative language used in the excerpt, it is used in the

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