saying that what they believe to be true is wrong, the person will not hear you out at all and will just tune you out, thinking that they are right and you are just trying to instigate. So when peOple say something untrue, like for instance, “Donald Trump is racistl”, I ask them, “why is he racist,
I didn’t know this, could you show me?”. They would then google, “examples of Donald Trump being racist”, which would most likely take them to a CNN article about how Trump denied rent to black people. I would ask them to read this article to me, and when it gets to the point where it makes that absurd claim, I would ask them to click the source, the source would probably be another liberal media website with no substantial proof or would link to the actual case in which
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Whenever my sister watches pretty little liars I like to complicate it by pointing out how the show manipulates its viewers into thinking it is a good by using examples of sociology. Like when it drags on season after season by always coming up with another plot line to make it last another season when it is just rehashed over and over again. It uses sociological manipulation such as hiring only attractive actors so its audience is captivated by the beauty but made stupid by the actual lines. It then likes to leave cliff hangers on the end of every season so that the audience keeps coming back to see what happens to the people on the show, because at this point the characters on the show are like an actual family to the audience. This is another form of sociological manipulation because the actors and actresses develop a realness to the audience and seeing them die or kiss someone else excites the audience because it is like a close friend just did this thing and it is real to the viewers.
Ever since I started taking this class and when I took sociology, I have been noticing more and more in ads. Marketing teams make ads so they are appealing to the viewers and kind of