Missrepresentation Essay

610 Words3 Pages

Prompt #1. Evoking pathos: The MissRepresentation film is filled with attempts of appealing to public emotions, using violent, offensive and sexual derogatory images for women to appeal to the emotions. From the beginning and all over the entire film the speaker mentions her unborn offspring and her fears for her child growing up in a world that is so discriminating and derogatory to women. She refers to her pregnancy and realizing that her baby would be a girl that the reason to start looking how to make a transformation in the way of how society and the media perceive women. The film is a call to those who have a daughter or want to have a daughter. The aim is that people want to make changes, in the same way it did the narrator, for the future of girls in the United States. Another attempt to appeal to the emotions is a call to …show more content…

The first characteristic is the claim, which is that large impact of media in our society is harmful to women. The trailer defines the power of the media, recognizing that people absorb more from it than any other source of information. The media is the principal force that outlines our society. The second aspect is reason, reason in this case is that the media have an important role in providing information on what is happening in society. The media outlining the rules and create distortion in the differences between what they are told that the world should be and how it really is. The media outlined our society, national discourse, politics, and especially the formation of lives and emotions of children. The next element is evidence. Billions of people use the Internet daily. The current generation of young people are very familiar with cell phones and Facebook. Read and see what the media presents to them, this translates to believe what they are told and in turn affects their behavior. The film uses a lot of statistics, and images as facts to support their