Rhetorical Analysis Of Gen Z Dating Trends By Daniel Cox

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Through time dating has looked very different among different age groups and just people in general. Daniel Cox informs readers about this topic using many statistics. His use of real facts leads readers to believe something and remember the importance. While he used stats, he narrowed down to smaller groups of people in order to make numbers seem larger. The point that is getting across to readers is the significant differences between dating throughout age groups. Through this he leans towards the negatives of the different types, not only does he inform but also pursuading readers to understand his thinking.
In the article “Gen Z Dating Trends”, different statistical stand points are shown, pointing towards the patterns of dating …show more content…

The writer’s patterns are shown by the sequence of percentages relating to this specific topic, these percents even go beyond just one instance. They show a variety of reasons as to why Gen Z’s dating preferences and patterns differ from each other. With these specific patterns, “How does the writer appeal to readers?” (Bullock et al. 127). Cox forms these facts within information to shock readers, those readers include the Gen Z population and those older who were not friends with their partners first. He reaches them with the thought that Gen Z is frowned upon for their choices of meeting people when the older generation was able to go out and find their potential partners while getting to know …show more content…

Cox even points out “Dating a friend may reduce concerns about trust, which is a major issue for young people.” (Cox). Implying that this is a major positive to dating someone you are friends with first. Pointing out to readers the unsafety for young women in current time. Helping the reader understand that the writer cares and understands the issue of this already. Even added in a quote saying “60% of young adults believed "most people can't be trusted””. This inclines the reader to feel the writer's thought when they explained this, not only are trust issues very real but also proving the point that being friends with someone first before dating them is a very smart idea. Moving back to online dating Cox brings more information about unsafety when it comes to online dating. “52% of Americans reported encountering what they believed to be a scammer on an online dating platform.” (Cox). Though the writer understands the popularity of the ways some may find dates, he also understands how it can be negative. In a way persuading the reader that online dating is bad by connecting to the reader with the real percents and facts while also explaining the positives that come with it as well, the understanding to why this is