Have you ever been at a small or a big refugee camp? It is filled with many different people in need, every person having their own reason or problems for being there. A lot of people in refugee camps are children that do not have food, education or any resources. This looks exactly as one cover of a magazine of a young girl that I found in a clinic. This advertisement that is being used as a cover of a magazine shows a girl wearing an old red headscarf that has holes in it. She has very big green eyes that are looking straight at the camera. The girl’s eyes look grittiness and at the same time sad. She also has a very tan, sunburn skin. The purpose of this advertisement is to show people around the world how the children in Afghanistan are …show more content…
She is wearing a red, old headscarf that looks like sort of a dress. The scarf she is wearing seems very old because it has small holes in it and also through those small holes seems to be another green dress that she is wearing. This kind of scarf is exactly like many Muslims wears to cover their head and their faces from their exception of their eyes. At the same time, in this imagine she is only showing her face, and the rest of her arms, legs are covered with the dress. The young girl’s skin looks very tan as if she is being exposed in the sun for long hours and for years. In addition to that, she is showing a little be of her hair and seems as if she has not washed neither her hair nor face. Also, the girl’s eyes are big and are a combination of green and brown. She looks around the age of ten or eleven years old. Her facial expressions are both sad and brave; especially her eyes seem very daring and bitter. In the back of the picture, there is a green landscape without pictures or decoration, is just a dark green color. In the picture, there are not people just the girl showing half of her body from the waist up. In the picture, the main focus seems to capture her face and her eyes because in the
The Cover Girl ad from March 2011 includes a picture of Queen Latifah in a beige like colored background with her green eye shadow on. Queen Latifah has small brown eyes with very long and luscious black eye lashes. She has a big and beautiful smile with shiny white and straight teeth. Queen Latifah also has a nice pair of small, gold, round dangling earrings in her ears. The word “Cover Girl” is displayed in big and bold green letters across her forehead, all to help improve her the way she looks. Queen Latifah is written in small green letters underneath in the right-hand corner right underneath the word “Cover Girl”. This picture of her is from her head to her shoulders, just enough for the viewers to focus on Cover Girl’s product, which is the makeup. You cannot really tell what type of shirt she is wearing in this photo but the little piece of frill coming off of her shoulder matches pretty well with the whole color scheme of the ad. She also has her hair pulled back into a long pony tail to also help show off their product even more. This advertisement by Cover Girl effectively uses logos, ethos, and pathos to convince the viewers to buy Cover Girl products.
With this impression in mind, the theme for the picture above is religion; it shows “Women protesting forced hijab days after the Iranian Revolution, 1979” (online). All the demonstrations made by women, because of this exact same reason, show this theme; moreover, it is a big religious issue. Religious themes are, also, shown when Marjane tells her dad that the Shah was chosen by God, which is false; and, especially, with the Islamic regime. In fact, from the Deliverers of Divine Justice walking around, to school being
The Compassion advertisement in Home Life magazine uses their demographics, layout, and text to gain an overall pathos effect. The advertisement is for Compassion, a charitable organization that allows people to sponsor poverty stricken children all over the world. By sponsor they mean funding for their education, food, recreation, health care, and church opportunities. This advertisement relies solely on pathos, but it attempts to gain ethos by the title of the organization and its Christian background. That gains enough credibility for Compassion to be successful because they are pushing for an emotional effect not credibility.
Accompanying this ad is a photo of a small male child in a seated position with his hands over his eyes. The boy is wearing a pinstriped shirt and socks in gray and black on a landing with a gray bannister and a light shining down on him. Inclusion of this picture with the words placed on the ad is attempting to gain a greater emotional response from the audience. The background of a brighter white light shining down symbolizes the need to shed light on the situation. The child seating on a landing on the stairwell could signal to the audience that we have reached a tipping point and need to act to improve the situation and not fall further down the steps.
Advertising is everywhere, it’s online, billboards, magazines, and the most popular television. Different advertising are mostly targeting towards a certain gender, age, or interests. Covergirl advertising is mostly targeted at women, and is also seen in every place you can think of. You most likely could go up to any girl and ask her-what is the Covergirl slogan? Easy, Breezy, Beautiful, Covergirl. Covergirl has done a great job at advertising there make-up products. Covergirl has branched out to every type of advertising there is. They have commercials, bill boards, online ads, there in many magazines, and they are also being promoted on the poplar show America’s Next Top
The rhetorical strategies incorporated into the advertisement played an enormous role in its effectiveness. The author, UNICEF, has a large influence due to its global recognition as an organization that works for children in over 190 countries. For this particular audience, UNICEF is targeting adults, which leads to the purpose. UNICEF targets adults so that the adults will be more likely to adopt a child in need. The phrase that the advertisement stated is, “Every child needs a family”; therefore, the
“Speechless” by Shirin Neshat is a photograph of a woman in a hijab with a gun by the side of her face. This close-up photograph also has arabic calligraphy laid over it. The gun in this photo is so close to the woman’s ear that it resembles an earing. The viewer, at first glance, could easily see an earing on this woman instead of a gun. Shirin Neshat was born in 1957 in Iran. She lived in Iran until she was 17 in 1974. In this time of Iran’s history, the veil offered great symbolism. At some points it was the symbol of oppression, at others it was the symbol of nationalism and strength. Because Shirin Neshat left Iran during the revolution, the veil was a confusing topic for
In an advertisement presented by “Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America” two little girls are sitting down on the floor in the middle of a library. One is holding a rifle and the other is holding a copy of “The Little Red Ridding Hood”, with a caption reading, “One child is holding something thats been banned in America to protect them”. Their intended audience is
The little girl’s dress gives the texture of lightness and seems like airy fabric that would be thin and translucent. The time in this piece is very accurate of the late 1700’s and when viewing it, the time seems classic. The emphasis of this piece is mainly the mother and the daughter, however when looking at them you are drawn into looking at their realistic eyes. The eyes seem like the focal point which draws the viewer in to the picture.
Granting United States citizenship to children of illegal aliens is one problem that needs to be solved. Many pregnant illegal immigrant women wait to cross into the United States until they are ready to deliver their child (Roleff). They are seeking to gain citizenship for their child so that the mother also will gain the right to immigrate to this country. Chain migration is another concern for immigration laws. This is when married sons or daughters, or married sisters or brothers' permits the spouses' extended families to immigrate to the country. So, for
The advertisement is aimed on parents. Generally, when an advertiser chooses teenager as his subject, it is wether the product is made for that age category or their parents to concern of. In Mirrors, even though the advertisement only shows images of the young girls, but it is for their parents to decide if a man who has a habit of humiliating women is a good president for their daughters who might be not good-looking, like
Skewed provision of healthcare services to common populations is not a new issue in the world. in the developed world, social stratification of populations goes beyond social borders; deep into service provision in hospitals. Probably unethical, provision of inequitable services to undeserved populations has craved its way deep into the healthcare industry. According to Gresenz, Derose, and Ringel (2011), the undeserving populations detail the group of people that face numerous challenges than the general population in accessing needed and timely services in the
This paper will analyze the Candie’s Foundation advertisement found in the Seventeen magazine. The advertisement is directed to the teenage audience, and its message is to avoid teenage pregnancy. The Candie’s Foundations is a non-profit organization that prevents teenage pregnancy by providing information and making campaigns. The advertisement will be examined by the use of logos, pathos, and ethos. These three different appeals will help to describe and understand each part placed in the advertisement. This document will describe the purpose of the advertisers and how they influence on audience decisions. This paper will describe how authors feel of the advertisement, and what is their opinion. It will explore the reasons of why those
In this frame, these children is playing in a clean and tranquil park. Then, the frame changed, we can see a little lovely girl stand besides a building, the building is big and tall, and it is very clean and white. We can see this little girl is wearing a clean and pretty blue dress, and she is holding a small white flower, more important is that this girl is smiling to the small flower. In this frame, the girl is now living in a peaceful condition, however, she shows us a face with smile, and it means she is living in a safe condition. This girl looks very innocent and cute, it is very quiet in this scene, there is no smoke and fire, patients or adults in this scene. We can only clearly see the little girl. In this scene, the video shows us a little lovely girl, and she looks very lovely, this scene will make audiences who watch this video want to protect the little girl.
The most conspicuous part of the advertisement is the image of the woman in front of a black background so that only her face is visible. This in itself is important because it is automatically making her face the focus of the advertisement and not her body. Unlike most advertisements in which a woman’s body is exploited to sell products to men, the UN Women advertisement draws attention to her eyes, therefore making her your equal, since you have to make eye contact with her instead of looking anywhere else on her body. She is completely expressionless, looking at the viewer with a blank stare, a totally blank slate onto which viewer’s reflect their own views. Even more important, the woman pictured is a Muslim woman, as displayed by her hijab. The hijab is widely seen in western society as a form of oppression by men, to make women subservient to them, and by juxtaposing an ad for equality with the