College commencement speeches are usually a glistening review of the college from an alumni who accredits their success to their school education but Steve Jobs addresses the graduates of Stanford college slightly differently. He shared his successes of his career but did not attribute them to his college equation but almost the opposite. He is known as one of the largest inventors in the tech industry and in the personal computer era and he shares how achieved this massive amount of success. Throughout the duration of his speech freshly graduated college students unpack his personal story and decipher how it applies to them in this stage of their life. While the members in the audience had just graduated college, Jobs had just released the …show more content…
In the first story, Jobs explains how taking an expected side-step in his journey led him to find his true passion in life and rediscover his joy for learning. He captions his first story as “connecting the dots”. Jobs uses a tactic of providing a hook that draws the listener in while also lying about what is to come throughout the speech. The first story's hook is that Jobs dropped out of college after only 6 months. He begins his first story at the true beginning, his birth. He explains that his biological mother “felt very strongly that I should be adopted by college graduates” but this plan quickly takes a turn when he becomes adopted by a couple who had neither graduated from college or high school. This is the first of many unexpected changes that occur throughout his future. He explains that he eventually completed his mother's goal of attending college but once he arrived at Reed College he “couldn’t see the value in it”. He uses pathos by connecting with the audience's emotions knowing …show more content…
This story revolves around a singular quote that Jobs had decided to live by, “If today were the last day of my life, would I want to do what I am about to do today?” He uses logos or logic to explain that death is the fate that everyone will eventually face and advises the students in the audience to make sure that they feel passionate about what they are doing each and every day. He compares death to an important tool to help make big decisions in life, in his scenario this encounter with death was when he got diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. He was given a 3 to 6 month countdown on life and he realized that he needed to begin cherishing every moment. He uses ethos to play on students' emotions and make them realize that they never know what day could be their last and that they should truly pursue their dreams. He soon learns that he has been gifted a rare second chance at life when his cancer is cured with a life-saving surgery. Although he is free from the timer on his time left he continues to hold with him the lessons he learned from his near death experience. He brings the story to a close by repeating his mantra of his speech “follow your heart and intuition”, he advises the audience to follow their own path in life and not get trapped “living with the results of other people’s thinking”. He leaves the audience with a
Pursuit of Happiness Alex Smith, a professional football player for the NFL, gave a speech to a graduating class at the University of Utah. With this speech I’m going to take a rhetorical analysis look at it. I’ll take a deeper look into what Smith said, and why he said it that way. The graduation speech was meant to be inspirational for the graduates and others attending the ceremony. It was also intended to congratulate them on their accomplishments.
America’s political system has thrived for 230 years, but in one of the most polarizing elections in the nation’s history many Americans are disgusted with both candidates. Nevertheless, a candidate must be elected, so like all election cycles, public figures take to the campaign trail presenting their arguments for who should lead the nation come January. Peter Thiel represents one such figure. He is a member of the Silicon Valley elite – a captain of industry funding America’s future. At the Republican National Convention, Thiel presents a persuasive speech arguing a vote for Donald Trump is a vote for positive change.
Introduction Hook: I never knew that one day, one idea could have such a big impact. That one thing could change the history, set up the rest of the country to follow suit with this specific topic, and things that need a change in general. Background: Over 50 years ago, on March 7, 1965, now known as bloody Sunday, segregation was still prevalent. At the time it was not allowed for blacks to vote at the time.
Steven Zheng Mrs.Korey 3/20/23 English 2 “Jason Reynold delivers Lesley University Commencement Address,” Rhetorical Analysis Numerous individuals each year graduate from college, destined for the real world as they take flight. In the highly creative and skillfully crafted, “Jason Reynolds delivers Lesley University Commencement Address”, given at the commencement of the graduates of Lesley University on May 19th 2018, Jason Reynolds delivers a poignant and deeply meaningful message of taking on the world. Jason Reynolds establishes credibility and meaningfully appeals emotionally to his audience through his masterful use of similes, metaphor, alliteration, repetition, symbolism, humor, and charisma to help them take flight in their lives.
The Steve Jobs commencement speech was a speech that was given by the former Apple Inc. CEO to Stanford University during the 114th commencement on 12th June 2005. The speech Steve Jobs gave Stanford University is a very effective speech, because of his use of rhetorical devices. Jobs especially use his background and childhood to play upon his rhetorical approach. In Steve Jobs, he tells several stories about love, detection, death, loss. The main part of the Speech is how Steve Jobs encourages the students to pursue their dreams, and do what makes them happy, even if it all doesn’t go after the plan.
Most commencement speeches are often boring, drawn out, and they seem similar, but this isn’t true about all of them. In his humorous and incredibly inspiring commencement speech given to Lesley University in 2018, Jason Reynolds captivates and teaches his audience through the use of storytelling and comedy to deliver his life advice. In Jason Reynolds commencement speech, he uses humor and other rhetorical devices in order to appeal to the audience’s emotions. For example, in the first sentence of his speech Reynolds makes a comment on how much of a challenge it was trying to fit all of his hair into the graduation cap.
In 2005 Steve Jobs was asked to give a commencement speech to the graduating students at Stanford university. Steve Jobs, a tech millionaire, got his start as the co-founder of Apple, one of the most influential tech companies around today. Him and his friend, Steve Wozniak, started the company out of their garage, little did they know that it would turn into the multi international company we know today, relied on by millions. Due to all of his experience and success at overcoming hardships, Steve Jobs was the perfect person to ask when Stanford was looking for their speaker in 2005. His speech is full of timeless, relatable stories and experiences that support the life advice he is giving to these students.
Sophia Wiercinski Mrs. Korey English II Advanced Honors 21 March 2023 In his cleverly crafted and humorously analytic speech given to Lesley University graduates in the 2019 commencement address, Jason Reynolds emotionally coaxes and carefully vocalizes his audience through the use of credibility, cliches, and humor, to advocate that sometimes the right thing to do can have consequences. Jason's strong rhetorical devices and his way of emotionally persuading his audience allow him to develop a captivating commencement speech. Jason Reynolds exhibits himself to be a strong speaker and starts his commencement speech with the use of establishing credibility. He states, “The first thing I would like to say is, thank you.
In her 2013 “Bowie State University Commencement Speech”, found in They Say/I Say, Michelle Obama, the current First Lady of the United States, uses several rhetorical strategies, including historical references and appeals to emotion and history, in order to drive her central message of the importance of education and the responsibly of her audience to deliver the legacy of education to the next generation. Throughout the piece, Obama relays a historical analysis of the progress made in education for African Americans, including an exploration of the toil and sacrifice made over the decades so that that progress could come to pass. She concludes by calling the graduating students to action to carry on the legacy of educational excellence that
Great Storytelling Lu Jia Delivered on a campus in California to an audience of a few thousands, yet it ended up inspiring tens of millions from both U.S. and worldwide; worshiped by Silicon Valley as the ultimate career talk, yet it embodied many aspects of life - chance, love, loss, and ultimately death. Short but smart, targeted yet universal, poignant and timeless – thus is Steve Jobs’ 2005 commencement address at Stanford. Some attribute its success to Jobs’ personal influence and charisma – they do add significant weight to the speech, undeniably. But close inspections from the lenses of rhetorical analysis allow us to appreciate this speech from a different perspective – in particular, how the speech was crafted into a fitting response to its rhetorical situation and how Jobs managed to strike a chord with his audience through the masterful use of logos, pathos and ethos, whether planned or not.
Mitch would soon start visiting his favorite professor, Morrie, on Tuesdays after learning about the declining of his health. During the visits, Mitch learns about significant moments and how his focus on the surrounding distractions interrupts his values. While conversating one Tuesday, Morrie tells Mitch, “Once you learn how to die, then you learn how to live” (qtd. in Albom 82). These aphorisms show how morals presents themselves when someone is looking death in the face.
Throughout his speech, Jobs’ main goal was to connect with the audience on different levels and build trust so they believe him when he says if a person works hard and always follow their dreams, they will be successful. He establishes the connection through his style of writing by using ethos, pathos, diction, and repetition. Steve Jobs needed to prove to the audience that he was a credible person to talk about following dreams, and working hard. He used ethos to demonstrate how he is
Name: Ngan Thu Bui SID#: 0860066 Class: Introduction to Argumentation (COMS-40) SPEECH ANALYSIS Every four years, American media and its people pay close attention to every speech within the U.S. presidential campaign. Last year, Hilary Clinton from Democratic and Donald Trump from Republican were two final candidates running for the U.S. presidency. The former First Lady, Michelle Obama showed her support for the Democratic presidential candidate by giving an emotional speech on Clinton’s campaign rally.
Rhetorical Analysis of Leader Language In my point of view, I found Bill Gates as the most promising leader throughout the globe. Bill Gates was the youngest, wealthiest CEO of all time, but this success was not only achieved by luck. His inspiring charming personality and effective communication skills made him the real “BILL GATES”. One of his talks on the teacher’s feedback is much of an importance.
In the speech “Steve Jobs Commencement Address to Stanford University, Class of 2005” , Apple CEO Steve Jobs provides his audience with personal experiences and the rough periods he went through in his early years before founding apple that helped him succeed. With the use of his stories Jobs creates a character that prevails through obstacles and manages to achieve his goals, which inspires his audience to look up to him and show that failure is sometimes necessary to succeed. At the beginning of his speech, Steve Jobs begins describing his life with a series of stories that helped him reach his success, this helps Jobs create ethos because his audience will understand the hardships he went through to be where he is today, instead of just thinking of Jobs as the founder of Apple and not really knowing about the struggles he had to go through.