Speaker- Rich Hill, die hard Pats fan, lover of new shirt
Occasion- At the first Patriots game, Roger Goodell, who attended the first game every year, did not attend this years, so the fans at Gillette Stadium decided to start chanting "Where is Roger?", thus creating the shirt.
Audience- People who wanted to know the reason behind the chanting, or people interested in buying the t-shirt.
Purpose- To show the reason behind the making of the t-shirt and a link to buy it.
Subject- An insight on the chant from the fans and why Goodell was expecting this to happen.
Tone- Hill uses an intriguing tone, as he hooks you into the background of the shirt and the chant, and then somewhat convinces you to buy it.
Hill establishes his ethos by giving the link to buy the shirt at the end of the article. This shows that the shirt is legit, and not just a random design that someone made. He also establishes his pathos by asking the audience about Goodell's decision, making them take a side in the "argument." He wants you to lean towards the Patriots side, so he uses persuasive syntax and diction to do that.
Occasion- At the first Patriots game, Roger Goodell, who attended the first game every year, did not attend this years, so the fans at Gillette Stadium decided to start chanting "Where is Roger?", thus creating the shirt.
Audience- People who wanted to know the reason behind the chanting, or people interested in buying the t-shirt.
Purpose- To show the reason behind the making of the t-shirt and a link to buy it.
Subject- An insight on the chant from the fans and why Goodell was expecting this to happen.
Tone- Hill uses an intriguing tone, as he hooks you into the background of the shirt and the chant, and then somewhat convinces you to buy it.
Hill establishes his ethos by giving the link to buy the shirt at the end of the article. This shows that the shirt is legit, and not just a random design that someone made. He also establishes his pathos by asking the audience about Goodell's decision, making them take a side in the "argument." He wants you to lean towards the Patriots side, so he uses persuasive syntax and diction to do that.