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18: Speaking to Entertain

  • Page ID
    63621
    • Anonymous
    • LibreTexts

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    • 18.1: Understanding Entertaining Speeches
      This page discusses entertaining speeches, emphasizing the importance of captivating the audience while conveying a clear message. Successful speeches require thorough preparation, adaptation to the occasion and audience, and awareness of time constraints. Tailoring content to fit the event's context and audience expectations enhances engagement and effectiveness in delivery.
    • 18.2: Special-Occasion Speeches
      This page discusses various types of ceremonial speeches, including introductions, presentations, acceptance, dedication, toasts, roasts, eulogies, farewells, apologies, and commencements. Each speech serves distinct purposes, such as engaging an audience, recognizing achievements, or commemorating individuals. Toasts celebrate, while roasts blend praise and humor. Apology speeches aim for restitution, and commencement speeches inspire graduates.
    • 18.3: Keynote Speaking
      This page discusses keynote speeches, which set the tone for events and include after-dinner and motivational speeches. After-dinner speeches use humor to engage audiences, while motivational speeches aim to inspire without specific goals, featuring examples from figures like Steve Sax and Becky Olsen. It emphasizes the importance of emotional resonance and audience understanding in crafting effective presentations, highlighting the role of humor in both speech types.
    • 18.4: Chapter Exercises
      This page explores Virginia's ethical dilemmas while preparing a roast for her boss at a company meeting. It emphasizes the need to select appropriate anecdotes and the line between playful humor and meanness. The text features considerations of ethical versus unethical information in roasting and includes an assessment of speech types and rhetorical strategies, providing examples of humorous language and answers in the context of delivering effective speeches.


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