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"Let's Get Chick-fi... WAIT IT'S SUNDAY!"

  • Emily Pellingra
  • Feb 9, 2017
  • 2 min read

The exigence that this meme is displaying is the fact that Chick-Fil-A is closed on Sundays. The mode is actually a combination of two different ones. It is mainly visual, but it has a bit of written. The more impactful part of the meme, and what is intended to be the main focus, is the visual aspect. The picture of the little girl pouting because Chick-Fil-A is closed on Sunday is intended to get across the main point of the meme. The media used for this meme is digital. Memes can be found all over the internet and can be shared with many different people all across the internet. I believe that anyone that lives close to a Chick-Fil-A can relate to this meme, so the audience whom it is intended for is extremely broad. I think the composer of this meme used this style because it is something that many can relate to, but it is not a really serious issue. The meme is supposed to be slightly funny, but also something that many can relate to. The disappointing feeling of craving Chick-Fil-A only to realize that it is in fact Sunday. The way that the words are positioned on the meme brings attention to the girls face, which I believe the author did on purpose. The main focus of the meme was supposed to be the girls disappointed face. The main rhetorical appeal used in this meme is Pathos. The disappointment sets in as one’s stomach growls when they realize it’s Sunday, and they cannot get the Chick-Fil-A they’ve been craving because it is closed. This meme probably evokes a sense of understanding in many viewers, which is the intended purpose of it. Viewers can relate to it, which makes it effective.


 
 
 

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