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Effective Rhetoric and Presentation
Business Textbooks Boundless Business Business Writing Effective Rhetoric and Presentation
Business Textbooks Boundless Business Business Writing
Business Textbooks Boundless Business
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Concept Version 10
Created by Boundless

Using Humor

Using a joke to start a presentation is often a good idea if used properly.

Learning Objective

  • Indicate how irony and metaphor are used in presentations


Key Points

    • In most cases, keep your joke clean.
    • Try to make the joke pertain to the subject you are presenting.
    • If you open with humor or use it in any other part of your presentation, be sure to avoid all sexual, religious and racial topics.

Terms

  • irony

    A statement that, when taken in context, may actually mean something different from, or the opposite of what is written literally; the use of words expressing something other than their literal intention, notably as a form of humor.

  • joke

    Something said or done for amusement.

  • humor

    The quality of being amusing, comical, funny.


Example

    • Here is an example that you might use when doing a presentation on football: "Anyone who makes a bad call against the Detroit Lions risks ticking off their last remaining fan."

Full Text

Using Humor

Beginning a presentation with a joke can be an effective strategy for winning over one's audience, provided the speaker or author knows his or her audience well. However, the speaker better hope the audience thinks the joke is funny! Most often, keeping one's joke clean is prudent, as not to create discomfort among the audience. Also helpful is telling a joke relevant to the subject being presented. Here, for example, is a joke one might use for a presentation on football: Anyone who makes a bad call against the Detroit Lions risks ticking off their last remaining fan!

Take care with the subject matter as sometimes humor can do more harm than good. If you decide to use humor at any point in your presentation, it is a good rule to avoid all sexual, religious and racial topics or references.

Irony and metaphor

Two common rhetorical devices used to convey special meaning to an audience are irony and metaphor.

The use of irony in rhetoric is primarily to convey an incongruity, often used in humor to deprecate or ridicule an idea or course of action. When taken in context, the statement may actually mean something different from, or opposite of what is said literally.

Irony

A stop sign ironically defaced with a beseechment not to deface stop signs

The use of metaphor in rhetoric is primarily to convey a new idea or meaning by linking it to an existing idea or meaning with which the audience is already familiar. Linking the new with the old and familiar through the use of metaphor is an excellent tool for introducing new concepts to one's audience.

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