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ELA 6: Red Herrings 63 Views


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Description:

Ever want to confuse a mystery reader? Just throw a fish at them. Well, maybe just write in a red herring or two.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:00

well a good mystery needs plenty of ingredients, an interesting setting a

00:06

cast of compelling characters and one spicy central problem to solve. but to [campfire stew pot]

00:11

make a truly delicious mystery we need to toss some fish into the pot. and yep

00:16

we need a bunch of red herrings .yeah just the herrings, though no one wants

00:20

anchovies in their mystery .so red herring is a false clue that's meant to

00:24

mislead or distract the reader. the term red herring is believed to come from a [definition on screen]

00:29

news story that English journalist william Cobbett

00:31

wrote in the early 19th century. he wrote that as a boy he would make false trails

00:36

with red herrings to train hunting dogs purposely misleading them from the real [dog walks through trees]

00:41

trail. pretty good idea unless your dogs really hate herring. well most red

00:45

herrings you'll see in mystery stories are a lot less fishy than Cabot's trails.

00:50

a popular type of red herring is misleading clues that point to the wrong

00:54

suspect. so if a story is about the mystery of who stole an expensive jar of cookies,

00:59

the author might include some red herrings about how jimmy is a compulsive [cookies on a counter]

01:02

cookie eater and has a long history of cookie related thefts, even if in this

01:08

case Jimmy is completely innocent. well just ignore the cookie crumbs around his

01:12

mouth. there people another popular kind of red herring well misleading clues [kid with cookie on his face]

01:15

that point away from the real suspect. so in our cookie jar caper it might turn

01:21

out that genie is the master thief. however to throw readers off the scent

01:25

the author might include details like Jamie is allergic to all kinds of [dog walks on beach]

01:29

cookies making her an improbable cookie thief. it all seems unlikely Jamie's the

01:34

thief right but the reader might not guess that Jamie stole the cookies not

01:37

to eat them but to sell them on eBay. well double chocolate chips can get you

01:42

a lot of dough on the you know ebay black market. well finally some red [woman behind laptop]

01:46

herrings are clues or plot lines that seem important but turn out to be

01:49

completely irrelevant to the story. going back to the cookie mystery the police

01:54

might find a stray hair it's a scene of the crime which they take in for DNA

01:58

analysis, which leads them to the address of a suspect who turns out to be the [lab tech mixes solution]

02:02

woman who cleans the cookie jars making this plotline a complete waste of the

02:07

readers time, but hey the officers get free tea so at least someone

02:11

is happy. yeah and probably some doughnuts there, because you know they're policemen. [policeman in front of a doughnut shop]

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