ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Language Arts Videos 34 videos
ELA Drills, Intermediate: Textual Analysis 3. Which of the following best summarizes the author's feelings about welfare?
What's an emotional appeal? Is that like when someone naturally attracts members of the opposite sex by crying all the time?
Want to share stories about your life and experiences but don't feel like posting up at a bus stop and talking to strangers a la Forrest Gump? Try...
ELA 6: Red Herrings 63 Views
Share It!
Description:
Ever want to confuse a mystery reader? Just throw a fish at them. Well, maybe just write in a red herring or two.
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
Full Transcript
- 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]
Related Videos
ELA Drills, Intermediate: Main Idea 1. Which of the statements is best supported by the passage?
ELA Drills, Intermediate: Point of View. Is the statement in the video true or false?
ELA Drills, Intermediate: Textual Analysis 3. Which of the following best summarizes the author's feelings about welfare?
ELA Drills, Intermediate: Comparing and Contrasting. In this sentence, what is compared to what?
What's an emotional appeal? Is that like when someone naturally attracts members of the opposite sex by crying all the time?