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Figaro rips the innards out of things people say and reveals the rhetorical tricks and pratfalls. For terms and definitions, click here.
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    Entries by Figaro (652)

    Thursday
    Oct022008

    Palin: Bush in Diguise!

    George W. Bush has put on a wig and rimless glasses and started talking like…Bush.

    And I love America where we are more tolerant than other countries are. And are more accepting of some of these choices that sometimes people want to believe reflects solely on an individual’s values or not. Homosexuality, I am not gonna judge people.

    Sarah Palin [disguised as Bush] in the Katie Couric interivew

    You really can’t blame him. After 8 years as President, he probably figures he’s up for a promotion.

    For a Figarovian analysis of Bushspeak—uh, Palinspeak—click here.

    Tuesday
    Sep302008

    Biden Him Good

    I’m looking forward to meeting Joe Biden. I’ve been looking forward to meeting him since the second grade.

    VP CANDIDATE SARAH PALIN

    ennoia (en-NOY-a), the figure of faint praise. From the Greek, meaning “hidden intention.”

    Oh, that saucy Sarah Palin!  With a smile like a dog’s before it bites you, she delivers her lines with an energy we haven’t seen politicians exhibit in some time.  We’re happy to see Governor Palin’s comfort with one of the finer figures. The ennoia damns the victim through faint praise, allowing you to seem agreeable  even when you’re on the attack. But Palin’s use of an it to imply the age of her hoary counterpart strikes us as a tad, well, schoolyardish. 

    And why isn’t John McCain laughing?

    Snappy Answer: “About the time you decided you were qualified for the vice presidency?”

    Here’s another example of ennoia.
    Friday
    Aug152008

    I, Like, Know

    Dear Figaro, I have a friend who says “you know” a couple dozen times in any 5 minute conversation. Why does she do this? How can it be stopped?
    Fred, from “Ask Figaro”


    Dear Fred,

    “You know” serves as a figure called a parelcon (pa-REL-con, meaning “redundancy”), a place-filler that gives the speaker’s brain a few more milliseconds to think. “Like” is a more common parelcon these days, and it has its uses in moderation.

    “You know” is actually a parelcon from my generation. As I say in my book, my generation was (rightly) uncertain about its ability to communicate. “You know” means “Are you with me? Do you get what I’m saying?” “Like,” on the other hand, reflects a group too timid to stand firmly on one side of anything.

    So how do you stop the non-stop parelcon?

    1. The Obnoxious Way:  Say “Yes, I know” or “No, I don’t” every time he says “You know.” You will make your point, and he will hate you.
    2. The Supportive Way: Mention his problem and offer to help. Set up practice sessions where you beep a horn every time he says “You know.” This feedback method does work. Though he’ll probably end up hating you anyway.
    3. The Fun Way: Make it a drinking game. Gulp every time he says it. If he participates, he’ll be too drunk to hate you.

    Fig.

    Wednesday
    Aug062008

    Bikinis Save Energy

    Paris Hilton might not be as big a celebrity as Barack Obama, but she obviously has a better energy plan.
    McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds.


    argumentum ad fortiori, the argument from strength. From the Latin, meaning “argument from strength.”

      New Paris Hilton video on Funny or Die! Responding to a McCain ad that likens Obama to celebrities like the airhead heiress, Paris appears in a leopard-spotted swimsuit. “I want America to know that I’m, like, totally ready to lead,” she says, announcing her candidacy to become president a mere eight years before the U.S. Constitution allows.

    She does a nice mashup of her rivals’ energy policies: “We can do limited offshore drilling with strict environmental oversight while creating tax incentives to get Detroit making hybrid and electric cars,” she says.

    The McCain campaign volleys back with a very nice argumentum ad fortiori. If something more-so is true, then it’s likely that something less-so will be true as well. Or vice versa. If Paris’s energy policy trumps Barack’s, then we all had better move to Jedda.

    Snappy Answer: Plus, she’d be the only president to make energy policy seem dirty.

    Sunday
    Jul272008

    Scalia Re-invents Reality TV


    Jack Bauer saved Los Angeles. … Are you going to convict Jack Bauer?”
    Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, in a speech made in Canada last summer, quoted by Slate’s Dahlia Lithwick.
      
    Figure of Speech: contrarium (con-TRARE-ium), the one-two punch.
      

    Click to read more ...

    Tuesday
    Jul082008

    Sorry About the Daily Figure

    Our dear Figarist, if you asked for the Daily Figure and wonder why you haven’t received it, the reasons are purely technical—which, in Figaro’s case, means insurmountable.  He is unable to figure out how to get past spam.

    We’re also sorry for the long hiatus in journals.  We’ve been traveling almost constantly, and haven’t quite learned how to manipulate goofy images of politicians on our Blackberry.

     But Figaro will not abandon figures. He promises.