Question
This informative speech is a 5-7 minute speech where you will research and organize information to share about an interesting person who has contributed to society. You are required to have four Ohlone College library sources (non .coms) and I encourage you to consider more like six or eight courses to fully support a speech of this length.
The body of the speech can be organized chronologically past to present or present to past, categorically or topically, sequentially, or as a causation speech. For example, a categorical or topical speech design might describe two instances of great contribution or character about the person and the third main point may be the theme that ties those specific instances together that illustrate the great societal impact the person has made.
The speech will include the introduction, 3-4 main points ( body paragraphs), and the conclusion.
The person I choose is Trevor Noah who wrote the book : Born A Crime.
The thesis is Trevor Noah’s childhood in South Africa during apartheid and how it impact his personality and lead him to today’s success.
Subject | Functional Writing | Pages | 5 | Style | APA |
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Answer
Trevor Noah
My speech today will focus on one of the most remarkable personalities in the comedy world, Trevor Noah. You certainly would enjoy learning much about this South African comedian, writer, television host, producer just to mention. His journey to his present glory is one which has been marked with determination, resilience, and self-discovery.
Early Life and Identity Dilemma
Trevor Noah’s early life was filled with racial identity dilemma. He was divided on whether to identify himself with the White or the Black race. He grew up during the apartheid regime where racial isolation and discrimination was rife in South Africa. (Christian Century, 2017). When he was young, he never understood why he could interact with his father comfortably while indoors but not when outdoors; especially in public (Dockterman et al., 2017). He also observed that his father and mother were walking apart in streets like strangers in public places (Stern, 2016). Noah was in a dilemma that he was not White enough to be White and that he was neither Black enough to be Black, hence he fell in between the two racial groups (Christian Century, 2017). His Swiss-father later broke up with his mother. His mother re-married. This was a predicament since his step-mother abused both Noah and his father (Christian Century, 2017). At the moment, Noah is a citizen of the world and is no more disturbed by racial identity dilemma since he shares his experiences freely with the world.
Self-Awareness
Noah came to understand the basis of his divided identity with respect to racial issue in apartheid South Africa, and used it positively to promote his personal progress and to transform the comedy and entertainment world. Noah came to realize that he had poor understanding of his divided racial identity during his early childhood years. He has realized that he was born at a time time when inter-racial marriages and relationships were deemed illegal by discriminatory racial laws in the apartheid South Africa. His father was a Swiss-German; whereas his mother was an Africa from the Xhosa ethnic group (Christian Century, 2017).
Noah Now
Noah is the current host of The Daily Show, a role he took over from Jon Stewart in 2015 (Cagle, 2017). He is one of the interesting persons in today’s world who has contributed significantly to the society. His awakened awareness and openness makes him use his story and experiences as evidence of his crime made by his father and father in associating in inter-racial romance. At the present Noah takes an active role in shading light on apartheid racial segregation laws (Stern, 2016).
Contributions
He is a role model of how love may overcome negative energy such as feelings of revenge, hate, and emotional pain (Christian Century, 2017. Noah is feeding the American public with new topics, issues, and an insight that may have not been of focus before to other comedians in the U.S. Noah’s childhood during apartheid has impacted his personality and has led to his success today (Christian Century. 2017). At the present Noah takes an active role in shading light on apartheid racial segregation laws (Stern, 2016). Noah is a role model of how love can transform the world despite having experienced difficult humiliating conditions caused by apartheid rule and segregation laws. Segregation law and disadvantaging conditions forced Noah and his family to experience heavy odds of racism, hunger, poverty, and abuse. He was particularly abused by his step father (Christian Century, 2017). He succeeds in spreading love through self-critiquing approach. Self-critiquing technique is also used by other popular comedians such as Stewart Lee and Charlie Brooker (Brassett, 2017). Majority of comedians nowadays explore their cultural and own life experiences to write jokes or create a sense humor (Sturges, 2015). His comedic shows are largely autobiographical in nature. Noah has understood that the best way of telling his story is through comedy or jokes. American comedy consumers are used to topics such as racial tensions and anger, but Noah offers the self-hating content to consumers. He has used his personal story as well as his family history in a positive manner to prosper in the entertainment and comedy world. He does not satisfy anger consumption by the American public that is often experienced when the victim is African-American and the perpetrator is White (Sturges, 2015). Rather than exploiting anger as a tool of expressing his difficult past, Noah uses satire and humor to tell sad stories, infuriating stories, crazy stories, and humiliating stories (Cagle, 2017). He tries to locate a joke even in most serious issues such as shootings and killings. For example he narrates in how his step father shot his mother in the head in close range. Luckily, the mother survived the ordeal (Keohane, 2016). This approach has promoted the fast rise of Noah to the peak in the comedy industry (Stern, 2016).
References
Brassett, J. (2017). British comedy, global resistance: Russell brand, Charlie Brooker and Stewart Lee. European Journal of International Relations, 22(1), 168-191. https://doi.org/10.1177%2F1354066115586816 Cagle, J. (2017). Trevor Noah a Comic’s Incredible Journey. People, 87(25), 78–80. Retrieved from https://fcep.ohlone.edu/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=a9h&AN=123364087&site=ehost-live&scope=site Christian Century. (2017). Born a crime: Stories from a South African childhood. Retrieved on Mar 30, 2019 from, http://livelydust/blogspot.com Dockterman, E., Solomon, F., Grillo, I., Steinmetz, K., Lang, C., Alter, C., Samuelson, K. (2017). Next Generation Leaders. TIME Magazine, 189(9), 38–47. Retrieved on Mar 20, 2019 from https://fcep.ohlone.edu/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=a9h&AN=121524484&site=ehost-live&scope=site Keohane, J. (2016). Trevor Noah… is not like you. Esquire, 165(2), 90–97. Retrieved on Mar 30, 2019 from, https://fcep.ohlone.edu/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=a9h&AN=112617712&site=ehost-live&scope=site Stern, D. (2016). Born a crime. Publishers Weekly, 263(44), (Sp)26-(Sp)27. Retrieved on Mar 30, 2019 from, https://fcep.ohlone.edu/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=a9h&AN=119168691&site=ehost-live&scope=site Sturges, P. (2015). The production of comedy: The joke in the age social media. SAGE Open, 5(4). https://doi.org/10.1177%2F2158244015612521
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