- Feb 2021
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www.nytimes.com www.nytimes.com
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It still took a few weeks before I wrote any reviews. At first, I worried that any opinion of mine would be unfair when restaurants were trying so hard to adapt to the new reality. Eventually, I understood that that was exactly what would make the reviews worth writing. Good food in a pandemic was great; great food seemed like a miracle, and I was finding great food all around.
Pathos - he sets up an emotional connection between the reader and the restaurants by conveying his pity with adequate reasoning.
Repetition - he underlines the importance of great food, being a food critic, he goes on to make a biblical reference, calling great food a miracle almost as grand as God's doing.
His satiated hunger drove him to realize how change did not deter the restaurants, yet, they made his job more worth while than it already was. Pete set up these restaurants for success with a slight undertone that relates to a superhero's story. A villain (the pandemic), the hero (great food from great restaurants), and the thankful people who were saved (him and anyone to eat the food).
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- Feb 2017
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static1.squarespace.com static1.squarespace.com
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heroic stage, nations develop, promulgating rigid systems of law to preserve the organization of society.
Is the connection here relating heroic to justice/fairness?
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