Like most Saturday Night Live skits, this skit uses Horatian Satire. Saturday Night Live uses this type of satire to point out controversial issues without explicitly stating how to correct the issue. Through the use of exaggeration, irony, and burlesque, Saturday Night Live satirizes the ignorance of the white community in the United States throughout the episode “The Day Beyoncé Turned Black.” For the purpose of influencing a change in American society, Saturday Night Live, uses exaggeration for the duration of their skit. Rob Klein and Bryan H. Tucker chose specific words and phrases to convey this satirical element. At the beginning of the skit, Beyoncé released her new video for her song “Formation,” which causes an uproar in the white community. The skit displays several news programs in which the news anchors discuss the
Like most Saturday Night Live skits, this skit uses Horatian Satire. Saturday Night Live uses this type of satire to point out controversial issues without explicitly stating how to correct the issue. Through the use of exaggeration, irony, and burlesque, Saturday Night Live satirizes the ignorance of the white community in the United States throughout the episode “The Day Beyoncé Turned Black.” For the purpose of influencing a change in American society, Saturday Night Live, uses exaggeration for the duration of their skit. Rob Klein and Bryan H. Tucker chose specific words and phrases to convey this satirical element. At the beginning of the skit, Beyoncé released her new video for her song “Formation,” which causes an uproar in the white community. The skit displays several news programs in which the news anchors discuss the