And I'm not talking about "officer involved shooting" or language that would feature in a Citations Needed episode, I'm asking for niche. My example:

When you read a long form interview and the interviewer has to open the piece with describing them entering, what they ordered for lunch, etc in the most flowery language.

"Mr. Hex Bear greeted me with a comfortable yet quaint handshake. The disheveled, patchy beard paired with a stained hoody gave off the impression that he was a common man, but his lunch choice said the opposite. He ordered the Truffle Salad, a glass of 1989 Cabernet, and mentioned the chef by name, asked the waiter how his children were. From the moment Hex sat down, he never broke eye contact with me, but exuded a confidence that made it seem like he did this every day."

This is a weird post and feel no need to respond.

  • BowlingForDeez [he/him]
    hexagon
    ·
    2 years ago

    This is another one I had trouble describing in the main post. When they say a persons name in the first paragraph. But then they want to refer to that same person as the subject of the next sentence and replace their name with a lofty description of their accolades. Hard to find examples of but like:

    "Congresswoman Hex Bear shocked the world with her reelection victory. The first ever elected Ursine from Ohio shared a brief statement last night over the results."