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What is the savior in the speech?

Use humor to create a relaxed and pleasant mood and atmosphere, so that the audience can immerse themselves in it. You can use the power of humor to build your credibility when talking about difficult topics. When you talk about some important and sensitive topics, you will arouse the audience's emotions about someone, an idea or an institution or system. At this time, we must be careful not to cause too intense or deep emotions and avoid telling jokes on too sensitive topics.

Your basic reputation includes laughing at yourself. Great humorists often express people's basic impulses in interesting ways. They admit that they have this desire, reveal what we want to hide or restrain, and prove to us that they can laugh at themselves.

You laugh at yourself by admitting that you have these less elegant impulses. How far you want to go in this direction depends entirely on your personal feelings, as long as you don't feel uncomfortable. Make yourself a joke, but don't be a clown. Remember to be kind to yourself.

During the speech, the questions raised by the audience can be summarized into three forms. Either way, it's us who are in trouble!

Humor will fail when it is used improperly or inserted too suddenly. Or humor will fail without knowing the audience.

We learn from practical experience. When we try this kind of humor once or twice, if it still doesn't work, the best way is to stop using it in the next speech.

When your humor fails, at this embarrassing moment, you can laugh at yourself and say, "The secret of this joke will be discovered by the FBI."

You laugh at yourself with this sentence and laugh with the audience. Or: "Before I tell more jokes, I have an idea. If you laugh at this joke, I'll give you five jokes for free. " We call such a punch line "savior". The savior can not only help you cope with the situation on the podium, but also help you to solve any embarrassing or embarrassing scenes in your life.

When you need a "savior" to help you in your speech, try the following sentence: "I know you are there because I can hear your breathing." Or see someone whispering to their neighbors under the stage, and you say, "Why don't you explain to him when you go home?" These humorous examples are not shocking statements. They just help you out when the previous jokes tend to be monotonous. Laughter is the audience who pays for your speech. You can help them pay for it.

When something unexpected happens during the speech, it is usually done in one sentence. This kind of words can be called "savior". If the time delay is too long and some people in the audience can't sit still and start whispering, you might as well use this noise to say:

"We have been waiting for so long, and I seem to hear vultures buzzing over our heads."

Any trivial problems and unexpected events can be solved with a comforting word:

"This kind of scene is difficult to deal with. I seem to have caught a coat rack in my hand, and I don't know where to hang it. " After speaking to a difficult audience, someone in the audience asked the speaker, "Did you kill them?"

The speaker replied, "No, they were already dead when I arrived."

Yes, sometimes the audience is difficult to deal with! Every listener is different and every situation is different. Uncontrollable circumstances may lead to difficulties and even hostile attitudes. In order to reverse this attitude, no matter what happens, we must face it with goodwill, courtesy and pleasure. Remember, the power of humor can help us eliminate the tension of the audience.

In order to make every listener a good listener, the speaker Bette always says a word of comfort when someone interrupts.

For example, he would ask the interrupted person, "May I know your name, sir?" If he answered a rare surname, Bette asked, "Is that your real name, or did you make it up?" Then Betty joked with the man and tried to make him feel comfortable. Bette does this because most people would rather be teased than ignored, and everyone wants to be included rather than excluded. The biggest insult is neglect.

Macfarlan, the speaker, sometimes lets the audience ask questions after the speech. Occasionally, a person will come to the front and say that he wants to ask a question, but in fact he wants to speak. This kind of person will talk for five minutes.

When this person finally finishes his long speech, Macfarlan will ask him, "Can you repeat the question?"

Every time such a rescue speech made the audience burst into laughter, so an unpleasant interruption slipped away and the speech continued smoothly.

Be careful, don't tell the audience that your speech is coming to an end now, try to avoid mentioning "now let's make a summary", and don't use physical movements to indicate that your speech is coming to an end, otherwise the audience will start to help you time and calculate how long it will take instead of paying attention to your speech.

Let the audience feel that they are still unfinished. When your speech is short, powerful and to the point. And use the power of humor to make it more lively. When it ends well, the audience will have a feeling of wanting more.

Should you make them laugh? Not necessarily. Some speeches need a highly serious and dramatic ending, while others need a short and humorous ending. How to do it depends entirely on the information of your speech, the nature of the meeting, the composition of the audience, and even the time of day.

When the occasion of your speech is a banquet or other social activities, when your speech ends at the end of the day, you can end it with humor, which is of course related to the topic you are talking about. Use the power of humor to eliminate the fatigue of the audience for a day and make them refreshed. For example, "I am the last speaker today, so we can relax now."

"I ate too much chicken tonight. I think I'm going back to life instead of sleeping." In most cases, don't force a smile before the speech is over. The ending will be more effective. It's best to try to make the audience smile. Telling a fact with gentle humor, or expressing a punch line, or a blessing to the audience, will receive great results. "Time flies. But remember, you are the navigator! "

"If you look at what you did yesterday and feel very accomplished, then you have accomplished nothing today!"

"If you don't teach your grandchildren to work, you will teach them to steal." Pay attention, be good at using humor flexibly, and let the audience listen to your speech happily, so that your speech will be a great success.