Often times advertisers use things that children can relate to to get their attention and make them want things. Like often times food companies partner with production companies so they can put cartoon characters on their products. Or they make it seem like you are "cool" if you buy or have what they are advertising or you aren't "cool" if you don't.
Hope this helps a little.
a contingency break; inattentional blindness
This scene is an example of a contingency break. A contingency break is when, in a piece of media (usually children movies or TV shows) a scene occurs that is immediately retconned in the next scene. A common example of this is in children's cartoons, when a character may have gotten their clothes dirty in one scene, but they are back to normal in the next with no time for them to have been cleaned. This applies to the movie <em>Shrek</em>, as the three blind mice are turned into horses in one frame, but are back to the status quo in the next.
Inattentional blindness is the failure to notice a fully visible, but unexpected, object/action because one's attention was on another object/action. A contingency break can be considered a "real-life" example of inattentional blindness because, if this scene occurred in real-life, you would not notice the mice turning back to normal as your attention was not focused on them.
Answer:
A transition that shows the result of an action is a: causal transition.
Explanation:
A causal transition is a word or group of words used when an author or a speaker intends to show a cause-and-effect relationship. That is, this type of transition connects one thing to another in order to represent one as the result of the other. Examples of causal transitions are: due to, hence, in order to, as a result of, since, etc.
"Then doubt not Faustus but to be renowned and more frequented for this misery than heretofor the Delphian oracle" pg 9
Spoken by Cornelius. With black magic, Faustus will be so skilled that he will become famous and more sought-after for help than the renowned Oracle of Delphi.