False
False appeal is that when company advertising the benefits and those benefits are not communicated to the customers.
FALSE IMAGE APPEAL promises a better and more successful in life for those who will use the products.
Unless there is attorney contributing answers on this site who would care to take a stab at this - - I believe that it is much too broad, and too complex a question to be answered on this venue. First of all - What state is this in? Is this a criminal or a civil case? What court heard the original case? Can you prove the allegatins of "false" evidence and "perjury?" Etc, etc, etc. Strongly suggest that you seek legal counsel!
Some examples of the appeal technique used to lure customers are bandwagon appeal, snob appeal, testimony appeal, false-image appeal, humor appeal, reward appeal, and scientific evidence appeal.
No, not unless the "expert" gave false testimony which would set the stage for an appeal by the either side. The purpose of having an expert witness testify in any case civil or criminal is to sway the jury to the side that is presenting the evidence, so the plaintiff would have no grounds to sue someone who presented factual, truthful claims.
the plaintiff can be charged with lying to police, or false testimony.
FALSE IMAGE APPEAL promises a better and more successful in life for those who will use the products.
false
false
False- The content of a message can appeal to consumers in a number of different ways-rationally, emotionally, and morally. Rational appeal focuses on how the product can benefit the user, or how it is in his or her self-interest to buy it. Emotional appeal uses feelings to motivate customers to buy. A moral appeal is directed at a person's sense of ethics.
False image appeal is when a viewer is essentially tricked into thinking a product will give you results that you see. An example would be mascara product commercials; most of the time the actors are wearing false eyelashes instead of the mascara being advertised.
rule of 3 eg: grace space pace command eg: you can do it! rhyme alliteration use product name