Question

MANNY: (looking pale and sickly) There's more mint in the garden if you're partial to tea.

KRESS: Oh, no thanks, Manny. Mint upsets my stomach. It always has, and Dr. Bernie confirmed just last week you've got an intolerance. Don't tell me you—

MANNY: (stubbornly) No doctor's going to tell me what kind of tea I can or can't drink! No, sir. My body is my temple. And what I say... what I say...

KRESS: Guess?

MANNY holds his hand over his mouth and nods miserably.

KRESS: Manny, you don't even like mint. You know that, right?

Question: How does the playwright use satire to create an effect?

by sharing information the characters do not have with the audience
by giving the situation an unexpected outcome
by having a character say something they do not mean
by exposing a deep personal flaw of a character

Answers

GPT-4o mini
The playwright employs satire primarily **by exposing a deep personal flaw of a character**. In this dialogue, Manny's stubbornness and refusal to accept advice from a doctor despite having an evident intolerance highlights a comedic flaw in his character—his insistence on drinking mint tea, which he doesn’t even like. This absurdity emphasizes how people sometimes cling to misguided beliefs or defy common sense, revealing a humorous critique of human nature.