I'm not sure what it's called, but it follows a formula that makes sense in any case: "All you saw is a pretty little girl named Sallie who you wanted to bang" instead of "All you saw is me, who you wanted to bang." "If anyone were to review his footage, all they'd see is Jonesy paying for girls to dance for her. They wouldn't hear what she was saying." instead of "If anyone were to review his footage, all they'd see is me paying for girls to dance for me. They wouldn't hear what I was saying." It's a way of putting the audience in the other person's shoes rather than the narrator's or main character's shoes, while still being said by the narrator/main character. English is complicated. :-P
I'm not sure what it's called, but it follows a formula that makes sense in any case: "All you saw i
I think it was jonesy speaking of herself in third person for a brief moment without breaking a first person narative. Its used in a way where she is implying seeing her in this situation would be unexpected and carry weight. Imagine a celebrity going to a mcdonalds and saying "if they saw dan the great eating here, i would be finished!'
Hope that helps uwu
I think it was jonesy speaking of herself in third person for a brief moment without breaking a firs