Kairos in Film, Ads & Speech: Why Timing Matters

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Published: October 6, 2025

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Origins in Classical Rhetoric

A chaotic blend of overlapping clock faces and gears, symbolizing the difference between measured time and timely action.
In ancient Greece, chronos meant measured time—hours, minutes, schedules. Kairos meant the right time—the perfect moment to act. This image blends those ideas, showing how modern life still balances deadlines and timing.

Ancient Greek thinkers made a key distinction between two kinds of time:

  • Chronos: clock time, measured in hours or days
  • Kairos: the right time, when everything aligns for action

Kairos was a central idea in classical rhetoric. Alongside ethos (credibility), pathos (emotion), and logos (logic), aka the rhetorical appeals, kairos gave speakers a way to time their appeals effectively. It asked: When should I speak? What form should it take? How will this land right now in this specific context?

Recognizing and Using Kairos

Timing is Everything in Kairos
Timing is everything in Kairos!

Even a strong message can fall flat if delivered too early or too late. Kairos helps you speak when people are ready to hear you. It connects your message to the moment, making it feel urgent, timely, or emotionally sharp.

To recognize and apply kairos, ask yourself:

  • What’s happening right now? Are people tense, hopeful, distracted, or curious?
  • What do they expect? Are you confirming, breaking, or reshaping that expectation?
  • What tone fits this? Should you be serious, calm, bold, or brief?
  • Can structure help? Use pauses, silence, cuts, or reveals to shape the moment.
  • Is the culture shifting? Use references, memes, or emotions while they’re fresh.
  • Is this the right spot? Move a scene, speech, or message earlier or later, and see what lands best.

Examples of Kairos in Media, Ads, and Film

In advertising, kairos often shows up through cultural timing. One example involved a viral meme (the dress illusion) where people debated whether a dress was white and gold or black and blue.

A campaign about domestic violence used the meme while it was trending. The campaign was run by run by the Salvation Army in South Africa. It featured the white-and-gold dress over a bruised body with the line, “Why is it so hard to see black and blue?” The ad worked because it landed while the meme was everywhere. The moment gave it force.

Here’s a quick news episode about the campaign.

Another example came from Jet2’s long-running ad campaign: “Nothing beats a Jet2 holiday,” whose jingle became a social media meme.

Here’s an example of the high-key Jet2 holiday campaign ad.

Instead of ignoring it, the company joined the trend while it was still spreading. They used the moment to amplify their brand. If they had waited, the opportunity would’ve passed. That’s kairos in amplification; not just in what you release, but in how you respond when culture shifts around you.

Some ads reference pop culture moments or viral celebrities at just the right time. A joke, a meme, or a phrase may work one month but feel outdated the next. When a brand uses it in the moment, it feels sharp and relevant. Too early or too late, and the same message feels off.

Narrative Timing in Film

A dimly lit room shows a man’s eyes and forehead barely visible from the shadows below a cabinet, surrounded by warm-lit dishes and tea sets.
In Parasite (2019), the man in the basement is revealed in a single haunting frame. The scene’s timing builds tension slowly, then hits with a visual shock. Image Credit: Barunson E&A

Kairos also shows up in how stories are told. In Parasite (2019), the reveal about the hidden basement comes at just the right time. The family thinks they’re safe. The tension is already rising. Then the plot twist hits — fast and sharp. That’s a good example of narrative kairos. The reveal lands when the audience is most ready for something to break.

Symbolic Timing in Storytelling

Some moments gain meaning from when they happen. A ghost appearing on Christmas Eve adds weight because the night already means something. A character confessing during a national crisis feels different than a normal scene. The timing adds emotion, not just plot.

Kairos in Public Speeches

One of the clearest uses of kairos is Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech. It was delivered during a historic civil rights march, at a time when the country was focused on justice and change. The words mattered because the moment was right. The message fit the mood, the tension, and the people listening.

Kairos and the Other Rhetorical Appeals

Ethos, pathos, and logos describe what you say. Kairos describes when and how you say it. It shapes all the other appeals by placing them in the right context.

A logical argument (logos) might fail if said too soon. An emotional speech (pathos) might fall flat if the stakes aren’t clear. Kairos turns those appeals into something timely and powerful by aligning them with the mood, tone, and momentum of the scene or speech.

Summing Up

Kairos means delivering the right message at the right time in the right way. It helps you shape scenes, speeches, or campaigns so they feel connected to the moment. In media, writing, or real life, great timing makes a message not just heard, but remembered.

Read Next: Want to dig deeper into screenwriting?


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You can also head back to the Screenwriting section for more tools, theory, and breakdowns.

By Jan Sørup

Jan Sørup is an indie filmmaker, videographer, and photographer from Denmark. He owns FilmDaft.com and the Danish company Apertura, which produces video content for big companies in Denmark and Scandinavia. Jan has a background in music, has drawn webcomics, and is a former lecturer at the University of Copenhagen.