IELTS Speaking for Success - 📰 Newspapers (S04E06) + Transcript
Episode Date: September 10, 2020Is the Internet is a good way to get news? Is it important to stay informed about what's happening in the world? What effect do newspapers have on society? Tune in and have a great day! - IELTS Spe...aking for Success PREMIUM: https://linktr.ee/sfspremium Transcript: https://successwithielts.com/s04e06 Our social media: https://linktr.ee/successwithielts © Success with IELTS Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, lovely. I'm Maria.
And my name is Rory, and we are the host of the IEL Speaking for Success podcast,
the podcast that aims to help you improve your speaking skills as well as your listening skills along the way.
We started this super podcast because we want you to use higher-level vocabulary and gorgeous grammar
in your everyday life and in your I-LAT speaking test.
Rory, have you got any news to report?
Nope, but we are going to talk about newspapers.
today. It's another coincidence.
Woohoo!
Newspapers and magazines,
they can ask you these questions in speaking part one.
Dear listener, now you can do an IELTS writing check with us.
Yep. It includes both task one and task two for both academic and general IELTS.
You'll receive written feedback from Maria or myself
with corrections, suggestions and a breakdown of the answers
answers in relation to the exam criteria.
You can find a sample feedback on our social media.
Go to SuccesswithIELF.com for more details.
Let's talk about newspapers and magazines.
Do you read news in newspapers or on the internet?
It's usually on the internet, actually.
I can't really afford or organize a subscription.
It's actually faster that way, I suppose.
Do you think the internet is a good way to get news?
I suppose if it's simple or factual information about events, then yes.
But there are a lot of opinion pieces out there that I don't like.
Would you do prefer reading magazines or newspapers?
I suppose if I have to choose one, it's probably going to be reading newspapers.
I find magazines to be a bit frivolous most of the time.
Do you often read newspapers?
Well, online, probably once a day.
And then offline, usually when I'm at home,
My parents and I like doing the crosswords and making fun of some of the court reports in the local paper.
How old were you when you started reading newspapers?
Oh God, probably before I was born, actually.
My parents are both journalists, so reading and writing is sort of in my blood.
I guess if you want a more serious answer, it's probably when I was six or seven or eight.
My dad used to bring home the paper every day, so we'd just read it normally.
Do you think it's important to read newspapers?
In print form, probably not so much these days when you can get all the information you need online whenever you want it.
Although on the other hand, if you read the paper once a day, it might be good for just preventing information overload, to be honest.
How do newspapers attract readers?
Well, I guess by advertising and appealing to tradition in the main, maybe there are some services that they offer.
for younger people, but it seems to be usually like older, more traditional people that they try to get the attention on.
What effect do newspapers have on society?
Well, in some places where communication infrastructure isn't so well developed, it might be crucial for information sharing.
And so without them, civil society couldn't really function.
More broadly, they're a big part of opinion formation on the issues of the day.
Is news important to you?
Well, yeah, you've got to know what's going on.
It's important to be well informed, but if I read more than once a day,
I'd probably get depression from all the bad things that people report on.
How often do you read the news?
Like I say, just once a day, otherwise it's probably not going to have a good effect on my mental health.
Do you prefer to read local or international news?
Well, I guess they're bound up together since Russia and the UK are major countries,
so anything that happens on the local level there usually has some impacts international.
Rory, do you discuss the news with your friends?
Sometimes, although I think it's better to avoid it,
since my take on things is usually very different to my friends,
and I don't really like arguing with people.
So maybe we just discuss the facts and then move on from there
to talk about something more personal or interesting.
Thank you so much for your answers.
No problem.
So when we talk about newspapers, Rory, you mentioned papers.
Can I call them papers or newspapers?
Both is okay.
newspapers as more formal than papers.
Yeah, and you've said, like, I prefer local papers.
We can also talk about journals.
Yes.
Or you could talk about tabloids and broadsheets.
Tabloids are, well, tabloids are more about information
that people on the streets would like to read about.
They're filled with drama, for example.
Whereas broadsheets usually have longer articles about more
specific pieces.
Yeah, tabloids are all about gossip.
They have this gossip columns.
And can you use the word periodicals?
Like magazines or periodicals?
You can.
I don't really use that word too often.
It's a less commonly used word, periodicals.
Yeah, so we can also say, like, I prefer glossy magazines, yeah, with gossip columns.
Yeah. So we read news on the internet, right? It's always on the internet. Yeah, we read news online. So read news online on the internet. And Rory, you said that you can't afford a subscription.
You can't afford something. It means you don't have the money to pay for it. Well, if you can't afford something, then you do have the money to pay for it. But I was thinking more in terms of the time, to be honest with you. It just takes a lot of effort to do it and I can't be bothered.
could afford a subscription, what newspaper would you subscribe to, or a magazine? Men's Health?
I suppose so. I used to... Cosmopolitan?
Cosmopolitan? I used to buy men's health, actually, a long time ago, but I don't really know.
No, what about, like, let me give you some options. So would you subscribe to The New York Times,
The Guardian, National Geographic, Readers Digest, or Cosmopolitan?
None of them, really.
No, sorry.
Oh, Rorynews.com.
The RoryTimes.
Some people have the time to sit and read these subscriptions all day.
I don't.
I'm very busy.
What newspaper do you prefer?
I prefer The Rory Times.
Yes, dear listener.
You can make it up, and in your speaking exam,
you can say that your favorite newspaper is The Rory Times.
Right, okay. So, yes, you can buy a subscription or subscribe to a newspaper or a magazine.
Rory, you've mentioned factual information, right? Or opinion pieces.
Yes. So factual information is just the straightforward facts about things.
Whereas opinion pieces are, well, a piece is like an article, for example.
And you can have an opinion piece, a fluff piece is usually something not so serious.
it's just designed to fill space in a newspaper.
So pieces like an article, an opinion piece is an article that some of these opinions.
It's not about the facts.
It's about their opinion about something that's happened.
And speaking about opinions, you've used a good one, my take on things.
So take on things.
What is it?
Your take on something is just your opinion about the situation,
but you can't always say my opinion, my opinion, my opinion.
So my take on something.
Yeah, can I ask you like, what's your take on?
Picnicics.
Yeah.
What's your take on horse riding?
Exactly.
Yeah.
My take on things.
And an interesting expression, actually.
Then we can read newspapers online and you've mentioned in print form, right?
So how can I use it in a sentence?
Oh, well, books are, well, if they're physical books, then books are in print form.
Newspapers are in print form.
So anything that has, like, ink on paper, anything that's been printed.
Can I call them a printed press?
They're from a printing press.
But like printed press or traditional press?
Maybe traditional press.
I've never heard this expression, printed press.
Or printed books, printed newspapers.
Yeah.
So traditional press or hard copies?
Yes.
Right.
What's in your blood, is reading in your blood, whiskey in your blood?
Newspapers.
Although I could include magazine.
in that as well since my mom was a magazine journalist.
But if I enjoy reading news,
can I say that,
reading is in my blood? It means like, I love it, right?
Why not? Yes.
And it's part of your family tradition as well.
Ah, right. So, kind of,
your parents are journalists,
and then they say,
like, journalism is in my blood.
So people read newspapers and magazines
to be well-informed.
Yeah, you said, well-informed.
But what are the synonyms can we have?
for example, to keep yourself updated.
Yes, you can keep updated.
But I like the word well-informed.
I like that one better.
You read current affairs,
or the latest events, like factual articles.
You follow the news.
You follow the news.
Yeah.
And if, for example, you go ahead and buy a broadsheet
or an actual newspaper,
you can read through the pages or leaf through the pages.
Mm-hmm.
You can also flick, flick through e-news, electronic news, flick through.
Yes.
Yeah, how often do you flick through e-news?
Oh, like I say, only once a day, and that's not for me.
When you talked about what newspapers do to attract readers,
you mentioned this word appealing.
So they are appealing to tradition.
Yeah, so if you appeal to tradition,
it just means that you appeal to people that think that tradition is the most important thing.
So, for example, people who always read the news, you can appeal to their sense of tradition by saying,
oh, it's a good thing you read the news.
But in Scotland, do people still buy, like, hard copies?
Yeah, not as much as they used to, but it's kind of like a dying media these days.
But they do, and there are some local newspapers, although the readership is, like, getting smaller and smaller by the year.
Which is sad in some ways, but we're just making a switch to online.
And it's probably better for the environment in the long run, I guess.
When was the last time you actually bought a magazine or a newspaper?
I can't remember.
I suppose the last time I bought a magazine must have been when I was back home.
I used to buy it when I traveled to Glasgow to see my friend.
I used to buy a magazine when I'd go and see my friend and read it through there.
And then for newspapers, I can't remember.
Because, well, my parents were journalists, so they got the newspaper for free.
Ah, okay, okay.
Well, interesting.
So you've never bought any furniture.
You can't remember if you bought any newspapers or magazines.
What's your problem?
What do you buy?
Do you buy anything?
I have a very busy life.
However, I did buy some expensive belts recently, so I'm not a complete Philistine.
Yay.
He's bought something.
and expensive.
Woo-ho.
Thank you very much for listening.
That's all from us
about newspapers and magazines.
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Bye.
Let's talk about newspapers and magazines.
Do you read news in newspapers or on the internet?
It's usually on the internet, actually.
I can't really afford or organize a subscription.
It's actually faster that way, I suppose.
Do you think the internet is a good way to get news?
I suppose if it's simple or factual information about events, then yes.
But there are a lot of opinion pieces out there that I don't like.
Which do you prefer reading magazines or newspapers?
I suppose if I have to choose one, it's probably going to be reading newspapers.
I find magazines to be a bit frivolous most of the time.
Do you often read newspapers?
Well, online, probably once a day.
And then offline, usually when I'm at home, my parents and I like doing the crosswords
and making fun of some of the court reports in the local paper.
How old were you when you started reading?
newspapers? Oh God, probably before I was born, actually. My parents are both journalists, so reading
and writing is sort of in my blood. I guess if you want a more serious answer, it's probably
when I was six or seven or eight. My dad used to bring home the paper every day, so we'd just
read it normally. Do you think it's important to read newspapers? In print form, probably not so much
these days when you can get all the information you need online whenever you want it.
Although, on the other hand, if you read the paper once a day, it might be good for just
preventing information overload, to be honest.
How do newspapers attract readers?
Well, I guess by advertising and appealing to tradition in the main, maybe there are some
services that they offer for younger people, but it seems to be usually like older, more traditional
people that they try to get the attention on.
What effect do newspapers have on society?
Well, in some places where communication infrastructure isn't so well developed, it might be crucial
for information sharing.
And so without them, civil society couldn't really function.
More broadly, they're a big part of opinion formation on the issues of the day.
Is news important to you?
Well, yeah, you've got to know what's going on.
and it's important to be well informed, but if I read more than once a day,
I'd probably get depression from all the bad things that people report on.
How often do you read the news?
Like I say, just once a day, otherwise it's probably not going to have a good effect on my mental health.
Do you prefer to read local or international news?
Well, I guess they're bound up together since Russia and the UK are major countries,
so anything that happens on the local level there usually has some impacts internationally.
Rory, do you discuss the news with your friends?
Sometimes, although I think it's better to avoid it, since my take on things is usually very different to my friends.
And I don't really like arguing with people.
So maybe we just discuss the facts and then move on from there to talk about something more personal or interesting.
