IELTS Speaking for Success - 📺 TV Programs (S05E15) + Transcript

Episode Date: March 1, 2021

What's your favorite TV program? Do you talk with your friends about the program you watched? In your country is it possible to watch any TV programs in English? Tune in and have a great day! - IEL...TS Speaking for Success PREMIUM: https://linktr.ee/sfspremium Transcript: https://successwithielts.com/s05e15 Find an IELTS Speaking Partner: https://links.successwithielts.com/ieltspartner Our social media: https://linktr.ee/successwithielts © 2021 Success with IELTS Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, Sunshine, I'm Maria. And my name is Rory, and we're the host of the AIL 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 start in this podcast to bring a smile onto your face and some good vocabulary and gorgeous grammar for your high score. Which score, Rory? It's a fan nine score. Woo! Oh, Rory, tell me, have you ever watched the Queen's Gamb?
Starting point is 00:00:31 bit. No, I've heard about it, but actually, I don't watch TV. Let's talk about TV and TV programs. Let's do it anyway. Yeah, dear listener, our premium news. In this week's premium episodes, we talk about bags in Speaking Part 1. In Speaking Part 2, Rory describes a time when he encouraged someone to do something that they didn't want to do. And in Speaking Part 3, we discuss motivation and leaders, click the link in the description to check out other topics we covered on our premium podcast and support us and sign up for our Patreon. Rory, what kind of TV programs do you like?
Starting point is 00:01:15 Once I can stream on demand. And, you know, the kind that you can have on in the background is sort of, well, background noise, for lack of a better term. What's your favorite TV program? Well, I used to like science fiction programs. I don't have much time to watch TV right now, but science fiction definitely. In science fiction series in particular, I really like Star Trek. And if I had the time, I'd rewatch all of Star Trek.
Starting point is 00:01:38 Star Trek Voyager in particular is my favorite. Do you often watch programs on TV or on your cell phone? Well, actually, I watch them on my smartphone. I really want a widescreen TV, though, for my new apartment. But there's just not enough time to go and buy the thing and then have it installed and put up on the wall on the support struts, guess. Do you like watching the same kind of program all the time? Oh, definitely, yeah. I often play things to death, especially if they're funny things.
Starting point is 00:02:07 Like, it's not just TV programs, it's things like Vines, for example, or comedy specials. I really like watching the same things again and again until I'm, like, word-perfect and how the script goes. Do you talk with your friends about the program you watched? Not really, actually. I was thinking about this the other day. We have different tastes and just about everything in terms of the media that we consume. So if they asked me, I would tell them, but I don't just go to them and just come out with it completely from nothing. In your country, is it possible to watch any TV programs in English? Well, yeah, I certainly hope so, given that it's Scotland. If we talk about Russia,
Starting point is 00:02:50 then I don't think it's possible to watch it on, well, non-satellite television. I think that have to pay for like a cable package or something for that. But you can watch, you can watch on streaming services like Netflix, for example. You can watch things in English there. And you can pay for subtitles on videos like on YouTube, but I don't think that's like a TV service, is it? That's just like video on demand, really, for lack of a better term. Do you often watch TV? No. It's just one of these things. Like I said, I have it on in the background. And that's not the TV, that's my phone. So it's just TV shows being streamed from my phone for me to listen to while I'm doing something like, oh well, yesterday was the ironing, for example. What did you iron? My clothes.
Starting point is 00:03:44 What else do you iron? My hair? I don't know. Bading. Somebody else is clothes. People used to iron. People used to iron their hair. Yeah, yeah. The examiner won't ask you this question, like what do you iron? But it just thought it was a follow up. Okay. So, Rory, let's talk about. It's a TV. So what's going on with TV, television? Yeah, TV is the short form and television is the longer form. I think people just talk about TV, don't they? Okay, watch TV, can I say watch the telly?
Starting point is 00:04:13 Yeah, people say watch the telly. Watch the box. Watch the box. Watch the box. Watch the box if you're living in the 1960s. Okay, so we don't say watch the telly, we don't say watch the box, just watch TV. People used to say, like, on the tube. That's where YouTube comes from.
Starting point is 00:04:29 People used to describe it as like a tube. I can't remember. It's got something to do with like the tubes inside the TV, the mechanism itself. Hmm. Okay. And also television, it's like a general term for all the TV programs, everything, just television. We can have satellite television, cable television, right? So satellite TV is when you have it beamed directly to your house from a satellite in orbit. And cable is when you have, well, the link to your house via cable.
Starting point is 00:04:59 They're kind of old things, though. I think most people have, like, internet packages, basically. They have everything compiled into one thing, and it comes through the internet. I think that's how it works. Yeah, we call them streaming platforms or streaming services. So, for example, like YouTube, TV, Netflix, like, streaming platforms. Well, I think, like, people, I think those are separate things, though. People pay for their internet service, and they pay for their television service
Starting point is 00:05:27 and other related services. And then part of that is Netflix, the internet side of it. It's really complicated. Yeah. Okay. All right. But you've been talking about like a widescreen TV, which is some gadget, a piece of equipment.
Starting point is 00:05:44 So a wide screen TV, like huge TV. Yeah, you have, well, once I was looking at, there was one for like 200,000 roubles or something, which is actually massive. It's like the size of my wall. And I really want it. Home cinema or something It is basically
Starting point is 00:06:00 It's a home cinema It's the biggest Home cinema It's probably going to be the biggest waste of money in my entire life But I really I really like that TV I don't know when I'd watch it either
Starting point is 00:06:09 Okay Alright so and you're gonna I should say No we need to talk about widescreen What it actually is Wide screen is just like Another way of saying Really wide
Starting point is 00:06:17 Yeah Like a king size bed A widescreen TV And you'll have it installed In your what Bedroom kitchen on my bedroom for sure I don't want anyone else to watch it
Starting point is 00:06:29 On the ceiling Well no Usually you get it installed on the wall I think they're called struts The things that you mount it on And if they're not called struts Then it's definitely called the mounting They're the things that hold your TV to the wall
Starting point is 00:06:42 That's a useful piece of vocabulary Yeah and the construction is Have it installed So to have something done for you So Rory is not going to install the TV himself He's going to pay some men Some qualified men
Starting point is 00:06:56 to do it for him. Or women. Oh, women. What happens to feminism? Right. Okay, people. People. So, but we both know it's going to be men. I'd like to have it installed in my bedroom, for example. And you play TV as a background noise. You have it on as a background noise.
Starting point is 00:07:15 So that's important to point out you have on the TV, you have the TV on, and then you have it on as background noise. So, like, I don't think, because people are busy, especially in Moscow, really sit down and relax and watch the television anymore. I don't think people do that. But instead they have it on in the background while they're doing something. So like I do the ironing and then while I'm doing the ironing I'll listen to whatever's on my phone. It's not quite the same viewing experience but still kind of engaging with the TV somehow. And as you know,
Starting point is 00:07:48 Rory does iron his socks, ladies and gentlemen. I do iron my socks. I iron my, I iron my, I iron my jeans as well. I discovered that that was something it's unusual. No, but jeans is okay, but socks. Hmm. Some people said that ironing your jeans was something people only did in the 1990s. Really? Apparently. Oh. Okay, so we have different kinds of TV programs. For example, cartoons, chat shows,
Starting point is 00:08:11 cookery programs, documentaries, game shows, news, wildlife, sitcoms. Rory mentioned science fiction. Yes, but most importantly, if it's a set of different shows about the same people, then it's a series. And it's important, to point that out because everybody says serials I know so what's going on? Serials and serious.
Starting point is 00:08:31 Well, to be honest, you could say like it's a serial but most people, the collocation isn't I watch serials, it's I watch a series or I watch this TV series. Yeah. So it's unusual I don't think it would bring down your score hugely but it's just one of these things
Starting point is 00:08:47 that makes the examiner think that's a bit unnatural. Yeah, guys, so Netflix series. Okay, TV series, Netflix series, The Game of Thrones is serious, and we say a serious. This is crazy, a series. This is crazy, a series, yeah. Okay, so make sure that you know the exact name of a show
Starting point is 00:09:08 that you really enjoy, right, chat show, like, serious. And if you like the person, what do you call this person, a presenter, right? Well, it depends. If it's like a live show, which means it's happening without being recorded, then the person's presenting it as the present. or if it's, maybe it can be recorded and it's like a game or something like that, then they're the presenter. But if it's about people who aren't real, then the people in it are characters.
Starting point is 00:09:37 Like in Star Trek, they have lots of characters. Yeah, but in chat shows, like a presenter. And you can play your favorite show to death. Yeah, that's a good one, to play something to death. You can do anything to death. But if we talk about TV, then you play shows to death, which just means you listen to the show. them again and again and again. You can listen to this podcast to death.
Starting point is 00:10:00 You can, and it will help you. To get the high score. The band ninth score. Yes, tastes are different, and Rory and his friends have different tastes in everything. Right? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:14 It just means that you have, I don't know, different preferences. But to say you've got a different taste as a higher level sentence, sorry, structure even. Yeah, and you, You said that my friends and I have different tastes in terms of TV programs. And that's another thing, like, in terms of, and then describing the thing.
Starting point is 00:10:35 So it just means, like, you could say in, different tastes in TV programs, but it focuses it a bit more when you say in terms of TV programs. It's more formal as well. But, yeah, sounds good. When we talk about TV programs and series, serious, you guys, okay, Netflix, series, we should talk about binge watching. So, Roar, you said that you play. something to death, you play something as a background noise, but do you binge watch stuff
Starting point is 00:11:02 and what it is to be binge-watch? I don't binge-watch things, but binge watching is when you watch everything like an entire series all at once and that's possible now because on Netflix, for example, the whole series comes out and then you can watch everything in one go. So... For two days, non-stop. Yeah, do you just watch everything? And that's binging. Yeah, it's basically you start on the 1st of January, you start and you just watch your first favorite series nonstop. It's called to binge watch. And you can use it as a gerent binge watching.
Starting point is 00:11:33 I enjoy binge watching. And you know what? What happens to your brain when you binge watch your favorite series? You don't have a life. Get a life. No, listen. Your brain produces dopamine, dopamine, right? Dopamine. Dopamine. And your body experiences a drug-like high. So you're high when you binge watch your favorite series, but should be your favorite. Yes, you guys, feel free to binge watch our, no, binge listen to our podcast. We could talk about the grammar. Grammar. If I had the time.
Starting point is 00:12:06 Oh, God, Rory, what kind of conditional is it? I don't know. That's why you're going to tell me what it is, because I don't know what conditionals are. The second conditional. It's the second conditional, Rory. It's an imaginary situation. Like, what's your favorite TV program? And you say, if I had more time, I'd watch James Oliver Coocault show.
Starting point is 00:12:28 If I had more time, I would learn what conditionals are. No, he just couldn't care less. Listen, we don't get told what this is in school. It's difficult to remember. Yeah, that's why you have me. Well, and you're pretty. Rory, you said, Eustra again, and this is our favorite word, I used to, used to, used to, used to. Actually, two words, but we say it as one.
Starting point is 00:12:52 Like, I used to watch cookery programs. I used to watch makeover shows. That's pronunciation. That's pretty good. So now you don't anymore. Yeah, and makeover shows is like when they go to your apartment and they change it and you hate it. It's a good exam strategy to highlight as well, not makeover shows, but using used to and conditionals. Because we just started this whole episode by saying, I don't know anything about TV. So if you don't know anything about a subject, then you could say, if I knew something about this, then I would
Starting point is 00:13:25 probably say that, but I don't. Yeah, yeah. Or if I had to watch TV programs, it would be chat shows, if I had more time, I'd, blah, if my friends knew something about TV. Well, you might not have any TV at all. You can talk about Netflix and things you watch on YouTube or on the internet, whatever. On the subject of having the time, I think we're out of it. Thank you very much for listening. Remember, have a life. and enjoy... Don't binge watch things.
Starting point is 00:13:55 Yeah, don't binge watch things. But binge listen to our podcast. We'll help you get ready for your exam. Have a TV free live. But before we go, in one of the previous episodes, we talked about ways to improve your speaking, and I mentioned finding a speaking partner. And very conveniently, we have a telegram chat
Starting point is 00:14:10 where you can find said speaking partner. It's free, and it's very easy to do. So don't forget to read the chat rules before you do it, but check out the link in the description, and we'll see you in the next episode. Bye. Rory, what kind of TV programs do you like? Once I can stream on demand.
Starting point is 00:14:35 And, you know, the kind that you can have on in the background is sort of, well, background noise, for lack of a better term. What's your favorite TV program? Well, I used to like science fiction programs. I don't have much time to watch TV right now, but science fiction definitely. In science fiction series in particular, I really like Star Trek. And if I had the time, I'd rewatch all of Star Trek. Star Trek Voyager in particular is my favorite. Do you often watch programs on TV or on your cell phone?
Starting point is 00:15:03 Well, actually, I watch them on my smartphone. I really want a widescreen TV, though, for my new apartment. But there's just not enough time to go and buy the thing and then pay to have it installed and put up on the wall on the support struts, I guess. Do you like watching the same kind of program all the time? Oh, definitely, yeah. I often play things to death, especially if they're funny things. It's not just TV programs, it's things like Vines, for example, or comedy specials.
Starting point is 00:15:30 I really like watching the same things again and again until I'm word-perfect in how the script goes. Do you talk with your friends about the program you watched? Not really, actually. I was thinking about this the other day. We have different tastes and just about everything in terms of the media that we consume. So if they asked me, I would tell them. but I don't just go to them and just come out with it completely from nothing. In your country, is it possible to watch any TV programs in English?
Starting point is 00:16:02 Well, yeah, I certainly hope so, given that it's Scotland. If we talk about Russia, then I don't think it's possible to watch it on, well, non-satellite television. I think that you have to pay for like a cable package or something for that. but you can watch you can watch on streaming services like Netflix for example you can watch things in English there
Starting point is 00:16:27 and you can pay for subtitles on videos like on YouTube but I don't think that's like a TV service is it that's just like video on demand really for lack of a better term do you often watch TV? No it's just one of these things like I said I have it on in the background and that's not the TV that's my phone
Starting point is 00:16:46 so it's just TV shows being streamed from my phone for me to listen to while I'm doing something like, oh well, yesterday was the ironing, for example.

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