时间:2019-03-01 作者:英语课 分类:听播客学英语


英语课

   Today is the first of April. The first of April is traditionally called All Fools Day, or April Fools Day. It is a day for mischief 1, or playing tricks on people; and for getting people to believe things which are not true.


  Today is the 50th Anniversary of one of the most famous April Fools Day tricks. It was 1957. BBC television had a weekly documentary 2 programme called Panorama 3. Panorama was a serious and respected programme, reporting on news events around the world. On 1 April, Panorama included a report about the problems facing spaghetti farmers in Switzerland. There were pictures of people picking spaghetti from spaghetti trees and laying it in the sunshine to dry. But the spaghetti farmers were afraid that a late frost would damage the spaghetti crop, and destroy their livelihood 4.
  Fifty years ago, most British people did not know much about Italian food like spaghetti. Many people apparently 5 accepted the documentary at face value. Some people say that it was many years before they found out that spaghetti does not really grow on trees.(No. Spaghetti really does not grow on trees. It was a joke. Alright?)
  The Panorama report was a spoof 6. Ever since then, it has been common for newspapers to carry spoof stories on 1 April. So this morning, I opened my newspaper eagerly, to find the spoof story. There was a story that the London Transport lost property office had just found the owner of an urn 7 containing human ashes which had been left on the underground eight years ago. Surely that was a spoof? But no, the story was in fact completely true.
  And then I found it. I told you in an earlier podcast that our Prime Minister, Tony Blair, is expected to retire later this year. What will he do when he is no longer Prime Minister? According to the Observer newspaper, he will start a new career as an actor. He has been offered a part in a play at a leading London theatre in the autumn. He is already learning his lines. He is practising them with his staff in 10 Downing Street. He has also been offered parts in the BBC’s science fiction programme Dr Who, and in several comedy shows.
  But is this really an April Fool spoof? Our Prime Minister is one of the finest actors in Britain today. He can convince people of anything. He can convince himself of anything. Such as that there are weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Do you know Shakespeare’s play, King Lear? It is about an arrogant 8 and powerful king who decides to retire. He divides his kingdom between his three daughters. But he then argues, first with one daughter and then with the others, until in the end he goes mad. Tony Blair as King Lear? Yes – I think so.

n.损害,伤害,危害;恶作剧,捣蛋,胡闹
  • Nobody took notice of the mischief of the matter. 没有人注意到这件事情所带来的危害。
  • He seems to intend mischief.看来他想捣蛋。
adj.文献的;n.纪录片
  • This case lacked documentary proof.本案缺少书面证据。
  • I watched a documentary on the Civil War.我看了一部关于内战的纪录片。
n.全景,全景画,全景摄影,全景照片[装置]
  • A vast panorama of the valley lay before us.山谷的广阔全景展现在我们面前。
  • A flourishing and prosperous panorama spread out before our eyes.一派欣欣向荣的景象展现在我们的眼前。
n.生计,谋生之道
  • Appropriate arrangements will be made for their work and livelihood.他们的工作和生活会得到妥善安排。
  • My father gained a bare livelihood of family by his own hands.父亲靠自己的双手勉强维持家计。
adv.显然地;表面上,似乎
  • An apparently blind alley leads suddenly into an open space.山穷水尽,豁然开朗。
  • He was apparently much surprised at the news.他对那个消息显然感到十分惊异。
n.诳骗,愚弄,戏弄
  • The show was a spoof of college life.那戏是对大学生活的讽刺。
  • That is Tim Robbins's spoof documentary about a presidential campaign.那是蒂姆·罗宾斯关于总统选举的讽刺纪录片。
n.(有座脚的)瓮;坟墓;骨灰瓮
  • The urn was unearthed entire.这只瓮出土完整无缺。
  • She put the big hot coffee urn on the table and plugged it in.她将大咖啡壶放在桌子上,接上电源。
adj.傲慢的,自大的
  • You've got to get rid of your arrogant ways.你这骄傲劲儿得好好改改。
  • People are waking up that he is arrogant.人们开始认识到他很傲慢。
学英语单词
a shag
acetylation value
acute peritonitis
ardill
background noise of channel
bamboo spar
Belle Fourche River
bellshaped
bifilar coil
BOD20
bulk ore-carrier
candlemass (england)
CB1348
Chesters
Chinese windlass
costae
culture transfering
dedicatees
Diesel skidder
distributed time-division multiple-access
doojiggers
drink to sth
dryoathyrium viridiforn (mak.) ching
epithelial rest
essential thrombocytopenia
ethete
Everlasting Registrar
FEBA
fiana
fish basket
flexible array bound
Galen's bandage
gas pipe connector
geanticlinals
gitoside
group planning and decision making
halt device
Hurwitz's stability criterion
induced module
keteleeria davidiana formosana
Konstantina, Zaliv
kyms
lambic beer
laser inertial navigation and attack system (linas)
lay teacher
limpest
line communication
line-managers
logic(al) diagram
luteo-
MAR-BP1
Mennucci
mischievious
naul
nearshoring
nepheline-basalt
non-capillary porosity
non-decreasings
non-rewirable cable reel
Nāmkān
old Adam
ophthalmomelanoma
orientation equipment
osphronemuss
osteomatous chondrosarcoma
oyster plant
phaseolus
phosphoribosyl transferase
piquets
plav
pneumatic transportation
polychromatia
Potaninia
pulling force
puncta remotum
reversible electric servomotor
scaling circuit counter
selfinactivating
shoess
shoot off one's mouth
slab with haunched ribs
Southwest Harbor
standard unit of accounting
strontiam
subjective audiometry
tausonite
the flemish
thinic
throwables
toilet-bags
topographic hillock
trigonometrist
truth or falsity
tub file
uchigatana
unflinching
vegetable cell
virustatic
waveconnect
Westchester County
yakity-yakking
zymotic efficiency of soil