1 April 2011

1 B2 Listening Exam

Here you are the key for the listening.

                                          KEY
Group:
SCORE:              / 10
LISTENING COMPREHENSION


Listen to an extract from a radio programme in which the editor of a newspaper and an actress are discussing about the role of the press nowadays.
 



1.       Why are the tabloid press under fire again? What’s the problem with them?
1 point à Because of their apparent disregard for truth and accuracy
0.5 point à Because of their disregard for truth / for accuracy

0.5
1
0

2.       Why doesn’t Jim Falmer, editor of The Daily Post, agree with the actress’ complaint?
2 points à Because  Shelley Russell used to beg the press to write features about her before she was famous
1 point à Because some time ago Shelley Russell wanted to appear in the press
2
1
0

3.       What story did The Daily Post write about the actress last week?
2 points à She was taking a bath with her co-star in her hotel room
1 point à She was with her co-star in her hotel room

2
1
0

4.       Write one of the headlines the newspaper wrote about the story.
-          Shelly gets bubbly with Shaun in champagne bath
-          Shaun’s wife is now filing for a divorce
1
0

5.       What does “flattering” mean?

a.       Elegant
b.      Smooth
c.       Overcomplimentary
d.      Believable

-0.33
0
1

6.       According to the actress, why do the press continue to print stories that are supposed not to be true?
1 point à To increase circulation and make more money
0.5 points à To increase circulation / To make more money

0.5
1
0

7.       According to the Daily Post, why do the press continue to print these stories?
1 point à Because the public are fascinated by fame and scandal, and they love to read about their favourite stars.
0.5 points à Because the public are fascinated by fame and scandal / Because they love to read about their favourite stars.

0.5
1
0

8.       What does “No smoke without fire” mean in this context? Use your own words to explain it.



1
0

1 B2 Reading Exam

Hi my dear students,
I´m quite worried this afternoon after checking your listening and reading exams.
In general terms I have found that you had a lot of difficulties to understand both texts. I attach the exam and the key in order that you can check how well you did it. Anyway we will check the exams on Tuesday and we will solve any trouble that you might have faced.

READING
THE CULT OF CELEBRITY
We are fascinated by their every move, we want to know everything about them. Jack Delaney asks why we are obsessed with the rich and famous.
Some are born famous (like royalty), some achieve fame (like film stars) and some have fame thrust upon them (like crime victims). Sometimes their celebrity is short-lived, sometimes it lasts a lifetime. In some rare cases, for example Diana, Princess of Wales, and Marilyn Monroe, it can be transformed by death into a sort of iconic status. But whatever the causes or circumstances, being a celebrity changes your relationship with the world. From being a private person, you become public property, and everybody wants to claim a bit of you. You are the object of envy as well as admiration, fair game for criticism, interrogation, ridicule and spite.
We make ‘em, we break ‘em
We treat the famous people with a mixture of reverence and brutality. We adore them, praise them, scrutinize them and destroy them. We make them unable to tell where their real selves end and the PR-manufactured images begin. We have no mercy, we show no shame. It is easy to assume that all aspects of a celebrity life are free to be examined because he or she is on show, which means he or she doesn’t have the same reality as everyone else. And it is precisely because many modern celebrities are no more special than the rest of us that we feel justified in treating them with such contempt. We build them up and knock them down.
So who are the famous?
It used to be the case that fame was a consequence of some mighty achievement or an unpleasant criminal act, when newspapers were filled largely with accounts of such things as earthquakes and wars, and when it was badly considered for journalists to examine the private lives of famous people, even the very famous.
It is now possible for people who are living ordinary private lives to become famous, for at least a short time, through the media – by appearing on game shows or confessional TV, for instance, or by volunteering to be the subject of a fly-on-the-wall documentary. The readiness of people to let programme-makers into their homes, to answer the most intimate questions about their lives, and to allow themselves to be filmed in the most undignified situations, never stops to amaze.
Given this ghastly invasion of one’s life, why is fame so desirable? Ask an average bunch of 10-year-olds what they want to do with their lives, and a large proportion of them will say that they would like to be famous. Not for anything in particular. Just famous. Period. In the adult population, otherwise perfectly normal people think nothing of confessing all about their personal tragedies on daytime television.

Why are we so obsessed?
The American writer Normal Mailer said that in an age without religion, celebrities are our new gods. If we have no faith in an afterlife and this life is our only one, then celebrity is the nearest any of us will get to immortality, and the pursuit of it becomes more urgent. At the pathological extreme of this motivation are murderers like Mark Chapman, who assassinated John Lennon partly, he said, to make himself famous.
Another feature of modern society is the power and omnipresence of the mass media. Its explosive expansion in the last couple of decades has created an insatiable need for new material. All the newspapers, magazines, television and radio programmes require an endless supply of human-interest stories. These are increasingly delivered in the form of interviews, profiles, gossip columns, photoshoots at gatherings, etc about people who are celebrated for something they have done, or for a position they occupy in society, or in some cases for just being a celebrity. There are some totally talentless people who are simply famous for being famous. As Andy Warhol said “In the future, everyone will be famous for fifteen minutes”.
Love it or hate it?
The American writer, Jay McInerney, commented, “I have enjoyed a little celebrity in my time, and I have looked at any number of models I have indulged in small talk about popular film stars. But at least I hate myself in the morning. I fear as a nation we’re losing our sense of shame in this regard”.
So how do you feel when you read a gossip magazine, or tune into confessional TV? Do you love it or hate it? What can be done to curb our fascination, particularly when the glittery sacrificial lambs go so willingly to slaughter? Probably not a lot. 
KEY

1.       Summarize the context of the text.
The text is about modern society´s obsession with celebrities and fascination for their lives. It also puts an emphasis on how we adore them at the same time that we destroy them, and how some of us, at a pathological extreme of this motivation, need more than a lot of gossiping; they would actually love to be famous themselves.
2.       How does an ordinary person become a celebrity?
a) by achieving fame like film stars
b) by appearing on game shows or confessional TV
c) by being in the public eye
d) by accomplishing any mighty achievement 
3.       According to the text, why is it that we “treat modern celebrities with contempt”?
Because we feel that many of them are no more special than the rest of us. Besides they lead ordinary lives.
4.       What are the cause/s that trigger celebrity-related obsession?
This is an age without religion and we have no faith in an afterlife, so celebrities are our new gods and being celebrities ourselves is the nearest we will get to immortality.
The mass media gives also the idea that being famous should be something desirable; the final goal of any ordinary person.
5.       What is the meaning of “ghastly” in “Given this ghastly invasion of one’s life, why is fame so desirable”? Explain its meaning and use its opposite in a different sentence.
Ghastly means causing discomfort, unhappiness, something unpleasant and shocking;
Becoming famous was the most pleasing thing that I have ever felt.
6.       What does Jay McInerney mean by “What can be done to curb our fascination, particularly when the glittery sacrificial lambs go so willingly to slaughter?”
a) there´s little to be done since we cannot curb our ardent desire to loathe celebrities.
b) we can refrain from idolizing celebrities.
c) we are even willing to sacrifice our lives for a minute of fame.
d) we feel so amazed by celebrities that we can hardly be aware of the values we´re losing.

7.       Interpret and give your opinion on Andy Warhol’s statement: “In the future, everyone will be famous for fifteen minutes”.
He thinks that to be famous nowadays, you don´t need to be a popular politician or a talented artist.
I agree with Andy Warhol that a lot of talentless people are and will be famous in this modern society. Belen Esteban is a good example of this. She has no studies nor a successful professional career, however, she is always on TV; the media speaks about her all the time.

31 March 2011

1 B1 Homework for the weekend

Hi students!
I´m back and you know, I have to propose you some homework to do this weekend. On page 54 there is a reading " Clothes to Die for" that I would like you to read and do exercises 6 & 7.
For Mondays and Wednesdays students the deadline is next Wednesday so as We haven´t class together you may not know anything.

Enjoy the weekend!

Monolingual Dictionary


As some of you have  asked me about a good monolingual dictionary I propose  this one because of its size, illustrations an clear definitions.
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englsh. New Edition. Longman.