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Tv News Reporters And Their Odd Diction
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Where do they learn that stuff?
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// Well Laura Bicker is Scottish - she probably got her diction growing up.//
yeah like Trevor McDonald got HIS accent growing up in Brixton ....
The priblem Doug wasa that the Beeb pronunciation unit was closed down thirty years ago and there grew up the idea that anything goes
soon I predict we will have - "Obama, he's the president of america innit ?"
or "Hillary asks in a presidential primary - wot wiv dat ven ?"
yeah like Trevor McDonald got HIS accent growing up in Brixton ....
The priblem Doug wasa that the Beeb pronunciation unit was closed down thirty years ago and there grew up the idea that anything goes
soon I predict we will have - "Obama, he's the president of america innit ?"
or "Hillary asks in a presidential primary - wot wiv dat ven ?"
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// The priblem Doug wasa that the Beeb pronunciation unit was closed down thirty years ago //
No it wasn't, it is alive and kicking.
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ informa tionand archive s/archi venews/ 2013/bb c_pronu nciatio n
BBC English used to consists of 100% home counties accents, and did not reflect Britain. So regional accents were gradually allowed to be broadcast. To most of the UK that was an improvement, but to people in the Home Counties they were suddenly subjected to normal speak and they were (and seemingly are still) dumbfounded.
No it wasn't, it is alive and kicking.
http://
BBC English used to consists of 100% home counties accents, and did not reflect Britain. So regional accents were gradually allowed to be broadcast. To most of the UK that was an improvement, but to people in the Home Counties they were suddenly subjected to normal speak and they were (and seemingly are still) dumbfounded.
I don't know if this is the sort of thing you mean, Doug, but I often find myself (almost) shouting at some TV news-readers, "For goodness sake, talk in phrases at least, if you can't manage a whole reasonably-spaced sentence!"
It happens when they actually resort to pronouncing individual words; that is, there appears to be no coherence in what they are actually saying.
I have never seen an autocue 'in the flesh', so I'm not sure whether it is because of how these work that readers get confused.
It happens when they actually resort to pronouncing individual words; that is, there appears to be no coherence in what they are actually saying.
I have never seen an autocue 'in the flesh', so I'm not sure whether it is because of how these work that readers get confused.
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