👆👆👆請點擊 美語天天聽 添加關注,每天都有英語聽!
CARL AZUZ, CNN 10 ANCHOR: Here we go with a brand new edition of CNN 10. I'm Carl Azuz. First story today is about a warning from the Federal Bureau of Investigation. It's telling Americans to be on guard against disinformation in the upcoming presidential election. This information is not only false information or fake news.
It's false information that's spread intentionally to influence the public or cause instability and the FBI says people in other countries may be trying to spread disinformation when it comes to the results of the election. That's scheduled to take place on November 3rd. Most of the time Americans know the winner on election night. There's no law that requires results then. It's tradition but especially this year, results may not be known on November 3rd because of greater interest in mail-in voting.
In the past, most Americans have voted in person at polling places. The PEW Research Center says the share of mailed in ballots was just over 20 percent in 2016. But that's been rising steadily since 1996 and it's expected to increase more in this election because of concerns about the possible spread of corona virus at public polling places.
With mail-in voting, state governments may not receive all of their ballots by election night and it may take a while to count them once they do come in. So what the FBI is concerned about is disinformation being spread while Americans wait for national results.
The agency's director has said there's evidence that Russia is trying to interfere in the election. The Trump Administration said Chinese interference is a major threat as well. Both of these countries have denied involvement in U.S. elections but the FBI says to protect themselves, Americans should get their election information through trustworthy sources like official government websites. Especially if they hear about delayed voting or results and the FBI cautions people to watch out for unverified info on social media. As far as election night goes, one state that often gives a good indication of national results is Florida.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
HARRY ENTEN, CNN SENIOR POLITICAL WRITER AND ANALYST: Shalom folks. I'm Harry Enten, a senior political writer and analyst here at CNN. And we're going to talk about the importance of swing states particularly the biggest daddy of them all, Florida. Because of the Electoral College, a candidate who doesn't win in the swing states is not going to become president even if they win more votes nationwide.
And when it comes to the swing states, perhaps no swing state is more important than Florida. No Republican has won the presidency without winning Florida since Calvin Coolidge in 1924 and only Democrats John Kennedy in 1960 and Bill Clinton in 1992 have ever won the presidency without carrying the Sunshine State. Indeed, very few states have voted more like the nation than Florida over the past five elections. In 2020, it looks like Florida's going to play a key role once again. DONALD TRUMP, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: It is called the state of Florida. It's a great state.
ENTEN: So why does Florida vote a lot like the nation? It's because it looks a lot like it. If you look at the likely electorate come 2020, white voters in Florida will make up a very similar percentage that they do nationwide. And when it comes to black and Hispanic voters, Florida is the only one of the major swing states in which they'll likely make up at least 10 percent of the electorate.
But perhaps the most important reason to pay so much attention to Florida is that it will count it's votes very, very quickly. All votes by mail with just a few exceptions have to be in by the time polls close. That's very much unlike a lot of the other important swing states. Given that Florida so closely represents the country, it could be an early indication of how voters feel this election.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
AZUZ: 10 Second Trivia. What happens when meteorologists run out of storm names in a hurricane season? Do they recycle old names, use the Greek alphabet, use the NATO alphabet or start next year's list. If all names are used in a single season's list, meteorologists turn to the Greek alphabet.
That happened this year after Tropical Storm Wilfred, the last name on the list formed on September 18th. Two more storms followed, Alpha and Beta.
The second of which flooded Houston and other parts of southeast Texas this week. The need for Greek names doesn't come up often.
Since storms started getting names in 1953, meteorologists only ran out one other time in 2005 when there were a record 27 named storms. This year there've been 23 so far. That includes Tropical Storm Paulette which is said to be back from the dead like a zombie.
It hit Bermuda as a Category 1 hurricane and strengthened to Category 2 status on September 14th but then it lost strength and speed over the Atlantic and wondered as a low-pressure system until Monday. That's when Paulette regained strength and its tropical storm status a few hundred miles from the Azores Islands. A CNN meteorologist says zombie storms are rare but they have happened before.
OK. This next story is going to give you something to holler about. We'd tell you to holler if you'd heard this one before but you probably haven't unless you're from Spivey's Corner, North Carolina. Here's how farmers used to communicate across the countryside.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: (Inaudible)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: (Inaudible)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: (Inaudible)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: (Inaudible)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: (Inaudible)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: My name is Charlie Peacock (ph).
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Robbie Goodman (ph).
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: My name is Sheila Fry (ph). I am a 10 time -- UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Six time -- UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Two time -- champ of the National Hollerin' Contest of Spivey's Corner, North Carolina.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Hollerin' is a controlled sound that farmers used to communicate with one another before they had modern conveniences like electricity or telephones.
(INAUDIBLE)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Hollers had a certain rhythm and a modulation that would create an echo that would travel over a long distance. But there isn't just one type of holler.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: There are actually four types of hollers. Number one, functional. It serves a purpose. (inaudible). Such as calling down to a field or calling up from a field when you needed something. Number two, communicative. You're communicating a message such as good morning, good evening. Number three, distress (ph). You need help. Number four, expressive, just for sheer fun. Many times that could be in the form of tunes or ditties.
(INAUDIBLE)
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: These types of hollers were what the judges were looking for at the National Hollering Contest.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The first ever National Hollering Contest was in 1969. It was started to raise funds for the local fire department. It became a nationwide hit. Hey, that's me. I won the (inaudible) division in 1978. My holler was a distress holler. It sounded like a siren.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: And I'm proud to be a winner.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Everybody had their own twist that they put on it. The National Hollerin' Contest ran for about 48 years until 2015. We created the Worldwide Hollerin' Festival that's located in Hope Mill to try to preserve and keep the tradition of hollerin' alive.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Hollerin' is an important piece of culture in this region because it helps us remember our past. We can also appreciate the modern conveniences that we have today.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Hollerin' is part of simpler times and it's just something that we need to treasure because we need to know our history.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I love hollerin' because it brings the community together and just the fellowship that you have with -- with one another. We want to keep that tradition alive.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
AZUZ: Seems old technology has been knocking out new technology in the nation of Wales. For the last 18 months, the broadband internet has been crashing every day at 7am in a Welsh village. No one could figure out why. A team of engineers then detected a burst of electoral interference coming from a single house when the resident turned on an old TV each morning. Engineers say anything electrical can impact broadband connections.
So people should keep their "antenna" up. Stay tuned in and screen for anything that could "cat odiously" diffuse such a high volume of other information channels. TV puns. They're always worth the "UHeffort". I'm Carl Azuz. Lawton High School is in Lawton, Oklahoma. Let's go Wolverines.
If you are watching from a classroom, either real or virtual and you'd like to get your school announced on CNN 10. Go to CNN10.com and click on this here link. That will take you to our official You Tube channel and if you subscribe and leave a comment on our most recent show, the most recent edition of CNN 10. You could hear your school announced tomorrow on CNN.
👆👆👆
今天的聽力練習完成了!
如果你堅持聽完了,請別忘了點擊右下角的」好看「支持一下哦!
同時,分享到朋友圈打卡可以有效督促自己的學習!
快去邀請小夥伴們一起來提高英語聽力吧!
CNN 10的前身即CNN Student News,是周一至周五每天十分鐘的新聞簡報。裡邊的語速就是美國人日常對話的正常語速,而且其間受訪者發言還會帶有一些常見的口音。對於有一定語言基礎,或者準備出國生活的朋友,是非常實用的聽力練習素材。
博主會定期貼出以CNN 10為主的聽力素材,其他包括TED或VOA的內容也會偶爾出現。聽力練習在於積累,每天堅持聽一點,相信一段時間之後你會為自己的進步而感到驚喜!
大部分聽力素材是視頻(比如CNN 10),各位有興趣的話可以關注之後回復「CNN」或「TED」等關鍵詞以獲取相應視頻的網盤連結,或者從公眾號菜單進入音頻歷史消息或者視頻資源。
請掃描下邊的二維碼關注博主,也請分享給更多的朋友,讓我們一起美語天天聽!
更新不難,堅持不易,希望美語天天聽能為您的聽力練習提供一點點幫助。如果此番勞作能得到您的認可,那這區區一元錢的鼓勵足以讓小編甘之若飴。