SO_UI_U4_PODCAST.doc

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  Upper Intermediate Unit 4 Video Podcast Script

 

V = Val              R = Rob              H = Hannah                            B = Bob              A = Adela

Al = Alice              Ro = Robert

 

 

V:              Hi. I read a lot, mostly non-fiction books about history and politics, but I also like some poetry, too. I’m outside the Tate Modern in central London asking people about reading. Do you read much?

 

R:              I do, yeah. I try to read as much as possible.

 

H:              Yes, I do. I’m a great reader.

 

B:              Yes, I do, yes. Mostly non-fiction.

 

A:              I read a lot of fashion magazines.

 

Al:              Yeah, I read a fair bit.

 

Ro:              Yeah, I read a lot of, sort of, art criticism and things, and things like that. But I also, I read a lot of comic books as well.

 

V:              What was the last book you read?

 

H:              Well, the last book I read was Water for Elelphants by Sara Gruen which was a book recommended to me by some friends – I’d never heard of her, or indeed, the book – but I enjoyed it very much. It was a story about a circus in the 1930’s America.

 

R:              The last book I read was a novel called The Search by a London author called Geoff Dyer and it’s about, it’s set in the States. It’s about a man who’s paid to pursue another person and he travels across the land trying to catch him.

 

A:              The last book I read: Breaking Dawn, part of the Twilight Saga by Stephanie Myers. I was re-reading it for the third time because I really enjoy the books. They get you quite hooked. 

 

Al:              I read a collection of short stories by Sylvia Plath called Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams.

 

B:              Douglas Adams’ Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency which was an ‘easy read’ and it was fun, it was humorous. It was a book I’d had on my shelf for ages and I just, it took me years to get round to reading it.

 

V:              What’s your favourite book?

 

H:              My favourite book of all time is a book called One Fine Day by Mollie Panter-Downes which is a book about a housewife, just after the Second World War and it just traces her existence in a day of her life. It’s terribly mundane.

 

Ro:              Probably The Killing Joke, which is a Batman graphic novel.

 

Al:              Well, one of them is definitely a book by Jean Cocteau called Les Enfants Terribles which is about two siblings and their, kind of, twisted relationship.

 

V:              Which fictional character would you most like to be, or meet?

 

R:              I’d most like to meet the fictional character, John Self from Martin Amis’ novel Money which is the funniest novel I’ve ever read.

 

B:              I think that would be The Mad Hatter from Alice in Wonderland. Just his irrationality, or irrationality to everyone else who looks at him, but to him, he’s completely normal.

 

Ro:              That’s quite an easy one: Batman. I’d love to be Batman and I’d love to meet the Joker.

 

Al:              I think I’d like to meet Humbert Humbert from Lolita, which is by Nabokov because he’s such a complex character and in the book you really empathise with him even though he’s got such dark and monstrous desires.

 

H:              Perhaps one of my, the people I’d most like to meet would be Mr Darcy from Pride and Prejudice. And I suppose, by default, that means I’d quite like to be Elizabeth Bennett.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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