Mostrando postagens com marcador hearst. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador hearst. Mostrar todas as postagens

terça-feira, 10 de maio de 2011

William Randolph Hearst, 1863-1951: He Created What Was Once the Nation's Largest Newspaper Grou

William Randolph Hearst, 1863-1951: He Created What Was Once the Nation's Largest Newspaper Group




Source: www.voanews.com 

Download MP3   (Right-click or option-click the link.)

Welcome to the VOA Special English program PEOPLE IN AMERICA.  Today, Steve Ember and Rich Kleinfeldt tell about American publisher William Randolph Hearst. Mr. Hearst created what was once the nation's largest newspaper organization. He bought newspapers in many areas of the United States.  He spent millions of dollars to gain readers in sometimes shocking ways.  He forever changed the American newspaper business.
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William Randolph Hearst was born in San Francisco in eighteen sixty-three.  He was the only child of George Hearst and Phoebe Apperson Hearst.  His father became rich by developing mines.   His mother was a philanthropist who gave her time and money to help others.
William Randolph Hearst had everything he wanted as a child.  But, he was a rebel.  In eighteen eighty-five, he was expelled from Harvard, one of the best universities in America, for playing a joke on a professor.
George Hearst wanted his son to take control of developing the mines or the land he owned.  But William had other desires.  He became interested in newspapers while at Harvard.  He started working as a reporter for the New York World newspaper owned by Joseph Pulitzer.
George Hearst owned the San Francisco Examiner newspaper.  But he was more interested in politics than in newspaper publishing.  In eighteen eighty-seven, George Hearst became a United States senator.  He gave control of the newspaper to his son William who was twenty-three.
William Randolph Hearst wanted to create a newspaper that people would talk about.  He worked long hours and put high energy into his newspaper.  He employed some of the best reporters and writers he could find.  And, he paid them the highest wages.  Mr. Hearst improved the appearance of his newspaper and bought modern equipment.  He also improved relations with advertisers.  Advertisers pay to have their products shown in newspapers to increase sales.  Newspapers profit from the money paid by advertisers.
News stories in the San Francisco Examiner were written with force, energy and excitement.  Some stories were written to shock readers and affect them emotionally.  However, the stories were simple and easy to read.
Mr. Hearst believed in doing whatever it took to get readers.  His newspaper policy was:  make the news complete; print all the news; shorten it if necessary, but get it in.  That became the policy in newsrooms across America.
By eighteen ninety-one, the San Francisco Examiner had three times more readers and advertisers than when Mr. Hearst took control of the newspaper.  In less than five years, William Randolph Hearst made the new San Francisco Examiner a huge success.
Mr. Hearst repeated his success in New York City. He borrowed five million dollars from his mother to purchase a second newspaper, the New York Journal.  In his first two months, he increased the number of copies sold from thirty thousand to one hundred thousand.
Joseph Pulitzer was a very successful publisher in New York.  Mr. Hearst shared Mr. Pulitzer's excitement and energy about the newspaper business.
During the eighteen nineties, Mr. Hearst and Mr. Pulitzer began a fierce newspaper war.  Mr. Hearst hired many reporters from Mr. Pulitzer's New York World newspaper.  He paid them more than two times as much as they had been earning.  He also reduced the price of his newspaper below Mr. Pulitzer's.
Mr. Hearst won readers by making the news more exciting and entertaining.  He created a kind of newspaper reporting known today as "yellow journalism."  News events were made to seem greater than they really were.  His methods went beyond what would be accepted today in major newspapers.  Critics said his newspapers were only for entertainment.  Yet many other newspapers tried to copy his methods.
Mr. Hearst attacked big businesses and dishonest politicians in his newspapers.  There were also reports about sex, murder and other crimes.  His newspapers became a voice for working people and the poor.  His influence grew across the nation through his newspapers and the magazines he bought or began.
Many experts say Mr. Hearst's reporting methods and his battle with Mr. Pulitzer for readers led to the Spanish-American War.  In eighteen ninety-eight, the United States fought Spain to help the people of Cuba gain independence from Spain.
Mr. Hearst's newspapers had accused Spain of sinking the American battleship Maine and killing two hundred fifty sailors.  This increased public support for the war.  However, it still is not known how the ship sank.
The war greatly increased readers for the Hearst publications.  Mr. Hearst's battle with competitors widened after the war.  Some newspapers blamed him when President William McKinley was murdered in nineteen-oh-one.  The assassination happened after one of the Hearst newspapers seemed to suggest killing Mr. McKinley.
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 VOICE TWO:
In the early nineteen hundreds, William Randolph Hearst became deeply involved in politics.  He represented New York in the United States House of Representatives from nineteen-oh-three to nineteen-oh-seven.  In nineteen-oh-four, he unsuccessfully sought the Democratic nomination for president.  He also failed in his campaigns to become governor of New York or mayor of New York City.
Mr. Hearst had hoped to change the way things were being done in New York City.  He hoped to defeat dishonest New York City politicians who controlled the city at the time.
Mr. Hearst also campaigned against big business.  He supported labor unions and government ownership of public utilities, railroads, and other big companies.  And, he sought political reform and the return of economic competition in the country.
Mr. Hearst's opponents accused him of being disloyal to his country because of his support for Germany during the first years of World War One.  He was opposed to American involvement in the war.
Mr. Hearst was sharply criticized for his political ideas.  Many people refused to deal with him.  Some hated him.   His newspapers were banned in many communities.
Mr. Hearst strongly supported Democrat Franklin Roosevelt for president in nineteen thirty-two.  Then he became increasingly conservative and turned against President Roosevelt.  He opposed American involvement in World War Two.  He also led a fierce campaign against communism during the nineteen thirties.
Through the years, Mr. Hearst continued to buy newspapers and magazines across the country and around the world.  He also controlled a number of radio and television stations and a movie company.
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William Randolph Hearst and his wife Millicent were married in nineteen-oh-three.  They had five sons.  She remained married to him until her death.  However, Mr. Hearst spent almost thirty years of his life with Hollywood actress Marion Davies in San Simeon, California.  They met in nineteen seventeen and later lived together at San Simeon.  He started a movie company to produce movies for her.  Their relationship shocked the nation.
Mr. Hearst spent thirty years and thirty million dollars to build a huge home at San Simeon.  It has one hundred sixty-five rooms.  Mr. Hearst and Marion Davies entertained many famous people there.  He continually bought costly art objects to fill it.
By nineteen thirty-seven, Mr. Hearst's heavy spending threatened to ruin his publishing organization.  He was forced to sell much of his property and many art objects.  The economic recovery after World War Two saved what was left of his media organization.
When William Randolph Hearst died in nineteen fifty-one, he still owned what was then the largest newspaper company in America.  Today, the Hearst Corporation includes more than one hundred thirty separate businesses.  They include newspapers, magazines, radio and television stations and business media companies.  The communications business William Randolph Hearst began continues to influence and inform people around the world.
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 ANNOUNCER:
This Special English program was written by Cynthia Kirk. It was produced by Paul Thompson.   Your narrators were Steve Ember and Rich Kleinfeldt.  I'm Faith Lapidus.  Listen again next week for anotherPEOPLE IN AMERICA program on the Voice of America.

terça-feira, 12 de abril de 2011

Patty Hearst, Speak Up in Class

Patty Hearst


Source: SPEAK UP


Speak Up in Class could provide an improvement to grammar focusing check it out the link and do the lesson. Please contact with me through carlosrn36@gmail.com and I'll leave the answers  http://englishtips-self-taught.blogspot.com/2011/04/where-are-they-now.html

Listen to the audio and getting started:

Where are they now?


Speak Up in Class
Patty Hearst

A-  Before you start!

Answer the question with a partner.

1.   Many people consider the Orson Welles film Citizen Kane (Quarto Potere) to be the best film of all time. What do you know about the story and characters? Have you seen it?
2.   What are some of the advantages and disadvantages of belonging to a very rich and famous family?
3.   Can you name any past or present terrorist organizations?
4.   What kinds of crimes do terrorists often commit?

B-  Listen and answer.

Read these statements. Then listen (without reading) and write T (true) or F (false).

1.   The film Citizen Kane was based on the life of William Randolph Hearst.
2.   W.R. Hearst was a rich Banker.
3.   He was Patty Hearst’s great-grandfather.
4.   Patty was kidnapped by terrorists while she was walking along the street.
5.   She became a member of the terrorist group.
6.   After her arrest, she spent many years in prison.
7.   Life is difficult for her now and she lives in poverty.
8.   She doesn’t like talking about her past.

C-  Read and answer.

Read the article and answer the questions.

1.   What did the SLA want Patty’s family to do?
2.   Why weren’t the terrorists happy with the result?
3.   What did Patty do after she was kidnapped?
4.   What was her defence?
5.   Did the jury believe Patty’s tory?
6.   What is Patty interested in now?

D- Learn it! Use it!

Find words in the text for these definitions.

1-  A person who has been kidnapped. H__ __ __ __  __  __

2-  The time when you are a child.  C __  __  __ __ __ __ __ __

3-  A group a criminals working together. G __ __ __

4-  Another word of “film.”  M __ __ __ __

5-  Stole money using force. R __ __ __ __ __

6-  A formal court process to decide whether a person is innocent or guilty. T __ __ __ __.








domingo, 10 de abril de 2011

Where are they now?

Source: Speak Up
Language level: Pre-intermediate
Speaker: Chuck Rolando
Standard: American Accent

PATTY HEARST

Patty Hearst


Have you seen the 1941 Orson Welles movie Citizen Kane? Orson Welles based “Charles Foster Kane” on a real person: William Randolph Hearst, a rich newspaper publisher and politician. In the movie Kane lived in a enormous palace called Xanadu. In reality Hearst lived in an enormous palace in California called Hearst Castle. Hearst was famous in America in the first half of the 20th century. His granddaughter, Patty Hearst, was famous in the 1970s.

TERRORIST

William Randolph Hearst died in 1951. His granddaughter Patty was born in 1954. She had a typically rich childhood, but that changed in February 1974. Patty was in an apartment in Berkeley (near San Francisco) when terrorists kidnapped her. The terrorists were members of the Symbionese Liberation Army. Patty  was their hostage and the SLA ordered Patty’s parents to donate food to the poor families of California. The Hearst family gave $6 million worth of food, but the SLA said was of bad quality!

THE BANK JOB

In April 1974 Patty made a shocking announcement. She said she was a member of the SLA and that her new name was “Tania.” A few days later members of the SLA robbed a bank in San Francisco. Patty was a member of the gang. The police arrested Patty and other SLA members in 1975. Her trial began in 1976.
     
The big question was this: was Patty really a terrorist, or did the SLA brainwash here?

According to the jury, she was a terrorist. She went to prison. Her sentence was 35 years, but it was reduced to seven years. After two years President Jimmy Carter ordered her release and she left prison in 1979.

A DOG’S LIFE

Today Patty Heasrt is 56. She is married and has two adult daughters who are models. Patty Hearst has never worked – her family is extremely rich – but she has a new passion in life: dogs. She owns French bulldogs and they often win dog shows. Patty refuses to talk about her past. But she is happy to talk about her dogs!