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

quinta-feira, 21 de julho de 2011

SPEAK UP IN CLASS WORKSHEETS

Source: www.speakup.com.br

Before starting to do the exercise, have a look at this entry: http://englishtips-self-taught.blogspot.com/2011/07/amy-macdonald.html

Amy MacDonald – For the Record (C1)

A - Before you start, talk to a partner.

1. What do you know about Amy MacDonald?
2. Do you like her music?
3. Can you name any other Scottish pop stars?
4. Have you seen or heard Lady Gaga? If so, what do you think of her?

B - Listen and answer

Read these statements. Then listen (without reading) and write T (True) or F (False).
1. Amy MacDonald spent her childhood in Glasgow.
2. About three million of her singles have been sold.
3. She claims that a conversation with fans on Twitter was misrepresented by the press.
4. Amy says she’s in debt to her record company at the moment.
5. She thinks her anonymity is due to her lifestyle.
6. She talks about a pop star who wore a wig to avoid being recognised while travelling on a plane.

C - Read and answer

Read the article and answer the questions with a partner.
1. Why is Amy’s commercial success surprising?
2. What did she mean when she said she hadn’t made any money from selling her CD?
3. What does she say about her financial situation at the moment?
4. Why don’t people recognise her?
5. What is Amy’s attitude to Lady Gaga’s behaviour during the flight to the north of Sweden?
6. What should Lady Gaga have done, according to Amy?

D - Learn it! Use it!

Complete these sentences with words from the glossary. (You may have to adapt the expression in some way; e.g. change the subject, or change from singular to plural.)
1. Having one of her poems published in a magazine was a great __________ for my aunt.
2. You can’t go for a job interview in that __________ suit. You’ll have to buy a new one.
3. Let’s put the __________  _________. It wasn’t me who let your secret out.
4. If you don’t update your anti-virus regularly you’re just __________ disaster.
5. My dad always __________ about the programmes on TV but he watches them all the same.
6. With a credit card it’s easy to spend too much and get into __________ .
7. Tom thinks he’s something special. I hate the way he __________ himself.
8. Most of the company’s __________ comes from its sales of electrical goods.

E - Ready for CAE? (Paper 3 Part 2)

Complete the text. Use only one word in each space.
There are quite a (1)__________ similarities between Amy MacDonald and Paolo Nutini. They were (2)__________ born in Scotland in 1987. Paolo (3)__________ up in a place near Glasgow and so (4)__________ Amy. Then there’s the way in (5)__________ they took the music world by storm. One difference, (6)__________ , is that they support different Glasgow football teams. (7)__________ a Catholic, Nutini naturally supports Celtic, (8)__________ MacDonald is a Protestant and is therefore a Rangers fan, (9)__________ the fact that her boyfriend Steve Lovell used to play (10)__________ another Glasgow team, Partick Thistle.
It’s now four years (11)__________ Amy signed a record contract at the age of 18 and in that time she has gone from (12)__________ an unknown teenage singer-songwriter to an international star, but she says she doesn’t see herself (13)__________ famous. Perhaps this is why she refuses to behave (14)__________ a celebrity and prefers to be anonymous. And (15)__________ her album sales have made her wealthy, she still lives in a small town just outside Glasgow.

Talk about it

In pairs or groups.
1. Do you agree with Amy MacDonald that a lot of celebrities like being followed around by the press?
2. Why do you think so many people are interested in reading about celebrities in gossip magazines?
3. It has been said that we live in a “celebrity society” in which gossip and fame equal power. Do you agree?

domingo, 10 de julho de 2011

Amy MacDonald






Source: of the picture  meninasnorock.blogspot.com


Source: www.speakup.com.br
Standard: British Accent
Speaker: Justin Ratcliff
Language level: C1 Advanced


Amy MacDonald



FOR THE RECORD

      A few months ago Speak Up featured an interview with the pop star Paolo Nutini. Nutini was born in Scotland in 1987 and so as Amy MacDonald, who has similarly taken the music world by storm.
      Both artists grew up near Glasgow. Nutini is from Paisley, while MacDonald is from  Bishopbriggs. The difference is that Nutini is a Catholic and so his favourite football team is Celtic. MacDonald on the other hand is a Protestant and support Rangers, while her English boyfriend, Steve Lovell, used to play for relatively minor Glasgow team, Partick Thistle.

MONEY AND MUSIC…
      In terms of music, Amy MacDonald made her recording debut in 2007 with the album This is the Life, which contained the hit single of the same name. The album sold three million singles. This is a remarkable achievement at a time when the music industry is clearly in crisis. And her sophomore album. A Curious Thing came out in March (2010). And yet, in spite of her commercial success, Amy MacDonald is reported as saying that she “hasn’t seen a penny” of the revenue, from her sales. We asked her to put the record straight.

AMY MACDONALD
(Scottish accent):

People reported that completely differently from what I said. It was actually a conversation on Twitter that I was having with fans, just people that were asking questions. And I was just answering them. And they were asking about album sales, and I never said that I’d never made a penny. What I said was that I hadn’t made any money from selling the actual CD. And that’s very normal, because the massive amount of cost that it requires to release an album. So, before you’ve even put it in the shops, you’re in a huge amount of debt to your record label, because they so kindly give you the money, so that you can live for the next year! So you’re in that debt, you’re in the debt of every penny that they spent on advertising, promotion, which obviously stacked right up. So you have to sell, I think about three million before you start earning on the album sales. So I think I’m like dead even now, like I don’t owe them anything, but obviously things are slowing down now, so there’s not really any album sales, happening. So that’s what that meant: I never meant that I was poor, or anything like that!

CELEBRITY

And how she is handling her celebrity?

Amy MacDonald

To be honest, I don’t see myself as a famous. And the whole fame thing I could take it or leave it. I’ve not really any interest. I just like music, and I like being a musician, and, for me, I think that it’s good that I’ve managed to have this very successful album, but I can still be completely anonymous because I don’t have the big beehive or I don’t flaunt myself in magazines, so people don’t really know what you look like. I think that’s a good way to be. I think they can have the voice and see the CD, but they don’t really know what you look like in a real-life scenario. So it’s good for me!

AS FOR LADY GAGA…

And she doesn’t seem to have problems with paparazzi!

Amy MacDonald:

But I think that  a lot of people actually court it. The one example that I know of was I was on a tiny flight with Lady Gaga, towards the north of Sweden. So there was, one flight a day to his place from Stockholm, and it was a festival. So everyone that was playing was on the same flight. So she was on the flight, and it was like she changed her wig three times in a hour flight, right? And it’s like: “Why else are you doing that? “Like and this is the thing. Like if she was wearing what I wearing what I was wearing, i.e. a hat and a pair of scruffy trousers and a jumper, nobody would have known who she was! But because she came out with three different wigs, one which was up to here, basically a bra and a pair of leather trousers and like boots that are that high, people know who she is instantly. And it’s just like: “Well, don’t moan about people following was wearing, nobody would even recognize you!” 


sexta-feira, 1 de abril de 2011

Ray Kroc, 1902-1984: The Man Who Made McDonald's Popular Around the World

Source: Voice of America Special English
www.manythings.org/voa/people www.voanews.com



I'm Phoebe Zimmermann. And I'm Steve Ember with PEOPLE IN AMERICA in VOA Special English.  Today, we tell about Ray Kroc, the man who helped make the fast food industry famous. He expanded a small business into an international operation called McDonald's.
(MUSIC)
You probably know what fast food is.  It is cooked food that is ready almost as soon as you enter a public eating place.  It does not cost much.  It is popular with most Americans and with many people around the world.  Some experts say that at least twenty-five percent of American adults eat fast food every day. Most fast food restaurants offer ground beef sandwiches called hamburgers and potatoes cooked in hot oil called French fries.  Other fast food places serve fried chicken, pizza or tacos.
You see fast food restaurants almost everywhere in the United States.  The names and the designs of the buildings are easily recognized – Burger King, Kentucky Fried Chicken, Pizza Hut, Taco Bell and of course, McDonald's. Most are chain restaurants.  That means each one is part of a huge company.
Each restaurant in the chain has the same large, colorful sign that can be recognized from far away.  Each offers its own carefully limited choice of foods.  Each kind of hamburger or piece of chicken tastes the same at every restaurant in the chain.
The fast food industry began with two brothers in San Bernardino, California in the nineteen forties.  Mac and Dick McDonald owned a small, but very successful restaurant.  They sold only a few kinds of simple food, especially hamburgers.
People stood outside the restaurant at a window.  They told the workers inside what they wanted to eat.  They received and paid for their food very quickly.  The food came in containers that could be thrown away.  The system was so successful that the McDonald brothers discovered they could sell a lot of food and lower their prices.
Ray Kroc sold restaurant supplies.  He recognized the importance of the McDonald brothers' idea.  He saw that food sales could be organized for mass production -- almost like a factory.  Mr. Kroc paid the McDonald brothers for permission to open several restaurants similar to theirs.  He opened the first McDonald's restaurant near Chicago, Illinois, in nineteen fifty-five.  Soon, more McDonald's were opening all across the United States.  Other people copied the idea and more fast food restaurants followed.
(MUSIC)
Raymond Albert Kroc was a very wealthy businessman when he died in nineteen eighty-four.  But he had not always been successful. Ray was born in Illinois in nineteen-oh-two.  His parents were not rich.  He attended school in Oak Park, near Chicago.  Ray never completed high school, however.  He left school to become a driver for the Red Cross in World War One.  He lied about his age to be accepted.  He was only fifteen. The war ended before he could be sent to Europe.
After the war, Ray became a jazz piano player.  He played with famous music groups. He got married when he was twenty.  Then he began working for the Lily Tulip Cup Company, selling paper cups.  He kept trying new things, however. He attempted to sell land in the southern state of Florida.  That business failed.  Ray Kroc remembered driving to Chicago from Florida after his business failed.  He said: "I will never forget that drive as long as I live.  The streets were covered with ice, and I did not have winter clothing.  When I arrived home I was very cold and had no money."
Ray Kroc went back to being a salesman for the Lily Tulip Cup Company.  He was responsible for product sales in the central United States.  His life improved when he started a small business that sold restaurant supplies.  He sold a machine that could mix five milkshakes at one time.
In nineteen fifty-four, he discovered a small restaurant that was using eight of his machines.  He went there and found that the owners of the restaurant had a good business selling only hamburgers, French fries and drinks.
At first, Mr. Kroc saw only the possibility for increasing the sales of his mixers to more restaurants.  Then he proposed an agreement with the McDonald brothers to start a number of restaurants.  Under the agreement, the McDonald brothers would get a percentage of all sales.
The first McDonald's restaurant opened in Des Plaines, Illinois, in nineteen fifty-five.  Ray Kroc was fifty-two years old -- an age when many people start thinking about retirement.  He opened two restaurants.  Soon he began to understand that the real profits were made in selling hamburgers, not the mixers.  He quickly sold the mixer company and invested the money in the growing chain of McDonald's restaurants.
In nineteen-sixty, Mr. Kroc bought the legal rights to the restaurants from the McDonald brothers.  By then, the chain had more than two hundred restaurants.
(MUSIC)
Fast food restaurants spread quickly in the United States because of franchising.  Franchising means selling the legal right to operate a store in a company's chain to an independent business person.  If the company approves, the business person may buy or lease the store for a period of years.
Many people want to own a McDonald's restaurant, but only a few are approved.  Each restaurant buys its supplies at a low cost from the parent company.  Each restaurant also gives the company about ten percent of the money it earns in sales.  Today, about seventy percent of McDonald's restaurants worldwide are owned and operated by independent businessmen and women.
Ray Kroc was good at identifying what the public wanted.  He knew that many American families wanted to eat in a restaurant sometimes.  He gave people a simple eating place with popular food, low prices, friendly service and no waiting.  And all McDonald's restaurants sold the same food in every restaurant across the country.
Ray Kroc established rules for how McDonald's restaurants were to operate.  He demanded that every restaurant offer "quality, service and cleanliness."  People lucky enough to get a franchise must complete a program at a training center called Hamburger University.  They learn how to cook and serve the food, and how to keep the building clean.  More than sixty-five thousand people have completed this training.
(MUSIC)
McDonald's began to expand around the world in nineteen sixty-seven.  Ray Kroc's business ability made McDonald's the largest restaurant company in the world.  There are now more than thirty thousand McDonald's restaurants on six continents.
The company operates in about one hundred twenty countries.  Every day, McDonald's restaurants around the world serve about fifty million people.
In later years, Ray Kroc established the Kroc Foundation, a private organization that gives money to help others.  He also established a number of centers that offer support to families of children who have cancer.  They are called Ronald McDonald houses.
Many people praised Ray Kroc for his company's success and good works.  But other people sharply criticized him for the way McDonald's treated young employees.  Many of the workers were paid the lowest wage permitted by American law.  Health experts still criticize McDonald's food for containing too much fat and salt.
In the nineteen seventies, Ray Kroc turned his energy from hamburgers to sports.  He bought a professional baseball team in California, the San Diego Padres.  He died in nineteen eighty-four.  He was eighty-one years old.
That first McDonald's restaurant in Des Plaines, Illinois, was torn down.  It was replaced by a store and visitors center that attempts to copy what was in the original building.  Another museum in nearby Oak Park describes the life of Ray Kroc.  Ray Kroc's story remains an important part of McDonald's history. And his way of doing business continues to influence fast food restaurants that feed people around the world.
(MUSIC)
This program was written by George Grow.  Lawan Davis was the producer.  I'm Steve Ember. And I'm Phoebe Zimmermann.  Join us again next week for anotherPEOPLE IN AMERICA program in VOA Special English.