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BBC 6 minute English-Is social media a distraction

BBC 6 minute English-Is social media a distraction

BBC 6 minute English-Is social media a distraction

   

Transcript of the podcast

Note: This is not a word-for-word transcript

Sophie: Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English. I’m Sophie

Sophie: Neil? … [sound of a smartphone] Neil

Neil: Oh, sorry! … And I’m Nei

Sophie: Neil, please put down your phone. We’re doing the show

Neil: Yeah, I know. Hang on a minute. I just need to tweet something and… Done

Sophie: And the subject of today’s show is social media and its impact on our daily lives

Neil: Hmm, well, I suppose it has had quite a big impact on mine

Sophie: That’s all too clear. Now, perhaps we can move on to today’s quiz question

Neil: Of course – I’m all ears. [sound of a smartphone] Oh, hang on, wait a second

Sophie: There’s a word to describe what you’re doing, you know. Answer me this: Which word describes a situation where you’re talking to someone and they suddenly look down at their phone or answer it? Is it

a) phobbing

b) phibbing? Or

c) phubbing

Neil: Well, you’ve got me there, Sophie! I have no idea! But I’ll guess that it’s c) phubbing

Sophie: Well, we’ll find out later on in the show whether you got the answer right or not. Now, let’s move on and talk about phone etiquette – etiquette means rules of polite behaviour in society or among people in a certain group

Neil: Well… interrupting conversations to check your phone has become a social norm, hasn’t it, Sophie

Sophie: Social norms are the rules of behaviour considered acceptable in a group or society. I don’t agree, Neil! Let’s listen to Professor Sherry Turkle of Massachusetts Institute of Technology talking about social norms amongst students

INSERT Sherry Turkle, American clinical psychologist and professor of the social studies of Science and Technology at Massachusetts Institute of Technology

I interviewed hundreds of college students and what they talked about was what some of them called ‘the rule of three’. And what the rule of three is which is that if you go to dinner with friends, you don’t want to look down at your phone until you see that three people, let’s say you’re six at dinner, are looking up in the conversation. So there’s a new etiquette where you don’t look down unless three people are looking up kind of to keep a little conversation alive

Neil: Professor Sherry Turkle

Sophie: Why don’t you try out the rule of three once in a while

Neil: There are only two of us here, Sophie – do the math! And I’m listening to you… mmm… let me just send a text message here on my phone … hang on

Sophie: Neil… NEIL! I’m not going to carry on with the show unless you pay attention

Neil: Sorry, Sophie. Actually I was just doing that to wind you up. I wasn’t really using my phone… Sorry

Sophie: And to wind someone up means to say or do something deliberately in order to annoy someone. Well, I do get wound up about people constantly checking their devices. Yesterday, I was in a café and two girls came in. They sat down and started chatting away – but not to each other – they were tapping away at their devices. And there was no face-toface conversation at all

Neil: But you can have moments of connection using your devices, you know

Sophie: If you have a connection with someone you engage emotionally

Neil: Exactly. I was on the train this morning and there were a couple sharing a tablet. They were looking at the screen, and talking about what they saw there. It was very intimate, and they were… well… very connected. Let’s hear from Ian Sinclair, British poet and filmmaker, talking about a new generation of connected humans

INSERT Iain Sinclair, British writer, poet, and filmmaker

Physiologically we’re changing, that almost the neck muscles are tipped over to look down. We’re getting a new kind of human being. And I think – maybe I’m not getting it – but there is actually a different kind of intimacy emerging in which these instruments are very important

Sophie: So Iain Sinclair says our physiology is changing – our bodies, our neck muscles are changing – to make it easier to look down all the time at our devices! But it isn’t only muscles that might change as a result of our techie habits – it’s the way we interact – or engage with each other too. Ian Sinclair talks about a different kind of intimacy emerging – what does he mean, Neil

Neil: Our intimacy – or closeness – with other people is somehow connected up with our devices. They’ve become part of us. And I expect some day devices will literally be part of us – an implant in our necks or something

Sophie: What a horrible thought

Neil: Let’s have the quiz question again Sophie to take your mind off it

Sophie: OK. I asked: Which word describes a situation where you’re talking to someone and they suddenly look down at their phone or answer it? Is it

a) phobbing

b) phibbing? Or

c) phubbing

Neil: And I said c) phubbing

Sophie: You were right, Neil! Well done! It’s a combination of’ ‘phone’ and ‘snubbing’ – snub means to deliberately ignore someone you know. New words formed by putting together parts of existing words are known as blends or portmanteau words. And ‘phubbing’ is starting to appear in some online dictionaries. Now can we hear the words we learned today

Sophie: Neil? OK! I’ll say the words myself

etiquette wind someone up have a connection with someone physiology interact intimacy snub

Sophie: Well, that’s the end of today’s 6 Minute English. Don’t forget to connect with us again soon! Come on Neil, connect with us! Come on

Neil: Oh, yeah, hang on, just got to

Sophie: Goodbye

Neil: Hang on… I’ll be with you in a second… Yes. OK. Bye

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