Addicted to sugar ⏲️ 6 Minute English

330,644 views ・ 2024-01-11

BBC Learning English


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00:07
Hello. This is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English.
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I'm Neil and I'm Georgie.
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Would you like a cup of tea, Neil?
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Oh, yes thanks Georgie, with milk and three sugars, please.
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Three sugars, wow!
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You really have a sweet tooth -
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you like eating sweet things. Aren't you worried about your weight?
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Yes, but I can't say no to sugar.
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Just as our addiction to oil is causing a climate emergency,
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our addiction to sugar is causing a health emergency
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for our bodies. Sugar gives us an instant hit at the chemical hormone
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dopamine making us feel good,
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but in the long run causing obesity, tooth decay and diseases like diabetes.
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But how did our addiction to the sweet stuff begin?
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That's what we'll be discussing in this programme.
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And as usual,
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we'll be learning some useful new vocabulary as well.
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Anyway, here's your tea, Neil.
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I just put one sugar.
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Thanks, Georgie, I'll give it a try.
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Now, before we go on,
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I have a question for you. Sugar cane, which grows naturally in Asia, Africa
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and the Americas first came to England in the 11th century.
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Back then it was an expensive luxury item affordable only to kings, queens
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and the very rich.
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So, which English monarch loved eating sugar so much their teeth turned black?
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Was it a) King Henry VIII b) Queen Elizabeth I
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or c) Mary Queen of Scots?
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I know Henry VIII was very unhealthy
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so I'll guess it's him.
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OK, Georgie. We'll find out the answer later in the programme.
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Just now, I compared sugar to oil as the world's most important commodity -
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a commodity is a product or natural resource that can be traded,
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bought and sold. Today,
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economies, governments and wars are based on controlling oil,
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but in earlier centuries, the same was true of sugar.
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For 400 years sugar,
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along with coffee and tobacco, was grown in slavery plantations
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and shipped across the Atlantic Ocean to Europe.
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By the time slavery was ended in 1834,
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the demand for sugar in Europe and the United States was at a record high.
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Here's Professor of international history Ulbe Bosma
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explaining more to BBC Radio 4 programme 'Thinking Allowed':
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Sugar was already an extremely important commodity
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in the 16th and 17th and 18th century,
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and in the 19th century
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we see a staggering growth of sugar consumption in Europe and United States
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and so with that sugar became the fuel for human bodies whereas
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oil became the fuel for vehicles in the 20th century.
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Professor Bosma talks
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about the staggering growth in the popularity of sugar.
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The adjective 'staggering' means shocking or surprising. Just
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like oil became the fuel for machine
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engines, sugar became the fuel for the human body.
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Fuel is a substance that is burned to provide heat or power
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Trading companies had become rich selling sugar grown using slave labour.
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When people began to realise the health problems of sugar
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in the 20th century,
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these companies needed new ways to sell their product
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and began using sugar in food which had previously contained none,
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food like bread, cereal and yoghurt.
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Here's Professor Bosma again, taking up the story for BBC
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Radio 4's 'Thinking Allowed'.
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You can flood the market with a certain commodity, with sugar in this case,
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but that still does not mean that people will consume it.
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So the eating habits of people had to change. People
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until the early 19th century, they had a few spoons of sugar per week,
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but not a kilo, which people consume today in many countries in the world.
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Sugar companies flooded the market with their commodity.
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If you flood the market,
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you make a lot of your product available for sale, often at a low price.
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But just because something is cheap and easily available, doesn't mean
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people will eat it. So, sugar
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companies tried to increase sugar consumption
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by changing people's eating habits -
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the way a group of people eat,
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for example, which types of food
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they eat, how much of it, and how often.
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Instead of one or two spoons of sugar per week,
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people started eating kilos, with results we see around us every day - worldwide
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obesity and heart disease have tripled in the last 50 years.
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What's more because sugary food is cheaper,
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it's often the poorest in society who are worst affected.
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Hmm, maybe it's time to try having your tea without any sugar
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eh, Neil? And to reveal the answer to your question:
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which English monarch's famous love of sugar turned their teeth black?
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I guessed it was the notorious overeater, Henry VIII.
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Which was the wrong answer. I'm afraid, Georgie.
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In fact, during the years before toothpaste and dentists,
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those black stumpy teeth belonged to Queen Elizabeth I.
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OK, let's recap the vocabulary
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we've learned from this programme about sugar, starting
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with 'a sweet tooth' - a fondness for eating sweet, sugary food and drinks.
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A commodity is a product or natural resource that can be traded,
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bought and sold. Fuel is a substance such as oil or coal
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that is burned to provide heat or power.
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The adjective 'staggering' means very shocking and surprising.
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If a company floods the market, they release a lot
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of a particular product for sale, often at a low price.
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And finally, eating habits
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describe the way a particular group of people eat,
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for example, which types of food
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they eat, how much and how often.
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Once again, our six minutes are up.
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Join us again soon
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for more trending topics and useful vocabulary here at
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6 Minute English. Goodbye for now!
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Bye!
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