CRAIG MELVIN -- Interview a Broadcaster! -- American English Pronunciation

66,146 views ・ 2013-12-13

Rachel's English


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Hey guys. Welcome to the new Rachel's English mini-series, Interview a Broadcaster!
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>> Hey guys. I'm here with Craig Melvin. Craig, tell me a little bit about what you do.
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>> I do YouTube. >> No you don't I do YouTube!
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>> Ah, I am a correspondent with NBC News, and an anchor with MSNBC,
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and that's, that's kind of what I do. >> Awesome.
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>> Yeah. Somedays it's awesome. >> And other days it's really awesome.
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>> Yes, yes. Because this is on the internet, I love it!
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>> He loves it! I don't know if you're aware,
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but sometimes people call the standard American accent 'broadcaster English'.
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>> Really? >> So..., Yeah. >> I did not know that.
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>> So we're sort of looking to the people who deliver the news
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to be examples of the standard American accent.
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>> No pressure. >> No pressure at all.
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>> Alright. >> So, I'm curious, where did you grow up?
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>> Uh, South Carolina, a state not known for--- >> Right!
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>> ---language. We'll just leave it at that. >> Right, for the American accent.
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>> Yes, but, I grew up in South Carolina.
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>> So, did you grow up speaking the standard accent,
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or did you sort of have to change that as you went into this field?
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>> I was blessed with a mother who was a school teacher, who, at a very young age,
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made sure that we understood how important it was to pronounce words correctly.
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And, this non-regional dialect. >> Yep.
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>> So, this ambiguous dialect, it's the same dialect I've always had because of her.
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>> That's great, yeah. >> Well, it's helped professionally. >> Right.
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>> Now, when you're preparing for the camera, how do you prepare a text?
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>> It depends on the story. Um, and if there are words in the copy
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that might prove themselves difficult, >> Yeah?
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>> I'll go over it three times. Three times is generally my rule, for each script.
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Read it aloud, three times. Um, because sometimes when you read something,
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it may not seem very complicated. But when you say it out loud,
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you realize, oh, I'm going to trip up over this word.
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>> Right. So you read it out loud when you're practicing. >> Yes, three times. >> Okay.
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>> Unless we're pressed for time. If there's breaking news, then it's a dice roll. >> Yeah.
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Mr. Melvin used the idiom 'dice roll', also used as, roll the dice.
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This means to do something even if you're not certain of the outcome, to take a chance.
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To have to read a text for the first time on air is definitely a dice roll.
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>> If there's breaking news, then it's a dice roll. >> Yeah.
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>> What is a word that you, sort of, shy away from?
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Are there any words in American English that you still find difficult to pronounce?
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>> Oo. That's a really good question. Yes. There are a couple.
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Um, there's one that I struggle with, regularly. >> Is it 'regularly'?
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>> 'Regularly' is one. If I see 'regularly', I frequently change it to 'frequently'.
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>> So you change it! >> Oh yeah. All the time.
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'Regularly'. This is a tough word. It's a four-syllable word with stress
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on the first syllable. DA-da-da-da. Let's practice just a few times slowed down.
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Reg-u-lar-ly, regularly. Regularly.
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>> So, and I also struggle with, and there's no synonym for this one: rural.
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>> Rural. I get questions about that. >> Rural. R-U-R-A-L. It's very difficult.
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Rural. >> Now, I'm noticing a pattern. With 'regularly' and 'rural',
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I think you're having issues with R's and L's maybe. >> Yes. I have always
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struggled with the R. >> Uh-huh.
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>> And I don't know why. Can you help me?
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>> I can. >> Rrr-.
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Rural. Another really tough word! Let's practice it slowed down. Rur-al. Rur-al.
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>> What's your favorite word in American English?
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And, maybe, why? >> Oo. My favorite word? >> Yeah.
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>> Oh, that's a good one. Favorite word. I---there are a couple that I enjoy.
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>> Let's hear them. >> Now some of these are just crutch words that I use.
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Uh, cool. 'Cool' is a crutch word. >> Yeah.
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>> But I---because 'cool' is one of those words it can be a noun,
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it can be an adjective, you can say 'Cool!' or 'eh, cool.'
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>> Right. Yeah, yeah. >> You know? It's a multi-purpose word. >> Yeah.
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>> So I enjoy 'cool'. And another word that I've always...well, that's a proper noun.
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It's not really a word, it's a name. >> It still counts.
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>> Betty Jo. >> Betty Jo.
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>> Betty Jo. >> Who's this? >> That's my mother. >> Ok.
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Betty Jo. Notice that we have a double T there. But, it represents one sound,
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and that's the Flap T, because it's not starting a stressed syllable,
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and there's a vowel before and a vowel after. Betty, Betty.
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>> Her name's Betty. Um, why am I telling this story on the internet? Her name's Betty,
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and, again, from South Carolina. When you grow up in South Carolina, it's like Ella May,
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Betty Jo. So, she grew up like a country girl, was Betty Jo. She grew up and she dropped
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the middle name. And I found out when I was, like,
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22-23. >> Oh, so she was like 'Just call me Betty'.
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>> Right. And when I found out that it was really Betty Jo, I use 'Betty Jo' sometimes
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as, obviously my mother, Betty Jo, but sometimes, my brother and I, if we're, like,
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just messing around, we'll be like "That's so Betty Jo."
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Messing around. In this case, it means to play around, a relaxed
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not serious interaction with someone. Notice Mr. Melvin made the NG an N sound,
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messin', messin', messin' around. Native speakers do this sometimes with -ing words.
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Another common example, doin'. What are you doin'?
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>> Sometimes, if my brother and I, if we're, like, just messing around,
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we'll be like "That's so Betty Jo."
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>> I bet she loves that. >> That was so inside baseball.
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'That's so inside baseball'. I'd never heard this phrase before, I had to look it up.
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So, thanks to Mr. Melvin for teaching me a new metaphor.
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Basically, it means inside information that isn't pertinent to the general public.
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In this case, information about Mr. Melvin's family.
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Inside baseball, DA-da-DA-da. Inside baseball.
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>> So inside baseball. But those are the two.
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>> Awesome. Well, Craig, thank you so much for joining us
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>> Thank you. I hope I did not bore your YouTube fans.
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>> I think they'll love it. >> This is a really cool thing you do.
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>> Thank you. >> See what I did there? >> Cool!
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He used the word 'cool' in a sentence. >> There you go.
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Follow Mr. Melvin on Twitter and check out his segments on TV
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or online for a great example of American English pronunciation.
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>> Alright, guys, that's it, and thanks so much for using Rachel's English.
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Special thanks to Patrick of PatrickJMT who manned the camera for this shoot.
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Check out his YouTube channel for excellent math tutorials.
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Check out all the videos in the Interview a Broadcaster series by clicking here,
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or on the link in the video description below.
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