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BBC 6 minute English-The rise of the emoji

BBC 6 minute English-The rise of the emoji

BBC 6 minute English-The rise of the emoji

   

Transcript of the podcast

Note: This is not a word for word transcript

Dan: Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English– the show that brings you an interesting topic, authentic listening practice and six new items of vocabulary. I’m Dan

Neil: And I’m Neil. We’ll be discussing the rise of those little graphics we call emojis and emoticons

Dan: You know, I think emojis are a vital tool for communication. And actually, they’re not that new, either

Neil: Oh really

Dan: Well, that’s the perfect opportunity to ask this week’s question. When was the first emoticon used? Was it

a) 1606

b) 1862

c) 1982

Neil: It must be 1982. I’ll go with c

Dan: We’ll find out if you’re right or wrong later in the programme

Neil: You know, I think we should clear one thing up before we go any further: what’s the difference between an emoticon and an emoji

Dan: Good point. Emoticons came first. They’re the images made using normal keys on a keyboard – usually punctuation, letters and numbers. For example a colon – two dots – followed by the curved line of a close brackets is a

Neil: A smiley face. Something you use in way too many of your emails

Dan: Well, thanks! Whereas an emoji is something completely different. It’s an actual image. It could be a simple, yellow, smiley face; or something like a dancing lady; or even a bowl of noodles

Neil: Ah yes, all those little images we have in our phones. But you’ll have to convince me – why do people use them so much

Dan: Well, let’s listen to Professor Vyv Evans. He wrote a book called The Emoji Code

INSERT Professor Vyv Evans, Author of The Emoji Code

They enable us to express emotion and empathy in digital communication. Increasingly, what we’re finding is that digital communication is taking over from certain aspects of face-to-face interaction. In the UK today, for example, adults spend 22 hours online on average each week. One of the reasons emojis are so interesting is that they really do enable us to express our emotional selves much more effectively

Neil: Ok so he used a very useful word – empathy. It means ‘the ability to show you understand someone else’s feelings’. Ok – tell me more Dan

Dan: Yes – adding an emoticon can show you understand and express emotion, and show empathy – more clearly. In digital communication we lack the visual signals we have in face-to-face interaction – as he says

Neil: Interaction, meaning ‘when people or things communicate with each other’. We can also interact with things like machines, computers and social media

Dan: Yes, Professor Evans says 60% of information when we’re talking to each other comes from non-verbal cues

Neil: Wow, that’s a lot. A cue is a signal that you need to do something

Dan: For example, an actor goes on stage after their cue

Neil: And non-verbal means ‘without using spoken language’. So, here in the studio there are lots of other non-verbal signals about how we’re feeling – non-verbal cues. For example my facial expression, my body language, the look in my eyes, Dan

Dan: There’s a glint of rage in there somewhere, Neil. Ok, so let’s apply this to digital communication. Imagine I sent you a text saying I hit my finger with a hammer – how would you respond

Neil: Well, it depends. Did you hurt yourself badly

Dan: If I followed it with a sad face emoji, then

Neil: Then I guess I’d know you hurt yourself. Poor you

Dan: But if I followed it with a laughing emoji – the one with the tears coming out because I’m laughing so much

Neil: Then I’d probably reply saying how stupid and clumsy you are

Dan: Exactly – without adding the emoji – it’s hard to know my emotional state. The emoji is the non-verbal cue – like my facial expression

Neil: By the way, is there an emoji meaning clumsy? Clumsy, means ‘physically awkward’ – someone who’s clumsy falls over a lot and drops things.Anyway, you were saying emoticons aren’t as new as I think

Dan: Yes, I asked when they were invented. Is it

a)1606

b)1862 or

c)1982

Neil: I said 1982

Dan: Well, in fact, a witty speech Abraham Lincoln reprinted in a newspaper as far back as 1862 included a semi colon with a close brackets

Neil: Like a winking face

Dan: Exactly. Though people think this was sadly just a typographical error – or what we normally call a typo

Neil: A typo – a spelling mistake made when typing too fast or carelessly

Dan: The official birth of emoticons is usually given as 1982, when a US professor instructed his students to use smiley faces to indicate jokes – in a digital communication

Neil: Wow, so they’re over 30 years old. Maybe I should start using them. Let’s round up with another look at today’s words

Dan: Sure. The first word we had was empathy. Do you have a lot of empathy, Neil

Neil: Yes, I think I’m quite good at understanding other people’s feelings. My friends tell me that, anyway! It’s important to empathise with your colleagues too

Dan: That’s not what I saw in your eyes! Yes, empathy is an important part of all human interaction

Neil: Nicely done. If two people interact, it means they ‘communicate with each other and react to each other’. It’s a pretty broad term

Dan: We could also talk about how the way children interact with the internet

Neil: Way too much! Next up, we had non-verbal, meaning ‘without spoken language’. When I first travelled to Poland, I used a lot of non-verbal communication to get my message across. Hand movements, counting with fingers, things like that. Next word, Dan

Dan: Next word… that is my cue to say the next word – which is in fact – cue. A cue is a signal to do something. A commander could give his officer a cue to attack. Or I could give you a cue to… sing a song

Neil: No thanks. I’ll stick with defining words, thank you. Like clumsy – meaning ‘physically awkward’. I’d have to say Dan, you’re a sporty guy, a talented footballer – you’re not clumsy at all

Dan: That’s what I thought until I broke my leg – after a clumsy opponent ran into me

Neil: Ouch. Finally – we had type. No hang on, that’s not right. It should say typo. A typo is a mistake in a written document, or a digital file or message

Dan: Always check your scripts for typos before reading them, Neil. And, that’s the end of today’s 6 Minute English. Please join us again soon

Neil: And we are on social media too – Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube. See you there

Both: Bye

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