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BBC 6 minute English-Christmas kindness

BBC 6 minute English-Christmas kindness

BBC 6 minute English-Christmas kindness

   

Transcript of the podcast

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

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

Neil: And I’m Neil… Did you get all your Christmas shopping done, Alice

Alice: I did, Neil. And I spent a small fortune – and that means a lot of money

Neil: Well, I hate buying all those presents that people just don’t really want

Alice: Oh, Neil, you grumpy old Scrooge! And I hope you realise that the subject of today’s show is Christmas kindness

Neil: Oh dear. I might be grumpy – and that means bad-tempered – but I’m not a scrooge! I don’t mind spending money – I just don’t know what to buy people. Ebenezer Scrooge is the main character in Charles Dickens’ novel A Christmas Carol. He’s a miser – and that means someone who loves money but hates spending it

Alice: Indeed. Well, on the subject of A Christmas Carol, Neil, at the end of the story, what does Scrooge buy the Cratchit family for Christmas dinner? Is it

a) a goose

b) a turkey? Or

c) a chicken

Neil: Hmm. Well, I haven’t read the book so I’m going to guess a) a goose

Alice: Well, we’ll find out later if you chose the right answer. Now, Neil, I agree that Christmas shopping can sometimes feel pointless – but we mustn’t forget what a magical time Christmas is for young children

Neil: Well, that’s true. I remember how hard it was to get to sleep on Christmas Eve – worrying that Santa Claus would get stuck in our chimney

Alice: Yes, well, eve means the day before something – in this case, Christmas Day. Parents tell their children that Santa Claus – an imaginary old man with a white beard and red clothes – will bring them presents at Christmas time. In the UK children believe that Santa comes down the chimney to get into the house

Neil: But it’s not all fun. Increasing numbers of people these days are struggling for money at this time of year. Having enough food to feed their family is what matters most and buying presents comes further down the list. So let’s listen now to a BBC Scotland report by Laura Maxwell. She’s talking about a special event with lots of presents

INSERT Laura Maxwell, BBC Scotland, and Beatrice Caddell

LM: Beatrice Cadell has just celebrated her 80th birthday. And instead of presents for her, she asked her friends to buy toys

BC: Everyone that turned up to that birthday do was absolutely brilliant. Absolutely brilliant. And it’s good for something like this. It’s even better. It’s even better – you know – somebody else can benefit. We don’t need it. We’re old

Alice: So Beatrice is celebrating her birthday and she told friends and family to buy toys instead of presents for her

Neil: Right. She had the generous idea of donating – or giving – the toys to a toy bank – a place where toys are given away free to people in need. The toy bank then distributed Beatrice’s toys to parents who couldn’t afford to buy presents for their children at Christmas

Alice: Yes. So Beatrice is happy that children can benefit – or be helped by her. She says she doesn’t need presents. A woman after your own heart, Neil

Neil: Indeed! And that means Beatrice has the same opinion as me! Well, that’s a great example of Christmas charity – and charity means giving free help to people who need it

Alice: Yes. And here’s another example, Neil. Last year in London, twenty tons of presents were donated, wrapped, and delivered to a local hospital to cheer up sick children who couldn’t go home for Christmas

Neil: Were they delivered in Santa’s sleigh

Alice: No Neil, they were delivered in a big double-decker bus! Let’s hear about the volunteers who made this happen

INSERT Volunteer

Lots of different groups of people come together under the banner of kindness – so religious people come together, corporate people come together, young people, old people – it seems to be something that stretches across many many many different demographics

Neil: Under the banner of kindness – what does that mean, Alice

Alice: Well, being under the banner of something means being part of a group who are united in support for an idea. And in this case, different people came together to do something kind for sick children

Neil: And demographics? What’s that

Alice: Demographics means statistical information about a population and the groups of people in it. People from different groups in society are working together – the old and the young, religious people, corporate – or business – people

Neil: And this talk of kindness is making me feel more in the mood for Christmas

Alice: I can see that, Ebenezer. You’ve got a smile on your face! Now, earlier in the show, I asked: At the end of the story, what does Scrooge buy the Cratchit family for Christmas dinner? Is it

a) a goose

b) a turkey? Or

c) a chicken

Neil: And I said a) a goose

Alice: Yes. And you were wrong, Neil! The answer is b) a turkey

Neil: That makes me a goose

Alice: It certainly does. Scrooge buys the Cratchit family the prize turkey hanging. Delicious! A Christmas Carol is a lovely story. Everybody should read it

Neil: And did you know that although turkeys are traditional Christmas food now, they weren’t in Dickens’s time

Alice: I see

Neil: They were exotic back then – and that means unusual because it comes from another country. The story was written in 1843. Now how about hearing the words we learned today, Alice

Alice: They are

a small fortune grumpy miser eve Santa Claus donating toy bank benefit after your own heart charity under the banner of something demographics exotic

Neil: Well, that’s the end of today’s 6 Minute English. Merry Christmas, everybody

Alice: Merry Christmas

Neil: Please join us again soon

Both: Bye

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