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Why Do So Many News Anchors Sound Alike?

3m 26s666 単語109 segmentsEnglish

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Why do so many news anchors sound alike?

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No matter which channel you tune into or

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what local broadcast you receive, news

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anchors share one common trait beyond

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professional attire and perfect hair,

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they tend to sound exactly the same.

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From their cadence to annunciation to a

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completely curious lack of a regional

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accent. How does that happen?

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Broadcasters didn't always sound so

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geographically neutral. In the early

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part of the 20th century, many radio

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personalities and performers adopted

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what was known as a mid-atlantic accent

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or a blend of mannered British and the

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East Coast dialect of the United States.

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This polished proper method of speaking

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was popular in Hollywood movies of the

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1930s and on radio because it signaled

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some kind of upper class education and

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arudition. Thanks to America's

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infatuation with England, sounding even

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vaguely British made people sound

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intelligent. Pundits like William

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F.Buckley Jr. carried the Mid-Atlantic

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torch even as it fell out of favor in

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entertainment. The more contemporary

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practice of sounding linguistically

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neutral is often referred to as having a

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general American accent, which is a bit

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misleading since there's really not much

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of an accent at all. Also referred to as

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standard American, broadcast English, or

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network English. General American was a

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term first used in the 1920s and 30s by

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linguists who wanted to isolate a more

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widespread accent than the New England

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or southern dialects. The scholar George

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Philip Crap used the phrase in his 1925

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book, The English Language in America.

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Linguist John Kenyon referred to it in

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his 1930 title, American Pronunciation,

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where he insisted that 90 million

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Americans spoke general American. As the

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century wore on, a wider range of

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regional accents were recognized, and it

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became almost impossible to generalize

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between New England, Southern, and

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General American. Though some linguists

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disagree on the definition of general

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American, it's still largely considered

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a speaking voice that lacks regional

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flare. So why do news anchors rely on

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it? One of the biggest reasons is to

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keep their employment opportunities

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open. Local anchors who deliver the

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nightly news for affiliate stations are

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often vagabonds, taking jobs across the

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country, and those different networks

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prefer a general American accent. If an

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anchor hailing from the South committed

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to delivering the day's top stories in a

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southern accent, for example, it's not

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likely a New York station would feel

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viewers could warm to them. Likewise, a

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Brooklyn accent might sound peculiar

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when Los Angeles residents want a

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rundown of local headlines. But an

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accent is only a portion of a

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broadcaster's delivery. At broadcasting

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schools, television journalists are

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trained to speak at a moderate speed and

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enunciate each word clearly. Whether

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they realize it or not, young

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broadcasters may also start out

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emulating their news anchor heroes who

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had impeccable diction like Walter

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Kankite or Ted Cppel. No letters are

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dropped. Sentences are composed for ease

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of reading off a teleprompter. Plain

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speaking also needs to fit whatever

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footage is being shown while the anchor

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is talking. Uneven modulation could be

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distracting, though. Some anchors do

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choose to emphasize words by drawing

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them out, like murder dair, or adopt a

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more somber tone when reporting on

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tragic events. Some anchors have also

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reported being more careful with their

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speech because broadcast microphones are

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often unforgiving. Words beginning with

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P tend to pop, for example. Broadcasting

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school drills out the kind of casual and

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conversational voice that doesn't

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translate well to a newscast. Of course,

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some linguists believe there's no such

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thing as being totally free of an

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accent. A southerner trying to remove

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any trace of a draw is going to sound

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different than someone from New England

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attempting to do the same. We may not

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notice simply because humans aren't that

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great at recognizing more subtle

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accents, especially our own.

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Broadcasters may sound alike in large

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part because they all enunciate and

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attempt to achieve articuly precision.

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Few anchors will say dubia. They will

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say double u.

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