Upper Intermediate Unit 2 Audio Script
UNIT 2 Recording 1
Conversation 1
A: How long have you been working here?
B: I’ve been here for over ten months now.
Conversation 2
A: How many chocolates have you eaten?
B: I’ve only had three!
Conversation 3
A: What have you been doing? You’re filthy!
B: I’ve been running.
UNIT 2 Recording 2
1
A: Has malaria decreased in recent years?
B: Yes, there’s been a huge decrease because of the use of nets.
2
A: Does the BBC sponsor Comic Relief?
B: Yes, the BBC is one of their main sponsors.
3
A: Has there been an increase in people’s awareness of Fair Trade?
B: Yes, and sales increased by about thirty percent in Europe last year.
4
A: The UN has launched an appeal for the disaster.
B: Yes, they’re appealing for money and also tents and blankets.
5
A: When did Bonnie Tyler record her song Total Eclipse of the Heart?
B: In 1983, and in 2008 it set a record for the most popular karaoke track ever.
6
A: What types of fruit do you export each year?
B: Our main exports are bananas and oranges, mainly to Canada.
7
A: Your latest project is research into rising sea levels.
B: Yes, we project a rise of at least one metre in the next fifty years.
8
A: Do we need a permit to enter the park?
B: No, but we’re not permitted to leave the main tracks.
UNIT 2 Recording 3
S1 = Speaker 1 S2 = Speaker 2 S3 = Speaker 3 S4 = Speaker 4
S5 = Speaker 5
S1: I really can’t see the problem. The first thing I did when it all began was I tried to find my house on the website but they hadn’t brought the camera van down our road yet, so I was quite disappointed. For me, it’s great because it means I can go and look at things like hotels or even cities before I go on holiday ... and anyway if someone wanted to look at my house they could just drive past it or walk past it, so I can’t see the problem.
S2: It’s obvious, isn’t it? I mean, they’re nothing to do with safety. They’re just used by the government to make money. I mean, look at the statistics. In the last year, in my area four cameras have been placed along one stretch of road, and you know what, the number of accidents has doubled. So they obviously don’t work as a deterrent. And now your car number plate can be logged so that they can keep track of you wherever you go. I hate it – I hate being watched like that. It’s just another example of our surveillance society.
S3: The way I see it, it’s an invasion of privacy. It means whenever I go to the supermarket, it’s recorded on a chip somewhere and they can find out exactly what I’ve bought. Why should people have the right to know what kind of food I eat? Or get my details and then send me junk mail? I certainly don’t want to be sent adverts from companies I don’t know. And this is just the start ... I expect next thing you know, the technology will be used to tell us what we can and can’t eat.
S4: Me, I’m glad they’re there. A few months ago I was robbed by two men at a bus stop not far from where I live but thanks to CCTV, the people who did it were all arrested. It was a bad experience but at least they didn’t get away with it. And you see it in the news all the time - that more crimes are being solved because of CCTV cameras. I think we should have more of them. Most people are law abiding anyway so they’ve got no need to worry.
S5: I actually think it’s an important development. There was a case recently, where there was this big demonstration and lots of people took photos and these were sent to the media. So it means that demonstrators and the police – everyone – has to be more careful because their photos might be sent to the newspapers or posted online. So in general, yeah, I feel it’s a good thing.
UNIT 2 Recording 4
1 They’re just used by the government ...
2 I hate being watched like that.
3 I don’t want to be sent adverts ...
4 I was robbed by two men.
5 Crimes are being solved ...
6 ... their photos might be sent to the newspapers.
UNIT 2 Recording 5
A: Do you think you would ever have cosmetic surgery?
B: Me? No I don’t think so I’m really against it actually, I think it’s …
A: Really, why?
B: It can be quite dangerous – some of the implants you can have, um –
A: Yeah, I know what you mean.
B: Take the case of Mike’s girlfriend – she actually had some Botox injections in her forehead.
A: Did she?
B: Yeah, and she couldn’t, you know she couldn’t –
A: Couldn’t move her face?
B: Yeah, she couldn’t smile or frown – her face was just frozen solid.
A: Although if someone’s really, really overweight and it becomes a health problem, do you think maybe then they should have some kind of surgery, you know, such as liposuction to get rid of fat?
B: Oh I see, for health reasons maybe, yes, I suppose so, I mean you’ve got a point there, but I still don’t like the sound of it. I wouldn’t do it myself.
A: I might, if it was to do with my health.
A: Do you ever download music for free?
B: You mean illegally? No, I think I’m probably one of the few people that don’t do it. I’ve always paid whether it’s the track price or the album price.
A: Why? I mean nobody I know pays.
B: Well the way I see it, it’s just theft, isn’t it? I mean …
A: Oh I totally disagree.
B: I mean, artists have copyright on their songs, so you’re stealing from them. It’s as simple as that.
A: But it’s a well-known fact that musicians get very little money from CD sales anyway. So they don’t lose out. I mean, they want people to hear their music.
B: Hmm. I’m not so sure about that. If people share the music without paying, how can musicians make any money?
A: Well, the famous ones, they don’t need more money and for newer groups, file sharing is the way they get known so they don’t have to spend a fortune, you know, on things like record companies and managers and …
B: Yeah, but …
A: … anyway, nowadays singers and groups make most of their money from concerts.
B: Hmm. I’m still not convinced. Aren’t you worried about being found out? For instance, what about that woman in America? Because of the hundreds of tracks she downloaded illegally, she got fined something like two million dollars.
A: Two million dollars? Ouch!
B: Yeah, so maybe you’d better think again.
A: Hmm.
A: Have you seen this plan in the local paper for changes to the city centre?
B: Oh, you mean the idea to ban cars from the centre?
A: Yes and only allowing buses. What do you think of the idea?
B: Oh, I’m in favour of it. I think it’d be really good for the environment, you know for cutting down pollution.
A: Well I don’t know, apparently it’s been shown that buses are more polluting than cars.
B: How can they be? But even if they are at the moment, it seems to me that they’re bound to get better, you know, they’ll get replaced with electric buses or something like that.
A: Maybe.
B: Does that mean you’re against it?
A: Yes, on balance, I think I am. I mean, according to the article, when they did a trial in another town there was a reduction in shop sales – apparently almost ten percent.
B: That doesn’t sound right, if more people came in on buses. I suppose the main thing is to put money into making sure you have a good public transport system.
A: Okay, I mean I agree to some extent, but actually, I think the town centre works perfectly fine as it is.
B: But it’s clogged up. You know, you can’t move, it’s polluted.
A: It’s a bit clogged up but if you’re patient you eventually find somewhere to park.
B: Well I just hope they decide soon.
...
hakerek91