CNN 10 - October 1, 2021
Transportation Workers Warn About Supply Chains; U.S. Government Agency Targets Robocalls; Impact Of Social Media On Young People.
CARL AZUZ, CNN 10 ANCHOR: Breaking news, Fridays are awesome. That is all. Hey that`s a fake breaking news. There are other events to report this
October 1st, and that begins with major problems in the global supply of the things we buy.
We told you how there are labor shortages, truck driver shortages, not enough workers to move things around at a time when demand is through the
roof. Now, those who are working to move goods globally are sounding the alarm that if their conditions don`t improve, supply chains could collapse.
Near the Port of Los Angeles, the largest seaport in the United States, there are cargo ships floating off the coast with hundreds of thousands of
shipping containers waiting to be unloaded. The backups gotten so bad, that no one knows how long it will take to get that done.
backup [ˋbæk͵ʌp] n. an accumulation due to stoppage
It`s not just a shortage of workers that`s the problem. It`s bureaucracy. Different local, national and international government rules for who can
work where. Seafarers, truck drivers and airline workers have seen delays, sometimes lasting for months before they can make pickups and deliveries.
seafarer [ˋsi͵fɛrɚ] n. 船员;航海家
pickup [ˋpɪk͵ʌp] n. 收集;整理
It`s all been complicated by the COVID pandemic.
An international shipping official says because different countries have different vaccine requirements, one seafarer he knows has been inoculated
inoculate [ɪnˋɑkjə͵let] v.【医】预防接种
six times, getting three different vaccines, while some others haven`t been vaccinated at all. So there`s confusion over that and there`s confusion
over testing. Those rules differ from place to place. Earlier this year, truck drivers were stuck at Germany`s borders when the country required
them to have a COVID test that takes days to get results from.
More recently, one ship`s officer says her crew had to have 10 COVID tests in seven days before they could get repairs at a shipyard in Singapore. She
says because of different COVID rules, some sailors have been stuck at sea for more than a year, and because of port shutdowns and constantly changing
travel restrictions.
A shipping company leader says seafarers maybe hesitant to commit to new jobs, because they can`t know for sure if they`ll be home by Christmas. So
what`s the solution to all this. Well some transport officials say COVID related travel rules need to be relaxed, or they need to be suspended for
transportation workers so they can easily move goods.
10 Second Trivia. Which of these U.S. government agencies was created the most recently? FDA, FED, FCC, or SEC. The Federal Communications Commission
Federal Communications Commission 联邦通信委员会
was established the most recently and today it`s looking at ways to curb robocalls.
robocall 自动语音电话
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: In 2018, more than 47.8 billion robocalls were made in the U.S. So how do these calls actually work. To make the call, a phone
isn`t actually being used, a computer is. Robocalls are being made using what`s called Voice Over Internet Protocol, or VOIP for short.
protocol [ˋprotə͵kɑl] n.【计算机】协议(计算机之间通信与数据传送所遵守的规则)
It`s the same technology used in popular apps like Facetime and Skype and it`s important because no international phone bill, means robocalls are
incredibly cheap and easy to make. And while the computer generates a random number to call, it`s also generating a false number to show up on
your caller ID, disguising its identity.
A process called spoofing, and with neighbor spoofing, the number on your caller ID is meant to look almost identical to yours to increase the
spoofing 电子欺骗
likelihood that you pick up. But if you call that number back, your local pizza shop might answer instead, because these computers are often spoofing
with real phone numbers.
Now according to the FCC, your best bet is to not answer calls from unknown numbers in the first place. Since answering a robocall lets the computer
best bet 最佳抉择, 最稳妥的办法
know you might engage, in that case get ready for even more robocalls now that you`re on the hot list. You`ll also be prompted to connect with an
engage [ɪnˋgedʒ] v. 从事,参加
prompt [prɑmpt] v. 怂恿;引起,激起
actual person who will either try to sell you a product or worse yet, trick you into a scam.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: -- to inform you that the IRS is filing a lawsuit against you.
IRS 国税局
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Now in the United States, the majority of these calls are illegal under the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, but because
robocalls can originate from anywhere in the world, it`s extremely difficult to enforce the law. Though heavy fines have been slapped on
slap [slæp] v.【口】课征(税,罚金等)[(+on)]
robocallers in the past. In the meantime, phone companies are working on systems that more effectively identify and block illegal robocalls, but for
now robocallers will likely keep on calling you.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
AZUZ: Instagram announced this week, it was pausing its effort to develop a version of the service for kids under age 13. Instagram says its product
gives users a voice and helps them stay connected with friends and family, but critics say the app would hurt children`s well-being and that those
well-being [ˋwɛlˋbiɪŋ] n. 健康; 安乐
concerns should come before profits. Social media questions also extend to older teens.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
HANNAH KURDZEIL, STUDENT: I do think there is like a certain dependency. I -- I`ve noticed this behavior myself.
CLARE SEBASTIAN, CNN CORRESPONDENT: Do you ever find yourself "doomscrolling" I think it`s called?
doomscrolling 人们在智能手机应用中、社交媒体或互联网上不断滚动浏览无数的坏消息
NOAH ROBERTS, STUDENT: Yes. Just going on forever and not doing anything and not any school you need to do.
SEBASTIAN: High school senior Hannah and Noah have no time to waste. They`re just weeks into their final year of high school, juggling
juggle [ˋdʒʌg!] v.耍(球,盘等);耍弄
schoolwork, clubs and college applications, and social media.
KURDZEIL: I think a lot of it is just, a year of missing out or not being as involved with your friends.
SEBASTIAN: Hannah is student union president, a job she says she couldn`t do without Instagram. She runs the union account. And yet last winter, she
did delete TikTok.
KURDZEIL: I would just constantly be sucked into these videos that were really appealing but didn`t particularly help make me happier as a person.
I think, overall, it has been a positive. I think I stopped worrying about the way my body looks a lot.
SEBASTIAN: These teenagers are aware of the mental health risks of social media, and as the Wall Street Journal recently reported so is Facebook. The
case has said Facebook`s own research in 2019 showed one in three teenage girls with body image issues felt Instagram made those issues worse. News
that didn`t come as a shock to teachers here.
IAN MORZAN, TEACHER: So, we were noticing the ill effects of oversaturation with regards to social media. Students reporting sleeplessness,
ill effects 不良后果,恶果
oversaturation 过饱和现象
all kinds of other, kind of, social emotional learning challenges.
SEBASTIAN: School dean Ian Morzan says the pandemic brought things to a head. Last year he began running regular classes, teaching students to take
bring (things) to a head: to intensify a situation to the point that action must be taken
charge of their online presence.
MORZAN: They can really have an open discourse about what`s good, what`s bad and then how do they protect themselves.
discourse [ˋdɪskors] n. 谈话,交谈,会话
SEBASTIAN: For Hannah and Noah, 18 months of virtual school did prompt a reckoning.
reckoning [ˋrɛkənɪŋ] n. 计算;【喻】算账,惩罚
ROBERTS: It made you more in control of yourself, because you had to be or else you`d get completely loss in the -- I think I limit my social media to
a lot of healthy stuff, actually. You follow people that inspire you, your friends.
SEBASTIAN: You guys were born in the same year as Facebook was. Do you ever worry about the long-term ramifications of -- of never having known a world
ramification [͵ræməfəˋkeʃən] n. 延伸性影响
without social media? Of how it might have shaped you?
ROBERTS: No I don`t, because the way you guys describe before social media doesn`t sound like a fun place at all. You get to see more people and learn
more cultures much quicker than you would.
KURDZEIL: I do worry sometimes about what it means for, not only things like my attention span or something I think we`re facing generationally but
on a more personal level. I do worry I`ve become preoccupied, maybe the way I`m being perceived by other people online, and I know that`s not a
preoccupied [priˋɑkjə͵paɪd] adj. 全神貫注的;入神的
healthy thing to worry about a lot.
SEBASTIAN: Clare Sebastian, CNN, in Queens, New York.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
AZUZ: What do you get when you take 13,000 live orchids and suspend them from the ceiling? A whole mess of upside down orchids, and they`re pulled
orchid [ˋɔrkɪd] n.【植】兰科;兰花
higher and lower on wires to make it seem like they`re moving around you.
This was put together by a company that aims to immerse people in art and technology. The title of this exhibit is "Floating Flower Garden". Flowers
and I are of the same root. The garden and I are one. It`s now on display in Tokyo. It’d be a fun date unless people are allergic.
That`s not a blooming good time. They might find it "appollen". They might ask are you "or kidding" me? And wonder why you`d "achoose" to pick a
destination from which there`d be "sneeze stems". Don`t be surprised if they get the itch to follow their nose by "running".
Hey we`re happy to be running with the students of Essex High School today. It is in Essex Junction, Vermont. Thank you for watching. I`m Carl Azuz for
CNN.
END
backup [ˋbæk͵ʌp] n. an accumulation due to stoppage
seafarer [ˋsi͵fɛrɚ] n. 船员;航海
pickup [ˋpɪk͵ʌp] n. 收集;整理
inoculate [ɪnˋɑkjə͵let] v.【医】预防接种
Federal Communications Commission 联邦通信委员会
robocall 自动语音电话
protocol [ˋprotə͵kɑl] n.【计算机】协议(计算机之间通信与数据传送所遵守的规则)
spoofing 电子欺骗
best bet 最佳抉择, 最稳妥的办法
engage [ɪnˋgedʒ] v. 从事,参加
prompt [prɑmpt] v. 怂恿;引起,激起
IRS 国税局; Internal Revenue Service
slap [slæp] v.【口】课征(税,罚金等)[(+on)]
well-being [ˋwɛlˋbiɪŋ] n. 健康; 安乐
doomscrolling 人们在智能手机应用中、社交媒体或互联网上不断滚动浏览无数的坏消息
juggle [ˋdʒʌg!] v. 耍(球,盘等);耍弄
ill effects 不良后果,恶果
oversaturation 过饱和现象
bring (things) to a head: 使某事物达到顶点; to intensify a situation to the point that action must be taken
discourse [ˋdɪskors] n. 谈话,交谈,会话
reckoning [ˋrɛkənɪŋ] n. 计算;【喻】算账,惩罚
ramification [͵ræməfəˋkeʃən] n. 延伸性影响
preoccupied [priˋɑkjə͵paɪd] adj. 全神貫注的;入神的
orchid [ˋɔrkɪd] n.【植】兰科;兰花