Pratica di Shadowing: Beloved actor stabbed to death ABC World News Tonight with David Muir - June 5, 2026 - Impara a parlare inglese con YouTube

B2
David Muir, ABC's World News Tonight, America's most watched newscast.
⏸ In Pausa
318 frasi
Se le frasi sono troppo corte o troppo lunghe, clicca su Edit per modificarle.
1
David Muir, ABC's World News Tonight, America's most watched newscast.
2
Now streaming same day with all the breaking news of the day on Disney+.
3
Most watched, most trusted.
4
Now on Disney+, every night.
5
Tonight, breaking news.
6
The horrific attack of veteran actor from Top Gun Maverick and Jumanji stabbed to death.
7
His body found outside a home.
8
Police say his girlfriend's son called 911, flagging down first responders.
9
What he allegedly told them when they arrived.
10
Trevor Ault in Los Angeles with late details coming in.
11
Tonight, hours after President Trump celebrates a better-than-expected jobs report,
12
the stock market suffers its worst day of the year.
13
What's behind this sudden drop?
14
And tonight, the president signaling a shakeup in national intelligence.
15
Mary Bruce at the White House.
16
The alarming situation on board the International Space Station.
17
Why NASA ordered the astronauts to take shelter.
18
They closely watched Senate race.
19
They could decide control of the Senate.
20
Growing questions tonight about Maine Democratic candidate Graham Plattner after several women have come forward with disturbing allegations.
21
The husband and father sentenced for killing his wife and another man he lured to their home
22
in a plot to run off with the family's au pair,
23
the judge calling him evil.
24
Newly released body camera video showing a driverless taxi interfering with first responders racing to a massive and deadly explosion.
25
The case making national headlines.
26
Erin Katursky sits down with Karen Reed,
27
her explosive new lawsuit against police after being found not guilty of killing her boyfriend.
28
Bombshell text messages between officers and what they reveal.
29
Tracking severe storms across multiple states,
30
65 million people under alert.
31
Extreme heat in the Northeast,
32
temperatures well into the 90s.
33
Dramatic video showing a retired Marine and his family fighting off a group of allegedly armed robbers.
34
After 105 years, the Chicago bear is about to blow out of the Windy City.
35
A real bear making a stunning escape why officials called it extremely intelligent.
36
From ABC News World Headquarters in New York,
37
this is World News Tonight with David Muir.
38
Good evening.
39
I'm Wade Johnson.
40
And for David, we begin tonight with breaking news.
41
The horrific killing of a beloved veteran actor in Los Angeles.
42
Authorities describing a bloody scene.
43
81-year-old James Handy found stabbed to death outside a home.
44
Police say his girlfriend's son called 911,
45
flagging down first responders, telling them he was the person they were looking for.
46
James Handy appearing in dozens of movies and TV shows.
47
His last role in Top Gun Maverick.
48
What authorities are saying about the suspect and the decision made late today.
49
ABC's Trevor Ault leads us off from Los Angeles us tonight.
50
Disturbing de stabbing of a veteran act alleged confession from t police say 81 year old j stabbed to death Wednesday
51
girlfriend's 44 year old s they found handy unrespon a stab wound to the chest
52
across the sidewalk and h pronounced dead at the ho have now charged Michael
53
murder saying after the st 911 and told them quote, of man.
54
I just killed the flagged down first respon telling them he was the w for.
55
You need to check y James Handy's career span most recently appeared wi Top Gun Maverick,
56
one of TV and movie credits to h suspects bail had been set
57
just learned he's now being held for a psychiatric evaluation.
58
He's due in court later this month.
59
All right, Trevor, all for us tonight.
60
We move on now to the U.S economy and the stock market suffering one of its worst days of the year.
61
The Dow dropping 695 points today.
62
The Nasdaq taking the biggest hit, losing 1,121 points.
63
The S&P 500 down 200.
64
There's also good news for the economy.
65
A new report shows the U.S added 172,000 jobs last month,
66
more than double the number predicted.
67
And tonight, President Trump on another key issue signaling a shakeup in national intelligence.
68
Mary Bruce at the White House.
69
Tonight in Wisconsin, President Trump reveling in those strong new jobs numbers.
70
They smashed all expectations.
71
But on Air Force One,
72
reporters pressing him about something else.
73
His new pick for acting director of national intelligence,
74
Bill Pulte, a Trump loyalist with no experience in intelligence or national security.
75
Bill Pulte is very good.
76
He's very talented.
77
Trump says he wants Pulte to slash staff at the agency.
78
I wouldn't mind if I've heard this way too high for way too long.
79
He tells the Wall Street Journal that as acting director,
80
Pulte is less shackled, saying that sort of gives you more power,
81
you know, for a somewhat limited period of time adding he can do a lot of the hard work
82
and we wouldn't have to saddle somebody that goes in.
83
And Whit, Trump has made it clear that Bill Pulte is not his permanent pick for the job.
84
He says he has five people in mind.
85
The question now, when does the president make that announcement public?
86
How long will it take his nominee to be confirmed?
87
And what does Bill Pulte do at the agency in the meantime?
88
Whit?
89
All right, Mary Bruce, our thanks to you.
90
Next tonight, the alarming situation on board the International Space Station,
91
NASA, ordering the astronauts to take shelter in the Crew Dragon spacecraft because of an air leak.
92
Operations on board the ISS have now resumed.
93
The leak was in a rarely used part of the space station.
94
Turning now to the closely watched Senate race that could decide control of the Senate.
95
Growing questions about Maine Democratic candidate Graham Plattner after reports of several women coming forward with disturbing allegations.
96
Plattner now responding.
97
ABC's Selena Wang reporting from Maine tonight.
98
Tonight, the Democratic candidate in one of the year's most closely watched Senate races battling a firestorm of controversy.
99
Graham Plattner, an oyster farmer and former Marine,
100
is running to unseat Maine Republican Susan Collins.
101
But Plattner's past now coming back to haunt him.
102
First, a series of sexist Reddit posts now deleted,
103
then reports he exchanged sexual text messages with at least six women shortly after he was married in 2023.
104
Plattner's wife Amy standing by him.
105
I want my marriage and I want to be married to Graham.
106
Overnight, the New York Times reporting several of Plattner's ex-girlfriends described quote unsettling behavior.
107
One claiming Plattner regularly grabbed her by the shoulders,
108
sometimes hard enough to leave marks,
109
and on one occasion yanked her out of a cab by her wrist.
110
She says during one argument,
111
Plattner twisted her arm behind her back,
112
shoved her into a bedroom and held the door closed from the other side so she couldn't get out.
113
The allegations in the latest story are troubling,
114
and I believe that Graham Plattner has a lot of questions to answer.
115
Plattner fiercely denies any violence,
116
but admits to mistakes in his past,
117
speaking with ABC affiliate WMTW.
118
I'm very happy to talk about incredibly uncomfortable things in my life,
119
But when things come along that are just made up or lies,
120
I'm very much going to push back against those.
121
He was already facing questions about why he got a tattoo resembling a Nazi symbol on his chest
122
while he was in the Marines some 18 years ago.
123
Plattner insists he only recently became aware of the Nazi connection.
124
I got it covered up within days because I didn't want that on my body.
125
It all puts National Democrats in quite a bind.
126
Winning Maine is crucial in their effort to retake the Senate.
127
Senator Bernie Sanders standing by Plattner.
128
Look, I'm sure he's not a saint.
129
And by the way, let's not forget,
130
he has acknowledged, this guy served four tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan.
131
He has acknowledged that he came back with PTSD.
132
But Senator Alyssa Slotkin exasperated.
133
I look forward to the day where I am not answering every single week a question about bad behavior by another dude.
134
I just, I look forward to that day.
135
And Whit Grim Plattner is not the Democratic nominee yet.
136
The primary is on Tuesday,
137
and Maine's Governor Janet Mills is still on the ballot.
138
Now, she suspended her campaign back in April,
139
but with all the scandals swirling around Plattner,
140
she's making sure Democrats know that they can still vote for her if they want to win.
141
All right, Selena Wang, thank you.
142
We move on now to the husband
143
and father sentenced to life without parole for killing his wife and another man he lured to their home in Virginia.
144
Prosecutors say Brendan Banfield killed both victims as part of an elaborate plot while having an affair with the family's au pair,
145
the judge calling him evil.
146
Here's ABC's Matt Rivers.
147
Tonight, Judgment Day in a twisted double murder plot.
148
I sent you to life in the penitentiary for the rest of your natural life.
149
Brendan Banfield convicted of killing his wife Christine
150
and a stranger he lured to their home in order to frame him for the murder
151
and stage it as a home invasion.
152
Banfield posed as his wife online and catfished Joseph Ryan through a fetish website.
153
When he arrived at the house,
154
Banfield shot him and stabbed his own wife.
155
I was able to see him stabbing her.
156
The husband and father conspiring with the family's au pair so they could carry on an affair.
157
Today, Christine's sister said she never truly knew Brendan.
158
I don't believe anyone did.
159
Not family, not friends, and certainly not Christine.
160
His testimony was the most self-serving display of narcissism I have ever witnessed.
161
The mother of Joseph Ryan, heartbroken.
162
I have felt the deepest loss I could ever experience.
163
But Banfield showing no remorse.
164
I'm greatly disappointed in the legal system.
165
The judge handing down life without parole.
166
The level of cruelty, calculation,
167
and inhumanity in this case reflects something far deeper than anger or impulse.
168
It reflects evil.
169
Witt, as a part of the plea deal,
170
the Au Pair is serving 10 years for manslaughter.
171
Witt.
172
Matt Rivers, we appreciate it.
173
Next tonight, newly released body camera video showing a Waymo self-driving taxi interfering with first responders
174
as they race to a massive and deadly natural gas explosion in Dallas.
175
A police officer struggling to move the car and what Waymo is saying tonight.
176
Here's ABC's Morgan Norwood.
177
Tonight, as this massive fire tore through a Dallas apartment complex,
178
this new body camera video showing a Waymo,
179
a driverless car, slowly first responders as they scramble to secure the scene.
180
This deadly fire killing three people and injuring several others.
181
Watch as this Dallas County constable pleads with support to move the vehicle.
182
This call may be recorded for quality assurance.
183
Yes, you need to move this car ASAP, please.
184
Waymo reportedly unlocking the car,
185
allowing the deputy to drive it out of the way.
186
Come on, man.
187
Can you go?
188
The system seems to be having a minor issue.
189
This mishap, just the latest in a series of Wayward Waymo incidents.
190
And Whit, tonight, Waymo saying that vehicle was in the process of completing a three-point turn in order to leave the area.
191
They add that they're working closely with Dallas law enforcement moving forward.
192
Okay, Morgan Norwood, thanks so much.
193
Now to the case making national headlines.
194
One year after being found not guilty of murdering her Boston police officer boyfriend,
195
Karen Reed is now filing a lawsuit accusing police of misconduct.
196
The lawsuit alleging disturbing voice and text messages were sent between officers.
197
Tonight, our chief investigative correspondent,
198
Aaron Katursky, sitting down with Karen Reed.
199
Tonight, nearly a year after she was acquitted of killing her boyfriend,
200
Karen Reed is speaking out about her scathing new lawsuit against two Massachusetts police departments that she says framed her for murder.
201
I've always known that if I could free myself,
202
that I would right the wrongs that have been done to me.
203
So this is now a new, this is your crusade.
204
I think that's a good word for it.
205
Reed's lawsuit includes vile and racist messages.
206
She says her from the lead investigator,
207
former state trooper Michael Proctor,
208
disparaging women, Asian Americans, Hispanics, Jews, and black Americans.
209
Take your time.
210
I saw a f***ing was involved,
211
so I wouldn't rush if you're working.
212
Let them die.
213
Like, literally, shove a f***ing nightstick up his a**,
214
plant a bag of coke on him,
215
and just be like, you're going in.
216
That person in their core cannot logically, objectively investigate someone.
217
He is rotten and evil in his core.
218
A federal investigation into the handling of Reed's case ended with no charges,
219
but her attorneys say they uncovered many more messages the feds never saw.
220
There are thousands, I mean,
221
tens of thousands of messages.
222
Vile and vulgar like these?
223
Yes.
224
His view of the world,
225
as reflected in these text messages,
226
indicates that Karen Reed was a person that he didn't care about.
227
And I've learned something about the underbelly of these institutions that I feel I have to do something with.
228
I have to make something good come of this.
229
With the Massachusetts State Police denounced the messages and fired the trooper.
230
The trooper's lawyer accused Karen Reed of trying to distract from her own conduct the night her boyfriend died.
231
And Reed is facing a lawsuit from her boyfriend's family for wrongful death.
232
All right, Aaron, thank you for that.
233
Tonight we're tracking severe storms across multiple states.
234
65 million people under alert.
235
Extreme heat in the northeast.
236
Temperatures well into the 90s again tomorrow.
237
Let's get right to ABC's senior meteorologist Lee Goldberg.
238
Lee, that severe weather on the move.
239
We really haven't seen a lot of heat here in the northeast,
240
but now that we have it,
241
we have a severe risk coming up on Saturday.
242
Those storms tonight, they're in the Midwest.
243
We have severe thunderstorms.
244
We've already seen some damaging ones across parts of Minnesota.
245
There's a severe thunderstorm.
246
Watch from Minneapolis into Wisconsin.
247
More storms late tonight from Nebraska into Illinois.
248
Damaging winds hail, even an isolated tornado.
249
That severe weather, that's going to reach the Great Lakes into the northeast on Saturday.
250
Let's time it for you in the morning.
251
That's when we see storms in the Ohio Valley into Pennsylvania and New York.
252
I think the strong storms are going to approach the I-95 quarters.
253
We go through late day,
254
especially into the evening hours.
255
Have your mobile alerts on.
256
Damaging winds, hail, frequent lightning, all possible.
257
Before that, it's another 90-degree day as the heat peaks along with some humidity.
258
The front will break the heat.
259
It'll last only into early next week,
260
and then the heat is on again.
261
Summer is definitely hitting its stride.
262
Witt.
263
All right, Lee Goldberg, thanks so much.
264
When we come back, dramatic video showing a Marine and his family fighting off a group of allegedly armed robbers,
265
details on the desperate search for a college student overseas one week after he was last seen,
266
and the bear being called extremely intelligent,
267
how it made its escape after being trapped inside a factory.
268
Next tonight, a Marine turns the tables on a group of attempted carjackers outside Washington, D.C.
269
Police say doorbell camera video shows four teenagers approach Jacob Borda at gunpoint on Wednesday.
270
tries to disarm one teen who allegedly fired a gun.
271
No one was hurt.
272
Borda's dad and brother rushed in,
273
tackled the suspects, and called 911.
274
The desperate search for a missing American college student in Kyoto, Japan.
275
Police say 20-year-old James Weston Higginbotham was last seen one week ago on a family trip.
276
Search teams are combing a mountain range for any traces of the man.
277
Investigators say it is highly probable Higginbotham left intentionally.
278
His family says he ventured off shortly after an argument with his mother.
279
When we come back, the bear being called extremely intelligent,
280
how it evaded capture.
281
And the Chicago Bears inching closer to leaving the city they call home for another state.
282
To the index now, the Chicago Bears are inching closer to getting a new home outside Chicago.
283
The team's board of directors voted to move forward with a plan to build a stadium in northwest Indiana.
284
The vote comes after Illinois lawmakers failed to approve the bill that would give the bears a break on property taxes.
285
Area lawmakers say they will continue fighting to keep the bears in Illinois.
286
Now to another bear making headlines,
287
and this one officials call extremely intelligent after it made a clever escape.
288
We told you earlier this week about the bear that went on a rampage and injured four people in Fukushima, Japan.
289
That bear was trapped inside a factory,
290
but then officials say it turned on a tap to drink water
291
and later evaded capture when it unlocked and opened a window before running away.
292
Finally tonight, paying tribute to one of our own,
293
former ABC News journalist Jim Wooten.
294
Over the course of more than two decades for ABC News,
295
Jim Wooten reported from more than 40 countries and five continents.
296
In Bosnia, he chronicled the devastating war and its impact on ordinary people.
297
From the early morning on,
298
all day long, one after another,
299
those wounded in the front line fighting at Brčko were brought here.
300
The genocide in Rwanda.
301
This is the land Yves now calls home.
302
It's volcanic rock.
303
You can't farm it, you can't build on it,
304
you can't live on it.
305
You can die on it,
306
but they can't bury you in it.
307
The AIDS crisis in South Africa.
308
Even a
309
little boy's reach ought to exceed his grasp.
310
Here at home, he often covered politics.
311
What Governor Clinton needed to do tonight was to present the possibility that he can be seen as a president.
312
He left an indelible mark on journalism and all of us here at ABC News.
313
Wooten is survived by his wife, children, and grandchildren.
314
He was 88 years old.
315
And our thoughts are with Jim's family tonight.
316
I'm Whit Johnson in New York.
317
Have a great night.
318
Thank you.

Scarica l'app

Valutazione AI per ogni frase che pronunci

TRENDING

Popolari

Perché praticare parlando con questo video?

Praticare la conversazione in inglese con video come quello di ABC World News Tonight offre un'opportunità unica per imparare il linguaggio naturale utilizzato nei notiziari. La modalità di shadow speech permette di ascoltare e imitare il parlato dei relatori, migliorando la propria capacità di espressione e comprensione. Questo metodo, noto anche come shadowspeaks, aiuta a sviluppare un orecchio più finemente sintonizzato per le sfumature della lingua inglese, rendendo più facile la comunicazione fluida. Inoltre, i contesti attuali trattati nei notiziari rendono l'apprendimento più interessante e pertinente.

Grammatica & Espressioni nel Contesto

  • Reported Speech: Frasi come "le autorità descrivono una scena sanguinosa" mostrano come riportare le parole di qualcun altro. Questa struttura è fondamentale per discutere notizie o eventi.
  • Present Continuous: Usato frequentemente nel contesto delle notizie, come in "i poliziotti stanno indagando." Questo tempo verbale esprime azioni in corso, utile per ricevere aggiornamenti continui.
  • Future Simple: Frasi del tipo "il presidente segnala un cambiamento" sono essenziali per esprimere previsioni o piani futuri, particolarmente rilevanti nel discorso politico.
  • Passive Voice: Esempi come "il corpo trovato" sono utilizzati per mettere l'enfasi sull'azione piuttosto che sul soggetto, un aspetto importante nella notizia per concentrare l'attenzione sugli eventi.

Trappole Comuni nella Pronuncia

Un aspetto critico da considerare mentre si pratica shadowing in inglese è la pronuncia di alcune parole chiave nel video. Parole come "horrific" e "veteran" possono risultare difficili per i principianti a causa delle loro sillabe e accenti. Inoltre, l'uso di termini come "allegedly" richiede attenzione, poiché la pronuncia corretta è importante per la chiarezza. Prestare attenzione al ritmo e all'intonazione dei relatori aiuta notevolmente nella pratica di conversazione in inglese, rendendo il parlato più naturale e coerente.

Incorporando queste strutture grammaticali, espressioni e praticando le parole chiave, gli studenti possono migliorare notevolmente le loro abilità nel parlare e nella comprensione dell'inglese ogni giorno attraverso la visione dei notiziari su YouTube.

Cos'è la tecnica dello Shadowing?

Shadowing è una tecnica di apprendimento delle lingue supportata da studi scientifici, originariamente sviluppata per la formazione dei traduttori professionisti e resa popolare dal poliglotta Dr. Alexander Arguelles. Il metodo è semplice ma potente: ascolti un audio in inglese di madrelingua e lo ripeti immediatamente ad alta voce — come un'ombra che segue il parlante con un ritardo di solo 1–2 secondi. A differenza dell'ascolto passivo o degli esercizi di grammatica, lo shadowing costringe il tuo cervello e i muscoli della bocca a elaborare e riprodurre simultaneamente i modelli di discorso reale. La ricerca dimostra che migliora significativamente la precisione della pronuncia, l'intonazione, il ritmo, il discorso connesso, la comprensione dell'ascolto e la fluidità del parlato — rendendolo uno dei metodi più efficaci per la preparazione alla prova di speaking dell'IELTS e per la comunicazione reale in inglese.

Offrici un caffè