シャドーイング練習: Shirt Brothers is a Masterpiece (I Think You Should Leave) - YouTubeで英語スピーキングを学ぶ
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I Think You Should Leave is one of the fastest growing absurd comedy shows in the early 2020s.
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I Think You Should Leave is one of the fastest growing absurd comedy shows in the early 2020s.
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Alongside established fan favorites like The Eric Andre Show and Nathan For You,
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it's successfully designed to be highly quotable and memeable.
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I have everything on this phone.
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I always just look at it.
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If I ever feel weird at all,
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I'm just looking at it.
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Season 3 delivers handfuls of new sketches that are enlivening, refreshing, and satisfying.
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Some of my favorites being,
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guy who goes on his phone when he's losing an argument.
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That's exactly the point I made two seconds ago.
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Fuck!
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Guy who's only on a dating show to use the zip line.
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Guy who puts on a VR headset and forgets how to move his body.
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I don't know how to work the body.
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It's you.
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It's you in there.
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How do we move our bodies ever?
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What?
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And you gotta give this kid an award for this line delivery.
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What'd you do to him?
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Breathe!
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Breathe!
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Dad, fucking breathe!
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If you were to make a Vines that Cure My Depression style compilation of sketches from this season,
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you gotta include the Darmine Doggy Door,
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you gotta put Egg Eater in there,
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you gotta put Metalloid Maniac.
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A Metalloid Maniac will zip around the magnetic metal board he built,
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revealing a piece of a photo of the phrase.
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But there's one sketch this season that prevails above all,
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and that's because, all things considered, it's a masterpiece.
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And that is...
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What if I said something that wasn't the title thumbnail here?
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Like, what do you think I'm gonna say?
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Yeah, it's Shirt Brothers.
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You know it's Shirt Brothers.
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This sketch checks all the boxes for me.
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Concept and execution, quotability, performance or delivery,
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the message or moral, and emotional impact.
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These elements shine through in all of the sketches.
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For example, the idea of starting a pay-it-forward chain,
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so you pay for the dude behind you in line,
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and then getting immediately behind that dude,
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so now he's obligated to pay for your 55 burgers,
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55 fries, 100 tater shots, 100 pizzas, 100...
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It's hilarious in concept alone,
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and the execution is great.
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I love the implication that people just know that this is a thing that happens,
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because as soon as the lady behind him finds out what he's doing,
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she also starts ordering.
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55 burgers!
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Ah, shit!
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The team on this one,
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and by the way, I do stand with the Writers Guild of America,
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because we wouldn't have these sketches without the writers,
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pay them, are absolute masters at dishing out bangers one after the other like a double combo.
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I'm well within my rights to kill you right now!
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But don't you love me?
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Ah!
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I'm going on a date.
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The line delivery is a worthy factor in contributing to the live-rent-free in my headedness.
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You know, what's the difference between what the fuck? and...
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What the fuck?!
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What the fuck?!
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Yeah, it's practicing your craft.
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I find it very wholesome and enjoyable when the sketches have positive morals despite their unapologetic madness.
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Like when there's a bit of character development in Guy Who Learns to Stop Talking About His Kids at Parties
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and actually has a great time.
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When you start to bring several of these elements together,
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like the message and the moral of accepting differences and focusing on what really matters,
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combined with the stellar performance and well-crafted musical climax,
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you get a powerful emotional impact.
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Wild on, wild on, tonight we go wild on
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Why am I so moved by the rat mom who just bought a cup of dog shit like it's a drug deal?
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So when you bring all these elements together,
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you get an excellent sketch.
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But what happens when not only do all the elements of that sketch come together,
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but when the emotional significance is parallel to real life events?
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Now if you're sitting there right now like, what?
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Just wait a sec, this is why this sketch is a masterpiece.
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Concept and execution.
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Guy who goes to his daughter's fourth grade fall concert becomes shirt brothers with a stranger Hey,
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hey shirt brother.
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Nice to meet you
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And now has to juggle helping him out of an existential crisis and being there for his daughter solo.
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Great concept, great execution
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When his newfound shirt brother pulls him out of the show for some help He explains
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that he went into one of the classrooms and destroyed the place.
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Quotability.
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Are you kidding me?
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You don't just fucking go nuts in here.
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I started spinning around going around, going nuts.
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Line delivery.
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I tried to rip the Wright brothers off the ceiling, brother.
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And so you know we've got all these elements going.
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You know, you've got a great concept,
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you've got the performance, you've got the quotability.
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And then you get the message and moral of this sketch.
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Can you tell me why you really did this?
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I've been listening to this new song and they're saying there's no rules.
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Close to the release of season 3,
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actor Biff Whiff, beloved fan favorite known as Detective Crashmore and Santa Claus in the earlier seasons,
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revealed that he had been diagnosed with cancer.
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He says that he has no idea if or when he will recover.
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And unless the creators of the show or Biff Whiff himself come out and say so,
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there's no way for sure we can know their exact intentions in writing this sketch
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and how this moral so closely could align with what someone might be going through in reconciling that they have cancer.
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You go through life and everything starts to feel really flat.
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Then you read something or you see something and you wake up, you feel inspired.
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I think there just might be no rules.
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Yeah.
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But whether or not it was intended, it's what shines through.
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If it's what people see,
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if it's what people feel, that's real.
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Tim explains that he needs to get back to the show for his daughter,
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and his shirt brother makes him promise...
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Promise me a million times that you will never do another rule.
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The music builds.
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We travel around the world every single time we go.
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His wife is wondering where he is.
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With time running out, they're forced to settle things.
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Listen to your daughter's solo.
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It's too late for me.
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I'm awake now.
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Emotional impact.
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Go on.
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The song about no rules starts playing.
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Tim starts running back to the show.
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The energy on the stage is high.
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His wife is worried he's not going to make it there in time.
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Sure brother is pacing in the room.
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Tim swings in the door just in time.
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His wife is happy.
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The kids are in a flow state.
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His daughter pops off on her solo.
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The audience roars in applause.
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Tim lets out a sigh of relief.
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He's here.
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His daughter's here.
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His wife's here.
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We made it.
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And there's no rules, he's going nuts!
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By the way, this song is not on streaming services,
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at least not yet.
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This was made by the band Turnstyle,
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and it appears that it was made for this show.
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He wrote a sketch that used this song that he built.
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God.
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All of these elements coming together in conjunction with knowing about Biff Whiff's real-life cancer diagnosis,
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leave a viewer not knowing whether they should be laughing or crying.
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Before the it's not that deep mob comes for me,
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and if you do choose to comment it's not that deep,
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thank you for the engagement on this video, I appreciate it.
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Am I really saying that this sketch,
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which is about two guys that see that they're wearing the same shirt,
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are then assumed to be partners in crime,
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in which one just goes nuts in the classroom for no goddamn reason other than
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that he heard a new song that said there's no rules.
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Am I really saying that that was written to have some profound meaning in it?
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No, not necessarily.
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But it could be.
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And what's interesting about that is,
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is it important what the intention of the author was?
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Jacob Geller has a really good bit about this,
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explaining that, Contrary to the frustrated memes of kids in English classes,
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the curtains never have to be just blue in art.
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Subtext, metaphor, thematic parallels can be read from everything.
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You can draw meaning from a plot point or item description,
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even if the author thought they were just creating some curtains.
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That is what art does to us.
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We are storytelling creatures.
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That's why we project and reflect our own experience through art.
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Art reflects life.
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That's why they say that shit.
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So whether they masterminded the sketch to be this way or is completely serendipitous,
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it resonates and I love it.
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It's amazing.
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So first of all, they need to release that song on streaming services.
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It's so damn good.
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And second of all, these moments that build up
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that kind of climax of absolute silly bullshit with profound emotional sequences are what I live for.
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Along with the announcement of his cancer diagnosis,
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Biff Whiff shared a GoFundMe from his Instagram account.
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the I Think You Should Leave community is rallying their support of our beloved shirt brother.
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So if you're able to...
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You gotta get!
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And if you're unable to,
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just promise me a million times,
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you'll never do another rule again.
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このレッスンについて
このレッスンでは、人気コメディ番組「I Think You Should Leave」のエピソード「Shirt Brothers」を通じて、英語の表現力を高めることに焦点を当てます。このビデオのトランスクリプトを使って、ユニークなフレーズやボキャブラリーを学び、日常会話で使える表現を増やしましょう。また、英語シャドーイングを用いた練習法を体験し、発音やイントネーションの向上を図ります。
重要な語彙とフレーズ
- concept - 概念
- execution - 実行
- quotable - 引用可能な
- pay-it-forward - 先払い
- emotional impact - 感情的な影響
- delivery - 配信、伝え方
- sketch - スケッチ(コント)
- obligated - 義務付けられた
練習のヒント
このビデオの速さやトーンに合わせて、shadow speechを活用した練習を行うことで、ネイティブスピーカーのような流暢さを目指しましょう。以下のステップを試してみてください:
- ビデオを繰り返し視聴し、内容を理解します。
- 一文ずつ区切り、話者のペースに合わせて声に出してみてください。この際、shadowspeaks技法を意識しましょう。
- 特に感情を込めて話す部分を意識し、感情表現を真似します。
- 必要に応じて、スローダウン機能を使用し、ゆっくりとしたペースで練習します。
- 最終的には、一緒にビデオに合わせて話すことで、より自然に発音できるようになることを目指します。
これらの実践を通じて、英語シャドーイングのスキルを磨き、会話やプレゼンテーションで自信を持てるようになりましょう。
シャドーイングとは?英語上達に効果的な理由
シャドーイング(Shadowing)は、もともとプロの通訳者養成プログラムで開発された言語学習法で、多言語習得者として知られるDr. Alexander Arguelles によって広く普及されました。方法はシンプルですが非常に効果的:ネイティブスピーカーの英語を聞きながら、1〜2秒の遅延で声に出してすぐに繰り返す——まるで「影(shadow)」のように話者を追いかけます。文法ドリルや受動的なリスニングと異なり、シャドーイングは脳と口の筋肉が同時にリアルタイムで英語を処理・再現することを強制します。研究により、発音精度、抑揚、リズム、連音、リスニング力、そして会話の流暢さが大幅に向上することが確認されています。IELTSスピーキング対策や自然な英語コミュニケーションを目指す方に特におすすめです。