쉐도잉 연습: Why did our friends start sharing their location? | BBC Global - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

B2
Location sharing started out as a safety tool, but somewhere along the line it turned into something more of a social test.
⏸ 일시 정지
130 문장
문장이 너무 짧거나 길면 Edit를 눌러 조정하세요.
1
Location sharing started out as a safety tool, but somewhere along the line it turned into something more of a social test.
2
Teenagers started sharing their locations with friends on Snapchat and Instagram.
3
Romantic partners did it too.
4
One survey even found that 20% of adults think that a partner who won't share their location is a deal breaker.
5
But how did we get to this point?
6
Because if you told me 20 years ago that all of my family
7
and half of my friends would know my exact location at every moment, I would have been absolutely horrified.
8
I recently put those questions to Thomas Germain.
9
He's co-host of the BBC podcast The Interface and author of the weekly column Keeping Tabs.
10
I mean, the only way we could go farther than this is like
11
if you were keeping a diary and sharing your thoughts.
12
It can't be a mistake that there's this social pressure built in that when you turn off location sharing, the other person gets a notification.
13
Cady stopped sharing her location with me.
14
Now I'm like, well, what happened?
15
Like, did her feelings change?
16
Like, what was it?
17
The thing with all of these technologies is we're living through
18
a natural experiment where we will find out what the consequences are.
19
But at that point, it's baked into our lives and it's too late.
20
are we at risk of conflating visibility with trust i mean
21
you can see all of the kind of intimate details of where somebody is it doesn't actually necessarily mean you're
22
that much closer to them no you now have a whole bunch of teenagers
23
and young adults who treat it as
24
if it was like likes on social media that
25
if you don't like me you're not my friend if you don't like me you're not close to me enough.
26
So when did you see that shift happening?
27
Yeah, there's definitely been a really interesting change here.
28
Apple introduced location sharing, I think it was about 15 years ago.
29
But I would say over the past 10 years, and especially in the last five, there's been this change in families now,
30
very common for everyone to have their location on, but also in like friend groups, I've seen this a lot,
31
where the fact that you're sharing your location with someone is a sign
32
that you've reached some level of intimacy or in romantic relationships that sharing a location is like a sign of trust,
33
a sign that you've got nothing to hide, that you're on the same page and you can always be in touch with each other.
34
But it's also created all of these weird pressures, both because some people don't want to share their location
35
and people often don't realize what it is they're revealing when they give this information away.
36
But saying no, or even worse,
37
revoking it once you've given it to another person can create kind of a conflict in some cases
38
that makes this like an issue of peer pressure that can be really difficult to navigate.
39
You're so right in romantic relationships.
40
I was stunned when I sort of this stat that showed me that for 21% of people in romantic relationships, not sharing their location is a deal breaker.
41
It's like the kind of tech equivalents.
42
You're like a phone equivalent of a prenup.
43
I don't know where that came from and what it does to a relationship, but I'm going to be honest, I find it slightly creepy.
44
Yeah.
45
I mean, I try to not pass judgment about this sort of thing.
46
You're a better man than me.
47
Well, I try.
48
I'm not saying I succeed.
49
But, you know, I've been writing about privacy for almost 10 years now, and I find this pretty alarming.
50
On the one hand, maybe it's like, oh, well, it's a sign that me and my partner, we trust each other and everything's fine.
51
And we don't have anything to worry about.
52
That's the question is that you need the sign.
53
You need the proof.
54
You need the sign.
55
You need the proof.
56
I think for some people, not giving that level of information is a sign that you're hiding something,
57
which is pretty shocking when we think about just how intimate and how much information you're sharing with another person.
58
This is where I am at all times.
59
So like there's no moment of your life that's just for you.
60
They need constant 24-7 access to you.
61
And I think that's kind of a problem.
62
Okay, so now I'm going to ask you to play psychologist.
63
Okay, can't wait.
64
And having sounded a little judgy about this, I have four kids.
65
Of the four of them, three of them I share, and I love seeing where they are.
66
One of them, my daughter, Maya, who's 29, always said, I find this kind of creepy.
67
Even my boyfriend, who I've been living with for 10 years, he doesn't share.
68
I don't really want you to know where I am at all times.
69
And so I have a sort of control sample, which is that it never occurs to me to even look or wonder where Maya is.
70
I don't even have that.
71
It's almost like knowing that I can look feeds a sort of addiction that I have now developed.
72
Are the companies, as well as it being great businesses, are they giving us something that we need or did they make this happen?
73
I mean, are they tapping into some need of ours that was already there
74
or have they created this need in us, Dr. Thomas?
75
You know, as a licensed psychologist, no of course i did
76
but uh i that's a really interesting question i think of it less as a need that's being fulfilled
77
and more of uh something that's playing into a natural human
78
desire once these tools are available it creates a new opportunity to worry and because it's there
79
because you can check it i think addiction is a useful framework i don't know
80
that this kind of thing is literally addictive but the fact
81
that you can check makes you want to do it the fact
82
that it's always there that you can always feed
83
that it's like oh do i need to be worried about
84
my daughter well i'll just check where she is you weren't there was no opportunity to do
85
that in the past so that anxiety maybe wouldn't have developed there
86
so i think it creates maybe more problems than it's solving i'm sure it's comforting for some people
87
and maybe slightly sort of infantilizing as well i mean i think of how
88
when i grew up i traveled all over the world without
89
my parents having any idea where i was in a crinky little airmail letter and you turned out fine well ish
90
More or less.
91
Ish.
92
Okay, so let me just kind of throw this forward before we close.
93
20 years ago, the idea to you
94
that you would have been tracked every minute by your family or by your friends would have seemed anathema.
95
It was just kind of unthinkable and you might have been a bit appalled even at the idea of it.
96
You watch technology, Thomas, very closely.
97
You follow all of this.
98
Where do you see this going in the tea leaves?
99
What else is there that's emerging in terms of tech features that today would seem weird,
100
which in 10 years time may be totally normalized in terms
101
of how we interact with other people well you know there's a there's a factor
102
that i think people don't consider
103
that makes this sort of thing very difficult to predict and
104
that is that so much of it is based on not just what's normal
105
but what's cool right if we think about the history of social media for example
106
when i was in high school everyone was on myspace it was a particular kind of interacting
107
that is dead it used to be
108
that everyone was watching cable it was impossible to imagine
109
that would go away i think you can look at a
110
lot of this stuff as generational trends there could be shifts in the you know public sentiment about what's normal
111
and what we want that people do that just this becomes icky
112
or it becomes lame
113
or it's like oh you're sharing a location that's what my grandma did what like come on who does
114
that but i think the one thing that i'm paying the most attention to
115
and this is i think different in a lot of ways uh there's been a lot of discussion about
116
the ways the technology has made our lives frictionless you can
117
get food delivered without talking to a human being you don't
118
have to go to the grocery store anymore you don't need
119
to go to you don't have to buy toilet paper they'll bring it to you
120
if you want to look something up it takes no effort
121
but i think that kind of
122
that lack of friction is starting to bleed into our social relationships
123
and raise the expectation of how much attention you're expected to give somebody
124
It could reach a breaking point where it's too much and people get tired of this and they go, I'm done, I'm not sharing my location, I'm not responding to your text,
125
or it could become an expectation and we'll all just start doing this
126
so we're not the weird one in the friend group that doesn't share our location.
127
It's hard to predict where things are going to go, but there's a lot of easy problems you can spot from a distance.
128
Thomas, Jermaine, thank you very much.
129
That was super.
130
Thanks for having me on.

앱 다운로드

당신이 말하는 모든 문장을 AI가 채점

TRENDING

인기 동영상

이 수업에 대하여

이번 수업에서는 친구들과의 위치 공유에 대한 사회적 변화와 그로 인해 발생한 다양한 감정적, 관계적 압박에 대해 알아봅니다. 유튜브 영어 공부를 통해 이 주제를 깊이 있게 탐구함으로써, 영어 쉐도잉 능력을 향상시키고, 보다 자연스럽게 대화를 할 수 있는 기회를 제공합니다. 이 비디오는 현대 사회에서의 기술과 인간 관계에 대한 귀중한 통찰을 제공합니다.

주요 어휘 및 구문

  • 위치 공유 (Location sharing) - 친구나 가족과 자신의 현재 위치를 공유하는 것.
  • 안전 도구 (Safety tool) - 안전을 보장하기 위해 사용되는 기술.
  • 소셜 테스트 (Social test) - 사회적 관계를 시험하는 방법.
  • 비밀 유지 (Privacy) - 개인 정보를 보호하는 것.
  • 친밀함 (Intimacy) - 사람과 사람 간의 깊은 관계.
  • 신뢰 (Trust) - 타인에게 믿음을 갖는 것.
  • 또래 압박 (Peer pressure) - 집단에서 오는 사회적 압박.
  • 감정 변화 (Emotional change) - 감정의 변화나 이탈.

연습 팁

이 비디오의 쉐도잉 연습을 할 때는 발음과 억양에 주의하며 반복해서 듣는 것이 중요합니다. 영어 쉐도잉을 할 때, 대화의 톤과 속도를 최대한 비슷하게 맞추는 것이 좋습니다. 이 비디오는 발음이 비교적 선명하고 속도가 심플하여, shadow speech 연습에 적합합니다. 각각의 문장을 듣고 바로 따라 말해보세요. 너무 빠르다고 느껴지면, 몇 초 뒤로 되돌려서 천천히 따라 해보세요. IELTS 스피킹 시험 준비에도 매우 유용하니, 특히 자신의 목소리를 녹음해 들어보는 것도 추천합니다. 실수를 두려워하지 말고, 자신감 있게 반복하는 것이 영어 말하기 능력을 향상시키는 데에 큰 도움이 됩니다.

쉐도잉이란? 영어 실력을 빠르게 키우는 과학적 방법

쉐도잉(Shadowing)은 원래 전문 통역사 훈련을 위해 개발된 언어 학습 기법으로, 다언어 학자인 Dr. Alexander Arguelles에 의해 대중화된 방법입니다. 핵심 원리는 간단하지만 매우 강력합니다: 원어민의 영어를 들으면서 1~2초의 짧은 지연으로 즉시 소리 내어 따라 말하는 것——마치 '그림자(shadow)'처럼 화자를 따라가는 것입니다. 문법 공부나 수동적인 청취와 달리, 쉐도잉은 뇌와 입 근육이 동시에 실시간으로 영어를 처리하고 재현하도록 훈련합니다. 연구에 따르면 이 방법은 발음 정확도, 억양, 리듬, 연음, 청취력, 말하기 유창성을 크게 향상시킵니다. IELTS 스피킹 준비와 자연스러운 영어 소통을 원하는 분들에게 특히 효과적입니다.

커피 한 잔 사주기