Prática de Shadowing: How to Start a Speech That Makes People Whisper ‘Damn, that’s good.’ - Aprenda a falar inglês com o YouTube

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Obama does something really smart here.
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Obama does something really smart here.
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Most presenters lose the room in the first 10 seconds.
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Not because they're bad, but because they play it safe.
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They start with their name,
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role and a bunch of boring context.
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Obama doesn't.
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starts with surprise, something unexpected.
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And you can do the same.
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In this video I'll show you 5 powerful ways to start your next speech.
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Let's start with the first one.
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Check out these two openings and see if you can spot what they have in common.
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How do you explain when others are able to achieve things that seem to defy all of the assumptions?
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They both start with a question and questions are powerful
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because the moment you ask one your audience engages Even
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if they don't answer it out loud their brain instantly starts searching for an answer
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and in that moment You have their full attention.
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All right on to the second one.
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This is the one that I use the most in my corporate career Sadly,
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in the next 18 minutes when I do our chat,
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four Americans that are alive will be dead through the food that they eat.
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Okay, now I don't want to alarm anybody in this room,
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but it's just come to my attention that the person to your right is a liar.
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They both open with a surprising statement.
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It can be a statistic,
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a fact or a bold claim that challenges what people believe.
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Something that makes your audience go, wait, is that true?
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In that moment of doubt, that's attention.
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Here's how you do it well.
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First, say the statement slowly and own it.
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For example, 400.
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Then you pause.
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The average office desk has 400 times more bacteria than the average toilet seat.
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Then you pause again.
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Let the surprise land before you move on.
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Alright, let's go to the third one.
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This one is simple but insanely powerful.
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I'm going to show you two of the most viewed TED Talks of all time.
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And I want you to spot what they have in common.
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So, I'll start with this.
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A couple of years ago,
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an event planner called me because I was going to do a speaking event.
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And she called and she said,
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I'm really struggling with how to write about you on the little flyer.
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And I thought, well, what's the struggle?
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And she said, well, I saw you speak and I'm going to call you a researcher, I think.
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But I'm afraid if I call you a researcher,
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no one will come because they'll think you're boring and irrelevant.
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It's funny the things you forget.
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I went to see my mother the other day,
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and she told me this story that I'd completely forgotten about,
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how when we were driving together,
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she would pull the car over.
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And by the time she had got out of the car
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and gone round the car to let me out the car I would have already got out the car
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and pretended to have died.
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They both start with a story and stories are powerful because they turn your talk into a movie.
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The moment a story begins people stop analyzing and they start experiencing.
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If you want instant attention, open with the story.
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But here's the key.
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Skip the long background and start right into the moment.
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Where and when does the story take place?
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What are you doing?
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What is going wrong?
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Drop your audience straight into the scene.
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That's how powerful storytelling looks like.
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Alright, let's go to the next one.
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Number four.
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At the start of your talk,
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your audience has one question.
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What's in it for me?
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And the next speaker answers that perfectly.
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And what I want to suggest to you is that many of you are one well-constructed,
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well-delivered talk away from absolute explosion of what it is that you want to do.
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He starts with a big promise.
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A big promise tells your audience what they will get by listening to you.
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Not what you will talk about,
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but what they will gain.
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For example, instead of saying,
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Today I will talk about body language.
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Say, by the end of this talk,
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you'll know how to appear confident in any high pressure situation.
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Now that's a promise worth listening.
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But let's now go to the fifth one.
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This one is, I would say,
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a little bit more advanced,
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but when you do it well, it's magical.
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Watch how these two public speaking world champions start their speeches.
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They both start with a visual action hook.
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Meaning, they don't just say something interesting, they do something interesting.
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Something unexpected.
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Something that looks slightly odd on stage.
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Not slightly, actually very odd on stage.
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And that instantly wakes people up.
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The examples you just saw are powerful.
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And yes, they are big.
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But you don't have to go that far.
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A visual action hook can be much simpler.
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For example, it could be you walking on stage and saying nothing for 5 seconds,
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or you holding up an object without explaining it,
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or you writing a word on a flip chart before speaking.
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Same principle, you do something unexpected that makes people curious.
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That's it.
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Hooks are super important, but they are only the beginning.
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What really matters is whether people understand your ideas.
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In the next video I'll show you how to explain your thinking clearly so people can actually follow and remember it.
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See you there.

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Por que praticar a fala com este vídeo?

Praticar a fala utilizando vídeos como o de Obama é uma estratégia eficaz para aqueles que desejam aprender inglês com YouTube. No início de uma apresentação, a forma como você se conecta com o público é crucial. Ao observar como Obama inicia seu discurso com surpresas e perguntas, você pode aprender a manter a atenção dos ouvintes desde o primeiro momento. A prática com vídeos também permite que você absorva a entonação e a emoção, elementos essenciais para uma fala envolvente.

Além disso, utilizar técnicas como começar com uma pergunta poderosa ou uma afirmação impactante não apenas envolve seu público, mas também o desafia a pensar, facilitando a retenção da informação. Essa abordagem prática é uma das melhores maneiras de melhorar a pronúncia em inglês e adquirir fluência ao falar.

Gramática & Expressões em Contexto

  • Início com perguntas: Obama começa com perguntas que instigam a curiosidade, como "Como você explica quando outros conseguem realizar coisas que parecem desafiar todas as suposições?". Essa estrutura não apenas captura a atenção, mas também fomenta um clima interativo.
  • Afirmativa surpreendente: Frases como "4 americanos que estão vivos morrerão devido à comida que consomem" são exemplos de afirmações que chocam e geram reflexão.
  • Uso de pausas: A técnica de pausar após fazer uma afirmação ajuda a reforçar a mensagem. Por exemplo, após dizer "400", uma pausa significativa permite que a informação "aterrisse" antes de prosseguir.

Armadilhas Comuns de Pronúncia

Ao assistirem a este vídeo, os aprendizes devem prestar atenção a algumas armadilhas de pronúncia. Palavras como 'statistics', 'bacteria' e 'toilet' podem apresentar desafios, especialmente para quem não está familiarizado com a sonoridade do inglês. Além disso, a ênfase nas sílabas corretas é essencial. O uso de shadow speak pode ajudar a praticar a entonação e a fluência, pois permite imitar o ritmo e a intonação do orador.

Ao integrar essas técnicas, você não apenas irá melhorar a pronúncia em inglês, mas também se tornará um orador mais eficaz e cativante. Lembre-se, usar vídeos e começar a falar com confiança é um passo importante no seu caminho para a fluência em inglês.

O que é a Técnica de Shadowing?

Shadowing é uma técnica de aprendizado de idiomas com base científica, originalmente desenvolvida para o treinamento de intérpretes profissionais. O método é simples, mas poderoso: você ouve áudio em inglês nativo e repete imediatamente em voz alta — como uma sombra seguindo o falante com 1-2 segundos de atraso. Pesquisas mostram melhora significativa na precisão da pronúncia, entonação, ritmo, sons conectados, compreensão auditiva e fluência na fala.

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