ฝึกพูดภาษาอังกฤษด้วยเทคนิค Shadowing จากวิดีโอ: "I wanna kill him so bad"

C2
การควบคุม Shadowing
0% เสร็จสิ้น (0/186 ประโยค)
The firebombing of my house.
⏸ หยุดชั่วคราว
ประโยคทั้งหมด
186 ประโยค
1
The firebombing of my house.
2
This event I would have much preferred that the New South Wales Police handled, failing that any responsible authority.
3
Yet so far every single person or institution with an obligation to investigate has mysteriously declined or just plain failed.
4
Apart from Kate McClymont at the Sydney Morning Herald who needs to be given immense credit for her work on this saga.
5
But very little credit can be given to other journalists and authorities who not only seem ambivalent about properly investigating the firebombing but downright hostile to any potential action that could threaten to expose those responsible.
6
And now we know a few of the reasons as to why this has been the case.
7
And these are very, very concerning reasons.
8
As such, today I feel like I've been left with no choice but to again address the firebombing as I've waited three years for the police to do something.
9
During these three years I've not only watched them pass by on numerous chances to solve this mystery, but also somehow for some mysterious reason, downright actually reject good leads that I've been aware of.
10
No follow-up or interest.
11
It's been a joke.
12
There's been more interest in the police determining what accelerant was used to burn down my house than convicting the people who ordered it.
13
So I hope this video will get some proactive cops interested in finally charging the people responsible for burning down my house,
14
or at least flush out what the hell is happening in the New South Wales Police, one of the largest, most powerful, well-equipped police forces in the Western world that has, in my estimation, seen a single journalist publicly uncover more about the firebombing than the entire force combined.
15
As you probably know, in 2022, my house was firebombed because of a video I made.
16
A video which I was forced to take down a year after the firebombing, after threats on my life and the lives of others were attempted to be passed on to me via a former Mongols bikey sergeant-at-arms gangster turned Four Corners journalist, Mahmoud Fazal.
17
Yes, Four Corners, ostensibly the most prestigious investigative journalism institution in Australia, the esteemed flagship, no less, of our dear public broadcaster, the ABC.
18
Allow me to reiterate, as that is really hard to capture just how damning this is.
19
A Four Corners journalist was meeting with heavy organised crime figures, then sending through demands purportedly on behalf of those figures, threatening that if I fail to remove my investigation into these figures, myself and people around me would die.
20
This story was exposed by Kate McClymon in the Sydney Morning Herald over a year ago, though I never spoke about it in depth.
21
You can read it if you want more context, it's brilliant work, but the important takeaway is this.
22
When faced with an abundance of new evidence relating to the firebombing, the evidence that was more than enough at the very least to charge a few people, what did the New South Wales Police do?
23
As far as I'm aware, nothing.
24
Nothing substantive at least.
25
I tried to question the Four Corners journalist who passed on these threats, but according to New South Wales Police, he refused to provide a statement.
26
Shouldn't that ring a few alarm bells?
27
Shouldn't that open up further avenues of inquiry when conveying threats in of itself can be an offence?
28
Apparently not.
29
This is every criminal's dream treatment.
30
Burn down a house, threaten to kill people, have it reported to police, and then the police do nothing.
31
I thought the police would do something.
32
I shut up for them.
33
I didn't release material I had as the police said it could hamper with their investigations.
34
Now in hindsight, I think it would have been safer to put out what I knew.
35
And then what did the national broadcaster do when faced with the fact that their reporter was telling people that he was going to meetings with gangland murderers in order to find out what death threats and messages to pass on to?
36
I guess in this context, I'll have to call myself a journalist as my stories are certainly more consequential than the utter Swill Four Corners pumps out.
37
The ABC did nothing.
38
Well, they didn't do nothing.
39
Do you want to know what they actually did?
40
They defended Mahmoud Fazal.
41
They defended this man with his self-advertised gangster history and this proof against him, who slanderously claimed that Kate McClymont's article on the threats that he passed on were based on, how's this,
42
ethnic stereotyping.
43
And the self-proclaimed greatest, most hard-nosed investigative journalist in the country believed him.
44
I can assure you that absolutely nothing in Kate McClymont's article is incorrect.
45
And considering McClymont's track record, it would take a very creative, brave, or perhaps just in way too deep ABC management type to chuck an Eddie Obeid and dismiss serious allegations as simply racist stereotyping.
46
But it looks like that's what happened.
47
The ABC were even offered multiple times hard documentary evidence to back up McClymont's claims.
48
Should they want to investigate these serious allegations?
49
Evidence that they refuse to even look at.
50
In light of, I have to stress, grave allegations, death threats from one of their reporters.
51
Which brings us to now, where even more damning news about Mahmoud Fazal is coming out, news that to be honest is really scaring me.
52
First, he was in the news over a lover's quarrel with his now former podcast host, independent reporter Ryan Nomenko, a man with a similar story to Fazal as he describes himself as part journalist, part outlaw.
53
This was covered by Media Watch, but to quickly explain, Fazal and Nimenko started a podcast.
54
Fazal, when getting permission for this podcast from the ABC, reportedly told his executive producer that it was unpaid.
55
Nimenko claims that when it came to payment, Fazal and a man who had been the subject of Fazal's Four Corners stories in the past, former cocaine dealer Ben Aitken, demanded cash from Nimenko immediately.
56
This really pissed off Nimenko.
57
Anyway, you can watch the Media Watch episode on the beef if you want the details of Fazal's denials of demanding cash for the podcast and then the text and bank details released by Nomenko which appear to contradict those denials.
58
Why is this interesting?
59
Check the front page of the Sydney Morning Herald.
60
Nomenko has provided what he claims are further texts between himself and Fazal in which Fazal says quote, fuck Geordie's and his people, they're dogs, I want to kill him so bad.
61
Yeah, the man who I know for a fact said he was meeting with organised crime figures in order to ascertain what message to send to me from them, the man who ABC and police failed to investigate is now reported to have said he wants to kill me.
62
So bad.
63
There's more in these text chains, which is just as damning.
64
But before I get into them, I want to note that as reported by Kate McClymon, Fazal has claimed that one of the text messages is fabricated and the others merely take it out of context.
65
Now just to editorialise a little, knowing a bit about the background of this story, It would have taken a very sophisticated writer with insider knowledge of the entire situation and a deep grasp of Fazal's prose to fake any of these messages.
66
Having seen the original chains, it's very difficult to see how these could possibly even be taken out of context.
67
Plus, even if just some of these texts are real, as Fazal himself has now implied, that's enough of an indictment on Fazal and the ABC in of itself.
68
I also want to add that Fazal has denied allegations in the past that I know are quantifiably true, backed up by text.
69
One that springs to mind instantly is passing on threats for organised crime.
70
Compound that with his denials and then the contradictions of those denials with evidence detailed in the latest Media Watch and I really don't trust his word.
71
At all.
72
So let's see what the chain said.
73
Some context, the day earlier I released this video about the conviction of Toofy whatever his name is for firebombing my house.
74
I made this oblique reference to Fazal.
75
Why do the Alamedans, an organized crime gang, give so much access to certain ABC journalists?
76
Why is the ABC so ardent in defending these certain journalists?
77
In response, Nomenko has claimed that he and Fazal had this exchange.
78
Ryan Nomenko, we all sweet to do F2 or has that issue with Shanks rattled you?
79
If you did what you did, just f***ing own it.
80
Why lie?
81
Never ends well, brother.
82
Mahmoud Fazal, f*** Geordie's and his people, their dogs.
83
I want to kill him so bad.
84
Ryan Nomenko, are you f***ing serious?
85
Over something you didn't do?
86
Leave it.
87
It's not your place.
88
Mahmoud Fazal.
89
Bro, Alameddine still want to hit me.
90
I need to make up to him with this pod and we will kill it.
91
Better him than me, but f*** him.
92
We should do a pod on that and get my story out.
93
Ryan Nomenko.
94
Nah, leave it.
95
It's not worth it.
96
Seriously, Geordies is a nerd, bro.
97
He's not part of OC.
98
That's organized crime.
99
Why hit a house over a story?
100
It's f***ing g***y.
101
You should know how bad it was when I had to cop all that shit.
102
Just leave it.
103
I'm not willing to speak about it because let's be real, you sent the fucking threats.
104
They fucked you.
105
Mahmood Fazal.
106
Nah, he has to get what he gets.
107
He's a dog.
108
Ratted me to Jax.
109
Jax means police.
110
Now, I want to be fair here.
111
Mahmood, can you tell me which one of these texts is out of context?
112
Keep in mind, I have a bunch of screenshots of the original chains.
113
Was make it up to the Alamudines with a podcast out of context?
114
Do elaborate on how.
115
I'd love to hear it because if it's not out of context, if organised crime has a man in four corners,
116
supposedly the most prestigious investigative journalism institution in Australia, if their guy has fooled, well I was going to say the smartest investigative journalist in the country,
117
but let's be honest, if you can't follow up on an offer for evidence as a journalist, you're atrocious.
118
But if organised crime has a guy in the ABC, I have very little doubt that a sprawling institution such as the New South Wales Police has been compromised to some degree.
119
I'd love to be proven wrong, so please New South Wales Police, Can you make a substantial arrest?
120
It's actually unbelievable that after three years you have no one.
121
There is something really weird going on.
122
There's also more texts.
123
Mahmoud Fazal.
124
Ah yes, last five seconds.
125
Why do certain journalists get access to the Alamedines?
126
Ryan Nomenko.
127
See, he's a sly dog.
128
Mahmoud Fazal.
129
And he has my story behind him.
130
He's a f***ing rat.
131
Ryan Nomenko.
132
Yeah bro, bad.
133
Now, in the wake of these leaks, Mahmood is desperately trying to paint Nomenko as a dishonest actor, stating in an email to the Sydney Morning Herald, Ryan Nomenko has a criminal history, a history of harassment and a documented record of dishonesty.
134
As a journalist, you should know that background is material when assessing his reliability and motives as your source.
135
How does he not see how hypocritical that is?
136
Mahmood, didn't you claim McClymont was relying on your background to stereotype you when she relied entirely on hard evidence for her claims?
137
Now you're relying solely on Nomenko's background to refute text change, some of which you yourself have tacitly admitted were real, just out of context.
138
Again, how?
139
What's the context in which any of this is okay?
140
Please enlighten us.
141
Plus, you have provided no hard evidence to the contrary, just Nomenko's background.
142
That's not fair on Nomenko.
143
furthermore if Nomenko is a liar if he has in your words a criminal history a history of harassment and a documented record of dishonesty why start a business with him?
144
Why start a journalistic endeavour with him?
145
Where the sole purpose should be to expose the truth.
146
But I guess if those character traits are good enough for the ABC, they're good enough for Fazal.
147
Seriously, this really needs to be emphasized because this is so damning, and not just Fazal, but the entire ABC is an institution.
148
What is a Four Corners journalist doing passing on threats to other journalists and demanding cash from this person?
149
And why did it It's taken till now for the ABC to even acknowledge that that might be a problem.
150
Mahmood has more to say about me.
151
I don't know why he's crying.
152
Seriously, comes with the territory.
153
You wanna shit on gangsters and make fun of them in your video.
154
Ryan Nomenko, ha ha ha ha ha.
155
That's what I said watching it.
156
Mahmood Fazal, the world's not your little bubble on the internet.
157
Bro, this c**t fell off hard.
158
His videos are getting 100 to 150K roughly.
159
I wonder if this video will get more than 150k.
160
Let's see, re, why am I crying?
161
Firebombing comes with the territory?
162
Yeah, I guess it does come with my territory, my reporting, but certainly not yours, Mahmood.
163
The only time you piss off organized crime figures is by accident, when your attempts at jobs and favors to make up to them, blow up in everyone's faces.
164
Look at Mahmood Fazal's repertoire of reporting.
165
I can't think of one instance in which his access these crime figures to produce anything revelatory or negative about organised crime.
166
He's never revealed any political connections, never any strange financial deals, any malfeasance that the authorities failed to pick up on.
167
He's not an investigative reporter.
168
He makes Gardening Australia or Woman's Weekly style interviews for crims.
169
It doesn't even expose anything or pass the basic fundamentals of what journalism supposedly is, which is a quest for the truth.
170
Showing a bunch of crims talking about how honourable they are and how they never break codes.
171
All criminals break the code.
172
They're all ratting on each other all the time.
173
If you're in a milieu where murder is commonplace, a milieu where the only abiding principle is amorality for financial gain, who's seriously dumb enough to buy the idea that there's a f***ing code that people follow?
174
But that's the point.
175
His reporting serves as a purpose to enforce the convenient myths around organised crime in Australia.
176
To keep the right people afraid and the right people impressed by these gross displays of violence, it's very clear in this where Fazal's sympathy lies.
177
It's sympathy for criminals, sympathy for murderers, sympathy for traffickers, sympathy for business,
178
taking out tax money to try and sell the Australian public the fiction that wealthy crime magnates are some sort of downtrodden forgotten people, forced into poverty, into crime and picked on by the Australian establishment.
179
When any shred of investigative reporting would reveal that in Australia these figures are wealthy and exploitative entrepreneurs fueled not by desperation but a deep culture of familial amoralism.
180
The leaders of these groups are not ostracized by Sydney's establishment but are in fact increasingly ingratiated with them, welcomed with open arms.
181
It's not anti-establishment or brave to celebrate millionaires just because they made their millions screwing over people outside of the law.
182
It's adolescent as hell and it's an indictment on the ABC and the Gen X managers there who are so out of touch,
183
so desperate for younger viewers that they desecrated an already anemic four corners, forcing it to produce crime porn, slop, propaganda slop, tailor-made for organised crime.
184
Make an arrest.
185
Make an arrest, you cowards.
186
Thank you.
📱

Shadowing English

พร้อมใช้งานบนอุปกรณ์มือถือแล้ว ดาวน์โหลดเลย!

5.0

ทำไมต้องฝึกพูดกับวิดีโอนี้?

วิดีโอนี้นำเสนอเรื่องราวที่ซับซ้อนและเต็มไปด้วยอารมณ์ การฝึกพูดจากบริบทที่เข้มข้นเช่นนี้ไม่เพียงแต่ช่วยให้ผู้เรียนภาษาอังกฤษได้ฝึกการฟังและเข้าใจได้ดีขึ้น แต่ยังช่วยให้พวกเขาสามารถถ่ายทอดอารมณ์และความรู้สึกผ่านการพูดได้อย่างมีประสิทธิภาพ นอกจากนี้การวิเคราะห์เหตุการณ์ที่เกิดขึ้นในวิดีโอนี้ยังช่วยให้ผู้เรียนสามารถเข้าใจโครงสร้างของภาษาอังกฤษในสถานการณ์ที่ไม่ปกติและซับซ้อนได้ดีขึ้น

ไวยากรณ์ & สำนวนในบริบท

  • การใช้คำว่า "shouldn't": คำนี้ถูกใช้เพื่อแสดงความคาดหวังหรือความจำเป็น เช่น "Shouldn't that ring a few alarm bells?" สร้างความรู้สึกของคำถามที่ไม่มีคำตอบที่ชัดเจน
  • การตั้งคำถามเกี่ยวกับการกระทำของหน่วยงาน: การใช้ประโยคคำถามเพื่อเสนอข้อสงสัย เช่น "What did the New South Wales Police do?" และการตอบสนองต่อสถานการณ์ที่ตึงเครียดนี้ จะช่วยให้ผู้เรียนฝึกทักษะการพูดในแบบที่ซับซ้อนมากขึ้น
  • การใช้วลี "as far as I'm aware": การใช้วลีนี้ช่วยให้ผู้พูดสามารถระบุข้อจำกัดของความรู้ของตนเองในขณะที่แสดงความคิดเห็น ซึ่งกระตุ้นให้ผู้เรียนสะท้อนถึงความเชื่อมั่นในข้อมูลที่ตนมี

ข้อผิดพลาดในการออกเสียงที่พบบ่อย

วิดีโอนี้มีการใช้คำศัพท์เฉพาะที่สามารถทำให้ผู้เรียนมีปัญหาในการออกเสียง เช่น "firebombing" ซึ่งคำนี้มีเสียงที่ออกมาค่อนข้างยาก และผู้เรียนอาจจะแยกเสียง “b” และ “d” ไม่ออก นอกจากนี้ ยังมีการออกเสียงคำว่า "threat" ที่บางคนอาจจะพูดผิดเป็นเสียง "t" แทนเสียง "th" ซึ่งอาจจะทำให้การสื่อสารขาดความชัดเจน การฟังและฝึกพูดซ้ำในแบบ "shadowspeak" จะช่วยปรับปรุงการออกเสียงภาษาอังกฤษอย่างมีประสิทธิภาพ

เทคนิค Shadowing คืออะไร?

Shadowing เป็นเทคนิคการเรียนรู้ภาษาที่ได้รับการรับรองทางวิทยาศาสตร์ พัฒนาขึ้นสำหรับการฝึกนักแปลมืออาชีพ วิธีการนี้เรียบง่ายแต่ทรงพลัง: คุณฟังเสียงภาษาอังกฤษจากเจ้าของภาษาและพูดตามทันที — เหมือนเงาที่ตามผู้พูดด้วยช่วงเวลาห่าง 1-2 วินาที การวิจัยแสดงว่าเทคนิคนี้ปรับปรุงความแม่นยำในการออกเสียง ทำนองเสียง จังหวะ การเชื่อมเสียง การฟังเข้าใจ และความคล่องแคล่วในการพูดได้อย่างมีนัยสำคัญ

เลี้ยงกาแฟเราสักแก้ว