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- [Voiceover] Welcome to The Effortless English Show
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with the world's number one English teacher, AJ Hoge,
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where AJ's more than 40 million students worldwide
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finally learn English once and for all
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without the boring textbooks, classrooms
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and grammar drills.
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Here's AJ with a quick piece to help you learn
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to speak fluent English effortlessly.
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- Hello and welcome to The Effortless English Show!
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I am AJ Hoge, the author of Effortless English, this book.
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And this is the show that teaches you
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to speak English powerfully.
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Many years ago, I was sitting
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in Spanish class.
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So I was in university, sitting in my Spanish class,
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another day of Spanish, (sighs) waiting for the teacher.
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And the teacher strolled in, and I'm thinking,
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"Oh God, another, another terrible class of grammar rules
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"and vocabulary lists."
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But on this day something different.
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The teacher was pushing a cart, right, with wheels
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that had a TV on top.
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So, instantly everybody in the class
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kind of sat up more straight and smiled,
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and there was a little bit of energy in the room,
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and we all looked at each other,
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and everybody was happy.
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This positive energy spread around the classroom.
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We all kind of giggled and laughed, and "Ah", "Ooh".
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Because we realized that it was Movie Day.
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Yes!
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No boring grammar rules, no boring vocabulary lists,
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no tests, no quizes - we were gonna watch a movie!
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Yeah!
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Movie Day was always a happy day in school,
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in any class, but especially in Spanish class.
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So the teacher hooked up the TV, plugged it in,
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and, of course, there was a VCR in those days,
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so they used tapes.
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There was a VCR, and the teacher put in the tape,
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and started the movie.
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Then she walked over and turned off the lights.
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So movies days were wonderful because it was a day
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where we didn't have to do anything, right.
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There is no real studying, no work, no stress;
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the teacher wouldn't call on us
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and force us to speak Spanish
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and make us all stressed out and worried.
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So I sat back ready to watch the movie,
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and the movie began.
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It was a story about, I don't know, an immigrant
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coming to America from Mexico.
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But because it was Spanish class, of course,
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the whole movie was in Spanish.
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So the teacher walked over to her desk and sat down,
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and started reading a book.
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And I could tell she was also happy,
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because no work for her, right?
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Just plug in the movie, press Play,
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and then sit back and relax for the whole hour of the class.
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So, in the beginning of the movie I watched it
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with good concentration,
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and, of course, everybody speaking Spanish,
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and I couldn't understand anything.
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Basically - zero (laughs).
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So I'm watching - eh, but I'm watching the pictures,
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kind of following the story, kind of figuring out,
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kind of understanding what was happening.
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I managed to concentrate maybe for 10 minutes,
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but then after 10 minutes I could feel my energy
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dropping down.
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And I started getting tired: my shoulders dropped down,
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I leaned back, "Aah, oh, well, just enjoy the movie."
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(sighs)
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And then after 15 minutes my eyes got a little -
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we say "droopy" meaning they get kind of low like this,
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this is droopy eyes.
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So my eyes got droopy.
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Then I looked around the classroom at the other students.
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(laughs)
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I looked over to my right, and I saw several students
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with their heads down on their desk, just like this.
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Just sleeping or resting, not even watching the movie,
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not even trying, just.
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Several others looked like me,
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most of the others looked like me:
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just sitting kind of bored-looking,
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with these blank faces,
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staring at the movie, but not understanding anything.
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And it stayed that way for the entire class.
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I got sleepier and sleepier - I didn't fall asleep,
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but I was kind of half awake and half asleep
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with this look on my face the whole time.
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More and more people in the class, my classmates,
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put their heads down on their desks.
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Some of them started whispering to each other,
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passing notes to each other, "Hey!" (whispers).
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In English, of course.
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Pretty much no one in the class
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paid attention to the whole movie
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because we couldn't understand it at all.
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Finally, at the end of class, the teacher put down her book
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that she was reading, walked over,
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stopped the movie about half way -
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because we couldn't watch the whole thing,
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the class was too short -
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walked over, flipped on the lights.
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And the bell rang "brrrring",
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and we all stood up and got our books,
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and hurried out of the class off to our next class.
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An hour wasted, but at least an hour without stress.
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Later in my life I became an English teacher.
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And I can remember, at several jobs that I had,
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walking by classrooms of other teachers
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and seeing the exact same situation,
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but in English.
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Looking through the door or the window,
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seeing an English teacher bring in the television,
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looking at all the happy faces of the students,
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because "Yay, an easy day of doing nothing!"
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And the teacher plugging in the television,
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popping in a movie - this time in English,
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turning off the lights, pressing Play.
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The teacher also happy walking to their desk,
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usually reading a book, or sometimes just, you know,
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laying back and resting and doing nothing;
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and little by little all the students in the class
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falling asleep (snores).
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That is how most people use movies
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or television shows to learn English - sadly.
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Now, at home I know that you might try to learn English
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with TV or movies.
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Perhaps you turn on CNN
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and you try to follow the news.
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Maybe you watch a movie on television,
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you watch the Star Network, or HBO,
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or whatever you can get in English.
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You turn it on, you press Play, and you watch the movie.
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And of course, what happens?
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Usually the same thing that happened to me
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in my Spanish class,
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the same thing that happened to all those students
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that I watched in English classes.
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In the beginning you try to follow what's happening,
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but you can't understand most of it: it's too fast,
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they use a lot of idioms, they use slang,
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they speak with maybe a little bit different accents.
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And so, you try to figure out the story from the pictures,
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but after a while your energy drops,
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your concentration drops,
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because it's too hard to understand.
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And then you finish the whole movie - maybe,
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and you have basically learned no English at all.
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And yet, around the world teachers continue to show movies
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to their classes in this exact same way.
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A waste of time.
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It's used as a waste of time;
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it's used as an easy day, a restful day.
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It's used as wishful thinking.
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It means we wish, we hope this will improve our English,
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because it feels fun, it feels easy to watch a movie.
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But the truth is using a movie in this way
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does not help,
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unless you're very, very, very advanced.
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Just watching a movie in English
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will not help your English.
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Why? Why not?
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Because you will not understand most of it,
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and if you don't understand, you are not learning.
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I learned zero Spanish watching movies in Spanish class.
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None. Zero. Nothing.
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It was a complete wasted hour of time.
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If you simply put in a movie and watch it,
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you're also just wasting your time.
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Again, unless you're very, very advanced.
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And if you're advanced, if you're very advanced,
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if you understand most of the movies,
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most of the TV shows you watch in English,
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well, congratulations, you're doing a great job.
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But for most people, just watching a movie like that,
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it's a waste of time.
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So should we forget about movies?
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Should we forget about TV shows?
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No.
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In fact, TV shows and movies
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are possibly
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a very, very powerful tool
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for improving your English speaking.
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Much, much, much better than a textbook.
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You know, I hate textbooks
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because in textbooks the English - it's not real, it's fake.
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"Hello, how are you?
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"I'm fine. And you?"
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Who talks like that?
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Nobody talks like that.
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But in movies, movie English is much, much closer
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to the real English we use in the United States
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when we talk to our friends,
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when we're at work, at our jobs,
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when we're on the street chatting with people,
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when we go to a restaurant.
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Movies and television shows show you
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a much more real kind of English.
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Movies and TV shows have slang and idioms
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that we use all the time.
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They have very, very useful phrases.
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Perhaps the most important of all,
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movies and TV shows have real pronunciation.
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It's how we really pronounce words and phrases.
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We push some words together, we cut some words,
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some words we stretch and make longer.
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All of the real English speaking that we use in real life
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you can get from movies and television shows.
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So how do we use them correctly?
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How do you use them so you could really learn,
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you actually improve your English,
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not waste an hour of time or two hours of time?
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Well, you do it by using
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The Effortless English Movie Technique,
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which I will teach you
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right after I answer a few Twitter questions.
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When we come back, I will tell you exactly step by step
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how to use a movie or a television show
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to improve your English speaking and listening.
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But first let's go to a few Twitter questions.
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Twitter question time.
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Well, this is a good question.
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"AJ, which series or TV shows do you recommend us to watch
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"for learning English?"
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Great question!
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Perfect for our topic.
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I don't have just one to recommend,
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because it depends on you, right?
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If you love crime shows, for example,
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then you should watch crime shows.
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But what if you hate crime shows,
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well, then don't watch them.
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Maybe you prefer something more light,
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something more romantic, something a little funnier.
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So I won't tell you exactly what to watch,
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but I will tell you which types of TV shows or movies
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are best for you.
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So, the best kinds are modern.
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First of all, they need to be modern.
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Modern means they're in this time period in history.
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They can be a little bit old like from the 1980s,
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or '90s, or 2000s, that's okay -
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if you want something a little older
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for a movie or a TV show.
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You do not want a movie, however,