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LinguaLive 20200422 CNN 10 Script

On Friday's show, you'll hear from American teenagers. In a school year that panned out very differently than anyone imagined, what challenges are they facing, and how are they overcoming them? Afterward, we're taking you to the edge of space in a capsule attached to a balloon. And a groundhog makes headlines simply by eating pizza.

CARL AZUZ, CNN 10 ANCHOR: Well, it’s springtime. We’re still producing our show. You’re still finding ways to watch it and Fridays are still awesome. So at least this pandemic hasn’t changed everything. I’m Carl Azuz for CNN 10. Some American intelligence officials say it may never be known exactly where COVID-19 came from. Scientists originally believed it started spreading from a seafood and animal market in Wuhan, China but we told you last week how researchers didn’t all agree with that explanation. And now U.S. government investigators say they’re looking at several theories for how the virus got into people and started spreading including the possibility that it came from a Chinese research laboratory in Wuhan. American intelligence officials are examining whether some kind of accident led to COVID-19 getting out of the lab and into the public. They say they don’t think it was developed as a biological weapon. They also say it’s too early to draw any conclusions and the Chinese government has denied
that lab research led to the corona virus pandemic. But the search for answers continues as the disease continues to spread. U.S. President Donald Trump says America is past the peak on new corona virus cases so he’s looking at ways to reopen certain parts of the country but some health experts say more testing is still needed before that should happen. And the governor of New York, the state with the most cases, says businesses and schools there will stay shutdown until at least May 15th. We know that for you students watching our show this is not how you pictured the school year panning out(展開する)especially you graduating seniors. So here’s a look at some of the challenges that American teenagers are facing and how they’re overcoming them.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: As a freshman they kind of tell you like, oh, you know everything to the build up to senior year. And kind of, everything is
like, going down the drain(排水溝)now.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Me and my team are really, like, motivated and determined to like go win a championship next year. I would be very
(inaudible) if I happen to, like, miss my senior season.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: My mental health has affected so much of my senior year and then for coronavirus take, like, the remainder of that is
definitely something that has been hard.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: (SINGING)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I got accepted to the University of the Arts in Philadelphia. So I was really excited to be going to but now I don’t know where I’m going to go. My mom lost her job. My dad might get laid off. I - - I don’t know what’s going to happen with them. So if we can’t afford to pay the bills then I might have to go to community college or something like that. I’ve kind of come to terms with(折り合いがつく)it but it’s also depressing to think about because, you know, it - - it should - -it shouldn’t have been this way.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I’m practicing but now with my team. I go to the park by myself or with my dad, my brothers. I do, like, a workout like home
drills, ladders. I just miss being with my teammates and bonding with them.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: It’s me doing my Chemistry homework from my bed where I’ve been doing everything else as well recently.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I never really considered, like, being able to go to school everyday and like being able to go to the store when I needed to
without, like, being worried.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: You know if it’s every kid’s dream to, like, be able to have, like, that prom(ダンスパーティー), like a perfect prom and to be able to walk at graduation with all those tassels(飾り).

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I miss out on a lot of what I think, like, the dream high school experience was but I don’t think that was robbing you from high
school experience. Like, I think that was my high school experience and I think that was I was supposed to experience.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I feel like I’ll cherish(大切にする), like, more moments with friends, family. Definitely my friends (inaudible) life and how I think.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I’m trying to stay on the positive side. Here and now, this is only a fraction(ほんの一部)of my life. You know, I’m going to be going so far
and beyond into the stuff that I’m going to do in my life.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I think it’s just important that we, like, acknowledge(認める)how disappointing this is because it’s a loss to everybody for different reasons. And while it’s disappointing we also have to use it as something to help us move forward.
(END VIDEO CLIP)

AZUZ: 10 Second Trivia. Which of these layers of the Earth’s atmosphere is the highest? Thermosphere(熱圏), troposphere(対流圏), mesosphere(中間層)or stratosphere(成層圏). Of these options no layer is higher than the thermosphere where the temperature is hotter the higher you go. The stratosphere extends from about six to 30 miles over our heads and that’s where a company called World View wants to take people in a capsule attached to a balloon if they can afford it. Here’s what the world view would look like if and when these trips get off the ground.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I think it would be a tremendous shame to live my entire life on a planet I’ve never really seen. I think that sort of changes how you view life and really gives you a better appreciation(理解).

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: We’re working to make space as accessible as a commercial airline flight. We have people from all around the world who
bought tickets to fly in a World View capsule. Our tickets right now are $75,000 a seat. The oldest person is in their 80's.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Air Force Balloonist Captain Joseph Kittinger Jr. is laced into an elaborate(手の込んだ)pressure suit in preparation for a daring(型破りの)ascent(上昇) into the stratosphere.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The idea for balloons and man space goes all the way back to during the 50s’. Before the age of rockets and the great space race, we were using high altitude(高度)balloons to take people to the edge of space. So it’s this really old idea that’s laid dormant(活動休止中である)really for the last 60 years and it seemed it was time to bring it back. As we begin to develop that project, the Strat Edge (ph) program came along. The team really jelled(固まる)around taking Alan Eustace edge of space and having him jump from the edge of space down very quickly. The team has that technology essentially formed the basis of World View.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: The balloon that takes the capsule up is about the size of a football stadium. So imagine looking out the window when it’s completely dark out and there’s an incredible starscape(星景) outside like - - like really nobody has seen except the astronauts. And you’ll see the sun start lighting up the planet below you. You’ll see the curvature of the Earth but the sky will still be black. It’s going to be the most extraordinary sight.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: When it’s time to come back, we open up a big parafoil that is 3,200 square feet. The largest parafoil that’s ever been operated. This parafoil, for example, is about 1,200 square feet so it would be about three times bigger than this one.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The balloon itself falls essentially in a big ball of plastic towards the Earth and then a team goes out and collects the balloon
and it gets turn into plastic bottles.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: We really feel that taking people in this way is going to really open the door to a space experience in a way that you really can’t do any other way. Humans have always explored. We’ve always gone beyond. We always have and we always must. That’s what in large measure makes us human.
(END VIDEO CLIP)

AZUZ: How much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck, would chuck wood? None if he had pizza. A woman in Philadelphia says she noticed her
dogs were looking intently(ひたすら)out the glass door and on the other side looking right back at them was this merry, munchin’, marmot. As the groundhog
gorged(たらふく食べる)himself on a stray piece of pie. This apparently went on for an hour before the ravenous(がつがつ食べる) rodent wrapped his "refection" and "rambled" away. Who wouldn’t "chuck" the chance to capture a varmint like a marmot carving out the time to "groundhog" every pizza pie he could? It’s a "cheesy" slice of life that would leave the "crustiest" rodent hungry for Groundhog Day. Rochester Beacon Academy is a beacon of education in Rochester, Minnesota. We hope you and everyone watching worldwide has a wonderful weekend. I’m Carl Azuz for CNN.
END

引用:CNN 10 April 17, 2020

World View




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