Hello!
Today, as we have already mentioned the enetrtainment topic, we are going to read a text about very popular way to spend freetime. Even though it's not highly recommended, because it doesn't bring anything productive in our lives, we still love to do it. And of course, I'm talking about watching TV shows and soap operas!
Here I leave you a text about some of the origin of the english word and the beginnings of it in the United Kingdom. Below the text you will find a quick vocabulary exercise. I hope you'll enjoy it!
Soap operas
Watching TV
is a very popular pastime in the UK.
But what kind of programmes do British people like to watch? Well, the
most-watched TV programmes every week are very popular dramas that are usually
on at least four times every week. They are dramas based in one neighbourhood
that try to depict ordinary life in
the UK - we call these dramas ‘soap operas’ or ‘soaps’.
In the
early days of TV, there were often dramas on during the day. Back in those
days, it was traditional for the husband to go out to work and for the wife to
stay at home and look after the house and the children. Most of these daytime
dramas were aimed at entertaining the housewives
who would traditionally be at home, probably doing the washing. Companies
selling washing powder would advertise their products at times when
these dramas were on, and sometimes those companies would even sponsor the
drama. Hence the word ‘soap’.
So what
about the word opera? Well, that’s because these dramas are often an
exaggeration of real life. They are supposed to represent ordinary lives but,
to make them entertaining, lots of dramatic events, like murders, divorces, affairs etc., all happen probably much
more regularly than they would in a normal neighbourhood.
Most soap
operas these days are shown in the evening. Each show will have several different
storylines happening at once that continue over several shows. The same cast members will appear in every show,
too.
There are
lots of different soaps on in the UK on different channels but there are three
main popular ones. ‘Coronation Street’ has been on since 1960. It is set in a
suburb of Manchester and it’s supposed to represent working class life in the
north of England. Then there’s ‘Eastenders’ which started in 1985, set in the
East End of London, and ‘Emmerdale’, which is set on a farm in Yorkshire, in
the north of England.
(adapted from ww.bbc.co.uk)
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