大学英语四级166及答案解析.doc
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1、大学英语四级 166及答案解析(总分:746.57,做题时间:130 分钟)一、Writing (30 minutes)(总题数:1,分数:30.00)1.For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write an essay entitled Cheating on Campus. You should write at least 120 words following the outline given below in Chinese: 1. 在大学里存在着考试作弊的现象; 2. 你是怎么看待这一现象的; 3. 如何才能制止之种现象。 (
2、分数:30.00)_二、Reading Comprehensio(总题数:1,分数:71.00)How To Get Famous in 30 Seconds Oct. 6, 2001, was the night that would make David Bernal famous, although he didnt know it at the time. He was 21 and a senior at California State University at Long Beach, majoring in art and illustration and doing a li
3、ttle break dancing on the side. On the night in question he had been hired to perform at a Korean-American talent show in Los Angeles. Theres a grainy amateur video of the event in which you can see him mumble his name into the microphone and then do his thing for about 60 sec. The audience goes ins
4、ane. Those watching cant believe whats happening. Bernal, who performs under the name David Elsewhere, describes his dance style as a mixture of “ popping, waving, liquiding, breaking, roboting“. What this means in practice is that, first, his body physically melts into a little puddle and then rebu
5、ilds itself bone by bone; then he becomes a giant robot; then weird energies go surging through his arms and legs; then he makes it look as though something is crawling around under his shirt; then he becomes a springy hopping creature. And then, just like that, its over. Except it wasnt over. Someb
6、ody converted the grainy video from that night into a digital file and posted it on the Web. One by one, then hundreds by hundreds, people started downloading the video, emailing it, linking to it, sharing it, copying it and reuploading it. In other words, the little video went viralit multiplied an
7、d reproduced and spread out of control on the Internet like a virus. And millions of people caught it. Bernal is famous now, in a way, but its a new kind of fame, courtesy of a new medium. Viral videos are only a few minutes or even a few seconds long, and theyre generally amateur in execution and w
8、ildly eclectic in subject matter. Browse one of the websites that hosts them, like YouTube or Google Video, and youll see drunken karaoke, babies being born, plane crashes, burping contests, freakish sports accidents and far, far stranger things. The one thing they have in common is that people cant
9、 stop watching them. The viral video probably began with the infamous Dancing Baby, which surfaced in 1996. A strangely compelling animation of a diapered infant getting its tiny groove on, the Dancing Baby was born as a software demo, but people started sending it to one another as an e-mail attach
10、ment. Until the Baby came along, nobody realized that that kind of spontaneous In box-to-In box sharing, following the and-theyll-tell-two-friends model, could ever add up to much, let alone scale to the level of a mass medium. “ It wasnt as though a marketing firm attempted to create the phenomenon
11、,“ says Michael Girard, one of the programmers who helped create the Dancing Baby. Soon, other clips followed the same branching path the Baby did: a cheerleader apparently being flipped through a basketball hoop; Paris Hiltons sex tape; Janet Jacksons famous wardrobe malfunction; a 19-year-old New
12、Jersey man (doomed to be forever known as “the Numa Numa guy“ ) overenthusiastically lip synching to a Romanian pop song. Last December, Saturday Night Lives Lazy Sunday video appeared on the Net after airing on the show. The white-boy rap about cupcakes and Narnia immediately went viral, spawning h
13、alf a dozen catchphrases and endowing SNL with an aura of cool it hasnt enjoyed since Waynes World. But most viral videos come from amateurs, brilliant or lucky camcorder auteurs who just put their work on the Net and watch it take off. Traffic to viral-video sites is surging, driven by ubiquitous b
14、roadband Internet access and cheap, easy -to -use digital video cameras. Since last year, visits to Yahoo! s Video section have gone up 148%. Traffic to iFilm. com grew 102%. YouTube, launched in December, is storming the Web. It already had 9 million unique visitors in February, compared with Googl
15、e Videos 6. 2 million and Yahoo! s 3. 8 million. YouTubes traffic grew another 24% just last month, and the site shows more than 40 million videos a day. Visitors to YouTube spend an average of 15 minutes there per sessionthats an eternity in the quick-clicking world of the Web. Seriously. Dont go t
16、o YouTube if you dont have some time to kill, because whatever time you have, YouTube will kill it. Viral videos are powerful, but that power can be a little scary. Once something goes viral, theres no way to get the genie back in the bottle, and some things go viral that shouldnt. One notorious sur
17、veillance video, still at large online, shows a suspect in a San Bernardino County, Calif. , police station shooting himself in the head with a pistol. Another video shows a chubby kid waving a golf-ball retriever like a light saber. The kid, Ghyslain Raza, was 15 at the time. Three of his classmate
18、s found the footage and put it online, and it became an instant Internet classic. Soon strangers started making fun of Raza on the street. The San Francisco Giants put the video on their Jumbotron. Raza, now 18, became known as the Star Wars Kid. He also became depressed and dropped out of school. E
19、ventually he sued (控告) the classmates who had found the video. Two weeks ago, they settled for an undisclosed sum. Corporations are running into similar problems. They want to ride the viral train for the free publicity, but it doesnt always go where they want it to. In March Chevrolet organized an
20、online make-your-own-commercial campaign for its Tahoe SUV. Green-minded humorists hijacked the campaign, creating widely circulated Tahoe ads with slogans like, “Nature? Itll grow back. Drive a car that costs the earth. “ Last year, Lee Ford and Dan Brooks, a London -based creative ad development t
21、eam, came up with an “edgy“ Volkswagen spot for a demo reel; a terrorist tries to detonate a car bomb outside a crowded cafe. But the car, a VW Polo, is too sturdyit contains the blast, killing the terrorist but saving the caf6. Shot on a shoestring budget, the clip is shocking, tasteless, stunningl
22、y effectiveand totally unauthorized. When it leaked onto the Net (it had been hidden on Ford and Brooks website) , they were pretty stunned too. “We went to sleep, and then America got it,“ says Ford, 33. “I woke in the morning and looked at our website. The hit rate was through the roof. “ The duo(
23、成对的人) had to apologize to Volkswagen. Not every video goes viral. The vast majority go nowhereYouTube hosts millions of hours of drunken parties, tearful confessions, smiling babies, sleeping cats and screen grabs from World of Warcraft, all doomed to obscurity. Nike showed a firm grasp of the form
24、with a popular clip, an ad stealthily designed to look like amateur footage, showing soccer deity Ronaldinho putting on a pair of sneakers and then, incredibly, nailing the crossbar with a soccer ball four times in a row. Some of the successes are accidental. For a while, one of the popular movies o
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- 大学 英语四 166 答案 解析 DOC
