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Directions: Please read the following passage within the limited time, and then do the exercise.

Length of Text: 490 words     Time Allowed: 5 minutes  

  

7. Television Is Doing Irreparable Harm

    


1 "Yes, but what did we use to do before there was television?" How often we hear statements like this! Television hasn't been with us all that long, but we are already beginning to forget what the world was like without it. Before we admitted the one-eyed monster into our homes, we never found it difficult to occupy our spare time. We used to enjoy civilised pleasures. For instance, we used to have hobbies, we used to entertain our friends and be entertained by them, we used to go outside for our amusements to theatres, cinemas, restaurants and sporting events. We even used to read books and listen to music and broadcast talks occasionally. All that belongs to the past. Now all our free time is regulated by the "goggle box". We rush home or gulp down our meals to be in time for this or that programme. We have even given up sitting at table and having a leisurely evening meal, exchanging the news of the day. A sandwich and a glass of beer will do-anything, providing it doesn't interfere with the programme. The monster demands and obtains absolute silence and attention. If any member of the family dares to open his mouth during a programme, he is quickly silenced. 
 

2
Whole generations are growing up addicted to the telly. Food is left uneaten, homework undone and sleep is lost. The telly is a universal pacifier. It is now standard practice for mother to keep the children quiet by putting them in the living-room and turning on the set. It doesn't matter that the children will watch rubbishy commercials or spectacles of sadism and violence-so long as they are quiet. 
 

3
There is a limit to the amount of creative talent available in the world. Every day, television consumes vast quantities of creative work. That is why most of the programmes are so bad: it is impossible to keep pace with the demand and maintain high standards as well. When millions watch the same programmes, the whole world becomes a village, and society is reduced to the conditions which obtain in pre-literate communities. We become utterly dependent on the two most primitive media of communication: pictures and the spoken word.
 

4 Television encourages passive enjoyment. We become content with second-hand experiences. It is so easy to sit in our armchairs watching others working. Little by little, television cuts us off from the real world. We get so lazy, we choose to spend a fine day in semi-darkness, glued to our sets, rather than go out into the world itself. Television may be a splendid medium of communication, but it prevents us from communication with each other. We only become aware how totally irrelevant television is to real living when we spend a holiday by the sea or in the mountains, far away from civilisation. In quiet, natural surroundings, we quickly discover how little we miss the hypnotic tyranny of King Telly.

 

 
 


Comprehension Exercise

1. This passage is mainly about ______.
A. the harm television has done to modern men
B. the benefits television has brought about to modern men
C. when television began to do harm to modern men
D.
how television has changed modern men's life

 

  
 2. According to Paragraph 1, it can be inferred that though ______.
A. a new invention, television has already become part of our life
B. old, television can still replace other means of entertainment
C. expensive, television has already become part of people's life
D.
cheap, television can do more than other means of entertainment

  

  
 3. According to Paragraph 1, before television came into being, people had ______.
A. had very few interesting pastimes
B. held a life of higher quality
C. few means of entertainment
D.
lived in an uncivilized world

  

 
 4. Which of the following media was the earliest one?
A. television
B. Internet
C. radio
D. movie

  

  
 5.  In the passage, the television is referred to as all of the following except the ______.
A. telly
B. goggle box
C. universal pacifier
D.
one-eyed monster

  

  
 6. The phrase "addicted to" in Line 1, Paragraph 2 most probably means ______.
A. absorbed in
B. added to
C. opposed to
D.
attributed to

  

  
 7. According to Paragraph 2, television has been used by parents as ______.
A. food
B. a piece of advertisement
C. a baby-sitter
D. medicine

 

 
 8. According to Paragraph 3, the author is worried that because of television viewing, people are in danger of losing ______.
A. reading and writing ability
B. speaking ability
C. picture-taking ability
D.
creating ability

 

 
 9. According to Paragraph 4, television is a bad medium because of all the following facts except that television may ______.
A. make us detached from the outside world
B. make us lazy enough not to think of other things
C. help us forget the worries and anxieties
D. prevent us from getting along well with each other
 

 
10. Which of the following adjectives might be used to describe the author's attitude toward television?
A. Neutral.
B. Indifferent.
C. Critical.
D. Positive.

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