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Wednesday, July 2, 2014

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IN BRAZIL, THE JOY OF ENGLISH - THE NEW YORKER

Twenty minutes from the end of their opening game in the group stage of the World Cup, Belgium—Team U.S.A.’s upcoming round-of-sixteen opponent—was trailing the underdog Algeria, 1-0. But then the Belgian substitute midfielder Marouane Fellaini, hitherto remarkable only for his spectacular Afro, outjumped a defender and headed home the equalizer.
“Big man … big stage … big hair … big goal … Belgium back in business.” What would the World Cup be without these over-the-top grace notes from English commentators like Adrian Healey, who called the game for ESPN?
English is the lingua franca of televised football. Even in India, where only ten per cent of the population speaks English, Hindi commentary was abandoned recently after protests from viewers. But it’s not just the language. It’s the style—the rhetorical cadences, the theatrical beats and pauses and alliterations, the overwrought metaphors and wordplays—that American commentators simply can’t match.
English doesn’t have an absolute monopoly on TV commentary, of course. Most famously, there’s Univisión’s Argentine-born Andrés Cantor, virtuoso of the “Go-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-l-l-l-l-l!,” who has a cult following, even among English-speaking audiences. Native Spanish speakers on the English-language shows, meanwhile, like ESPN’s Fernando Palomo and Alejandro Moreno, do a pallid imitation of the Cantor bellow but otherwise pretty much stick to the classic American two-man play-by-play-plus-analysis formula that was perfected for baseball, despite the radically different rhythms between that sport and soccer.
Only the English have truly risen to the challenge posed by Ana Thome Williams, a Brazilian-born senior lecturer in linguistics at Northwestern University and the author of the recent book “O Jogo Narrado” (“The Game Narrated”): “Commentators have to transform soccer into art—not everyone can do that.” Well, the English can. Even if it’s sometimes bad art.
The person we have mainly to thank for this is David Coleman, who died six months ago, at the age of eighty-seven. Coleman was the voice of BBC Sport for four decades, hosting his own show and anchoring “Grandstand,” the Saturday afternoon multi-sport spectacular. He covered every World Cup from 1958 to 1998. Alternately affable and irascible, with his flat Northern vowels and prodigious knowledge of the game, Coleman’s “garrulous gurgle,” as the Daily Telegraph once called it, swept away the decorous BBC English that marked the first generation of bow-tied, pencil-mustached TV commentators. (“Oh, my goodness, that’s a jolly good goal by Jimmy Greaves. Well played.”)
The most delicious legacy of the man was his gaffes, to which the satirical magazine Private Eyeused to devote a regular column. The constant risk of Coleman’s overripe rhetorical style was the foot in the mouth, the half-cooked sentence that came tumbling out before the gears of the brain were fully engaged. Private Eye dubbed them Colemanballs.
“Here they come, every color of the rainbow: black, white, brown.”
“And he missed the goal by literally a million miles.”
“If that had gone in, it would have been a goal.”
“With alphabetical irony, Nigeria follows New Zealand.” (Huh?)
Coleman’s spirit still gurgles away in the current crop of English commentators, men like Adrian Healey, Ian Darke, and Jon Champion, who are charged with the bulk of ESPN’s World Cup coverage. It’s the second time we’ve been treated to the inimitable art of English commentary (ESPN switched from Americans after the 2006 World Cup), and sadly it may be the last. Fox has the rights to the 2018 competition, in Russia, and we can look forward to the dubious privilege of listening to Gus Johnson, whose calls tend in the direction of “Bam!,” “Bang!,” and “Hot Sauce!”
But, for as long as the English call the plays, the World Cup will be especially fertile soil for Colemanballs.
“I don’t think there is anybody bigger or smaller than Maradona.”
“Beckenbauer really has gambled all his eggs.”
“England have not won a game for three months. The fact that we haven’t played one is irrelevant.” (Definitely my personal favorite.)
Like the World Cup itself, the 2014 contest among commentators still has two weeks remaining. Adrian Healey’s alliterative string of “bigs” and “B”s could well be a contender. I also liked Jon Champion’s line in the Brazil-Chile game: “Chile may be a long, thin country, but it’s thick with talent.” But, if you want some true Colemanballs, don’t rule out the perpetually overcaffeinated Ian Darke, who will be in the commentary booth again on Tuesday, when the United States take on the highly favored Belgians, they of the big hair and big goals.
Darke’s phrasemaking seemed a bit off during the group stage, but the man has a touch of the Lionel Messi or the Luis Suárez, needing only a single flash of inspiration to leave his mark on a game. After all, anyone whose past gems include “with four minutes gone the score is already 0-0” and descriptions of a player who “crossed the line with the ball almost mesmerically tied to his foot with a ball of string” is always likely to conjure up one of those moments that make the World Cup such a special experience.

SOURCE: The New Yorker 

EXPRESS TRIBUNE: Learning initiative: After English language course, Lyari youth ready to take on the world

KARACHI: When Adeel Hayat, a 22-year-old resident of Aath Chowk, Lyari, was offered an opportunity to participate in an English language and peace-building training initiative, he did not really believe it would serve to be a life-changing event.
On Saturday, after a span of six months of participation, the ambitious graduate was, however, able to articulate his ideas before an audience of several hundred at the Pak-American Cultural Center (PACC). He now believed that through better employment opportunities and community service, the youth have the power to bring a real change in the impoverished and strife-hit neighbourhood of Lyari. The speech was a part of the graduation ceremony comprising 175 young boys and girls who had completed the rigorous six-month ‘English Learning Programme for Peace’, especially designed for the youth of Lyari by the PACC in collaboration with the Karachi Youth Initiative (KYI). The programme was free-of-charge and the participants were provided a transportation facility by the KYI.

“The 150-hour programme was not only about teaching them English, it was also about helping them grow as potential leaders and contributors in the social and economic development of Lyari,” said the PACC English Language Programme director Madiha Rehman. She added that the programme was designed to help develop a sense of pride and self-confidence in the students so that they can achieve their life goals. “I believe that we have achieved the objective of equipping the students with good communication and leadership skills that will enable them to serve their communities.”
Another participant, a 19-year-old Zamzam Saeed, who also bagged the ‘top student’ award agreed to participate in the programme as she genuinely felt it would be a good learning experience. “The purpose of education is to refine an individual and these six months were all about that,” she said.

The participants, aged between 16 and 25, were inducted in the programme through KYI recruitment camps that were arranged in all the 11 union councils of Lyari. “Of around 1,000 applications that we received, we chose those girls and boys who we felt displayed the will to do something for themselves and their community but had just not been provided with the necessary opportunities to do so before this,” said the KYI spokesperson Farhan Iqbal.
“The youth of Lyari is exceptionally talented and it is the duty of the authorities and the society to guide that talent in the right direction,” said the chief guest of the ceremony and PACC president Rafiq Tabani.
Tabani also thanked the parents of the students for encouraging and supporting their children through the programme, and distributed awards and certificates to the students.

SOURCE: Express Tribune 

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Tuesday, July 1, 2014

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