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Independent Study 8

  • English Round Table 서울시 서초구 나루터로 10길 29 (용마일렉트로닉스) (map)

Welcome to your first class. We will start class with a casual conversation. Next, we will discuss you learning objectives/goals while studying at ERT. Our reading this week is about discrimination. Our listening is an NPR story with a script. For the reading underline any words or phrases that are unfamiliar to you. For the listening please listen and follow the transcript at the same time.

Click HERE for the reading

AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:

You may not be familiar with the name Masayuki Uemura, but odds are high you've spent hours with his revolutionary work.

(SOUNDBITE OF KOJI KONDO'S "SUPER MARIO BROS. THEME SONG")

MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST:

With games like Mario Bros. and Donkey Kong, the Nintendo Entertainment System, or NES, dominated the home video game industry in the '80s and '90s. Uemura was its chief architect.

CORNISH: He died this week at the age of 78. Uemura grew up in Tokyo. He became an electrical engineer. He joined Nintendo in 1972 and was soon working on the predecessor to early hit Duck Hunt.

(SOUNDBITE OF DUCK HUNT SOUND EFFECTS)

KELLY: In the early '80s, he was tasked with creating a home console to rival Atari. Nintendo's president asked Uemura to come up with a game using cartridges.

CORNISH: The result was Famicom, or the Family Computer. It hit the U.S. market in 1985. And if Santa didn't hook you up, the 8-bit gaming system ran around $150.

(SOUNDBITE OF COMMERCIAL)

UNIDENTIFIED ANNOUNCER: When you play the system with the most arcade hits, you're playing with power.

KELLY: Back before we were worried about screen time. We're remembering the work of Masayuki Uemura. He died this week.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

Earlier Event: January 5
In Depth Discussion (Blue 2)
Later Event: January 5
Independent Study 2