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The BBC accent
Antonello Guerrera
@antoguerrera
This video is an absolute gem. ❤️🇬🇧
In 1967 John Reith, the first ever Director General of the BBC, spoke to Malcolm Muggeridge about the "BBC accent". - via
@BBCArchive
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The BBC accent (Original Post)
BootinUp
Oct 2022
OP
Based on my time spent in the UK, regional accents are alive and well.
greatauntoftriplets
Oct 2022
#2
Thunderbeast
(3,540 posts)1. Radio announcers and newsreel narrators from the mid 20th century
all reported with the same intonation. It was mildly alarmist.
Listen to Rachael Maddow's "ULTRA". The voices from the archival radio news clips were not natural or conversational.
I wonder why?
greatauntoftriplets
(176,901 posts)2. Based on my time spent in the UK, regional accents are alive and well.
But I always appreciated the BBC accent because the presenters' accents were crystal clear to American ears.
3catwoman3
(25,504 posts)3. How very interesting - I LOVE stuff like this.
Particularly intriguing was the bit about tower, tar, and tyre (tire) all being pronounced tah.
Thanks for posting this!
Sneederbunk
(15,167 posts)4. Malcolm Muggeridge was alway an intriguing tv guest.
Remember the old days with Jack Paar.
Lionel Mandrake
(4,121 posts)5. Something similar has happened on this side of the pond.
I'm from California. My parents were from the "Midwest", i.e., about two thirds of the way from the left coast to the right coast. Once I asked a fellow American what sort of accent I have. She said: "You sound like the man on television."