1.- Look for these words in a dictionary
Startled
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Hooded
Grim Reaper
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Puppeteer
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Scar
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Unwittingly
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To
couch (sth)
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Pouting
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Fuss
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2.-Read the next
15,000 New Yorkers look startled as
Saddam Hussein strokes his chin and
considers his next chess move. Across the
table George Bush waits his turn. A single
spotlight moves away from the actors on the
big screen to the stage below, searching out
Shakira, the newest, blondest pop diva.
"I know pop stars are not supposed to stick
their noses into politics," she says,
shrugging. The screen above her head next
reveals Bush as a hooded Grim Reaper and
Saddam's puppeteer, controlling the chess
game below. This is hardly subtle social
comment, but it is daring for a pop concert
in a city still with a painful scar in its altered
skyline. Shakira may have sold 12m albums
and accepted the "Latin Britney" tag, but
this is not the behavior of a pop princess.
"Sometimes people don't want to see pop
stars giving their opinion about politics.
They think pop stars are made to entertain. I
come from Colombia, a country that has
been in a slow, subtle war for 40 years.
Growing up with this makes you have an
opinion. It was a little risky to use my show
to deliver a message - many people around
me told me not to do it - but it was a
statement about love and what I feel this
world and its leaders are lacking."
This explanation unwittingly betrays the
contradictions behind everything Shakira
does. While she wants to make serious
political observations, she feels it necessary
to couch them in less controversial words
about love. She points out the control she
has over her own career: writing and
producing her own material, learning
English so that she would not need someone
else to translate her lyrics. Yet she seems
equally at home pouting for men's
magazines.
Shakira was born in Barranquilla, an
industrial town on the Caribbean coast of
Colombia and she moved to Miami eight
years ago. "I have always been aware of the
situation in Colombia" Shakira
acknowledges. "A five-year-old child there
knows what a guerrilla is. They probably
know who Mickey Mouse is, too. They are
aware that there is injustice.”
Her first song, Your Dark Glasses was a
tribute to her father ("My idol," she
declares). Aged just 14 she released her first
album, Magia, comprising songs she had
written between the ages of eight and 13. In
1995 her third album, Pies Descalzos, sold
4m copies and Shakira the popstar was born.
Encouraged by Latin diva Gloria Estefan she
spent the next two years studying rhyming
dictionaries, the poems of Walt Whitman
and the lyrics of Leonard Cohen, hoping to
learn English.
"I had to find a way to express my ideas and
my feelings, my day-to-day stories, in
English." She then went to rural Uruguay to
write her debut English-language album,
Laundry Service. Even more significantly,
she dyed her black hair blonde on the eve of
the album's release in 2001, to the disgust of
a number of her original fans. It was a fuss
over nothing, she says. "I'm not pretending
to be American. How could I? I am
Colombian. I would never abandon the Latin
community."
The Guardian Weekly 20-2-1226, page 13
3.- Answer the questions
What is showing on the screen at Shakira’s pop concert?
What do you think is the
political message of the film?
The word subtle is used to describe ‘social comment’ and ‘war’. What is its meaning in
each case?
Shakira is performing in ‘a city still with a painful scar in its altered skyline’. Which city
is that?
Shakira ‘unwittingly betrays the contradictions behind everything (she) does’. What are
those contradictions?
If you ‘couch’ something in ‘words about love’, what does this mean?
How did she learn English? Why do you think these influences might be useful to a
lyricist?
Why do you think she dyed her black hair blonde?
What is the writer’s attitude towards Shakira?
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