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- [David] Hey readers,
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you've caught me just
as I was about to listen
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to my favorite podcast,
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"Grumpy Li'l Guy".
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Where the host finds something new
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to be unhappy about each episode.
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I probably shouldn't be
listening to podcasts at work,
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but this gives us a great opportunity
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to talk about how an author develops
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claims across a text,
how parts create a whole.
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You get to learn something
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and I get to chill out with
one of my favorite pods.
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Win-win.
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Our little secret.
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How about it?
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Okay, so I'm gonna put my feet up
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and put on the podcast.
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(bouncy music)
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♪ He's a grumpy little guy. ♪
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- [Host] Hey, this is Grumpy Li'l Guy
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with Dim Bin Rain Stone,
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brought to you by WKHN 90.3 FM
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and our partners at Khan Academy.
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Today, I want to talk to you
about loose shopping carts.
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Are they a sign of moral decline?
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- [David] Okay, hey, sorry,
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gonna get in real quick.
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I'm one of those people who loves
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to pause the podcast and discuss a lot.
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So, let's talk about how the host
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of this show is building his argument.
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Let's listen for a bit
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and then I'll divide up
the argument into sections.
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(David imitates skipping sound)
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- [Host] ...loose shopping carts.
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Are they a sign of moral decline?
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When I see a flock of
shopping carts uncared for
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and unloved clogging the parking lot
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of my local Save a Bunch,
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I feel a fury that borders on,
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"Whoa, why don't we
care about one another?"
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- [David] So our first section here
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introduces the main idea
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and gives some background
for the argument.
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The author is trying
to argue that a failure
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to put your shopping cart
back demonstrates a culture
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where people don't take
care of each other.
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Let's skip ahead.
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(David imitates skipping sound)
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- [Host] ... cart abandonment
as social contagion.
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The desire to put away your grocery cart
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is a socially considerate one,
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but studies indicate that
social disorder is infectious.
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A 2008 study in the Netherlands found
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that if you see graffiti in an alleyway,
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you'll feel more entitled to litter there.
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- [David] This section
is an expand and explain.
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The author expands on the main idea
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and explains more about it.
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Not just background or the context,
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but going deeper on the subject itself.
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So, we've got a reference
to a study that explains how
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and why cart abandonment might happen.
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Let's keep going.
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(David imitates skipping sound)
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- [Host] Who it hurts?
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Why is this bad you might be asking.
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What's the trouble here?
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Well, shopping carts don't have breaks.
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They can hit little kids, they
can block handicapped spaces,
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they can damage cars, they can
trundle outta the parking lot
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and into the road causing car crashes.
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- [David] This part of the
argument brings in examples
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to strengthen the original claim
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that not returning your grocery
cart is bad for society.
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The more specific the example the better.
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Vague assertions aren't compelling.
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If I say the weather was bad,
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that's less interesting than,
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"Hail the size of a grapefruit
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punched a hole in my car's windshield."
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Let's press on.
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(David imitates skipping sound)
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- [Host] Legitimate reasons
to abandon your cart.
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Now, I recognize
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that there are several legitimate
reasons why a person might
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not be able to return
a shopping cart easily.
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Perhaps you've got lots of children
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and can't wrangle the kids
and groceries by yourself.
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Perhaps you have a physical disability
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and can't return the cart on your own,
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but the fact that a minority
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of people cannot return carts
means that the rest of us
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as a society must support
you and fill in the gaps.
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- [David] Do you see how the podcaster
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is addressing a counter
argument and then absorbing it
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to make the overall
claim a little stronger?
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He acknowledges that some of
the reasons a person might have
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for not returning a cart are legitimate,
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but it strengthens the overall
argument to say that when one
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of us has a legitimate reason
they can't return the cart,
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the rest of us have to support them.
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So that's the structure of this argument.
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How a claim is developed across sections,
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with each section working
together to build support for
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and then strengthen the overall idea.
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First, introduce the
idea, give background.
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Second, expand and explain.
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Third, provide examples or data.
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And fourth, address counter arguments.
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This is a structure you can
use in your own arguments.
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And there are different structures
and orders to arguments.
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This obviously isn't the only one.
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Now, if you want to go back
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and read the whole argument,
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I'll put the full text
in the video description.
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Meanwhile, I think I've
hit the end of the episode.
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- [Host] Thanks so much
for listening today.
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Our line producer is Hannah Charlie,
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our senior producers are Jeff
Handel and Heather Neston,
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and our executive producer is Amanda Leff.
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I'm Nim Bin Rain Stone,
and you can learn anything.
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- [David] Gosh, I love that show.
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♪ He's a grumpy little guy. ♪
- [David] David out.