J
jussomeguy
Guest
1069_KIFR said:After the show, I hope Vinnie had her written up and docked a days pay!!!
Written up and a $56.00 fine?
1069_KIFR said:After the show, I hope Vinnie had her written up and docked a days pay!!!
coppersmom said:this jeremiah character who claims to have been the big cheese in radio that no one remembers....
DavidKaye said:Goldilocks94941 said:I think trying to pronounce a place name with the correct accent of the originating language usually sounds pretentious and stops a conversatonal tone dead in its tracks. Note how anyone on KPFA will say Nicaragua, versus the rest of us.
Comic Marga Gomez whose family is from Nicaraguq has a funny bit about the pronunciation of "nee-ha-RAHHHHHHH-quahhhhhh".
But, what to do? How *local* should a local pronunciation be? "Versailles Street" in the city of Alameda is pronounced by locals as "ver-SAILS", not "ver-SIGH". Likewise, Haight Street in SF is pronounced "HATE", not the proper "HEIGHT" as they Haight family pronounces it. Likewise, Kezar Pavilion in SF is correctly pronounced "KEY-zur", not "key-ZAR", according to the family after whom it is named.
In San Francisco, "Bernal" of Bernal Heights is prounced "BURR-null", but in Pleasanton the street named after the exact same family is pronounced "burr-NAL". The correct pronunciation is the Pleasanton way. I'm sure that it was changed to "BURR-null" to fit with "Heights" because it flows better.
Of course, my preference is that Bernal be pronounced differently depending on which Bernal is being talked about. But I think if a traffic reporter referred to "ver-SAILS" Street in Alameda I'd cringe, even if it is locally correct.
coppersmom said:well Jerry ...you must not remember how to spell your good friend Bristow's name.. You are the one who called for public beheading of a very skilled person who added an "i" to an adjective..that makes you a big jerk.
MC said:Wasn't there a study once that found that the sportscasters who provided the least information, were usually the most popular in a given market? They spent more time relating to the audience and less time giving out stats, Therefore, a person that is the most precise in their language, grammar and pronunciation may not be the most effective communicator or the person with the best ratings.