杨澜TED演讲稿范文英文通用4篇
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杨澜TED演讲:改变中国的一代【第一篇】
The night before I was heading for Scotland, I was invited to host the final of "China's Got Talent" show in Shanghai with the 80,000 live audience in the stadium.
Guess who was the performing guest? Susan Boyle.
And I told her, "I'm going to Scotland the next day.
" She sang beautifully, and she even managed to say a few words in Chinese.
[Chinese:送你葱] So it's not like "hello" or "thank you," that ordinary stuff.
It means "green onion for free.
" Why did she say that? Because it was a line from our Chinese parallel Susan Boyle -- a 50-some year-old woman, a vegetable vendor in Shanghai, who loves singing Western opera, but she didn't understand any English or French or Italian, so she managed to fill in the lyrics with vegetable names in Chinese.
(Laughter) And the last sentence of Nessun Dorma that she was singing in the stadium was "green onion for free.
" So [as] Susan Boyle was saying that, 80,000 live audience sang together.
That was hilarious.
在我去苏格兰的前一晚,中国达人秀邀请我到上海主持总决赛体育馆的现场有八万名观众。
知道特别嘉宾是谁吗?苏珊大妈。
我告诉她,“我明天要去苏格兰。
"她不但歌声非常动听,还学会了说几句中文。
她说:“送你葱”这句话的意思不是“你好,”“谢谢,”那类的话。
"送你葱"意思是“免费的大葱。
”她为什么要说这句话呢?因为“送你葱”是来自有着"中国苏珊大妈"之称的一位五十多岁在上海卖菜的女摊贩,她非常喜欢西方歌剧,但她不懂歌词的意思也不会说英语,法语,或是意大利语,所以她以独特的方式来记歌词将歌词全部换成蔬菜名。
(笑声)意大利歌剧公主彻夜未眠的最后一句她当时就是以"送你葱"来演唱的。
当苏珊大妈说了这句话的时候,现场的八万名观众一起跟着唱了起来。
当时的场面十分有趣。
So I guess both Susan Boyle and this vegetable vendor in Shanghai belonged to otherness.
They were the least expected to be successful in the business called entertainment, yet their courage and talent brought them through.
And a show and a platform gave them the stage to realize their dreams.
Well, being different is not that difficult.
We are all different from different perspectives.
But I think being different is good, because you present a different point of view.
You may have the chance to make a difference.
我想苏珊大妈还有那位上海的卖菜大婶都有她们的独特之处。
大家通常会觉得她们无法在娱乐圈这个行业里闯出天下,但是才能和勇气让她们得到了肯定。
一场秀和一个平台让她们有了一个可以圆梦的舞台。
其实要与众不同不是什么难事。
我们都有独特之处从不同的角度来看。
但我觉得与众不同其实很好,因为你有不同的想法。
你也许可以在某一方面有影响。
My generation has been very fortunate to witness and participate in the historic transformation of China that has made so many changes in the past 20, 30 years.
I remember that in the year of 1990, when I was graduating from college, I was applying for a job in the sales department of the first five-star hotel in Beijing, Great Wall Sheraton -- it's still there.
So after being interrogated by this Japanese manager for a half an hour, he finally said, "So, Miss Yang, do you have any questions to ask me?" I summoned my courage and poise and said, "Yes, but could you let me know, what actually do you sell?" I didn't have a clue what a sales department was about in a five-star hotel.
That was the first day I set my foot in a five-star hotel.
我这个年代的人是幸运的我们目睹并参与了中国历史性的变化。
在过去的二,三十年里中国发生了很多变化。
我还记得1990年的时候。
我刚好读完大学,我当时申请了一个营销的工作地点是北京的一个五星级宾馆,这个宾馆现在还有,叫喜来登长城饭店。
在被一位日本经理询问了半小时之后,他在面试要结束时说,"杨小姐,你有问题要问我吗?"我鼓起了勇气,镇定地问,"你能不能告诉我,你们卖什么的?"因为我当时完全不知道一个五星级饭店的销售部要做什么。
那是我第一次走进一家五星级饭店。
Around the same time, I was going through an audition -- the first ever open audition by national television in China -- with another thousand college girls.
The producer told us they were looking for some sweet, innocent and beautiful fresh face.
So when it was my turn, I stood up and said, "Why [do] women's personalities on television always have to be beautiful, sweet, innocent and, you know, supportive? Why can't they have their own ideas and their own voice?" I thought I kind of offended them.
But actually, they were impressed by my words.
And so I was in the second round of competition, and then the third and the fourth.
After seven rounds of competition, I was the last one to survive it.
So I was on a national television prime-time show.
And believe it or not, that was the first show on Chinese television that allowed its hosts to speak out of their own minds without reading an approved script.
(Applause) And my weekly audience at that time was between 200 to 300 million people.
与此同时,我参加了由中国国家电台举办的试听会这是第一个向大众开放的试听会现场还有上千名的女大生。
制作人告诉我们他们在找甜美,单纯和漂亮的新面孔。
当轮到我的时候,我起身问道,"为什么在电视上的女人一定要长得漂亮,甜美,单纯还要配合度高?为什么她们不能有自己的想法说自己的话?"我以为我的话可能有点冒犯了评委。
但我的话反而得到了他们的认同。
因此我进入了第二回合,然后第三,第四。
在第七回合比赛结束后,我战胜了所有的选手。
我也因此在加入了黄金档的一个节目。
你也许不敢相信,这个节目是中国第一个允许主持人表达他们自己的想法他们不需要念之前写好的稿。
(掌声)我当时每周的观众人数达到200-300万。
Well after a few years, I decided to go to the U.
S.
and Columbia University to pursue my postgraduate studies, and then started my own media company, which was unthought of during the years that I started my career.
So we do a lot of things.
I've interviewed more than a thousand people in the past.
And sometimes I have young people approaching me say, "Lan, you changed my life," and I feel proud of that.
But then we are also so fortunate to witness the transformation of the whole country.
I was in Beijing's bidding for the Olympic Games.
I was representing the Shanghai Expo.
I saw China embracing the world and vice versa.
But then sometimes I'm thinking, what are today's young generation up to? How are they different, and what are the differences they are going to make to shape the future of China, or at large, the world?
几年以后,我决定去美国的哥伦比亚大学读研究所,同时也创办了自己的媒体公司,这个想法在我刚刚入行的时候并不存在。
公司的项目分很多类。
我访问过的人数已经过千。
有时候年轻人会对我说,"杨澜姐,你改变了我的人生,"这些话让我感到骄傲。
我觉我这代人很幸运因为我们看到了整个国家的兴起。
北京竞标奥运的举办权我有在场。
我也代表了上海市博会。
我看到了中国拥抱全世界也看到了全世界拥抱中国。
但我有时会想,现在的年轻人到底要做什么?他们到底有什么不同之处,有什么样的变化会因他们而产生这些变化会怎样改变中国,甚至整个世界?
So today I want to talk about young people through the platform of social media.
First of all, who are they? [What] do they look like? Well this is a girl called Guo Meimei -- 20 years old, beautiful.
And she claimed to be the general manager of Red Cross at the Chamber of Commerce.
She didn't realize that she stepped on a sensitive nerve and aroused national questioning, almost a turmoil, against the credibility of Red Cross.
The controversy was so heated that the Red Cross had to open a press conference to clarify it, and the investigation is going on.
所以我今天的话题是关于年轻一代通过社交媒体的平台来认识他们。
首先,他们是谁?长得什么样?照片上的女孩叫郭美美20岁,很漂亮。
她还说自己是商会红十字会在商会的一名经理。
她没有想到她的举动引起了大众的敏感导致了一场全国性的质问,差一点变成一场针对红十字会的骚乱。
这场争论非常激烈以至于红十字会开了一场记者会来澄清"郭美美事件,"该事件也因此被调查。
So far, as of today, we know that she herself made up that title -- probably because she feels proud to be associated with charity.
All those expensive items were given to her as gifts by her boyfriend, who used to be a board member in a subdivision of Red Cross at Chamber of Commerce.
It's very complicated to explain.
But anyway, the public still doesn't buy it.
It is still boiling.
It shows us a general mistrust of government or government-backed institutions, which lacked transparency in the past.
And also it showed us the power and the impact of social media as microblog.
现今为止,公众已知道郭美美给自己捏造了红十字会经理的职位也许是因为她喜欢慈善二字。
她的那些奢侈品是男朋友送的礼物她的男友之前是一名董事会成员在商会红十字会下属的一个部门工作。
这个解释起来有点困难。
尽管如此,公众愤怒仍未平息。
热论还在进行中。
这个事件说明了民众对政府机构或是政府所支持的'机构的不信任,而这些机构在过去都不够透明。
这个事件也说明了社交网站的力量和影响。
微博就是个很好的例子。
Microblog boomed in the year of 2010, with visitors doubled and time spent on it tripled.
Sina.
com, a major news portal, alone has more than 140 million microbloggers.
On Tencent, 200 million.
The most popular blogger -- it's not me -- it's a movie star, and she has more than 9.
5 million followers, or fans.
About 80 percent of those microbloggers are young people, under 30 years old.
And because, as you know, the traditional media is still heavily controlled by the government, social media offers an opening to let the steam out a little bit.
But because you don't have many other openings, the heat coming out of this opening is sometimes very strong, active and even violent.
微博在2010年兴起,访客人数翻倍浏览时间更是之前的三倍。
单是新浪网,一个主要的新闻网站,就有超过1.
4亿的微博用户。
腾讯网,2亿。
有最多人关注的用户不是我是个电影女演员,她有超过九百五十万的跟随者,网上的叫法是粉丝。
大约有80%的微博用户都是年轻人,年龄在30岁以下。
大家应该都知道传统媒体依然由政府控制,社交网站提供了一个平台让大家可以表达自己的不满。
因为其它的平台不多,来自社交网站的激愤有时可以变得非常强烈,非常活跃甚至带有暴力。
So through microblogging, we are able to understand Chinese youth even better.
So how are they different? First of all, most of them were born in the 80s and 90s, under the one-child policy.
And because of selected abortion by families who favored boys to girls, now we have ended up with 30 million more young men than women.
That could pose a potential danger to the society, but who knows; we're in a globalized world, so they can look for girlfriends from other countries.
Most of them have fairly good education.
The illiteracy rate in China among this generation is under one percent.
In cities, 80 percent of kids go to college.
But they are facing an aging China with a population above 65 years old coming up with seven-point-some percent this year, and about to be 15 percent by the year of 2030.
And you know we have the tradition that younger generations support the elders financially, and taking care of them when they're sick.
So it means young couples will have to support four parents who have a life expectancy of 73 years old.
通过微博,我们可以进一步地了解在中国年轻的一代。
但他们到底有什么不同之处?第一,他们大部分是80后和90后,出生在一胎化政策的年代。
因为有了选择性的流产很多家长选择要男不要女,后果就是现今男人的数量超出女人数量的3千万。
这个差别让社会存在一种潜在危险,但没人敢确定;因为我们生活在一个全球化的世界,男生们可以到其它国家找女友。
年轻人里的大多数都受过不错的教育。
中国这一代的文盲人数少于百分之一。
在城市里,有80%的学生上大学。
但他们面对的是一个在变化的中国今年,年龄超过65的人口已经达到百分之7点几,到2030年人口老化会达到15%。
大家也许知道我们的传统是年轻的这一代有义务供养老的一代,在他们生病时候照顾他们。
这意味着已成家的年轻人将需要供养4位父母他们的预期寿命是73岁。
So making a living is not that easy for young people.
College graduates are not in short supply.
In urban areas, college graduates find the starting salary is about 400 U.
S.
dollars a month, while the average rent is above $500.
So what do they do? They have to share space -- squeezed in very limited space to save money -- and they call themselves "tribe of ants.
" And for those who are ready to get married and buy their apartment, they figured out they have to work for 30 to 40 years to afford their first apartment.
That ratio in America would only cost a couple five years to earn, but in China it's 30 to 40 years with the skyrocketing real estate price.
年轻一代的日子不是那么好过。
大学毕业生的供应超过需求。
在城市里,大学毕业生的起薪大约在400美金一个月,但平均的房屋每月租金超过500美金。
那怎么办呢?他们只能一起住挤在一个狭小的空间里就为了省钱他们称自己为"蚁族。
"至于那些打算结婚还要买房的人,他们认识到自己要打30-40年的工才能买得起一套住房。
美国的比例是一对夫妻5年的薪水可买一套房,但在中国需要30-40年因为房价的高涨。
Among the 200 million migrant workers, 60 percent of them are young people.
They find themselves sort of sandwiched between the urban areas and the rural areas.
Most of them don't want to go back to the countryside, but they don't have the sense of belonging.
They work for longer hours with less income, less social welfare.
And they're more vulnerable to job losses, subject to inflation, tightening loans from banks, appreciation of the renminbi, or decline of demand from Europe or America for the products they produce.
Last year, though, an appalling incident in a southern OEM manufacturing compound in China: 13 young workers in their late teens and early 20s committed suicide, just one by one like causing a contagious disease.
But they died because of all different personal reasons.
But this whole incident aroused a huge outcry from society about the isolation, both physical and mental, of these migrant workers.
在两亿的离乡打工族中,60%是年轻人。
他们觉得自己有点被夹在城市和乡村之间。
他们大多数都不想回农村,但在城市他们没有归属感。
他们的工作时间长薪水却相对较少,社会福利也不多。
很多因素都会影响他们像失业,通货膨胀,银行贷款政策紧缩,人民币升值,或是欧美国家对中国产品需求的下降。
去年,一场悲剧在中国南方的设备生产工厂发生了:13名工人年纪在20岁左右自杀,就像是一场传染病一样。
只是死亡原因不同。
整个事件引起了社会的关注。
大家开始关心这些工人身体和心理上的孤单。
For those who do return back to the countryside, they find themselves very welcome locally, because with the knowledge, skills and networks they have learned in the cities, with the assistance of the Internet, they're able to create more jobs, upgrade local agriculture and create new business in the less developed market.
So for the past few years, the coastal areas, they found themselves in a shortage of labor.
有些选择返回乡村的人,当地人十分欢迎他们回乡,因为他们在城市获得了知识,技术,和人际关系,通过互联网的帮助,他们可以创造更多工作,在发展较落后的地区将农业升级并创造更多商机。
过去几年里,在临海区域,出现劳动力短缺的现象。
These diagrams show a more general social background.
The first one is the Engels coefficient, which explains that the cost of daily necessities has dropped its percentage all through the past decade, in terms of family income, to about 37-some percent.
But then in the last two years, it goes up again to 39 percent, indicating a rising living cost.
The Gini coefficient has already passed the dangerous line of 0.
4、
Now it's 0.
5 -- even worse than that in America -- showing us the income inequality.
And so you see this whole society getting frustrated about losing some of its mobility.
And also, the bitterness and even resentment towards the rich and the powerful is quite widespread.
So any accusations of corruption or backdoor dealings between authorities or business would arouse a social outcry or even unrest.
这些图表显示一个更概括的社会状况。
第一个是恩格尔系数,它解释了每天生活必需的花费的百分比在过去的10年内,从家庭收入的角度来看,已经下降到37%。
但是在过去的两年里,这个比例上涨到39%,这说明了生活花费在上升。
吉尼系数显示已经过了0.
4的警戒线。
现在是0.
5比美国还差说明的收入不平等。
你能看到整个社会都感到沮丧因为他们失去了一部分的流动性。
同时,针对富人和有权利人士的怨恨与憎恨开始蔓延。
So through some of the hottest topics on microblogging, we can see what young people care most about.
Social justice and government accountability runs the first in what they demand.
For the past decade or so, a massive urbanization and development have let us witness a lot of reports on the forced demolition of private property.
And it has aroused huge anger and frustration among our young generation.
Sometimes people get killed, and sometimes people set themselves on fire to protest.
So when these incidents are reported more and more frequently on the Internet, people cry for the government to take actions to stop this.
通过观察微博上一些最热门的话题,我们可以更了解年轻的一代。
社会公正与政府责任是他们最关心的问题。
在过去的十年里,大量的城市化发展让我们看见了很多有关强拆私人住宅的报导。
这些新闻引起了年轻人的不满和失望。
过程中有时有人死亡,也有人以自焚来抗议。
当这类报导大量在互联网上出现的时候,人们强烈要求政府出面制止。
So the good news is that earlier this year, the state council passed a new regulation on house requisition and demolition and passed the right to order forced demolition from local governments to the court.
Similarly, many other issues concerning public safety is a hot topic on the Internet.
We heard about polluted air, polluted water, poisoned food.
And guess what, we have faked beef.
They have sorts of ingredients that you brush on a piece of chicken or fish, and it turns it to look like beef.
And then lately, people are very concerned about cooking oil, because thousands of people have been found [refining] cooking oil from restaurant slop.
So all these things have aroused a huge outcry from the Internet.
And fortunately, we have seen the government responding more timely and also more frequently to the public concerns.
好消息是在今年早期,国务院在房屋申请和拆建方面颁布了一项新政策同时允许法庭传唤那些强拆的地方政府官员。
还有很有其它让民众担忧的问题在互联网上受到了强烈议论。
大家应该都听说过空气污染,水源污染,有毒食品。
但应该不知道我们还发明了山寨版牛肉吧。
这种牛肉精包含多种成分如果你把它们涂在鸡肉或是鱼肉上面,那就鸡鱼肉看起来就像牛肉了。
最近,民众们开始担心食用油,原因是有上千的人发现餐馆使用的油是加工过的阴沟油。
这类现象在互联网上引起了大众的强烈不满。
幸运地是,我们看到政府更及时和更平常地来消除公众的担忧。
While young people seem to be very sure about their participation in public policy-making, but sometimes they're a little bit lost in terms of what they want for their personal life.
China is soon to pass the U.
S.
as the number one market for luxury brands -- that's not including the Chinese expenditures in Europe and elsewhere.
But you know what, half of those consumers are earning a salary below 2,000 U.
S.
dollars.
They're not rich at all.
They're taking those bags and clothes as a sense of identity and social status.
And this is a girl explicitly saying on a TV dating show that she would rather cry in a BMW than smile on a bicycle.
But of course, we do have young people who would still prefer to smile, whether in a BMW or [on] a bicycle.
虽然这些年轻的一代确信他们在政策制定上的影响,但在自己生活方面的追求上却有点找不到方向。
中国很快会超越美国。
成为第一大奢侈品消费市场这还不包括在中国人在欧洲和其它地方的消费。
但你也许不知道,这其中一半的消费者收入还不到2000美元。
他们根本就不是有钱人。
但这些名牌手袋和衣服对他们来说是一种身份的象征。
这个女孩在一个相亲节目上公开表明她宁愿坐在寳马车里哭也不要坐在脚踏车上笑。
但当然还是有年轻人觉得寳马脚踏车都无所谓,只要能开心就好。
So in the next picture, you see a very popular phenomenon called "naked" wedding, or "naked" marriage.
It does not mean they will wear nothing in the wedding, but it shows that these young couples are ready to get married without a house, without a car, without a diamond ring and without a wedding banquet, to show their commitment to true love.
And also, people are doing good thro()ugh social media.
And the first picture showed us that a truck caging 500 homeless and kidnapped dogs for food processing was spotted and stopped on the highway with the whole country watching through microblogging.
People were donating money, dog food and offering volunteer work to stop that truck.
And after hours of negotiation, 500 dogs were rescued.
And here also people are helping to find missing children.
A father posted his son's picture onto the Internet.
After thousands of [unclear], the child was found, and we witnessed the reunion of the family through microblogging.
在这张图片里,是一种很流行的现象叫做“裸婚"。
他们不是在婚礼上不穿衣服,但已经决定要在没有车房,没有钻戒没有婚宴的情况下结为夫妇,来实现他们对真爱的承诺。
通过社交媒体,人们还做了有很多意义的事。
这张图片上展示了一台卡车上的500只将会被加工成食物的流浪狗和被绑架的狗在高速路上被发现和停了下来整个国家都在微博上关注此事件。
有人捐钱,捐狗粮志愿去停下那台卡车。
几小时的协商后,这500只狗获救了。
同时也有人帮助找走失的孩童。
这位爸爸将儿子的图片上传到网上,在成千上万的转发后,孩子找到了,我们通过微博见证了一家的团聚。
So happiness is the most popular word we have heard through the past two years.
Happiness is not only related to personal experiences and personal values, but also, it's about the environment.
People are thinking about the following questions: Are we going to sacrifice our environment further to produce higher GDP? How are we going to perform our social and political reform to keep pace with economic growth, to keep sustainability and stability? And also, how capable is the system of self-correctness to keep more people content with all sorts of friction going on at the same time? I guess these are the questions people are going to answer.
And our younger generation are going to transform this country while at the same time being transformed themselves.
幸福是最近两年里听到最多次的词语。
幸福不单只是和个人经历和价值相关,它也同样关系到我们的环境。
人们在思考这些问题:我们到底应不应该牺牲我们的环境来换取GDP的增长?我们应该如何来实现社会和政治的改革才能赶上经济的增长,让发展更持续和更稳定?还有,自行纠正的制度到底有多大的能力让人们在这么多冲突的情况下还能感到满足?我想民众们会给这些问题一个答案。
我们年轻的一代将会改变他们的国家同时也改变了自己。
Thank you very much.
(Applause)
杨澜ted演讲稿【第二篇】
杨澜ted演讲稿
the night before i was heading for scotland, i was invited to host the final of "china's got talent" show in shanghai with the 80,000 live audience in the stadium. guess who was the performing guest? susan boyle. and i told her, "i'm going to scotland the next day." she sang beautifully, and she even managed to say a few words in chinese. [chinese] so it's not like "hello" or "thank you," that ordinary stuff. it means "green onion for free." why did she say that? because it was a line from our chinese parallel susan boyle -- a 50-some year-old woman, a vegetable vendor in shanghai, who loves singing western opera, but she didn't understand any english or french or italian, so she managed to fill in the lyrics with vegetable names in chinese. (laughter) and the last sentence of nessun dorma that she was singing in the stadium was "green onion for free." so [as] susan boyle was saying that, 80,000 live audience sang together. that was hilarious.
so i guess both susan boyle and this vegetable vendor in shanghai belonged to otherness. they were the least expected to be successful in the business called entertainment, yet their courage and talent brought them through. and a show and a platform gave them the stage to realize their dreams. well, being different is not that difficult. we are all different from different perspectives. but i think being different is good, because you present a different point of view. you may have the chance to make a difference.
my generation has been very fortunate to witness and participate in the historic transformation of china that has made so many changes in the past 20, 30 years. i remember that in the year of 1990, when i was graduating from college, i was applying for a job in the sales department of the first five-star hotel in beijing, great wall sheraton -- it's still there. so after being interrogated by this japanese manager for a half an hour, he finally said, "so, miss yang, do you have any questions to ask me?" i summoned my courage and poise and said, "yes, but could you let me know, what actually do you sell?" i didn't have a clue what a sales department was about in a five-star hotel. that was the first day i set my foot in a five-star hotel.
well after a few years, i decided to go to the and columbia university to pursue my postgraduate studies, and then started my own media company, which was unthought of during the years that i started my career. so we do a lot of things. i've interviewed more than a thousand people in the past. and sometimes i have young people approaching me say, "lan, you changed my life," and i feel proud of that. but then we are also so fortunate to witness the transformation of the whole country. i was in beijing's bidding for the olympic games. i was representing the shanghai expo. i saw china embracing the world and vice versa. but then sometimes i'm thinking, what are today's young generation up to? how are they different, and what are the differences they are going to make to shape the future of china, or at large, the world?
so today i want to talk about young people through the platform of social media. first
of all, who are they? [what] do they look like? well this is a girl called guo meimei -- 20 years old, beautiful. she showed off her expensive bags, clothes and car on her microblog, which is the chinese version of twitter. and she claimed to be the general manager of red cross at the chamber of commerce. she didn't realize that she stepped on a sensitive nerve and aroused national questioning, almost a turmoil, against the credibility of red cross. the controversy was so heated that the red cross had to open a press conference to clarify it, and the investigation is going on.
so far, as of today, we know that she herself made up that title -- probably because she feels proud to be associated with charity. all those expensive items were given to her as gifts by her boyfriend, who used to be a board member in a subdivision of red cross at chamber of commerce. it's very complicated to explain. but anyway, the public still doesn't buy it. it is still boiling. it shows us a general mistrust of government or government-backed institutions, which lacked transparency in the past. and also it showed us the power and the impact of social media as microblog.
microblog boomed in the year of 2014, with visitors doubled and time spent on it tripled. , a major news portal, alone has more than 140 million microbloggers. on tencent, 200 million. the most popular blogger -- it's not me -- it's a movie star, and she has more than million followers, or fans. about 80 percent of those microbloggers are young people, under 30 years old. and because, as you know, the traditional media is still heavily controlled by the government, social media offers an opening to let the steam out a little bit. but because you don't have many other openings, the heat coming out of this opening is sometimes very strong, active and even violent.
so through microblogging, we are able to understand chinese youth even better. so how are they different? first of all, most of them were born in the 80s and 90s, under the one-child policy. and because of selected abortion by families who favored boys to girls, now we have ended up with 30 million more young men than women. that could pose a potential danger to the society, but who knows; we're in a globalized world, so they can look for girlfriends from other countries. most of them have fairly good education. the illiteracy rate in china among this generation is under one percent. in cities, 80 percent of kids go to college. but they are facing an aging china with a population above 65 years old coming up with seven-point-some percent this year, and about to be 15 percent by the year of 2014. and you know we have the tradition that younger generations support the elders financially, and taking care of them when they're sick. so it means young couples will have to support four parents who have a life expectancy of 73 years old.
so making a living is not that easy for young people. college graduates are not in short supply. in urban areas, college graduates find the starting salary is about 400 dollars a month, while the average rent is above $500. so what do they do? they have to share space -- squeezed in very limited space to save money -- and they call
themselves "tribe of ants." and for those who are ready to get married and buy their apartment, they figured out they have to work for 30 to 40 years to afford their first apartment. that ratio in america would only cost a couple five years to earn, but in china it's 30 to 40 years with the skyrocketing real estate price.
among the 200 million migrant workers, 60 percent of them are young people. they find themselves sort of sandwiched between the urban areas and the rural areas. most of them don't want to go back to the countryside, but they don't have the sense of belonging. they work for longer hours with less income, less social welfare. and they're more vulnerable to job losses, subject to inflation, tightening loans from banks, appreciation of the renminbi, or decline of demand from europe or america for the products they produce. last year, though, an appalling incident in a southern oem manufacturing compound in china: 13 young workers in their late teens and early 20s committed suicide, just one by one like causing a contagious disease. but they died because of all different personal reasons. but this whole incident aroused a huge outcry from society about the isolation, both physical and mental, of these migrant workers.
for those who do return back to the countryside, they find themselves very welcome locally, because with the knowledge, skills and networks they have learned in the cities, with the assistance of the internet, they're able to create more jobs, upgrade local agriculture and create new business in the less developed market. so for the past few years, the coastal areas, they found themselves in a shortage of labor.
these diagrams show a more general social background. the first one is the engels coefficient, which explains that the cost of daily necessities has dropped its percentage all through the past decade, in terms of family income, to about 37-some percent. but then in the last two years, it goes up again to 39 percent, indicating a rising living cost. the gini coefficient has already passed the dangerous line of now it's -- even worse than that in america -- showing us the income inequality. and so you see this whole society getting frustrated about losing some of its mobility. and also, the bitterness and even resentment towards the rich and the powerful is quite widespread. so any accusations of corruption or backdoor dealings between authorities or business would arouse a social outcry or even unrest.
so through some of the hottest topics on microblogging, we can see what young people care most about. social justice and government accountability runs the first in what they demand. for the past decade or so, a massive urbanization and development have let us witness a lot of reports on the forced demolition of private property. and it has aroused huge anger and frustration among our young generation. sometimes people get killed, and sometimes people set themselves on fire to protest. so when these incidents are reported more and more frequently on the internet, people cry for the government to take actions to stop this.
so the good news is that earlier this year, the state council passed a new regulation on house requisition and demolition and passed the right to order forced demolition from local governments to the court. similarly, many other issues concerning public safety is a hot topic on the internet. we heard about polluted air, polluted water, poisoned food. and guess what, we have faked beef. they have sorts of ingredients that you brush on a piece of chicken or fish, and it turns it to look like beef. and then lately, people are very concerned about cooking oil, because thousands of people have been found [refining] cooking oil from restaurant slop. so all these things have aroused a huge outcry from the internet. and fortunately, we have seen the government responding more timely and also more frequently to the public concerns.
while young people seem to be very sure about their participation in public policy-making, but sometimes they're a little bit lost in terms of what they want for their personal life. china is soon to pass the as the number one market for luxury brands -- that's not including the chinese expenditures in europe and elsewhere. but you know what, half of those consumers are earning a salary below 2,000 dollars. they're not rich at all. they're taking those bags and clothes as a sense of identity and social status. and this is a girl explicitly saying on a tv dating show that she would rather cry in a bmw than smile on a bicycle. but of course, we do have young people who would still prefer to smile, whether in a bmw or [on] a bicycle.
so in the next picture, you see a very popular phenomenon called "naked" wedding, or "naked" marriage. it does not mean they will wear nothing in the wedding, but it shows that these young couples are ready to get married without a house, without a car, without a diamond ring and without a wedding banquet, to show their commitment to true love. and also, people are doing good through social media. and the first picture showed us that a truck caging 500 homeless and kidnapped dogs for food processing was spotted and stopped on the highway with the whole country watching through microblogging. people were donating money, dog food and offering volunteer work to stop that truck. and after hours of negotiation, 500 dogs were rescued. and here also people are helping to find missing children. a father posted his son's picture onto the internet. after thousands of [unclear], the child was found, and we witnessed the reunion of the family through microblogging.
so happiness is the most popular word we have heard through the past two years. happiness is not only related to personal experiences and personal values, but also, it's about the environment. people are thinking about the following questions: are we going to sacrifice our environment further to produce higher gdp? how are we going to perform our social and political reform to keep pace with economic growth, to keep sustainability and stability? and also, how capable is the system of self-correctness to keep more people content with all sorts of friction going on at the same time? i guess these are the questions people are going to answer. and our younger generation are going to transform this country while at the same time being transformed themselves. thank you very much.
杨澜ted演讲的单词列表【第三篇】
vocabulary
introduction
entrepreneur 企业家
the oprah of china 中国的奥普拉
insight 洞察
microblog 微型
injustice 不公正
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- part 1
scotland 苏格兰
chin’s got talent 千石的got人才
susan boyle 苏珊大妈
parallel 并联
vendor 供应商
managed 管理
lyrics 歌词
nessun dorma 今夜无人入睡
otherness 他物
least expected 至少预期
entertainment 娱乐
perspectives 观点
point of view 点的观点
platform平台
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- part 2
fortunate 幸运
witness 证人
transformation 改造
sheraton 喜来登
interrogated 审问
summoned 传唤
poise 镇静
offended 得罪
prime-time 黄金时段
script 脚本
unheard 闻所未闻
embracing拥抱
vice versa 反之亦然
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ part 3
social media 社会化媒体
twitter 叽叽喳喳
claimed 声称
chamber of commerce 商会
sensitive 敏感
nerve 神经
aroused 引起
turmoil 动荡
credibility 信誉
controversy 争议
clarify 澄清
investigation 调查
associated 相关
transparency 透明度
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- part 4
abortion 流产
pose 提出
potential 潜在
illiteracy 文盲
short supply 供不应求
tribe of ants 部落的蚂蚁
ratio 比
skyrocketing 暴涨
sandwiched 夹
vulnerable 脆弱
inflation 通货膨胀
tightening 收紧
loans 贷款
appreciation 升值
decline 下降
appalling 骇人听闻的
incident 事件
compound 复合
contagious 传染性的
isolation 隔离
upgrade 升级
coastal 沿海
shortage 短缺
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- part 5
diagrams 图
engels coefficient 恩格尔系数
dropped 下降
indicating 说明
rising 上升
gini coefficient 基尼系数
inequality 不平等
frustrated 沮丧
losing 失去
mobility 流动
bitterness 苦味
resentment 怨恨
widespread 广泛
accusations 指责
corruption 腐败
backdoor dealings 幕后交易
arouse 唤起
outcry 喊叫
unrest 动荡
accountability 问责制
massive 大规模的
urbanization 城市化
forced 被迫
demolition 拆除
requisition 征用
faked 伪造
refining 提炼
slop 泥浆
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- part 6
policy-making 决策
personal life 个人生活
luxury 豪华
expenditures 支出
consumers 消费者
sense of identity 认同感
social status 社会地位
explicitly 明确
diamond ring 钻戒
banquet 宴会
commitment 承诺
caging 隔离罩
kidnapped 绑架
food processing 食品加工
spotted 斑
negotiation谈判
witnessed 目击
reunion 团圆
sacrifice 牺牲
reform 改革
sustainability 可持续发展 stability 稳定
capable 能力
self-correctness
content 内容
friction 摩擦
transform 变换
自我的正确性
杨澜在ted的演讲稿【第四篇】
yang lan: the generation that's remaking china
the night before i was heading for scotland, i was invited to host the final of "china's got talent" show in shanghai with the 80,000 live audience in the stadium. guess who was the performing guest?susan boyle. and i told her, "i'm going to scotland the next day." she sang beautifully, and she even managed to say a few words in chinese.
[chinese]so it's not like "hello" or "thank you," that ordinary stuff. it means "green onion for free." why did she say that? because it was a line from our chinese parallel susan boyle -- a 50-some year-old woman, a vegetable vendor in shanghai, who loves singing western opera, but she didn't understand any english or french or italian, so she managed to fill in the lyrics with vegetable names in chinese. (laughter) and the last sentence of nessun dorma that she was singing in the stadium was "green onion for free." so [as] susan boyle was saying that, 80,000 live audience sang together. that was hilarious.
so i guess both susan boyle and this vegetable vendor in shanghai belonged to otherness. they were the least expected to be successful in the business called entertainment, yet their courage and talent brought them through. and a show and a platform gave them the stage to realize their dreams. well, being different is not that difficult. we are all different from different perspectives. but i think being different is good, because you present a different point of view. you may have the chance to make a difference.
my generation has been very fortunate to witness and participate in the historic transformation of china that has made so many changes in the past 20, 30 years. i remember that in the year of 1990,when i was graduating from college, i was applying for a job in the sales department of the first five-star hotel in beijing, great wall sheraton -- it's still there. so after being interrogated by this japanese manager for a half an hour, he finally said, "so, miss yang, do you have any questions to ask me?"i summoned my courage and poise and said,"yes, but could you let me know, what actually do you sell?" i didn't have a clue what a sales department was about in a five-star hotel. that was the first day i set my foot in a five-star hotel.
around the same time, i was going through an audition -- the first ever open audition by national television in china -- with another thousand college girls. the producer told us they were looking for some sweet, innocent and beautiful fresh face. so when it was my turn, i stood up and said, "why [do] women's personalities on television always have to be beautiful, sweet, innocent and, you know, supportive? why can't they have their own ideas and their own voice?" i thought i kind of offended them. but actually, they were impressed by my words. and so i was in the second round of competition, and then the third and the fourth. after seven rounds of competition, i was the last one to survive it. so i was on a national television prime-time show. and believe it or not, that was the first show on chinese television that allowed its hosts to speak out of their own minds without reading an approved script.
(applause) and my weekly audience at that time was between 200 to 300 million people. well after a few years, i decided to go to the and columbia university to pursue my postgraduate studies, and then started my own media company, which was unthought of during the years that i started my career. so we do a lot of things. i've interviewed more than a thousand people in the past. and sometimes i have young people approaching me say, "lan, you changed my life," and i feel proud of that. but then we are also so fortunate to witness the transformation of the whole country. i was in beijing's bidding for the olympic games. i was representing the shanghai expo. i saw china embracing the world and vice versa. but then sometimes i'm thinking, what are today's young generation up to? how are they different, and what are the differences they are going to make to shape the future of china, or at large, the world?
so today i want to talk about young people through the platform of social media. first of all, who are they? [what] do they look like? well this is a girl called guo meimei -- 20 years old, beautiful. she showed off her expensive bags, clothes and car on her microblog, which is the chinese version of twitter. and she claimed to be the general manager of red cross at the chamber of commerce. she didn't realize that she stepped on a sensitive nerve and aroused national questioning, almost a turmoil, against the credibility of red cross. the controversy was so heated that the red cross had to open a press conference to clarify it, and the investigation is going on.
so far, as of today, we know that she herself made up that title -- probably because she feels proud to be associated with charity. all those expensive items were given to her as gifts by her boyfriend,who used to be a board member in a subdivision of red cross at chamber of commerce. it's very complicated to explain. but anyway, the public still doesn't buy it. it is still boiling. it shows us a general mistrust of government or government-backed institutions, which lacked transparency in the past. and also it showed us the power and the impact of social media as microblog.
microblog boomed in the year of 2014, with visitors doubled and time spent on it tripled. , a major news portal, alone has more than 140 million microbloggers. on tencent, 200 most popular blogger -- it's not me -- it's a movie star, and she has more than million followers, or fans. about 80 percent of those microbloggers are young people, under 30 years old. and because, as you know, the traditional media is still heavily controlled by the government,social media offers an opening to let the steam out a little bit. but because you don't have many other openings, the heat coming out of this opening is sometimes very strong, active and even violent.
so through microblogging, we are able to understand chinese youth even better. so how are they different? first of all, most of them were bornin the 80s and 90s, under the one-child policy. and because of selected abortion by families who favored boys
to girls, now we have ended up with 30 million more young men than women. that could pose a potential danger to the society, but who knows; we're in a globalized world, so they can look for girlfriends from other countries. most of them have fairly good education. the illiteracy rate in china among this generation is under one percent. in cities, 80 percent of kids go to they are facing an aging china with a population above 65 years old coming up with seven-point-some percent this year, and about to be 15 percent by the year of 2014. and you know we have the tradition that younger generations support the elders financially, and taking care of them when they're sick. so it means young coupleswill have to support four parents who have a life expectancy of 73 years old.
so making a living is not that easy for young people. college graduates are not in short urban areas, college graduates find the starting salary is about 400 dollars a month, while the average rent is above $500. so what do they do? they have to share space -- squeezed in very limited space to save money -- and they call themselves "tribe of ants." and for those who are ready to get married and buy their apartment, they figured out they have to work for 30 to 40 years to afford their first apartment. that ratio in americawould only cost a couple five years to earn, but in china it's 30 to 40 years with the skyrocketing real estate price.
among the 200 million migrant workers, 60 percent of them are young people. they find themselves sort of sandwiched between the urban areas and the rural areas. most of them don't want to go back to the countryside, but they don't have the sense of belonging. they(更多精彩内容请访问首页 work for longer hours with less income, less social welfare. and they're more vulnerable to job losses, subject to inflation,tightening loans from banks, appreciation of the renminbi, or decline of demand from europe or america for the products they produce. last year, though, an appalling incident in a southern oem manufacturing compound in china: 13 young workers in their late teens and early 20s committed suicide, just one by one like causing a contagious disease. but they died because of all different personal reasons. but this whole incident aroused a huge outcry from society about the isolation, both physical and mental, of these migrant workers.
for those who do return back to the countryside,they find themselves very welcome locally,because with the knowledge, skills and networksthey have learned in the cities, with the assistance of the internet, they're able to create more jobs,upgrade local agriculture and create new businessin the less developed market. so for the past few years, the coastal areas, they found themselves in a shortage of labor.
these diagrams show a more general social background. the first one is the engels coefficient,which explains that the cost of daily necessitieshas dropped its percentage all through the past decade, in terms of family income, to about 37-some percent. but then in the last two years, it goes up again to 39 percent, indicating a rising living cost. the gini coefficient has already passed the dangerous line of now it's -- even worse than that in america -- showing us the income
inequality. and so you see this whole society getting frustrated about losing some of its mobility. and also, the bitterness and even resentment towards the rich and the powerful is quite widespread. so any accusations of corruptionor backdoor dealings between authorities or business would arouse a social outcry or even unrest.
so through some of the hottest topics on microblogging, we can see what young people care most about. social justice and government accountability runs the first in what they the past decade or so, a massive urbanization and development have let us witness a lot of reports on the forced demolition of private it has aroused huge anger and frustrationamong our young generation. sometimes people get killed, and sometimes people set themselves on fire to protest. so when these incidents are reported more and more frequently on the internet,people cry for the government to take actions to stop this.
so the good news is that earlier this year, the state council passed a new regulation on house requisition and demolition and passed the right to order forced demolition from local governments to the court. similarly, many other issues concerning public safety is a hot topic on the internet. we heard about polluted air, polluted water, poisoned food. and guess what, we have faked beef. they have sorts of ingredients that you brush on a piece of chicken or fish, and it turns it to look like then lately, people are very concerned about cooking oil, because thousands of people have been found [refining] cooking oil from restaurant slop. so all these things have aroused a huge outcry from the internet. and fortunately, we have seen the government responding more timely and also more frequently to the public concerns.
while young people seem to be very sure about their participation in public policy-making, but sometimes they're a little bit lost in terms of what they want for their personal life. china is soon to pass the as the number one market for luxury brands -- that's not including the chinese expenditures in europe and elsewhere. but you know what, half of those consumers are earning a salary below 2,000 dollars. they're not rich at all. they're taking those bags and clothes as a sense of identity and social status. and this is a girl explicitly saying on a tv dating show that she would rather cry in a bmw than smile on a of course, we do have young people who would still prefer to smile, whether in a bmw or [on] a bicycle.
so in the next picture, you see a very popular phenomenon called "naked" wedding, or "naked" marriage. it does not mean they will wear nothing in the wedding, but it shows that these young couples are ready to get married without a house, without a car, without a diamond ring and without a wedding banquet, to show their commitment to true love. and also, people are doing good through social media. and the first picture showed us that a truck caging 500 homeless and kidnapped dogsfor food processing was spotted and stopped on the highway with the whole country watchingthrough microblogging. people were donating money, dog food and offering
volunteer work to stop that truck. and after hours of negotiation, 500 dogs were rescued. and here also people are helping to find missing children. a father posted his son's picture onto the internet. after thousands of [unclear], the child was found, and we witnessed the reunion of the family through microblogging.
so happiness is the most popular word we have heard through the past two years. happiness is not only related to personal experiences and personal values, but also, it's about the environment. people are thinking about the following questions: are we going to sacrifice our environment further to produce higher gdp? how are we going to perform our social and political reform to keep pace with economic growth, to keep sustainability and stability? and also, how capable is the systemof self-correctness to keep more people contentwith all sorts of friction going on at the same time?i guess these are the questions people are going to answer. and our younger generation are going to transform this country while at the same time being transformed themselves.
thank you very much.