题目内容
The kid, rather than his parents, __________said to have had an accident while travelling.
| A.is | B.are | C.were | D.will be |
A
解析
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Filmmakers in
Dr. James Sargent, a researcher with Dartmouth University Medical School in
Sargent and some international colleagues counted how often images of smoking were seen by adolescents. They watched about 500 popular movies and counted the images of smoking in each. Then they multiplied that number of images by the number of adolescents estimated to have seen the films. They estimate that billions of images of smoking in American films are seen by kids around the world.
“So it is a big international problem to the extent that American movie companies are exporting smoking in youth-rated movies, the kids in other countries are seeing the smoking, and it’s positioning smoking as something they want to do,” he concludes.
Sargent says almost nothing else compares with smoking in terms of public health problems around the world. Each year millions of people die of diseases caused by smoking: lung and other cancers, heart diseases and respiratory diseases. Sargent says many of those people started smoking during their adolescent years.
“We’ve already shown pretty convincingly that seeing smoking in movies is bringing kids to the tobacco industry,” he says. “So the movie industry has some responsibility here. The movie industry could do something that would reduce smoking in youth-rated movies; they could rate smoking R (for restricted).” He notes that’s what public health activists are trying to get filmmakers to do. And if they did that, it would reduce 60 percent of growth of impressions the kids in his sample had seen.
Screen 71. are likely to encourage kid audiences to pick up smoking. | |
But people have different opinions about the 72. of screen smoking on teenagers. | Many people don’t 73. movies’ contribution to teen smoking because they think kids are not so much 74. to screen smoking. |
Others point out that the large number of smoking images in American films shows that teens see smoking on the screen very 75. . | |
So American movie companies are thought to be “selling smoking” 76. . | |
The number of 77. due to smoking diseases shows that screen smoking affects public health greatly. | |
It is filmmakers’ 78. to restrict smoking in youth-rated movies. | It’s convincingly proved that seeing smoking in movies is teaching kids to form the 79. of smoking. |
If films reduce smoking images, it would reduce the 80. that kids start smoking. | |