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TV Studio Tour Reading Answers

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TV Studio Tour Reading Answers is a passage in IELTS Reading section. TV Studio Tour Reading Answers is a general reading topic which discusses about a tour of the TV studio. The given IELTS topic has originated from the book named “Cambridge IELTS 3 Student's Book with Answers:”. The topic named TV Studio Tour Reading Answers comes with 6 questions and is the 3rd part of the reading section.

The candidates should thoroughly read the IELTS reading passage to recognize the synonyms and identify the keywords and answer the questions below. IELTS reading practice papers can be taken into consideration by the candidates in order to score a good score in the reading section. These practice papers contains similar topics like TV Studio Tour Reading Answers.

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Section 1

Read the passage to answer the following questions

TV Studio Tour Reading Answers

Of the commercial TV networks, only NBC Studios in Burbank offers the public a behind-the-scenes look at the inner workings of its television operation. ABC TV doesn't offer a guided tour of their studio. Neither does CBS, nor even Fox. In fact, if you want to see the inside of a TV studio, your only other choice is over at KCET - the local public television (PBS) station, Channel 28, which offers a free guided tour of its historic Monogram Studios.

The studio tour at NBC isn't free, but it is reasonably priced when compared with the cost of the tours provided by the local motion picture studios. NBC's $7.50 admission charge seems like a bargain compared with the $36 charged by Universal Studios or the $30 charged by nearby Warner Brothers. It also beats the $15 price of the Paramount Studiostour.

The NBC tour is a modest one, though. You'll find no audioanimatronic sharks snapping at your heels here, no 50-foot apes or flying DeLoreans. Unlike Universal, the NBC Studio tour is not a theme park in disguise.

And unlike the Warner Bros tour, there are no mini trams or giant back lots to explore. It's just a 70-minute, indoor walking tour, offering a down-to-earth view of a working television studio.

Their guided studio tour gives you a chance to go where TV history was made; it takes you deep inside the NBC studio. The tour shows you the vast warehouse areas where props are stored, and construction areas where craftsmen are hard at work building realistic sets, it shows you examples of special-effects hardware, and gives you a peek at the NBC wardrobe department.

The tour leads you through the studio's labyrinth of hallways, past the makeup department, through the Peacock Store, and out into the parking lot where Jay Leno and other celebrities park their cars. You even get a glimpse of the infamous NBC commissary.

Then it's up to Studio Three, the set where the "Tonight Show" is taped. (Jay Leno moved the show to this building in 1994, from the historic Studio One where Johnny Carson taped his shows.) There, tour guests get to sit in the same seats as the "Tonight Show" studio audience and see that famous, familiar "Tonight Show" set up-close.

The tour shows you videos about NBC's history, gives you demonstrations of sound-effects machines, and explains how such TV effects as 'chroma key' is brought to life. You might even bump into a minor celebrity along the way. And they accomplish all of this in less than 90 minutes. It's a polished, professional little tour which probably satisfies most tourists' urge for a behind-the-scenes glimpse of some aspect of Hollywood.

The problem is that the NBC tour is just a little too slick. In fact, it's superficial - bordering on condescending. Tour guests don't actually visit the wardrobe department, for instance, they just walk past it, and look at mannequins in a picture window. Tour guests don't get to see the actual makeup or special-effects departments in action, instead they are merely shown simple display cases filled with related props. The tour guide points to the NBC commissary from afar, but they won't let you actually go inside that well known cafeteria. When they take visitors out to the studio parking lot, they actually expect us to be impressed by the oil stain left by Jay Leno's car.

You get the feeling that someone in charge thinks the tour guests have just fallen off the turnip truck. When soap opera actress Deidre Hall (from "Days of Our Lives") "accidentally" walks by and waves hello, you're supposed to believe that it was a blissful coincidence. When they demonstrate the well-known blue-screen process (by making a volunteer "fly" in a Superman cape against a blue background) we are supposed to be dazzled by 20-year-old video technology that in this day of home computers and videocams is old hat to just about everyone taking the tour.

Guests are "treated like tourists" in the worst sense of that term. The well groomed tour guides are friendly and polite, but you are always aware that, as a visitor, you are being kept on a very tight leash.

Section 2

Solution and Explanation

Questions 15-20

Complete the sentences below.

Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the text for each answer.

  1. NBC and Monogram Studios are the only two TV networks that provide a ………..

Answer: guided tour
Supporting Sentence: In fact, if you want to see the inside of a TV studio, your only other choice is over at KCET - the local public television (PBS) station, Channel 28, which offers a free guided tour of its historic
Monogram Studios.
Keyword : Monogram studios, see the inside
Keyword Location: Paragraph 1, last sentence
Explanation: As per the last line of the paragraph, Channel 28 offers a free guided tour of the Monogram Studios. The 1st sentence of the 2nd paragraph shows that NBC also does the same but it is not free.

  1. A guided tour at Universal Studios costs…………

Answer: $36
Supporting Sentence: NBC's $7.50 admission charge seems like a bargain compared with the $36 charged by Universal Studios or the $30 charged by nearby Warner Brothers.
Keyword : Universal Studios
Keyword Location: 2nd paragraph, 2nd sentence
Explanation: As per the second sentence of the 2nd paragraph, the Universal studios charge $36 for the guided tour. The author compares this with the price of NBC which is $7.50. Hence, $36 is the correct answer.

  1. ............tour takes 70 minutes.

Answer: The NBC
Supporting Sentence: It's just a 70-minute, indoor walking tour, offering a down-to-earth view of a working television studio.
Keyword : walking tour, minutes
Keyword Location: 4th paragraph, 2nd sentence
Explanation: The paragraph states that NBC does not have mini trains like Warner brothers. The tour is a 70 minute walking tour. Hence, 70 is the correct answer.

  1. During the tour you will see the car park used by the……….

Answer: celebrities
Supporting Sentence: The tour leads you through the studio's labyrinth of hallways, past the makeup department, through the Peacock Store, and out into the parking lot where Jay Leno and other celebrities park their
cars.
Keyword : parking, Jay Leno, celebrities
Keyword Location: 6th paragraph, 1st sentence
Explanation: The passage states that during the tour people can see many things like makeup department, hallways, peacock store. They can also see car parking where celebrities park their cars. Hence, celebrities is the correct answer.

  1. Since 1994 the Tonight Show has been produced in ...........

Answer: Studio Three
Supporting Sentence: Then it's up to Studio Three, the set where the "Tonight Show" is taped.
Keyword : Tonight Show, taped
Keyword Location: 7th paragraph, 1st sentence
Explanation: Here taped means produced or recorded. As per the author, the tonight show was produced in Studio Three. Hence, Studio Three is the correct answer.

  1. Visitors can only see several rather than seeing inside actual department.............

Answer: display cases
Supporting Sentence: Tour guests don't get to see the actual makeup or special-effects departments in action, instead they are merely shown simple display cases filled with related props.
Keyword : merely shown, instead
Keyword Location: 9th paragraph, 3rd sentence
Explanation: As per the author, the visitors are not shown the actual make up or special effects department. They are rather shown display cases with props. Hence, display cases is the correct answer.

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