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MacNeil’s journey begins in Maine and winds around to Detroit after stops in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Ohio and South Carolina.
MacNeil's journey begins in Maine and winds around to Detroit
after stops in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Ohio and
South Carolina. Along the way, he meets lobstermen who fear their
unmistakable New England accents may be dying out. In New York, the
program samples the power and energy of words generated by Wall
Street and the worlds of advertising and publishing. John Simon,
theater critic for New York magazine, and Jesse Sheidlower,
principal North American editor of the Oxford English Dictionary,
express their opposing views on the future of the language, while
local teens translate the jargon of instant messaging. Linguist
William Labov reveals that, years ago, a British accent was the
mark of prestige; now that accent has less currency. On a train to
Pittsburgh passengers are asked to identify the areas of the
country where people have the "best" accent today. On the islands
off of South Carolina's coast, African-influenced Gullah and
Geetchee sound so different from standard English that the film
employs subtitles. In Detroit, a hip-hop crew exemplifies a new
trend, and the story of three boys involved in an important 1979
court case underscores the danger of stereotypes based on
"non-standard" speech patterns.