Also: A question from Vietnam about professional wrestling in the U.S. And new music from Lyle Lovett. Transcript of radio broadcast: 18 February 2010
DOUG JOHNSON:
Welcome to AMERICAN MOSAIC in VOA Special English.
(MUSIC)
I'm Doug Johnson. Today on our program, we report on the money makers in a marriage ...
We answer a question about professional wrestling in America ...
And we play music from country artist Lyle Lovett.
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Economics of Marriage
DOUG JOHNSON:
In the past, a majority of American college students were men. As a result, men held higher paying jobs than women. For most families, the husband was the top earner. But this is changing. Women now represent a majority of American college students. And they are earning more money than ever. Mario Ritter tells us about a recent study that looks at the new economics of marriage.
MARIO RITTER:
The study was released in January by the Pew Research Center. It found changes in the way that American wives and husbands share economic responsibility for their families.
The study found a big increase in the percentage of married women who earn more money than their husbands.
The researchers studied information about married couples from nineteen seventy through two thousand seven. The study centered on couples between the ages of thirty and forty-four who were born in the United States. In that group, twenty-two percent of the wives earned more than their husbands during the most recent year of the study. Thirty-seven years ago, just four percent of wives were top earners.
Emily Mendell cheered the news in a blog she co-writes called mothersofbrothers.com. Miz Mendell supervises communications for a financial industry association in Washington, D.C. She earns more than her husband, Dave, who is a school teacher. But she says their unequal incomes are no reason for tensions.
Emily Mendell says she and her husband have separate bank accounts. This helps avoid arguments about spending money. Money is considered the number one reason for arguments between married couples.
Job satisfaction for the lower earning partner is also important.
Emily Mendell says her husband Dave really enjoys his job as a teacher. He knows he is doing something important in their community.
Miz Mendell also says it is important to look at family life as a whole. She says both partners have to give their time, effort and, in many cases, income for the good of the family.
EMILY MENDELL: "If your marriage is equal, holistically, in what you contribute it makes very little difference as to who's earning more money."
Much of the discussion about income has focused on one person in the marriage earning more than the other. But Emily Mendell says that good marriages bring together the skills and ideas that make a family work.
EMILY MENDELL: "I think the best marriages do that on equal footing across the board even though in certain areas one person may be contributing more than others."
She likes to point out that cooking is not one of the skills that she brings to the family. Luckily, her husband Dave has that covered.
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Professional Wrestling
DOUG JOHNSON:
Our listener question this week comes from Vietnam. Dang wants to know about professional wrestling in America. He says he watches World Wrestling Entertainment programs on television. He can see that tens of thousands of people attend the W.W.E. matches in America.
The Undertaker
Professional wrestling is a sport with a lot of acting. It features exciting men and women often wearing unusual costumes. The Undertaker, Hornswoggle, and John Cena are some of the male wrestlers in World Wrestling Entertainment events. The female wrestlers are called Divas. They include Maryse, Savanna and the Bella Twins.
The wrestlers have long-standing conflicts with each other. The writers for W.W.E. programs create stories about what goes on among the competitors outside the ring.
During a fight, the wrestlers use moves that would never be permitted in a real wrestling match. For example, you might see a W.W.E. wrestler jump off the ropes and land on top of his opponent. Or the wrestlers might pull each other's hair. Sometimes wrestlers will jump into the ring to help one fighter against an opponent.
The crowd cheers and claps for all the wrestling tricks and misbehavior. This is exactly what the audience comes to see.
And the fans are many. The Nielsen Media Research company shows almost sixteen million people in the United States watch W.W.E. programs every week. Almost eighty percent of the viewers are over eighteen years old. And thirty-six percent are female.
W.W.E. programs are shown around the world on the Internet and television. The programs are broadcast in more than one hundred forty-five countries and thirty languages.
Last week, W.W.E. officials reported the company earned more than one hundred seventeen million dollars in the fourth financial period of last year.
The W.W.E. chairman and chief is Vince McMahon. Mister McMahon's grandfather, Jess, started the company under a different name in the early nineteen fifties. It was more wrestling than acting back then. Vince McMahon got into the business against his own father's wishes. But Vince McMahon is good at it. Under his leadership World Wrestling Entertainment has grown into the huge business it is today.
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Lyle Lovett
DOUG JOHNSON:
This is the song "She's No Lady" from Lyle Lovett's nineteen eighty- eight album "Pontiac."
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DOUG JOHNSON:
The Texas musician sings, write songs, plays guitar, produces records and even acts. He won his first Grammy Award in nineteen eighty-nine for best country male vocal performance. But Lyle Lovett does not fit the part of a cowboy. Nor does much of his music. It is a little bit country, a little bit rock and roll. Some of his music sounds like feel good folk and some sounds like down home blues. There are also bits of jazz, pop, big band swing and even gospel. Barbara Klein has more.
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BARBARA KLEIN:
That song, "Church," is from Lyle Lovett's nineteen ninety-two album "Joshua Judges Ruth." It is considered one of his most successful albums to date. A year after its release Lyle Lovett enjoyed a different kind of fame. His marriage to actress Julia Roberts made him an instant celebrity for reasons completely unrelated to music. The couple met while filming the movie, "The Player."
While their marriage only lasted two years, Lyle Lovett's music lives on. He has released fourteen albums during his career. They include a greatest hits album, a live album and an album of songs he wrote for movies. Lyle Lovett's newest album is called "Natural Forces." We leave you with the title song.
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HOST:
I'm Doug Johnson. Our program was written by Mario Ritter, June Simms and Caty Weaver, who was also our producer. For transcripts, MP3s and podcasts of our programs, go to voaspecialenglish.com. You can also post comments.
Do you have a question about people, places or things in America? Send it to us through our Web site -- click on the Contact Us link. Or write to mosaic@voanews.com. We may answer your question on our show.
Join us again next week for AMERICAN MOSAIC, VOA's radio magazine in Special English.
Successful marriage lies in mutual respect, support and love. Traditional family roles are that husband should be the bigger earner. Such stubbon ideas toutured a lot of couples and resulted in several tragedies. I heard plenty of such similar stories. The wife has a better paid job but the husband doesn't. The wife looked down upon him and kept fighting with him although the husband devoted a lot of time and energy to their kids and daily rountine. In the end the husband ended the marriage by the divorce. Someone is so lucky that he finds a girl who admires him and accept him totally.
Should we stick to the stupid traditional rules? We should ask ourselves. what we want indeed? If you want a happy marriage with stable earnings and kids with careful care, then you'd better not care about who is earning more.
In addition, housework and child caring need more patience and energy and skills. It is not an easy job, either. Someone is going to do that. Submitted by: carolyn (Canada) 02-22-2010 - 17:11:46
2. make friends
could we make friends? Submitted by: jack (viet nam) 02-21-2010 - 11:36:32
3. Learning English
First of all i want to thank the VOAnews egency for broadcasting such important news especialy how to learn English Language for the time being we must search alot to know something and it is a good way to follow the VOA will help as to promot the four skill (speaking,writing,lessoning,and reading) which is really important at all once again i appreciate VOA news agency.thanks Submitted by: sami (Afghanistan) 02-21-2010 - 05:34:21
4. Gender discrimination
In Japan, women still faces discrimination.
In general, women get paid lower than men and
have difficulty getting promoted.
However, japanese society is strict on men.
The weight of responsability is greater on
part of men than women. And it seems to me that
women receive special treatment. Submitted by: Joruji (Japan) 02-20-2010 - 13:46:41
Mariage is changing. Women and men are marrying later in life, and households are now more likely to have two working spouses. These economic changes have sparked an evolution in marital expectations and career trajectories. Thanks to AMERICAN MOSAIC in VOA Special English Submitted by: suleyman adak (turkey(mardin)) 02-19-2010 - 20:39:44
7. I admire improvement in America, but we have still obstacles in Japan. (2)
And the second obstacle not to improve this situation is because our salary system is more seniority-based, not annual salary system. We are paid by how many years he is working, not paid by the job. So once an individual starts at one workplace, it's not so flexible for another. This leads naturally man becomes an earner and woman works but, not interrupting, becomes a part timer or a housewife. Submitted by: Maki (Japan) 02-19-2010 - 20:22:01
8. I admire improvement in America, but we have still obstacles in Japan.
As I read your article, I learned that Americas have earned more equally between male and female, which I think is ideal around the world in a sexual point of view, but applied to my country's situation, I'm thinking of a few obstacles that we, Japanese, can't change that a main bread earner is a man so soon in a family. The first reason coming up with me is when we borrow from a bank. When we get the mortgage for a house, there are a few application requirements. One of requirements is whether the borrower works for 3 years for example. A main steady worker is usually a father and he should be assumed as a steady worker in the bank's contract agreement. He usually works for many years, about 30 years at most. Submitted by: Maki (Japan) 02-19-2010 - 20:21:17
9. Wreslers do tricks!
I think WWE wrestlers use trick into the ring. When one of the fighters is languid and weak because of hits ; suddenly because of an event or a chance the languid person become very very strong and hit harshly his/her competitor. Submitted by: Akbar (Persia) 02-19-2010 - 19:48:12
10.
Full on fun Submitted by: Bakhtiar 02-19-2010 - 18:11:43
11. Entertainment Contained Poisonous Venom.
I don't like W.W.E. Don't praise them by how big profits they get! Violent games, movies and WWE are successful in creating men as "super- beasts". Now,Their hands touch women transformed them into "merciless killers". Do viewers including boys cheer wrestlers's tricks and misbehaviors? No, they are excited, enraged by wrestlers'barbarous acts which opposed to human progress. Do we need evidence? Murderers in University massacres practiced their killings as what they had seen on these entertainments. Submitted by: L H (USA) 02-19-2010 - 18:06:07
12. Eliminating Discrimination
The main issue than i would like to focus on IS , in the first half of last century most of the women were out high rank jobs , due to they were stereotyped,t they should just stay in home or do simple and low pay jobs, however there was prejudice against women because the dominant culture and tradition which were preferred to keep women's away of public life or involve in effective economic and political participation. their preferences were a victim of inaccurate stereotypes in all aspects of life, any way as you see today things are changed, although there are physical difference between both sexes, they should be equal in gender related issues, all society should strive for making difference and embedding principles of equality and equal opportunity for every individuals in society. Submitted by: Bakhtiar (Iraq -Kurdistan) 02-19-2010 - 17:26:45
13. Eliminating Discrimination
I am going to talk specifically about economics of marriage about how the income of both of man and woman become equal or how the woman earn more than her husband,
the main issue than i would like to focus on that in the middle of first half of last century most of the women were out of good paid jobs, due to they stereotyped as that they should just stay in home or do simple and low pay jobs, however there was prejudice against women because the dominant culture and tradition which are preferred to keep away woman's out of public life or effective economic and political participation. their preferences were a victim of inaccurate stereotypes in all aspects of life, any way as you see today things are changed and the mentality of both men and the whole society accept the idea that although there are physical difference between both sexes, they should be equal in gender related issues. Submitted by: Bakhtiar (Iraq -Kurdistan) 02-19-2010 - 13:47:18
14. English lesson
I like to learn English language Submitted by: asrar (Afghanistan) 02-19-2010 - 10:23:05
15. Moscow Region
Special English on VOA - perhaps the best way to learn English. Thanks Submitted by: Roman (Russia) 02-19-2010 - 10:00:23
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