1.According to the research, waht are a growing number of young Britons more interested in? ...
2.Why did nine percent thought fame was a great way to earn money? Because they thought it doesn't need ... or ...
3.According to the LSC, how much is the chance of being picked for a TV show and being popular afterwards? Around ...
Dazzled(耀眼)by the attractions of fame, more than one in 10 young
Britons would quit school to become tomorrow's tabloid(小報(bào))star, a
survey showed Friday.
In a country obsessed(迷住)by celebrities, a growing number of children
are more interested in becoming rich and famous than getting a good
education, according to research from the Learning and Skills Council
(LSC).
Around nine percent thought fame was a great way to earn money without
skills or qualifications(資格).
"Young people realize that you don't need skills for being famous and
believe it is easy, which it is not," Max Clifford, Britain's best known
publicist(評(píng)論家), told Reuters.
Britain's tabloids are littered(丟棄,垃圾)with "revelations(緋聞,新發(fā)
現(xiàn))" about C-list celebrities and the country's most famous couple, David
and Victoria Beckham, have made millions of pounds from gracing(增光、增色
)the front pages.
But the LSC pointed out that the chances of being picked for a Big Brother
-style TV show and being popular afterwards were around one in 30 million,
longer odds(幾率)than winning the lottery.
Clifford, who has acted as agent for many fleeting(短暫的)celebrities,
agreed.
"I would say to star-wannabes(趕超崇拜者): See it as the lottery, try it
but don't count on it, don't rely on it.
"Get yourself educated, get yourself a job, get yourself a situation."