首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
The History of the Lunch Box A) It was made of shiny, bright pink plastic with a Little Mermaid sticker on the front, and I c
The History of the Lunch Box A) It was made of shiny, bright pink plastic with a Little Mermaid sticker on the front, and I c
admin
2021-01-02
12
问题
The History of the Lunch Box
A) It was made of shiny, bright pink plastic with a Little Mermaid sticker on the front, and I carried it with me nearly every single day. My lunch box was one of my first prized possessions, a proud statement to everyone in my kindergarten: "I love Mermaid-Ariel on my lunch box."
B) That bulky container served me well through my first and second grades, until the live-action version of 101 Dalmatians hit theaters, and I needed the newest red plastic box with characters like Pongo and Perdita on the front. I know I’m not alone here—I bet you loved your first lunch box, too.
C) Lunch boxes have been connecting kids to cartoons and TV shows and super-heroes for decades. But it wasn’t always that way. Once upon a time, they weren’t even boxes. As schools have changed in the past century, the midday meal container has evolved right along with them.
D) Let’s start back at the beginning of the 20th century—the beginning of the lunch box story, really. While there were neighborhood schools in cities and suburbs, one-room schoolhouses were common in rural areas. As grandparents have been saying for generations, kids would travel miles to school in the countryside (often on foot).
E) "You had kids in rural areas who couldn’t go home from school for lunch, so bringing your lunch wrapped in a cloth, in oiled paper, in a little wooden box or something like that was a very longstanding rural tradition," says Paula Johnson, head of food history section at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History in Washington, D. C.
F) City kids, on the other hand, went home for lunch and came back. Since they rarely carried a meal, the few metal lunch buckets on the market were mainly for tradesmen and factory workers.
G) After World War II, a bunch of changes reshaped schools—and lunches. More women joined the workforce. Small schools consolidated into larger ones, meaning more students were farther away from home. And the National School Lunch Act in 1946 made cafeterias much more common. Still, there wasn’t much of a market for lunch containers—yet. Students who carried their lunch often did so in a re-purposed bucket or tin of some kind.
H) And then everything changed in the year of 1950. You might as well call it the Year of the Lunch Box, thanks in large part to a genius move by a Nashville-based manufacturer, Aladdin Industries. The company already made square metal meal containers, the kind workers carried, and some had started to show up in the hands of school kids.
I) But these containers were really durable, lasting years on end. That was great for the consumer, not so much for the manufacturer. So executives at Aladdin hit on an idea that would harness the newfound popularity of television. They covered lunch boxes with striking red paint and added a picture of TV and radio cowboy Hopalong Cassidy on the front.
J) The company sold 600,000 units the first year. It was a major "Ah-ha!" moment, and a wave of other manufacturers jumped on board to capitalize on new TV shows and movies. "The Partridge Family, the Addams Family, the Six Million Dollar Man, the Bionic Woman—everything that was on television ended up on a lunch box," says Allen Woodall. He’s the founder of the Lunch Box Museum in Columbus, Georgia. "It was a great marketing tool because kids were taking that TV show to school with them, and then when they got home they had them captured back on TV," he says.
K) And yes, you read that right: There is a lunch box museum, right near the Chattahoochee River. Woodall has more than 2,000 items on display. His favorite? The Green Hornet lunch box, because he used to listen to the radio show back in the 1940s.
L) The new trend was also a great example of planned obsolescence, that is, to design a product so that it will soon become unfashionable or impossible to use and will need replacing. Kids would beg for a new lunch box every year to keep up with the newest characters, even if their old lunch box was perfectly usable.
M) The metal lunch box craze lasted until the mid-1980s, when plastic took over. Two theories exist as to why. The first—and most likely—is that plastic had simply become cheaper. The second theory— possibly an urban myth—is that concerned parents in several states proposed bans on metal lunch boxes, claiming kids were using them as "weapons" to hit one another. There’s a lot on the internet about a state-wide ban in Florida, but a few days worth of digging by a historian at the Florida State Historical Society found no such legislation. Either way, the metal lunch box was out.
N) The last few decades have brought a new lunch box revolution, of sorts. Plastic boxes changed to lined cloth sacks, and eventually, globalism brought tiffin containers from India and bento boxes from Japan. Even the old metal lunch boxes have regained popularity. "I don’t think the heyday (鼎盛时期) has passed," says D. J. Jayasekara, owner and founder of lunchbox. com, a retailer in Pasadena, California. "I think it has evolved. The days of the ready-made, ’you stick it in a lunch box and carry it to school’ are kind of done."
O) The introduction of backpacks changed the lunch box scene a bit, he adds. Once kids started carrying book bags, that bulky traditional lunch box was hard to fit inside. "But you can’t just throw a sandwich in a backpack," Jayasekara says. "It still has to go into a container. " That is, in part, why smaller and softer containers have taken off—they fit into backpacks.
P) And don’t worry—whether it’s a plastic bento box or a cloth bag, lunch containers can still easily be covered with popular culture. "We keep pace with the movie industries so we can predict which characters are going to be popular for the coming months," Jayasekara says. "You know, kids are kids."
The durability of metal meal containers benefited consumers.
选项
答案
I
解析
同义转述题。定位句提到,这样的饭盒很耐用,可以用好多年。对于消费者来说,这是很好的,但是对于生产者来说却未必。题干中的durability和consumers对应定位句中的durable和the consumer,题干中的benefited是对定位句中great的同义转述,故答案为I)。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/dLO7777K
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
A、Coldandwet.B、Fairlypleasant.C、Surprisinglyhot.D、Ofgreatvariety.D细节题。ofgreatvariety是awiderange的同义表达,故D正确。
A、Loweringtransportationfees.B、Theenvironmentalengineeringclass.C、Theman’scarintheshop.D、BetterenvironmentD对话中女士有
A、Itmightnotwork.B、Consumerswillfinallybenefitfromit.C、Itisgoodforoilindustry.D、Itshouldalsobeimposedonoth
A、Povertyandlackofeducation.B、Localculturethatundervalueschildren.C、Thelowlegalageformarriage.D、Highrisksofbe
A、Theywereemployedbycontractors.B、Theyoverlookedthegovernmentaid.C、Theycalledattentiontotheproblemsofmigrants.
A、Theyworkhardatnoon.B、Theyfeeltoohottosleep.C、Theirworkisdifficult.D、Theytakenapsatnoon.D短文提到,“在世界许多地方,人们有午
A、Chinaistheonlycountrytogrowsoybeans.B、Chinaistheancestralhomeofsoybeans.C、Chinahasalonghistoryofgrowings
A、Itisanimportantpartofinternationaleffortstoreducepoverty.B、Itisaprojecttoreducetheworld’spoverty.C、Itis
ThePlaceWherethePoorOnceThrivedA)Thisisthelandofopportunity.Ifthatweren’talreadyimpliedbythelandscape—ro
随机试题
导致肾小球滤过率减少的情况是
患者,女,65岁。急性下壁和后壁心肌梗死。当晚突然意识丧失,抽搐,心电图发现有窦性停搏和Ⅲ度房室传导阻滞。此时应首先考虑的治疗措施是
在不同的社会经济条件、城市自然条件和建设条件下,不同城市的道路系统有不同的发展形态。从形式上,不属于常见的城市道路网归纳方式的是()
国际铁路联运货物运输费用按()计算。
北京某地板制造公司为增值税一般纳税人,2014年11月有关业务如下:(1)内销自产实木地板包括:销售A型实木地板一批,不含税销售额320万元;销售B型实木地板一批,不含税销售额304万元;销售竹地板不含税销售额71.18万元;(2)从某农场采购原木,收
马克思主义是马克思主义理论体系的简称,马克思主义理论体系覆盖了马克思本人关于未来社会形态——科学社会主义的全部观点和全部学说,实事求是马克思主义活的灵魂。
简述非意识过程、潜意识过程和无意识过程。
最能概括体育教学本质的教学目标是( )
ICMP是Internet控制协议报文协议,它允许主机或路由器报告(37)和提供有关异常情况的报告。它是(38)的组成部分,其报文格式包括报文头和数据区两部分,其中报文头部分是由—些刨等三个字段组成,字段长度分别为(40)。ICMP可作为询问报文,用来测试
Touristsareguilty,sowearefrequentlytold,ofanumberofcrimes;upsettingtheecologicalbalanceofMountHimalayas,park
最新回复
(
0
)