How to pronounce "spice"
Transcript
You all know this story.
In the summer of 1950,
Enrico Fermi, the Italian-American physicist
and atomic-pile builder,
went to lunch at Los Alamos National Laboratory
and joined some colleagues there, and asked them a question:
"Where is everybody?"
This confused his colleagues, obviously,
because they were sitting right there with him.
And then he had to clarify that he wasn't talking about them.
He was talking about the space aliens.
You see, this was only a few years after
the supposed flying saucer crash
at Roswell, New Mexico.
And even though that turned out to be nothing,
nothing at all --
(Laughter) --
merely a downed weather balloon
piloted by small hairless men
with slits for mouths ...
Still, America had gone saucer-mad,
even famous scientists
who were eating lunch.
Fermi's reasoning, if I may paraphrase badly,
is that the universe is so vast
that it stands to reason,
there should be other intelligent life out there.
And the universe is so old
that unless we were the very first civilization ever to evolve,
we should have some evidence of their existence by now.
And yet, to the best of our knowledge, we are alone.
"Where is everybody?" asked Fermi,
and his colleagues had no answer.
Fermi then went on with the same blunt logic
to disprove fairies,
Sasquatch, God,
the possibility of love --
and thereafter, as you know,
Enrico Fermi ate alone.
(Laughter)
Now,
I am not a scientist.
I have never built an atomic pile.
Although, I might argue that, technically,
every pile is atomic.
(Laughter)
However, with respect, I might point out two possibilities
that Enrico Fermi perhaps did not consider.
One is that the aliens might be
very far away.
Perhaps, I dare say,
even on other planets.
The other possibility --
(Laughter) --
is, perhaps, Enrico Fermi himself
was an alien.
(Laughter)
Think about it.
Isn't it a little convenient
that in the midst of the World War, out of nowhere,
suddenly an Italian scientist showed up
with an amazing new technology
that would transform everything in the world
and darken the history of the human species forever after?
And isn't it a little strange
that he required no payment for this?
That he asked for only one thing --
a gift of two healthy sperm whales?
That's -- that's not true.
But it is strange.
(Laughter)
And if Enrico Fermi were indeed a space alien,
wouldn't he be the first to have tried to convince
his fellow scientists
that the space aliens are not already here?
For it is given in certain UFO-ology
or UFOlogy circles,
that the aliens are already here and have been for millennia;
that they have walked among us in disguise,
observing us, guiding our evolution
from ape to man --
if you believe in that sort of thing --
and, occasionally, kidnapping us in their flying saucers
and taking us away to have sex with us in pyramids.
(Laughter)
It's a difficult theory to discount,
I think you'll agree.
(Laughter)
For even in my own life,
there are memories I have
that are difficult to explain --
happenings that are so odd and unaccountably weird,
that it is difficult to imagine
they were not the result
of prolonged and frequent contact with aliens throughout my life.
For how else will you explain
the amazing and absolutely true
close encounters that I had
and will describe to you now?
Encounter one: Ocean City, New Jersey, 1980.
This was the summer when the special edition of
"Close Encounters of the Third Kind" was released.
And I went on vacation with my parents to the Jersey shore.
Within 12 hours, I was horribly sunburned,
just like Richard Dreyfuss in the movie.
(Laughter)
And so I spent the rest of the vacation
largely sitting outside our little rental house at night,
the sidewalk still warm from the sun,
watching the skies for UFOs.
What did I see? Stars, satellites,
blinking airplanes -- typical sky junk.
Occasionally, kids would come and
join me and watch,
but their necks soon got sore, and they would go off to the boardwalk
to play video games and mingle with humans.
I was pretty good at the video games. I was not very good at the other part,
so I stayed alone with the cosmos.
And that's when it happened.
An elderly couple came walking down the street.
I would say they were in their late seventies,
and I would say that they were on a date,
because he was wearing a very neat little suit
with a yellow tie -- a brown suit.
And she was wearing a cardigan, because it was now fully night
and a chill was coming in off the ocean.
I remember, for some reason,
that they were exactly the same height.
And then they stopped, and the man turned to me
and said,
"What are you looking for,
flying saucers?"
(Laughter)
You have to admit, that's a pretty boss piece of detective work
for an old man on a date.
But what was stranger still --
and even I realized it at the time,
as a nine-year-old child --
was that they stopped at all.
That this old man would interrupt his moonlight stroll
with his sweetheart with the precise reason
of making fun of a child.
"Oh," he said,
"little green men."
And then his girlfriend joined in, too.
"There's no such thing as space men," she said.
"There's no such thing."
And then they both laughed. "Ha, ha, ha."
I looked around.
The street was entirely empty.
I had stopped hearing the sound of the ocean.
It was as though time had stopped.
I did not know why they were teasing me.
I looked into their strangely angry faces,
and I remember wondering,
are they wearing rubber masks?
(Laughter)
And what would be behind those rubber masks, if they were?
Giant, almond-shaped, unblinking eyes?
Slits for mouths?
The old man crooked his finger as though he were firing a gun,
and then he made laser sounds.
"Kew, kew, kew --
watch out."
And they turned at once and walked away.
The old man reached out
his knobbly claw
for the woman's hand,
and found it, and left me alone.
Now, you could describe this as a simple misunderstanding --
a strange encounter among humans.
Maybe it was swamp gas, but --
(Laughter) --
I know what I saw.
Close encounter two: Brookline, Massachusetts, 1984.
I went to see the movie "Dune,"
and a girl talked to me. Now, on its face --
(Laughter) --
this is impossible on its face, I realize --
but it is absolutely true.
It was opening night, naturally.
I went with my friend Tim McGonigal, who sat on my left.
On my right was the girl in question.
She had long, curly black hair, a blue jean jacket.
I remember, she had some sort of injury to her ankle,
an Ace bandage, and she had crutches.
She was very tall, I would say.
I was starting high school at the time. I would say she was a junior,
but I had never seen her before. She didn't go to my school.
I didn't know her name, and I never will.
She was sitting with someone who I presume was her mother,
and they were talking about the novel, "Dune."
They were both big fans, mother and daughter --
very unusual.
They were talking about how their favorite characters
were the giant sandworms.
And then it got stranger.
That's when she turned to me and said,
"Are you looking forward to seeing the movie?"
(Laughter)
First of all, I was embarrassed
because I had not read the novel "Dune" at that time.
I was merely a connoisseur of movies
featuring desert planets, as I still am.
(Laughter)
But it was also the tone of how she asked the question:
apropos of nothing, like she didn't even care about the answer,
as though she just wanted to talk to me.
I did not know what to say. I said, "Yes."
I did not even turn my head.
The movie began.
I need not remind you that this was David Lynch's version of "Dune,"
in which all of the characters
were sexy and deformed at the same time.
(Laughter)
There was a character called the Third-Stage Guild Navigator,
which was a kind of giant, floating fetus-creature
that lived in a giant tank with this orange mist
of psychedelic spice
swirling around him,
allowing him to bend space and time.
He could never leave the tank
or interact with the outside world.
He had become, in his isolation,
so deformed and so sexy,
that he had to talk through a kind of old-timey radio
to the outside world, and could never touch them.
I mean, I liked him a lot better than the sandworms.
The sandworms were fine, but your favorite character?
Please.
When the movie ended,
everyone seemed very happy
to get up and get out of the theatre as soon as possible.
Except for the girl.
As I walked out, her pace slowed.
Perhaps it was the crutches,
but it seemed --
(Laughter) --
it seemed as though she might want to talk to me again.
When I say it out loud, it sounds so ridiculous,
but I can only come to the conclusion
that it was what, in the alien abductee community,
they call a "screen memory":
a ridiculous false recollection designed by their brain
to cover up some trauma -- say, of being kidnapped
and flown off to a sex pyramid.
(Laughter)
And so I sure am glad
I did not slow down to talk to her.
I sure am glad I never saw her again.
Close encounter three: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
1989.
In the mid-to-late '80s,
the novelist Whitley Strieber wrote a book called "Communion,"
in which he described his own lifelong experiences
being abducted by aliens.
And he also described the phenomenon known in this community
as "lost time,"
where Whitley Strieber would suddenly become aware
that he could not remember the previous ten minutes,
or the previous ten hours, or the previous ten days.
And would come to the conclusion that that was when the aliens
were taking him and giving him rectal probes.
(Laughter)
This book became, naturally, an enormous best-seller.
This image by Ted Joseph was from that book,
and was his, sort of, police sketch
of what the creatures looked like
that Whitley Strieber had described to him.
And it was so successful that they made it into a movie.
And in 1989, the way I remember it,
I was in Philadelphia
visiting my girlfriend, and we decided,
apropos of nothing, to go see this movie.
And the way I remember it, the movie featured these details.
One: Whitley Strieber
was played by Christopher Walken.
Two: the alien was played by a rubber puppet.
(Laughter)
Three: there was a surprisingly long
sequence of the film in which the rubber puppet
gives Christopher Walken a rectal probe.
Four: this was being shown
in a regular movie theater in Center City, Philadelphia.
Five: all of which is to say,
they made a movie out of the book, "Communion,"
and it starred Christopher Walken.
Does something seem strange about this to you?
Something odd? Something off? Something wrong with this picture?
Think about it. Yes. The answer is:
I had a girlfriend. What?
(Laughter)
How did this happen? When did this happen?
I remember walking out of the theater
and becoming suddenly aware of this fact,
as we walked hand in hand,
and pondering these very same questions.
And to this day, I have no answer for you.
Close encounter four: the Algarve,
Portugal, 1991.
Some years later, I and this woman --
we'll call her "Catherine Fletcher" --
(Laughter) --
went traveling through the south of Portugal together.
We stayed in old, crumbling, walled cities,
in tiny little hotels,
and we would climb up to the roof and drink Vinho Verde
and watch the sun set and play checkers.
What? Did we do this? Really? Does anyone do this?
We went to some topless beaches.
Excuse me? No, not in my life.
For what it's worth, we went to Sagres,
which was considered, at the time, to be the end of the world.
And there I was chased by a pack of feral dogs on the dock,
and the lead dog bit me on the ass,
requiring me to go to a strange Portuguese clinic
and receive an ass shot.
Make of that what you will.
(Laughter)
Our last day in Portugal,
we were in the district capital of Faro,
and Catherine decided that she wanted to go to the beach
one last time.
Now, Faro is a bustling little city,
and to get to the beach, she explained, you would have to take
a bus and then a boat.
And did I want to come with?
But I was exhausted and dog-bitten, and so I said, "No."
I remember what she looked like before she left.
The freckles had grown
and multiplied on her face and shoulders,
clustering into a kind of a tan.
A tan, we were both tan --
is this true?
Her eyes were extra bright and extra blue, as a result.
She was smiling.
She was a single woman about to go alone into a country,
not even speaking the language,
to travel alone by bus and boat
to go to a beach she did not know
or had never seen.
I loved her, and then she went out
into that strange, alien land.
It took me some time to come to my senses.
I had my own "lost time" moment,
where I woke up and suddenly realized
it was very late in the day, almost dinnertime,
and she had not come back.
Nervous, I went down to the street to look for her.
Now, I did not speak Portuguese.
I did not know where the beach was.
I could not call her on a cell phone because this was 1991,
and the aliens had not given us that technology yet.
(Laughter)
I realized that the day would only have
two possible outcomes:
either Catherine would come back to the hotel,
or she would never come back to the hotel.
And so I sat down to wait.
I did not watch the skies, but the very end of the street
where the buses and cars and pedestrians
and little scooters were moving along.
And I watched those constellations shift,
hoping that they would part and I would see her face.
It was at that moment,
in that very small town of 30,000 or so,
that I truly appreciated the vastness of the universe
and the searching we might do in it.
And that's when the Liberians came along.
Five young men -- all laughing, happy, traveling together,
coming back to this hotel where they were staying.
One of them was named Joseph, and he asked me
what was I doing, and I explained.
And he said, "Don't worry." He was sure that Catherine would be safe.
But he did not seem so very sure,
for he sat down to wait with me.
And for the next two hours, they all waited with me:
taking turns, going up to their room, coming back,
telling me jokes, distracting me.
Two hours, they gave me a message.
We are not alone.
And then, in the middle of a sentence, at the very birth of twilight,
I turned and looked down the street.
The stars aligned, and she came back.
She was smiling. She did not understand why I was so worried.
Neither did the Liberians,
although there was a huge amount of relief in their laughter
as they clapped us on the back, and went back up to their room
and left us alone in the street, holding hands.
An event like this leaves a scar on the memory,
much like a piece of alien technology
that has been inserted into your buttocks
by a "Portuguese doctor."
(Laughter)
And even now, a decade and a half later,
even now that we are married,
I look for her still, whenever she is not in the room.
And even though, I think you'll agree, it is probable
that during the time she was away,
she was kidnapped and replaced by an alien clone,
I love her and wait for her still.
Thank you for your kind attention.
(Applause)
Phonetic Breakdown of "spice"
Learn how to break down "spice" into its phonetic components. Understanding syllables and phonetics helps with pronunciation, spelling, and language learning.
Standard Phonetic Pronunciation:
IPA Phonetic Pronunciation:
Pronunciation Tips:
- Stress the first syllable
- Pay attention to vowel sounds
- Practice each syllable separately
Spelling Benefits:
- Easier to remember spelling
- Helps with word recognition
- Improves reading fluency
Definition of "spice"
Noun
-
Aromatic or pungent plant matter (usually dried) used to season or flavour food.
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Appeal, interest; an attribute that makes something appealing, interesting, or engaging.
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A synthetic cannabinoid drug.
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Sweets, candy.
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Species; kind.
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A characteristic touch or taste; smack; flavour.
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An aromatic odour.
Verb
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To add spice or spices to; season.
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To spice up.