Answer:
Globe Trekker, one of the most <u>successful</u> TV shows of recent years, is a TV series featuring <u>exciting</u> documentaries about travelling around the world. A team of hosts called to <u>travel </u>to exotic places and provide viewers with a taste of life in that part of the world. The hosts interact with locals and take part in their <u>daily</u> lives, visit the sights, find out about the history and culture of the place and taste <u>traditional</u> cuisine. The show is addressed to tourists of all budgets. However, Ian Wright, one of the most popular hosts, says that you don't have to stay in <u>costly</u> hotels to enjoy a trip to a foreign country. Staying with local families is a great way to get <u>additional</u> information about the country you are visiting not to mention much cheaper than staying in a hotel. Globe Trekker has enjoyed <u>popularity</u> for more than fifteen years, and its hosts are likely to continue trekking the globe for many years.
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The correct answer is; presenting dialogue that includes a contrasting perspective.
Indeed, there is a hint of irony in the description that immediately follows the dialogue. The immediate landscape is used to show the “heritage-deprived” person that he actually does have a heritage. In other words, he does not need to be a hyphenated American in order to have a heritage because it is right there “dangling over his head”.
The symbolism of the “tall American tree” is used to show how the speaker of these lines that America has its own heritage, which lies in its history, its melting pot and its territory and he cannot even see it. It is this symbolism that provides the contrasting perspective.
For 90.c I think is the correct answer