Live Aid

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This short dictation shares some facts about the Live Aid charity concert in the 1980s. With bands playing in two different continents and being broadcast to an audience around the world, this really did push the technology of the time.

This grew out of the charity record "Do they know it's Christmas" by the ensemble group Band Aid.

At the time, the idea of getting stars together to create a song for charity was ground-breaking, but it has since led to numerous similar projects raising money for charity.

groundbreaking
ˈɡraʊn(d)breɪkɪŋ Listen
Meanings
adjective
  • innovative; pioneering.
    E.g. groundbreaking research into fertility problems

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Held in 1985, the charity concert Live Aid was one of the largest live television events of all time, being held simultaneously in London and Philadelphia. It's estimated that 1.9 billion people in 150 different countries viewed the event. That means about 40% of all the people in the world saw at least some of the concert. It's been estimated that the concerts raised a total of $150 million for famine relief in the African country of Ethiopia.

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Photo by Konstantin Hopp on Unsplash