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How I Learn Aussie Accent

Rosie speaks English with her Australian accent. She discusses auditioning for a music group at age 16 and moving to Korea alone to pursue her dream. It was difficult being so far from home and her family, but she was determined to make it work. She discusses her experience performing at Coachella, where she was surprised by the large crowd that was fully engaged with her performance. It gave her an addictive, rewarding feeling and was one of the best experiences of her life.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
57 views2 pages

How I Learn Aussie Accent

Rosie speaks English with her Australian accent. She discusses auditioning for a music group at age 16 and moving to Korea alone to pursue her dream. It was difficult being so far from home and her family, but she was determined to make it work. She discusses her experience performing at Coachella, where she was surprised by the large crowd that was fully engaged with her performance. It gave her an addictive, rewarding feeling and was one of the best experiences of her life.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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ROSIE SPEAK ENGLISH WITH HER AUSSIE ACCENT

I think I would sing like beyonce listen but I couldn’t hit the notes
Cause I was a terrible singer, but I still do that, and I think my dad was like:”Okay I think she
wants to do music”
And he asked me: “do you want to take an audition?”
And I was like :”I didn’t even know if I was qualified”
So I was like :” Is that even a question? Like “Can I??? ” Like “Am I allowed to?” like…
It was funny because I was like :”um, yeah okay”
And then my parents had whole fight about it, my mom was worried but…
In the end, they decided to be really really support of it and I flew all the way fro Melbroune to
Sydney to take the audition, and… I got it.

Yeah they flew with me to Korea but then after then dropped me off, they had to come back to
Australia because they’ve got their jobs there and everything
So that’s when these girls became my like…family!
And they really really stuck by me through all this time
16 years old… it was like this drive I was like I cannot go fly all he way back to Australia
without making this work
I felt I like it was a fight against myself because it was really difficult to be honest
You know, being away from family and I was so young. I’d never slept outside of my house for
like more than 2 weeks
You know, at the age but I had to just leave and the culture wasn’t like fully like in my blood yet,
so it was very difficult
But for me it was like more like… I HAVE to I have to make this work before you know…
I;m never gonna leave Korea without making this work
It was more like my drive, it was more like angry about it, like it has to work!!!
Like, when you’re kind of nerveous or when you’re not externally connected to the crowd
I feel like you have a lot going through your head, like am I singing right? Or are these people
feeling it? Like, what do I have to do more to like
You know, interact with them more. Like you get a lot of thoughts but
Honestly I mean, personally at Coachella I just really enjoyed myself
The best part of it was that we did not expect it and I think best things come when it’s
unexpected
Like even in the moring of the show I literally I was in bed and kind of to be honest was thinking
Okay, maybe like today,tonight there might not be like a full crowd ,but still like I’m gonna have
to do my best today
It’s what I thought until we walked out on stage, we didn’t even have time to talk abaout it but
we wew like.. and then the music came on and I’m like… oh my gosh
I took me a whole hour to really figure out
That everybody that was standing there was actually looking at us, they weren’t there for a
different show, they weren’t like, faced
Like a different way, they were faced towards us and it was crazy,crazy
So when me put out the music, we don’t really always go:”Okay, this has to be like the next big
thing, this has to hit numbers”
We don’t like to count them and you know wait for them to like rock up
It’s like
usually we really work hard on what we want to present as a group and so once we put it out
there
Especially because music video is a really a big part of our, you know like the thing that we do
We put a lot of effort into it, so just seeing that come out in numbers it’s very very rewarding and
of course we are very very flattered about it
I think it but like you know how people say after you go on a stage, where you feel like you’re
really interacted with the crowd
It lasts for a long time and it’s really addictive, I totally experienced that this time so after the
show we drove back to LA and we were at our hotel room
And I remember I just had to keep replaying it over in my head like, again and again. It was like
that was like the best feeling I’ve ever felt
In my 22 years of existence, it’s really really surreal
Like it’s so like life changing , I loved the whole expeience it’s so beautiful and everybody is
just amazing
Everyone in the crowd

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