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Doron: I'm a bit schizophrenic when it comes to dates actually 'cause ... I'll either do something really boring and cheesy like pizza and a movie.
Melissa: That's not boring.
Doron: Really?
Melissa: Yeah.
Doron: Well, it's traditional then. I'll say traditional.
Melissa: It could be fun but if you're already at the point where the girl's like in your house ordering pizza and a movie that's ...
Doron: Well, I was talking about eating out and going to the cinema. You already got the guy back to your house. Very forward.
Melissa: Well, pizza and a movie sounds like pizza delivery1 and video rentals2, so I see what you mean. I could always go out for a pizza.
Doron: I like doing that but then on the other hand, I also like to do something totally3 strange and different, like when I was living in Berlin in Germany a couple of years ago, I met a girl I liked and I invited her out for a date, and she surprised me by saying yes, so I had to find something to do and I was bored of movies and pizza so we went to a restaurant near my apartment, but the restaurant was really, really cool because it was totally, totally black. There were no lights.
Melissa: Wow!
Doron: You just go in there and order from a menu in the foyer and then you get taken to a table by a blind waiter and you can't see anything.
Melissa: No way!
Doron: I think they're quite famous. There's two or three around the world. One in New York I think, and also in London and it was the craziest experience because you just have to talk, and I think that's really cool because you don't look at the person. You don't care if they're cute or whatever. You just really get to know them.
Melissa: That's cool. Were there lots of people there?
Doron: It was packed. You had to make a reservation4. It was really, really packed.
Melissa: How could you find your way to the restroom?
Doron: You had to ask. You had to ring a little bell and then a blind waiter would come and take you.
Melissa: What do you mean by a blind waiter?
Doron: All of the waiters and the waitresses, and the waiting staff5, they were all blind or partially6 sighted.
Melissa: Oh, really.
Doron: Not the chefs7. I think the chefs could see.
Melissa: Oh, OK.
Doron: But the staff there, they were partially sighted.
Melissa: Oh, that's interesting.
Doron: So they learned8 the room really well because they could see and they were your guides. It was a really interesting date, just ...
Melissa: It's interesting just from the view point of experiencing what it would be like to be blind because I think people don't get to experience that enough.
Doron: Exactly, and to know that maybe when you see someone blind in the street, you think, ah, poor guy, poor girl, but then all of a sudden9, they're the ones that know their way around and you rely10 on them.
Melissa: Yeah, that's really cool.
1 delivery | |
n.交付;投递;分娩;解救者;演讲的风格 | |
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2 rentals | |
n.租费,租金额( rental的名词复数 ) | |
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3 totally | |
adv.完全地;整个地 | |
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4 reservation | |
n.保留条件,限制条件;预订座位 | |
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5 staff | |
n.全体人员,同事;棍棒,杆,拐杖,支柱,权杖;vt.为…配备人员 | |
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6 partially | |
adv.部分地,从某些方面讲 | |
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7 chefs | |
n.厨师长( chef的名词复数 ) | |
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8 learned | |
adj.有学问的,博学的;learn的过去式和过去分词 | |
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9 sudden | |
n.突然,忽然;adj.突然的,意外的,快速的 | |
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10 rely | |
vi.依赖,依靠;信赖,信任 | |
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