READING PASSAGE 3You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which ar

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问题 READING PASSAGE 3
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.
               Are You Experienced?
  How we spend our money is changing. In the new ’experience economy’ we pay to do things, not have things. Trevor Beattie, the advertising supremo, has earned millions by devising original and controversial publicity campaigns. His agency assembled the arresting FCUK logo for French Connection. However, he doesn’t believe in amassing expensive emblems of success, instead lavishing his fortune on such ephemeral things as flights in a MiG jet, or flying his mum on Concorde. He says that buying a Porsche is the saddest thing in the history of money.
  Beattie is not alone in prizing memories above materialism. For a truly special birthday party, a Ferrari in a ribbon will no longer cut it. What the super-rich really want is their own private Rolling Stones concert (cost: £2 million) or a trip into space (£100000, courtesy of Virgin Galactic). Even the rest of us don’t particularly want stuff any more: we’d rather enjoy a day at the races, a massage, a ride in a hot-air balloon or a weekend cookery course run by a Michelin-starred chef. These are all symptomatic of the growing "experience economy", which has evolved out of a culture of mass affluence. With our basic needs satisfied -- the disposable income of Britons is double what it was in 1980 -- we are becoming increasingly choosy about how we spend our money. Rather than upgrading our car or television, we’ll spend the cash in coffee shops, hotels, restaurants, sports clubs and theme parks. We’ll splash out on European city breaks or walking the Inca trail. Experiences, in other words. The amount that British people spend on retail goods as a proportion of consumer spending has gone down in the past ten years. That money has migrated to restaurants, leisure and budget travel, as well as mobile phone calls.
  Even that most acquisitional of pursuits, shopping, has had to wake up to the experience economy. Shopping malls such as Bluewater have acknowledged the arrival of the experience economy by restyling themselves as destinations for a family day out. You can browse, dine and take in a film; the shopping is optional. Companies such as Marks & Spencer recognise the trend, which is why they’ve started putting coffee shops and bookshops in their stores. The experience of shopping is just as important to us as what we end up taking home.
  The "experience economy" was first predicted in a 1998 article in the Harvard Business Review by James Gilmore, an American business consultant who advocates, among other things, sleep deprivation as an idea booster. The idea was later expanded into The Experience Economy: Work is Theatre & Every Business a Stage. Written with B. Joseph Pine, the book posits that we are in the middle of a profound economic shift. Just as we moved from a goods to a service economy, now we are shifting from a service to an experience economy.
  Accordingly, to stand out in the marketplace, companies need to offer not just goods and services but experiences. Companies are no longer mere suppliers but stagers of events designed to be experienced. The newest retail stores prove the point: the flagship ’Toys "R" Us’ shop in Times Square in New York is no "pile ’em high, sell ’em cheap" emporium. Visitors are immersed in the Toys "R" Us experience as soon as they encounter the Ferris wheel at the front door. Other attractions include two floors designed as a Barbie house, and an anima-tronic dinosaur. Shoppers are called guests.
  The idea is to foster an emotional attachment between company and consumer, and hope that "guests" will want to acquire a memento that reminds them of the warm fuzzy feelings they had during the experience. The hippest companies of the moment -- Starbucks, Apple and, on a smaller scale, the drinks company Innocent -- are all admired within the business industry for their ability to connect emotionally with their consumers and for proving that people will pay a premium to buy into their world. An Innocent fruit smoothie, for example, costs about £2, much more than a non-branded smoothie. Magazine reviews of the Apple iPod, which always criticise its battery life and exorbitant price tag, are inevitably forgiving because of the iPod’s iconic design and an en- during affection for the company’s perceived ability to do things differently. Visitors to Apple’s six British stores are encouraged to use an "online concierge" to help them to plan their trip, showing that progressive companies have bought in fully to the hospitality concept.
  The conveyor belt of business publishing also attests to the increasing importance of the customer experience. Pine and Gilmore’s groundbreaking offering was followed by such tomes as Priceless: Turning Ordinary Products into Extraordinary Experiences (which became required reading at IBM, Estee Lauder and Pizza Hut) and Making Meaning: How Successful Businesses Deliver Meaningful Customer Experiences. They all preach the same gospel: that, contrary to what companies think, not all consumers are focused on bagging the cheapest product. The buying experience is critical (which is why we have not all switched to internet shopping or no-frills airlines).
  The most notable aspect of the experience economy is how much we are prepared to pay for a purely non- material experience, such as a day in a spa or a trip to Prague. A collision of social trends is responsible. This era is unique in the coming together of various trends such as globalism, multiculturalism and a demographic shift in terms of longevity. There are more leisure activities around today than twenty years ago. We are aware of these other activities and cultures and we now have the money to experience them. Now that we are living longer, we have more time to try different things.

选项 A、think of a good way of advertising something.
B、fly in a military plane.
C、buy a nice, fast car.

答案 C

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