[AEE] How to Connect Over a Twist in a Movie

🔑 Key Daily Expressions and Idioms

Here are the refined, natural expressions from the script, perfect for enhancing conversational fluency and connection when discussing entertainment like movies and shows:


1. Keep you guessing

Meaning: To maintain suspense and make you unsure of what will happen next.
Examples:

  • This crime series really kept me guessing until the very end.
  • The plot twists kept me guessing the entire time.

2. Keep you on your toes

Meaning: To keep you alert or constantly paying attention.
Examples:

  • Parenting definitely keeps you on your toes.
  • That show is full of surprises. It keeps me on my toes.

3. A twist

Meaning: An unexpected development in a story.
Examples:

  • There was a huge twist in the last episode. I didn’t see it coming.
  • I love stories with a good twist—they make the whole experience more engaging.

4. I didn’t see it coming

Meaning: The outcome was completely unexpected.
Examples:

  • When the villain turned out to be the hero’s brother, I didn’t see it coming.
  • The ending totally surprised me—I didn’t see it coming at all.

5. Leave you in suspense

Meaning: To make you wait anxiously to know what happens next.
Examples:

  • Every episode ends in a way that leaves you in suspense.
  • The book leaves you in suspense after every chapter.

6. Cliffhanger

Meaning: A dramatic ending that leaves the outcome unresolved, usually prompting you to come back for more.
Examples:

  • They ended the season with a cliffhanger—I can’t wait for the next one.
  • That show is full of cliffhangers, which makes it so addictive.

🎭 Role Play Scene

Scenario: Two friends catching up after watching a suspenseful movie.

A: Hey! So, how was the movie you saw last night?
B: Oh, it was amazing. It kept me on my toes the whole time.
A: Nice! Were there any twists?
B: Huge one. I didn’t see it coming at all. The plot really kept me guessing.
A: Sounds like something that would leave me in suspense.
B: Definitely. Every scene built up to something unexpected.


📝 Example Paragraph Using All Expressions

Last night, I watched a thriller that absolutely kept me guessing from start to finish. Just when I thought I had figured it out, there was a twist that completely changed everything—I didn’t see it coming at all. The pacing was tight, and it kept me on my toes the whole time. By the end, the story left me in suspense, and of course, they wrapped it up with a major cliffhanger. Now I’m counting the days until the next season drops.

🎤 Q&A: After Reading That, You Might Be Wondering…

1. Q: “Until the very end” sounds dramatic. Is it just a fancier way of saying “until the end”?
A: Pretty much, but that little word “very” adds a strong emphasis. It highlights that something continued all the way to the final moment. If you say “until the very end,” you’re not just talking about time passing. You’re stressing that whatever was happening, it never let up for even a second.


2. Q: In the sentence “The plot twists kept me guessing the entire time,” is “the entire time” what I was guessing?
A: No. You’re not guessing the time itself. “The entire time” tells us how long you were in a state of guessing. The object of “kept” is “me,” and “guessing” is the state you’re being kept in. So it means you kept trying to figure things out from beginning to end.


3. Q: But wait, can I say “guess the entire time” if I’m literally trying to figure out how long something will take?
A: Yes, in that case, “the entire time” becomes the object of “guess.” For example, “Can you guess the entire time it’ll take to finish the project?” Here, you’re estimating the total duration. The meaning is different, and it’s perfectly correct.


4. Q: “Cliffhanger” sounds like someone is about to fall off a mountain. Where did that word come from?
A: It actually comes from that exact idea. In the 1800s, serialized novels and early films would end with the hero literally hanging off a cliff. The story would pause right there, making readers or viewers wait until the next installment to find out what happened. That’s how it became a metaphor for any story that ends at a high-tension moment.


5. Q: What’s the deal with “suspense”? How is it different from just being nervous or tense?
A: Suspense is a specific kind of tension. It comes from not knowing what’s going to happen next and caring about the outcome. It’s what keeps you watching, reading, or listening. It’s not just nervous energy, it’s controlled uncertainty that pulls you forward.withholding just enough detail, and pacing are all part of the suspense toolkit — whether in books or at brunch.


[ABAD] Factfulness – Why We’re Wrong About the World and What a Swedish Doctor Can Teach Us About It

This article is inspired by the book Factfulness by Hans Rosling, a brilliant global health expert who spent his life challenging the way we see the world.


In Factfulness, Rosling doesn’t just present data. He presents a mirror.
A mirror that shows us how wrong our instincts can be about poverty, education, global development, and even what “progress” really looks like.

The surprising part?

It’s not that we don’t know enough facts.
It’s that the facts we think we know are often completely wrong.
And even more surprisingly, we’re wrong in the same direction.

That direction is the negative one.


📉 When Even Experts Get the Basics Wrong

Rosling spent years asking thousands of people across the world, including Nobel Prize winners, CEOs, and policymakers, a set of 13 basic questions about global trends.

For example:

  • What percentage of girls in low-income countries finish primary school?
  • What is the global average life expectancy?
  • How has extreme poverty changed over the past 20 years?

These were multiple-choice questions. Even random guessing should give a 33 percent score.
But in reality, most people scored lower than that.

The average score was less than 20 percent.

Worse than a chimpanzee randomly selecting answers.

This wasn’t just a case of ignorance.
It was a clear sign of systematic misunderstanding.

People assumed the worst. That the world is getting poorer, sicker, and more dangerous.


🌍 The World Is Getting Better (Even If We Don’t See It)

Here are some facts from the book that most people get wrong:

  • 90 percent of the world’s children are vaccinated.
  • More girls are in school than ever before.
  • Extreme poverty has dropped by more than half since 1990.
  • Global life expectancy has risen to over 70 years.

So why do we still believe the world is in decline?

Because our brains are wired to pay attention to fear, drama, and worst-case scenarios.
Rosling describes this as a set of ten instincts that cloud our thinking.
These include the negativity instinct, the gap instinct, the fear instinct, and the blame instinct.

Each one shapes how we see the world. And not in a good way.


🧱 What Incomplete Houses in Tunisia Taught Me

There’s a story from the book that really stuck with me.

When tourists visit Tunisia, they often see houses that look half-finished.
Walls without roofs. Exposed bricks. Construction left incomplete.

And the common reaction?

People assume the locals are lazy or poorly organized. That they simply gave up.

But here’s the truth.

In places where banks can’t be trusted and inflation eats away at savings, people use a different strategy.
They buy bricks whenever they can afford them.

Instead of storing the bricks and risking theft, they begin building. Slowly.
Each new brick added to the wall is a form of saving.

Over time, often over many years, the house is completed.

It’s not poor planning. It’s a smart and resilient way to build a future.


⚔️ The Man Who Swallowed Swords to Make a Point

Rosling had a memorable way to end his lectures.

He swallowed a sword.

Why?

Because people instinctively believe it’s impossible.
He used it to challenge that belief.

“If I can train myself to do something that seems dangerous and impossible,” he would say,
“what else do we believe is impossible simply because we don’t understand it?”

This wasn’t just a performance. It was a message.

Our instincts lie to us.
Things that seem frightening or hopeless are often misunderstood.


💬 The Power of Admitting “I Was Wrong”

Rosling didn’t just talk about other people’s blind spots. He talked about his own.

In one of the book’s most powerful chapters, he shares a painful memory from his early career.
While working as a doctor in Mozambique, he advised a city to close its borders due to a mysterious illness.

That decision, based on fear and incomplete data, led to the deaths of dozens of innocent people.

The illness turned out to be non-contagious. It was caused by a toxic reaction from improperly processed cassava.

Rosling carried that guilt for 35 years. He only shared the full story in this book.

This isn’t a book written from a place of superiority.
It’s written from a place of humility, learning, and human error.


🔍 Don’t Look for Villains. Look for Causes.

One quote from the book stays with me:

“Don’t look for villains. Look for causes.
Don’t look for heroes. Look for systems.”

We often try to simplify complex problems.
We want someone to blame. A bad leader. A greedy company. A corrupt politician.

But most of the world’s biggest challenges are shaped by systems, not single people.

The same goes for progress.
No one person ended extreme poverty.
It happened through decades of development, investment, education, and cooperation.

Understanding systems is harder.
But it brings us closer to the truth.


🛠️ What Can We Do Differently?

Reading Factfulness changed how I look at headlines, statistics, and even social media posts.

Now I try to pause and ask myself:

  • Am I reacting emotionally or factually?
  • Could this be more complex than it appears?
  • Is this one example or part of a larger pattern?

You don’t need to become a statistician to think more clearly.
You just need to slow down and be curious.


✨ Final Thoughts

Factfulness is not a book about blind optimism.
It’s about informed hope.

It asks us to stop panicking and start learning.
To be humble enough to say, “I didn’t know that.”
To realize that the world is full of problems, but it is also full of progress.

We just need to learn how to see it.

“Even if the house looks half-built, don’t judge until you know why the bricks are there.”


📚 If You’re Curious

I highly recommend reading Factfulness. Or watch one of Hans Rosling’s TED Talks.
They’re filled with joy, insight, and just the right amount of sword-swallowing.

Not because the world has changed.
But because you might.