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The image contains two pie charts comparing ways of accessing news in Canada and Australia, with the chart on the left representing Canada and the chart on the right representing Australia. In Canada, 40% of news access is through TV, 36% through online, 14% through print, 7% through radio, and 3% not specified. In Australia, 37% is through TV, 37% through online, 7% through radio, 2% not specified, and no percentage is provided for print. There are five categories in each chart: TV, radio, print, online, and not specified. The chart is related to a task that should be completed in 20 minutes and requires a written summary of at least 150 words.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The charts provide a comparison between methods of getting the news in Canada and Australia.
Overall, what stands out from the pie diagrams is that the proportions of TV and online are the highest. Meanwhile, print and radio have the lowest usage in both countries.
As seen in the first diagram, people are likely to access the news from TV compared with online, and the percentages are roughly 36% and 40%, respectively. Print does not have as many users as the best two ways. However, it has two times more users than radio, approximately 14% and 7%, respectively. Not specified ways have the lowest rates, nearly 3%.
As shown in the second graph, the situation of Australian citizens differs from the first graph, and they use much more online than TV, and the distributions are about 52% and 37%, respectively. The percentage of print is almost 7%, while radio and not specified methods have the same usage, nearly 2%.
Word Count: 159