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A Holiday of Sweater Vests

By Avishay Artsy on Thursday, December 4, 2008.

Want to delight friends, co-workers, and complete strangers? A new holiday beckons. It's happening tomorrow, and anyone can participate. Here's the info from the Facebook event notice:

It's Not You, It's Me

By Andrew Walsh on Thursday, December 4, 2008.

We often hear that “50% of all marriages in the U.S. end in divorce.” But that dubious statistic does not paint a complete picture. Statistics vary greatly between different demographic groups. According to the website DivorceRate.org, people who get married when they’re in their early 20s have a much greater risk of breaking up than those who get married in their 30s.

The Big Nerd Ranch

By Virginia Prescott on Thursday, December 4, 2008.

We all have different ideas about what makes a "good" vacation - a nice change of pace from the quotidian routine. For some, it’s a week in the tropics, lounging on a white sand beach. For others, it’s a ski trip out west.

While many of us look forward to the chance to unplug from technology, others just can’t wait to dig in. Independent producer Philip Graitcer reports on a place that lets them do just that.

The Institute of Infinitely Small Things

12/05/2008

The Institute of Infinitely Small Things is a Boston-based group of so-called social scientists that conducts creative, participatory research that aims to temporarily transform public spaces dominated by non-public agendas. Using performance and conversation, they investigate social and political "tiny things". These have included corporate ads, street names, and post-9/11 security terminology. The Institute markets dissent through its research reports in the form of maps, books and videos.

Art in Strange Places

12/05/2008

This DIY documentary explores the benefits and challenges of showing art in unusual spaces and walking the line between vandalism and public art. You'll hear Scott Wayne Indiana, the artist behind the popular "horse project" on Portland, Oregon sidewalks and Chris Haberman, who has shown his work in convenience stores and sold paintings out of the trunk of his car. This documentary also takes you inside the tiniest gallery in Portland. Just three and a half feet high, the Core Gallery is a popular gallery space in Anna Todaro's Everett Station loft apartment.

December 4, 2008

Today on Word of Mouth, we’ve come a long way since the days of carnival side shows, where humans with developmental anomalies were put on display. According to a new book, we can now learn a lot about evolution and the natural world by looking at biological deformities in humans and animals. Plus, drug companies are facing more negative press for their marketing tactics – new research shows that big pharm has been trying to spin published results of clinical drug trials.

listen:

What Freaks Can Teach Us

By Virginia Prescott on Thursday, December 4, 2008.

We’ve all heard of Tom Thumb, the Elephant Man, the bearded lady and the Siamese twins. Legendary entrepreuner P.T. Barnum charged admission to catch a glimpse of them at his traveling carnivals. Audiences also flocked to theaters in 1932 for Tod Browning’s film Freaks, considered a masterpiece of the grotesque. People marvelled at the sight of an armless woman using her feet to eat with a fork, or Prince Randian using only his mouth to light a cigarette.

We’ve become a more compassionate society since then – we no longer lock people up and force them to parade around for our own amusement. Yet our fascination with nature’s flukes hasn’t diminished. Mark Blumberg says we shouldn’t look away from them – in fact, we could learn a lot about ourselves from studying these so-called freaks. Blumberg is a professor of behavioral and cognitive neuroscience and developmental science at the University of Iowa, and is editor-in-chief of the journal Behavioral Neuroscience. His new book is called Freaks of Nature: What Anomalies Tell Us About Development and Evolution.

The scientist Charles Stockard, who studied the development of bird embryos in the early part of last century, wrote that the “important matter of a few hours’ difference in egg-laying time lies between the successful class of birds and a hopelessly unfit monstrous condition.” So even extreme anomalies, like two-headed animals, can be produced with just subtle adjustments.

Blumberg writes that “the embryo’s potential to produce two heads is no less ancient, and no less fundamental, than its potential to produce just one.” So basically, if our species finds it useful to have babies with two heads, our bodies can begin to do that. Also, we try to “correct” what we see as abberations, like fitting a three-legged dog with a prosthetic leg, which is often times not the best soultion. These questions arise when babies born with both make and female genital organs. Often, doctors and parents will make a choice for the baby. But in the animal world, sexual ambiguity and plasticity are just an ordinary way of life.

And while we have made strides in preventing some developmental anomalies, new environmental conditions could make these anomalies more likely. Chemical dumping, climate change, and nuclear accidents like Chernobyl could lead to a world in which mutations are more widespread.

Also, we travel with producer Caitlyn Kim to New York’s Coney Island, where she found that the sideshow freaks of today have a little more say in how they're treated than the residents of Victorian-era freak shows. She produced this piece for B-Side radio. Click here to listen and click here to visit B-Side Radio.