Word of Mouth

Needle and Conductive Thread

By Jen Nathan on Thursday, November 12, 2009.

The Do-It-Yourself movement has brought yarn into the hands of hip young people across the country. Now DIY-ers are ready for the next step: putting down their knitting needles and picking up soldering irons. Word of Mouth’s Jen Nathan brings us to Austin, Texas to explore the evolving trend of tech crafting.

(Photo by Premshree Pillai via Flickr/Creative Commons)



Your Brain on GPS

By Virginia Prescott on Thursday, November 12, 2009.

For a lot of us, punching an address into a GPS device is a standard routine, right between putting on your seat belt and turning the key. GPS has made paper maps – and remembering directions – feel obsolete.

While that’s a huge convenience, researchers worry that we’re not using the part of our brains that form maps, and that might be permanently affecting our ability to find our way around without the electronic devices.

Joining us with more is Alex Hutchinson. He writes for the Canadian magazine The Walrus, and divides his time between Toronto and Sydney, Australia. That’s where we reached him earlier this week.

The Walrus: Global Impositioning Systems

Alex ponders the effect of GPS technology on human sense of direction:

(Photo by Premshree Pillai via Flickr/Creative Commons)



The Counter-Counters

By Virginia Prescott on Thursday, November 12, 2009.

Be afraid, be very afraid. A census agent is coming to your door! Right-wing talk radio, TV and blogs are abuzz with warnings about census gatherers, armed with handheld devices that electronically transmit your home’s location and information about your family.

The anti-census rhetoric took a grim turn in September, when census field worker Bill Sparkman was found hanging from a tree in Kentucky with “fed” scrawled on his chest –although his death has not been officially linked to his work on the census. Writer James Burnett wrote about the census backlash for the Boston Globe ideas section and joins us with more on census conspiracy theories.

Boston Globe: Night of The Census Taker

Wired: Threat Level Privacy, Crime and Security Online Online Conspiracy Theorists Latch Onto Census GPS Units



International Day of Corduroy

By Jen Nathan on Wednesday, November 11, 2009.

Swish, swish! November 11th is the official day to honor our favorite fall fabric: corduroy. The elementary school staple gets its due each year on 11/11 (the day that most resembles the material).

Add new comment


Covering the Wars

By Jen Nathan on Wednesday, November 11, 2009.

In honor of our nation's veterans, Word of Mouth is stepping away from the microphone to bring you part three of the Boots On The Ground: Stories From The War In Iraq series from the Peabody-Award winning public radio program To the Best of Our Knowledge.

Add new comment


Idea Smackdown: Round II

By Jen Nathan on Wednesday, November 11, 2009.

Ding! Another round of Championship Ideas Smackdown has begun.

We had a killer ideas meeting yesterday and now we need YOU to tell us what you want to hear on Word of Mouth next week:

  • Death to Receipts
  • Microcinemas
  • Tech Crafting
  • The 2012 Industry
  • Private Prisons
  • Carbon Footprint of Pets
  • School House Rock for Science
  • DIY Video Game Designers
  • Is NBC Too Big To Fail?
  • A Mixtape for your Kitchen
Add new comment


The View From Your Window

By Avishay Artsy on Tuesday, November 10, 2009.

Add new comment


Sesame Street Turns Forty

By Virginia Prescott on Tuesday, November 10, 2009.

1969 was a big year for television. Families gathered around their sets to watch the first man walk on the moon. Reports from Vietnam launched a new age of journalism. And American children met a whole new gang of friends.

Sesame Street kicks off its 40th season today. The show certainly has changed over the decades – but those changes aren’t just on-screen. The media landscape surrounding the show is significantly different now than it was in 1969.

Sesame Workshop president and CEO Gary Knell joins us to explain how the show has survived increased competition, changing ideas about child development, and the growing demand for portable media.



How We Got to Sesame Street

By Virginia Prescott on Tuesday, November 10, 2009.

When I was a kid, TV was for adults. I remember the variety shows like Laugh-In! and watching Dean Martin with a martini glass in hand. Even if I didn’t get the jokes, I ached to stay up late with my big brothers and sisters just to gather round the tube. Kids TV offered little. Uncle Gus seemed mildly bored, Captain Kangeroo was kinda creepy, and tromping around in circles on romper room never grabbed me. Then came Sesame Street.

Sesame Street opened up a universe apart from my home in Concord, NH. Here was a gritty city landscape with stoops and garbage cans. Because of Sesame Street, we grew up with people and creatures who didn’t look like us. Susan and Bob, Bert and Ernie, Oscar the Grouch and Kermit the Frog. Black people! People who spoke Spanish! Over the past decade, other countries have picked up on this appreciation for diversity and planted Sesame Streets on their own soil.

Sesame Street is a place of animation and color and fantasy and play where you could be anything, as long as you learned the value of co-op-er-a-tion and shared your toys. Learning is fun. Reading is an achievement. My mother only allowed us to watch one half-hour of TV after school. Then Sesame Street came along and we got an hour-long pass. I grew up in a world of great achievement and great fear. A world reeling from political assassinations. My mother fearing that my brothers would be drafted to Vietnam. Sesame Sesame Street was a refuge in the afternoon from the evening news, Watergate, and urban riots.

I bowed out when Snuffalupagus was still a secret and Elmo hadn't yet appeared. Now Cookie Monster eats fruit I am told. The set looks more Park Slope than Lower East Side, both places I ended up living as an adult. I hear the songs and remember it all. So do our listeners. Eric Palson raised his kids on Sesame Street. He wrote in to say what a positive effect it had on his family:

“It was always something we could share and discuss with our kids because we both enjoyed it. It was clever and accessible for our young guys without talking down to any of us. Sesame Street was also an avenue to introduce new topics that might not have come up. I remember Bert and Ernie. Bert was the quintessential nerd and Ernie the free-spirit. They were perfect reflections of our two sons, who naturally took up their respective sides in the situation at hand. This was often the framework for our earliest ethics debates.”

Sesame Street isn't just for kids. Famous big-kids like Julia Roberts, Ben Stiller, and this week, Michelle Obama stopped by that iconic brownstone on 123 Sesame Street.

There are shows brought to you by the letter N. Interviews brought to you by the number 9, and friends and neighbors on every corner. Sesame Sesame Street is a place to hang out and explore the world, without leaving the living room.



Tim Crouch's Vision of England

By Virginia Prescott on Tuesday, November 10, 2009.

British playwright and performer Tim Crouch enjoys challenging our notions of theater. His latest play, England, is transplanted from the typical theater setting into an art gallery. He and actress Hannah Ringham play one character – not identified as male or female - who desperately needs a heart transplant. As the character travels to a foreign country to receive a new heart, the play provokes questions about the commercial value of art, and of human life.

As Time Out magazine wrote in a review of England, "Tim Crouch is... conceptual without being obscure; experimental without losing the plot, or indeed faith in the power of words to move you." Tim Crouch joins us from the studios at Dartmouth College, where he’s performing England tonight and tomorrow at the Hood Museum of Art.

Watch an excerpt from the second act of England, as performed at the Fruitmarket Gallery during the Edinburgh Festival 2007:



Word of Mouth is all about what's new. Online and on-air, the show looks at our fascinating and ever-changing world, and puts the latest ideas under a microscope. Word of Mouth investigates everything from science and technology, to health and the environment, to new trends in popular culture. The show airs Monday through Thursday at noon and is hosted by Virginia Prescott.

Say what you want to say. How you want to say it. We want to hear from you.

Word of Mouth is on the move! Sign up for our podcast and take the show wherever you go.

Past Shows
Nov 23, 2009 | Link
Nov 19, 2009 | Link
Nov 18, 2009 | Link
Nov 17, 2009 | Link

Support From

Corporation for Public Broadcasting

The TD Charitable Foundation

The Next Green Thing

is supported by

Public Service of New Hampshire
committed to clean energy solutions
New Hampshire Electric Co-op