Word of Mouth

The Truly Smart City

By Laura Sheeter on Monday, November 2, 2009.

For urban dwellers, the question of how well you know your city is quickly being replaced with the question of how well does your city know you? Transportation systems can track your comings and goings, utility companies know your usage patterns and banks know what you spend and when. Does that make for a city of dreams, or a nightmare?

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May The Hologram Be With You

By Virginia Prescott on Monday, November 2, 2009.

Think back to that iconic Star Wars scene when R2D2 beams in a hologram of Princess Leia to deliver an urgent message to Obi-Wan Kenobi. A tiny image of Princess Leia flickers before Obi Wan’s eyes, a technological marvel when the film came out in 1977. Audiences were equally entranced when a hologram of Yoda was transported through space and time to a Jedi Council Meeting.

Now researchers are taking a cue from star wars and developing 3D technology that can beam anyone – Jedi or mere mortal – to a meeting far, far away. If a 3D image isn’t tactile enough, maybe an animatronics robot would do the trick. These life-like avatars move their mouths and eyes, mirroring a person’s expression in real time.

Universities are now considering these avatars and holograms as high-tech updates to old school speaker phone and video conference technologies.

We’ve beamed in Jeffrey Young, so to speak, to tell us more. He’s senior writer for The Chronicle of Higher Education and writes for their College 2.0 blog.

The Chrinicle of Higher Education: Beam Me to the Faculty Senate

(Photo by Chris Hildreth for The Chronicle of Higher Education)



Grading Media Coverage of Health Care

By Virginia Prescott on Monday, November 2, 2009.

In September, former senate majority leader Tom Daschle spoke at The New School in New York City. He described a health care town hall meeting that was nothing like the shrill, hostile meetings then leading the news. “The next morning,” Daschle says, “I read the newspaper and I’d say 95% of the coverage in the paper was about the demonstrators and quotes that they had, either about me, or about health care that were completely off base. Nothing about the thoughtful, substantive discussion that occurred for an hour and a half in that hall.”

The headlines generated by gun-toting protesters, people decrying “socialized medicine” and “death panels” have faded, but the health care debate continues. This week, Democrats and Republicans in the House of Representatives are expected to vote on their versions of the health care reform bill, bills that are quite different from the Senate’s version.

If you find yourself getting lost in the process, you are not alone. Trudy Lieberman has been following health care and the media’s coverage of the issue for the Columbia Journalism Review. She also teaches health and medicine reporting at the City University of New York and joins us to grade the media coverage of the health care debate.

Columbia Journalism Review: Truth Emerges about the Public Option

L.A. Times: Media needs to deepen coverage of healthcare reform

Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism: Health News Coverage in the U.S. Media

(Photo by Truthout.org via Flickr/Creative Commons)



Here's What's Awesome: Double Guitar Solos, Dating Rescues

By Brady Carlson on Sunday, November 1, 2009.

I think Here's What's Awesome needs a catchphrase - something as catchy as Gomer Pyle's "Sha-zam!" but as down to earth as Daniel Schorr's "This is Daniel Schorr." Let's think on this as we explore another week of awesome links:

And next, three people and a piccolo
Two Brazilian musicians prove that a) you don't need two guitars to play a guitar duet, and b) you don't need to "beatbox" or sing about robots to become an internet musical sensation!

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Amongst the Ruins

By Avishay Artsy on Thursday, October 29, 2009.

Among the horror film formulas of gothic monsters, aliens, slashers and the undead is one that now stands out as unfeeling: the insane asylum.

Little wonder, given that these mysterious architectural giants loomed behind iron gates in dozens of American towns. Hollywood brought us inside, painting mental institutions as places of misery and despair. Think of Shock Corridor, The Snake Pit, or the more recent thriller Session 9.

Hollywood trumped up the terror of insane asylums, but they were originally built for healing, as places of safety as well as madness. Among the earliest of the mental hospitals was the New Hampshire Asylum for the Insane in Concord.

An acute psychiatric care facility and a children’s unit still operate there. About half of the old buildings have been converted to state offices or storage units, while the rest sit empty. Word or Mouth producer Avishay Artsy went to unlock the history of this decaying institution.



DIY Halloween Film Festival

By Virginia Prescott on Thursday, October 29, 2009.

The balconied buildings and moss-dripped trees of New Orleans are a natural for horror films and, of course, for vampires. Last weekend, the pale winged monsters descended on the city's annual vampire film festival.

Fifty terrifying films from eleven countries made for four days of blood and gore in the big easy. So maybe you couldn't shape-shift and fly down. Why not program your own film festival this weekend? All you need is a mountain of popcorn and a stack of scary movies.

Since we're all about digging beneath the surface here on Word of Mouth, we asked horror film buff Bryan White to uncover some chilling films that go beyond Nightmare on Elm Street and The Shining. Bryan is the mastermind behind the blog Cinema Suicide and he's here in the studio to help us plan a truly frightening DIY film fest.

The Sentinel, dir. Michael Winner, 1977

The Fog, dir. John Carpenter, 1980

Trick 'r Treat, dir. Michael Dougherty, 2008

(Photo by Perttu Raivio via Flickr/Creative Commons)



When Zombies Attack

By Jeff Young on Thursday, October 29, 2009.

In the event of a zombie infestation, what would you do? Quarantine the zombies, try to develop a cure, or load a shotgun and aim for the head? It’s a conundrum that mathematicians, of all people, are studying in earnest.

An alarming paper in the scientific journal Infectious Disease Modeling Research Progress caught our attention. A team of mathematicians from Canada modeled the potential outbreak of zombies, which they say is likely to be disastrous, unless extremely aggressive tactics are employed.

Living on Earth’s Jeff Young was equally alarmed, so he called up one of the paper’s authors, Philip Munz, to discover what all the panic is about.

(Photo by Mark Lobo via Flickr/Creative Commons)



The Psychology of Fear

By Sheryl Rich-Kern on Thursday, October 29, 2009.

During the month of October, nearly 24 million Americans will wander through the twisted hallways of a haunted house, where zombies emerge from darkened corners and blood-curdling screams rise to the rafters.

Why do some people seek out that creepy feeling of being scared while others avoid haunted houses and horror films at all costs?

Word of Mouth’s Sheryl Rich-Kern visited one of the largest haunted houses in the country, Spooky World in Litchfield, New Hampshire, to find out.

(Photo courtesy of Spooky World)



The Marketing of Desire

By Virginia Prescott on Wednesday, October 28, 2009.

Female Sexual Dysfunction is a term of some debate, and not one frequently discussed on public radio. But its origins and the race to treat it are examined by filmmaker Liz Canner in a documentary called Orgasm, Inc.

Liz Canner was originally hired by a pharmaceutical company focused on creating a Viagra equivalent for women. That gig turned into a nine-year exploration of how female sexuality has been treated by the medical profession, and the origins –and profitability -- of disease. Liz Canner joins us with more, in advance of tonight’s screening at The Music Hall in Portsmouth.



Girldrive: Redefining Feminism

By Virginia Prescott on Wednesday, October 28, 2009.

The American road trip – at least in the novels inspired by it – is a manly domain. Classics like On The Road, Travels with Charley, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance and Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas all feature men searching for themselves and their personal vision of America. It’s a tradition begun by the male trappers and traders, and Alexis de Tocqueville, who was sent by the French to study the fledgling American republic in the 1830s. He traveled the dusty roads to find his stories.

That’s what two young women did in the fall of 2007, except that most of the roads were paved. Nona Willis Aronowitz and Emma Bee Bernstein were recent college grads interested in what feminism means to American women today. They interviewed more than two hundred women, along with a few men -- from their role models to strangers who don’t identify as feminists at all.

Their interviews, photographs, and personal impressions are compiled in the book Girldrive: Criss-Crossing America, Redefining Feminism and we invited Nona Willis Aronowitz to tell us about their travels.

Girldrive trailer! from Girldrive on Vimeo.



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.

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Nov 23, 2009 | Link
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