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Bikinis to Burkinis, Acting Sick, & Kazoo Magazine

Kim Piper Werker via Flickr CC
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When a seasoned magazine editor took her daughter to the bookstore, they found scientists and explorers in magazines for boys. For girls: princesses, cover girls in make-up and tips for shinier hair.

On today’s show a new magazine for girls has plenty of creative, inspiring ideas, and no lipstick! 

Also today, aspiring doctors get all they can from med school, for the rest, they turn to actors. We'll find out how playing sick is helping to make better doctors. And the 5-second rule gets the science treatment.

Listen to the full show. 

Bikinis to Burkinis

Spring 2017 is tromping down the runways at New York's Fashion Week. So far, not a Burkini in sight. Late last month, France's highest court struck down a prohibition against Burkinis in one of the 30 seaside towns which forbade the full-body covering favored by some Muslim women. Proponents argue the ban increases security and defend secularism in light of the attack in nearby nice. Opponents claim it's straight-up islamophobia.

Deirdre Clementefrom the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, studies American culture, fashion, and clothing. She says it is not the first time the law has stepped in to regulate how women dress on the beach.  

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Bikinis to Burkinis

Mary Walker Would Wear What She Wanted

We move from a pioneer in magazines for kids to the story of a woman who would fit quite well within those pages. Nate DiMeo, creator and host of The Memory Palace podcast brings us her story.

You can listen to this story again at PRX.org.

Getting Paid to Act Sick

You don't become a doctor by watching Gray's Anatomy. It takes years of pre-med and med school study, at least a year-long internship, and--depending on one's specialty--residencies, fellowships and board certification. Some med schools are adding theater to the mix: giving med students the chance to think on their feet by simulating interactions with patients and colleagues played by actors. Elizabeth Zimmer, is not a medical patient, she just plays one for aspiring and practicing doctors. She's wrote in the Village Voice about the experience of playing sick.

Related "Playing Sick: How Actors are Making Better Doctors"

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Getting Paid to Act Sick

The Wong-Baker Pain Scale

Credit h/t --> http://bit.ly/2d2zuVV
A nursing student named Janelle asked Adventure Time character designer Matt Forsythe to revamp the Wong-Baker FACES Pain Rating Scale by switching it out with the face of Finn the Human.

  

Almost everyone who has been to a hospital has had this experience: the doctor brings out a chart with those little faces and a 1 to 10 scale on it and asks you what your level of pain is. But are a row of cartoon faces and numbers enough to explain how you feel? This story comes to us from health and science reporter Elana Gordon from WHYY’s podcast “The Pulse.”

You can listen to this full story again here: Reassessing the Assessment of Pain

Kazoo - A Magazine for Girls

  When Erin Bried and her 5-year-old daughter went to the bookstore together, they hit a wall. There were plenty of princesses and dolls and pink lipstick on girls’ magazines, but where were the pirates, or the space explorers? So, with Erin's experience in publishing and her daughter's enthusiasm, they decided to start a different kind of magazine for girls. Others agreed. Within 30 days the Kickstarter campaign to launch kazoo magazine became the most successful journalism project in crowdfunding history. Turns out there's a lot of interest for the 5-10 set that promises cool, fun, imaginative stories & activities developed and inspired by creative women and girls.

Erin Bried is a former Condé Nast editor, author of three books, and most recently the founder and editor in chief of Kazoo - "A magazine for girls who aren't afraid to make some noise."

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Kazoo - A Magazine for Girls

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