ot Coal: Not the New Black By www.wconline.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Jan 2016 00:00:00 -0500 Is there a future for coal fired power? Full Article
ot Next chair of the National Lottery Community Fund revealed By www.thirdsector.co.uk Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 16:12:11 Z Dame Julia Cleverdon spent 17 years as the chief executive of Business in the Community as part of a long career in the voluntary sector Full Article Fundraising
ot FHWA rule updates protections for workers and drivers in work zones By www.safetyandhealthmagazine.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 00:00:00 -0500 Washington — A Federal Highway Administration final rule includes updates intended to improve safety and mobility for workers and drivers in roadway work zones. Full Article
ot Urban Roots Fruit+ and Cantina-Style Salsa By www.preparedfoods.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 12:00:00 -0500 The new Urban Roots is dedicated to delivering plant-forward products with bold, globally inspired flavors. The rebrand comes with two line expansions: the launch of Fruit+, and Cantina-Style Salsa. Full Article
ot Top 2024 Advances in Alternative Protein By www.foodengineeringmag.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 00:00:00 -0500 These are the FE editorial picks from the past year that best exemplify advances in the alternative protein space, from facilities to flavor. Full Article
ot Good Morning, News: City Council to Vote on Clean & Safe Contract, Vision Zero Gets an Audit, and Trump Taps Elon Musk to Lead DOGE (Do You Even Want to Know?) By www.portlandmercury.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 08:20:00 -0800 by Taylor Griggs The Mercury provides news and fun every single day—but your help is essential. If you believe Portland benefits from smart, local journalism and arts coverage, please consider making a small monthly contribution, because without you, there is no us. Thanks for your support! Good morning, Portland! There's rain on the menu for today, but you probably didn't need me to tell you that. Hopefully you know how to layer for November in Portland by now. Anddddd that's all the small talk we have time for this morning, so chop chop. It's news time. IN LOCAL NEWS: • Portland City Council is set to vote today on a five-year contract renewal for the Downtown Portland Clean & Safe district, as well as a major expansion of the service area it covers and a fee hike. A couple weeks ago, when this item was first brought to the council, many Portlanders testified against the contract renewal. Now, four incoming city councilors (Mitch Green, Sameer Kanal, Tiffany Koyama Lane and Angelita Morillo)—along with community organizations and dozens of residents, have penned a letter to the current City Council asking them to postpone the contract renewal. Why the negativity for Clean & Safe? Well, as an excellent new article from our Courtney Vaughn details, the Clean & Safe district is overseen by an organization that has significant overlap in its management with the Portland Metro Chamber, AKA the Portland Business Alliance. The new contract would funnel a good portion of the $58 million contract to the Metro Chamber, which they will spend on lobbying efforts for private business interests. The program is also convoluted and lacks oversight, and it contributes majorly to the criminalization of homeless people in downtown Portland. So there's a lot wrong with it. Read the article for more of the details, and stay tuned for City Council's decision today. • The Portland Auditor's Office has released a much-anticipated (by me, at least) report on the Portland Bureau of Transportation's (PBOT) Vision Zero Action Plan, which the city adopted in 2016 in an effort to eliminate traffic crash fatalities and serious injuries. But in the eight years since the Vision Zero plan was adopted (and been updated twice), traffic crash deaths have increased in Portland, especially in the last four years. In 2023, 69 people were killed in traffic crashes on Portland streets. Given the current reality, it's understandable that people are questioning how effective the Vision Zero program is. While the Auditor's Office isn't seeking an overhaul of the program, the report recommends PBOT makes several key changes to improve Vision Zero outcomes. The audit report says PBOT should create a better project evaluation system, install more speed cameras, and use more qualitative data to determine the most equitable safety projects. According to PBOT, most of the concerns expressed in the audit report have already been addressed in the most recent Vision Zero update. PBOT leaders did say they are hopeful more traffic safety improvements will be possible when Portland finally (fully) transitions to its new, less-siloed form of government in January. The report just came out this morning, so there hasn't been much in the way of community response yet, but I'm sure it will spark some Thoughts, capital "T." • On a related note, the World Day of Remembrance of Road Traffic Victims is this Sunday, an annual day to honor the many lives lost prematurely to traffic violence. Community organizations Families for Safe Streets, BikeLoud PDX, and Oregon Walks will join PBOT, elected leaders, and community members for a gathering at Portland City Hall. Find out more about the event here. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Families for Safe Streets PDX (@fss_pdx) • Here's a painful fact, courtesy of a new investigation from OPB and ProPublica: Despite President Biden's repeated promises to save old growth forests in the Pacific Northwest, the Bureau of Land Management is allowing timber companies to log such forests now more than in the last 10 years. Biden's BLM is on track to log 47,000 acres of public lands during his four years in office— about the same amount that Trump oversaw during his first term in office. And, get this: This is after Biden made an executive order to protect mature and old-growth forests in 2022! Considering the rare beauty of these forests—and, more importantly, their importance to ecosystems and ability to mitigate carbon emission—this is very unfortunate. The Biden administration hasn't answered for the BLM's actions, or if they're planning to take steps to further protect old growth forests in preparation for the next Trump administration. Let's hope he makes some changes while he still can, because we all know Trump will be a lot worse. • Rene Gonzalez, after losing his bid for mayor, is seeking donations of up to $579 because his campaign is in debt. I wonder if anyone will pay him. Stealing this from the other site because y’all need to see it. Anyone gonna donate $579 to Rene Gonzalez’s failed campaign for mayor??? @pradapdx.bsky.social[image or embed] — Taylor Griggs (@taylorgriggs.bsky.social) November 12, 2024 at 5:11 PM IN NATIONAL/WORLD NEWS: • President-elect Donald Trump (ouch) has asked Vivek Ramaswamy (ouch again) and Elon Musk (commentary unnecessary here) to lead a new government agency that he plans to create in order to regulate federal spending. The new agency will be called the Department of Government Efficiency, which just happens to create the acronym DOGE, a reference to the Shiba Inu meme of the mid-2010s and the joke cryptocurrency by the same name that Musk promoted. Apparently, a Department of Government Efficiency needs to be run by two people. I hope I am adequately conveying my tone of contempt here. As ridiculous as this all is, it's also extremely bad. Trump, Musk, and Ramaswamy's plan is to fire thousands of federal employees, cut necessary regulations, and ultimately destroy many of the most crucial components of the federal government. All we can do is hope that SOME Republicans in Congress (we don't need all of them!) will realize how idiotic this is and block Trump's attempt to create a new government agency, which he can't do without congressional approval. Or can he? The limit to this idiocy knows no bounds. However, given these men's volatility—which is replicated in many others in Trump's sphere—it does seem pretty likely that they'll all be in a huge fight by the time Trump takes office. I do think there are some major catfights on the horizon, if that gives you any comfort in these trying times. fundamentally this is what Trump administrations are all about: the guys. there will be new guys every week. they will startle you, you'll be astounded by them, and then as quickly as they appeared they will fade into an indistinguishable mass, leaves on the forest floor.[image or embed] — Peter (@notalawyer.bsky.social) November 12, 2024 at 4:39 PM • Here's something that will NOT give you comfort in these trying times: Despite the hope last year would mark a global carbon dioxide emissions peak, humans are burning more fossil fuels this year than we did last year. The world is on track to put 0.8 percent more carbon into the atmosphere than in 2023. Though this is not surprising, it IS actually crazy behavior from humanity (and let me be clear, it's a tiny minority of humans leading the charge on this, though a substantially larger minority are eagerly/mindlessly participating in burning fossil fuels at a rate incompatible with the future of life on this planet). Good thing we will have strong climate leadership in the White House come January. NOT!!!! • One way people are attempting to #resist Elon Musk after he helped Trump get into office and will now seemingly play a key role in his administration? Leaving Twitter, AKA X, the social media site he bought and ruined. Bluesky may be the place to be now. (I am finding it much more pleasant.) In the week since the U.S. presidential election, Elon Musk has used X, the social media platform he owns, to reiterate his support for President-elect Donald Trump. Some of X’s users have decided they want to post elsewhere. Among the largest beneficiaries of that desire is Bluesky. nyti.ms/48JtYAt[image or embed] — The New York Times (@nytimes.com) November 12, 2024 at 10:46 PM • Okay, here's some actual good news: The U.S. House voted down a bill that would've helped Trump censor and persecute his political opponents. The Stop Terror-Financing and Tax Penalties on American Hostages Act had previously received bipartisan support, but after Trump was elected, some Democratic lawmakers (and The Intercept) raised alarm bells. The bill would give the U.S. Treasury Department complete authority to revoke the tax-exempt status of nonprofits it deems are "terrorist supporting organizations," which Trump could use to enable the destruction of nonprofits that the future president doesn't politically align with. WHEW. • Finally, please watch this video of a little boy and his crow friend. ???????? Bye bye! View this post on Instagram A post shared by Dogs | Puppies | Family (@yourpaws.global) Full Article Good Morning News!
ot Portland’s Ranked Choice Voting Was a Success (Despite What the Oregonian Claims) By www.portlandmercury.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 09:48:00 -0800 The newspaper asserts that Ranked Choice Voting "cratered" voter engagement. That's bullshit. by Wm. Steven Humphrey Starting in January 2025, Portland will have the most diverse, and politically balanced City Council in the history of our city. Full stop. The reason why we’re able to celebrate this indisputable fact is thanks to charter reform and ranked choice voting, which allowed citizens from every demographic and Portland neighborhood the opportunity to serve their city (and the rest of us to vote for them). But despite those two objectively correct statements, local media continues to platform the dishonest cynics who have been fighting charter reform and ranked choice voting from the beginning. The Oregonian, who loves writing intellectually dishonest headlines like this, really outdid themselves with this recent post-election article: Portland’s ranked-choice debut causes voter engagement to crater; 1 in 5 who cast ballots chose no one for City Council. Let’s break it down, shall we? Using the word “crater” to describe Portland’s voter engagement, and attempting to lay the blame on the doorstep of ranked choice voting, is not only an unethical choice, it’s factually incorrect. While overall voter turnout wasn’t what it was in 2020 (79%), Portland engagement still reached 74.5%—that’s still three-quarters of our total population. Does that sound like overall engagement “cratered” to you? And perhaps it’s true that one-out-of-five voters chose not to rank any candidates for City Council and mayor—though, as a reasonable person, I might wait until that number got a little bit higher before labeling it as “cratering.” And yes, it is absolutely correct that a historically large group of candidates ran for City Council this year, which probably stunned some voters who aren’t used to doing a lot of research. BUT! And let me say this loud and proud so everyone in the back can hear it: Having a lot of candidates who love their community and want to serve it is A VERY GOOD THING. (And it’s even better for democracy.) And while we can definitely do more as a city to make sure minority and low-income communities have the information they need in future races, according to the Oregonian’s own numbers, four out of five Portlanders successfully filled out their ballots without their brains exploding. So actually, I’d call that a big win. And that’s my problem with this poorly headlined article: The main thesis seems to be that just because one-in-five Portland voters chose not to cast votes in two races, this is somehow the fault of ranked choice voting. That’s bullshit. And here’s why: Let’s imagine ranked choice voting never existed, and Portlanders were still choosing just a single candidate for every office. Thanks to the general ineptitude of the current City Council—which inspired so many people to run against them—a huge number of candidates would’ve still been on that ballot. And if that had occurred, voters would have been confronted with the exact same conundrum. Oh, and if you do happen to dip into the O’s article, here’s a little media studies trick: While most news outlets claim objectivity as their guiding star, if you want to spot potential bias, head to the final paragraph of just about any article, and see who gets the last word. In the case of this Oregonian story, the last word was given to a failed conservative Council candidate, Bob Weinstein, who freely admits he was never in favor of charter reform in the first place, and issued this damning indictment of ranked choice voting: “It’s very anti-democratic, to me, to have a result like this.” I’m curious: Which of the following results is the most “anti-democratic”? Was it three-quarters of the population voting? Was it the large number of candidates who, after 100 years of being shut out of elections, were finally given a chance to fairly compete? Was it the actual result, which was getting (as mentioned before) the most diverse and politically balanced City Council we’ve had in the history of our city? Or was it “anti-democratic” simply because he lost? Unfortunately, we’ll probably be reading a lot more thoughtless headlines and hearing a lot more anti-Charter Reform language from Portland’s conservative business class. Frankly, the old system worked GREAT for them, giving the wealthy an outsized voice and control over policy in City Hall. And even though the new council will have conservative voices who will fight valiantly to ensure the rich continue getting richer, that’s not good enough for those who want absolute power. In short, if you like what conservatives did to Measure 110, keep an eye out on what they’re planning to do to Charter Reform. For the rest of us, there’s an old saying: “Progress, not perfection.” We’re sorry to break the hearts of the Oregonian headline writers and the bad actors who have dominated Portland politics for over a century, but new, vital forms of government—like any new plan or system that regular folks like you put into action every single day—will NEVER be perfect from the start, and need time and grace in order to operate at top proficiency. That said, if one-in-five voters refusing to choose a candidate in two races is the worst thing to happen in an election where we make sweeping changes for the very first time? I’d say democracy continues to be in pretty good shape. But that’s just my opinion—from deep in the “crater.” Full Article Opinion
ot Republican strategist Scott Jennings discusses congressional leadership By www.npr.org Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 04:09:32 -0500 NPR's Steve Inskeep talks with Republican strategist Scott Jennings about Republican leadership in in the U.S. Senate and House. Full Article
ot Why working-class voters have been shifting toward the Republican Party By www.npr.org Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 04:12:08 -0500 NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Penn State labor and employment relations professor Paul Clark about blue-collar voters and their decision to back President-elect Trump in this election. Full Article
ot A look at the potential impact of shutting down the Department of Education By www.npr.org Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 04:13:25 -0500 NPR's Steve Inskeep asks the Brookings Institution's Jon Valant about President-elect Trump's campaign promise to close the Department of Education. Full Article
ot House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries discusses "The ABCs of Democracy" By www.npr.org Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 04:13:44 -0500 House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries speaks with NPR's Michel Martin about his new book "The ABCs of Democracy," and Democrats' outlook following the 2024 election. Full Article
ot Basic Black: Voting Matters in Black & White By www.wgbh.org Published On :: Sat, 18 Oct 2014 00:00:00 EST October 17, 2014 Democrat Martha Coakley and Republican Charlie Baker are in a dead heat in the Massachusetts governor's race. The margin of error in the polls for both candidates is slim, but can voters in communities of color fill the margin with a victory, sending one of them to the governor's office? Are the campaigns of the independent candidates resonating with black, Latino, or Asian voters? This week on Basic Black, we look at how the candidates for governor are delivering their message to communities of color in the race to the finish line on November 4. Panelists: - Latoyia Edwards, Anchor, New England Cable News - Phillip Martin, Senior Reporter, WGBH News - Peniel Joseph, Professor of History, Tufts University - Marcela Garcia, Regular Contributor to the Boston Globe's Editorial and Op-Ed Pages - Paul Watanabe, Director of the Institute for Asian American Studies, UMass, Boston Full Article
ot Basic Black: Thomas Menino's Imprint on the "New Boston" By www.wgbh.org Published On :: Fri, 31 Oct 2014 00:00:00 EST October 31, 2014 In remembering the legacy of former Mayor Thomas Menino, State Senator Linda Dorcena Forry remarked, "He didn't just focus on downtown, it was also our neighborhoods." This week on Basic Black, we look back at the city's longest serving Mayor and the huge imprint he left on Boston's neighborhoods and communities of color. Panelists: - Latoyia Edwards, Anchor, NECN - Charles Yancey, Boston City Council, District 4 - Yawu Miller, Senior Editor, Bay State Banner - Phillip Martin, Senior Reporter, WGBH News Full Article
ot Basic Black: After the Storm... Beverly Scott and the MBTA By www.wgbh.org Published On :: Sat, 14 Feb 2015 00:00:00 EST February 13, 2015 Back to back storms in as little as two weeks dropped record amounts of snow on New England. The capacity of the MBTA’s equipment was put to the test, but the system buckled under the weight of the weather. In the face of widespread train delays and mounting criticism, MBTA General Manager Beverly Scott responded with a fiery press conference that’s not likely to be forgotten anytime soon. The day after her press conference, Scott submitted her letter of resignation. We’ll take a look at her tenure and immediate task at hand to get the trains back to normal. Later in the show, as the Bay State Banner celebrates 50 years of reporting the news of New England’s communities of color, we discuss the continuing evolution of journalists of color. Panelists: - Latoyia Edwards, Anchor, NECN - Phillip Martin, Senior Reporter, WGBH News - Kim McLarin, Assistant Professor of Writing, Literature and Publishing, Emerson College - Yawu Miller, Senior Editor, The Bay State Banner - Akilah Johnson, Reporter, The Boston Globe Full Article
ot Robotic dogs patrol Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate after election win, Iranian murder plot By www.christianpost.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 13:51:00 -0500 Robotic dogs are patrolling President-elect Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida days after his election victory as the Republican has faced two assassination attempts and reports of an Iranian murder plot against him. Full Article
ot Rare and complex NATO tank spotted and destroyed in Russia's Kursk region By english.pravda.ru Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 14:24:00 +0300 A "rare and complex" British Challenger 2 tank that Ukraine received from the UK was spotted in the Kursk region of Russia. "The destruction of a heavy British Challenger 2 tank, a rather rare and complex tank to operate, by the marines of our 155th brigade indicates the concentration of enemy efforts," Two Majors Telegram channel said. The fact that such rare military hardware was transferred to the Russian region indicates the intention of the Armed Forces of Ukraine to use all opportunities to hold positions in the Kursk region, authors of the channel added. Full Article Incidents
ot McMaster University Researchers Uncover Potential Treatment for Rare Genetic Disorders By www.newswise.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 21:30:59 EST In a groundbreaking study, researchers at McMaster University have identified a potential treatment for Sandhoff and Tay-Sachs diseases--two rare, often fatal lysosomal storage disorders that cause progressive damage to nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord. After years of investigating the diseases' underlying mechanisms, the research team has identified an existing FDA-approved drug that could significantly improve quality of life for affected patients and their families. Full Article
ot Lean Hypotheses and Effectual Commitments: An Integrative Framework Delineating the Methods of Science and Entrepreneurship By www.newswise.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 06:15:47 EST Full Article
ot McMaster University Researchers Uncover Potential Treatment for Rare Genetic Disorders By www.newswise.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 21:30:59 EST In a groundbreaking study, researchers at McMaster University have identified a potential treatment for Sandhoff and Tay-Sachs diseases--two rare, often fatal lysosomal storage disorders that cause progressive damage to nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord. After years of investigating the diseases' underlying mechanisms, the research team has identified an existing FDA-approved drug that could significantly improve quality of life for affected patients and their families. Full Article
ot Health Ministry to Continue Promoting Tertiary Hospitals to Focus on Critical Patients By world.kbs.co.kr Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 17:12:49 +0900 [Politics] : The pilot project to restructure tertiary hospitals will continue, with the hospitals to focus on severe diseases, emergencies and rare diseases. Currently, 31 out of 47 tertiary hospitals are taking part in the project and nine more are set to join. The hospitals have reduced the number of ...[more...] Full Article Politics
ot How can Scotland re-establish its building stone industry? - British Geological Survey By news.google.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 10:31:29 GMT How can Scotland re-establish its building stone industry? British Geological Survey Full Article
ot Scurrying roaches help researchers steady staggering robots By www.news.gatech.edu Published On :: 2019-08-28T07:00:00Z Full Article
ot Data from Hawaii observatory helps scientists discover giant planet slingshots around its star By keckobservatory.org Published On :: 2019-08-30T07:00:00Z Full Article
ot Tiny thermometer measures how mitochondria heat up the cell by unleashing proton energy By news.illinois.edu Published On :: 2019-09-04T07:00:00Z Full Article
ot Potential NFL stadium moves closer to going on Inglewood ballot this summer By www.scpr.org Published On :: Mon, 26 Jan 2015 19:01:34 -0800 A rendering of he new stadium and complex to be built near the Forum in Inglewood was released by the Hollywood Park Land Company, Kroenke Group and Stockbridge Capital Group earlier this month.; Credit: Courtesy Hollywood Park Land Company Ben BergmanA measure that would allow an 80,000-seat NFL-caliber stadium to be built in Inglewood could be on that city’s ballot by this summer after developers submitted almost three times as many signatures than needed for a voter initiative. “22,216 signatures were submitted to the city clerk today,” said Gerard McCallum, project manager with the Hollywood Park Land Company. “It was unbelievable. The response was more than we could have ever anticipated.” Normally, before construction can begin on any project there has to be an environmental review, but that can take a long time and time is something in short supply for St. Louis Rams Owner Stan Kroenke and his plan to move the team to L.A. “We would be going through another three year project process, and the current construction wouldn’t allow that,” said McCallum, referring to the redevelopment of 238 acres of the old Hollywood Park site that was permitted in 2009. “If we were going to make any modifications, it would have to be approved this year,” said McCallum. To speed things up, developers decided to bring the stadium project directly to Inglewood voters, which required 8,000 signatures. Once the signatures are verified, Inglewood’s City Council will consider the measure, then developers hope a special election would take place before the start of the next NFL season. McCallum says construction would begin whether the Rams or any other team decides to move here, though on Monday Kroenke made another move suggesting a return of the NFL to Los Angeles could be closer than it has been at any point during the last two decades, though not until after the 2015 season. From The St Louis Post-Dispatch: Rams management sent a letter to regional officials on Monday afternoon. The letter said the team was converting its 30-year lease to an “annual tenancy,” effective April 1 and, “in the absence of intervening events,” extending through March 31, 2016. The notice, which has long been expected, does two things: It allows owner Stan Kroenke to pull the team out of St. Louis as soon as 2016, because the Rams lease will now expire at the end of every season. The original lease was to expire in 2025. It also legally binds the Rams to play at the Edward Jones Dome next fall — a point on which many here were uncertain. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
ot Can LAX get as big as other top airports? By www.scpr.org Published On :: Wed, 04 Feb 2015 16:15:31 -0800 More than 70 passengers travelled through LAX last year, an all-time record.; Credit: Photo by monkeytime | brachiator via Flickr Creative Commons Ben BergmanHere’s a pop quiz: What is the world’s busiest airport? Almost two weeks ago, Chicago's O'Hare International claimed the honor. "As Chicago reclaims its place with the world’s busiest airport, it speaks to the strength of our city’s economy," bragged Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel. Not so fast, said Dubai, which last week said it was number one. “This historic milestone is the culmination of over five decades of double-digit average growth," announced HH Sheikh Ahmed Bin Saeed Al Maktoum, Chairman of Dubai Airports. Then, on Wednesday, Atlanta weighed in, and yes, it also claimed to be the champion. “I am pleased to announce that once again – for the 17th year in a row – Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport is the busiest airport on Planet Earth, with more than 96.1 million passengers,” Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed said. Airports Council International ranks Atlanta as number one in passenger traffic, but those are based on 2013 numbers. The group's 2014 numbers will be out in a few months, but until then we know that LAX proudly takes an undisputed sixth place. Gina Marie Lindsey, Executive Director of the Los Angeles World Airports, announced her retirement Tuesday after a 33-year career in the aviation industry. Since Lindsey started in 2007, passenger traffic has grown by 15 percent. Aviation consultant Jack Keady doesn’t think LAX stands a chance of competing with rapidly expanding Dubai, which state-owned Emirates airlines has made its glitzy global hub. "Dubai has bumped everyone down,” said Keady. Still, Keady says LAX will keep growing, even though it’s going to be working with the same number of runways for the foreseeable future. “Instead of running 30-passenger turboprops and 100-passenger planes, you start bringing in the heavy metal,” said Keady. Bigger planes are especially important because under a 2006 settlement with airport neighbors, once LAX hits 75 million passengers, it has to start closing gates. More than 70 million passengers travelled through LAX last year, an all-time record. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
ot 'Lost in Space' robot designer Robert Kinoshita dies at 100 By www.scpr.org Published On :: Tue, 13 Jan 2015 17:38:48 -0800 Video of the B9 robot from "Lost In Space" and his most famous catchphrases.; Credit: timtomp (via YouTube) Mike RoeRobert Kinoshita, the Los Angeles native who designed the iconic robots from "Lost in Space" and "Forbidden Planet," has passed away. He was 100 years old. Konishita died Dec. 9 at a Torrance nursing home, according to the Hollywood Reporter, citing family friend Mike Clark. His creations included "Forbidden Planet's" Robby the Robot, the B9 robot from "Lost in Space," Tobor from "Tobor the Great" and more. Kinoshita also created "Lost in Space's" iconic flying-saucer-shaped Jupiter 2 spaceship. Kinoshita built the original miniature prototype of Robby the Robot out of wood and plastic by combining several different concepts, according to the Reporter; the Rafu Shimpo reported that he struggled with the design. "I thought, what the hell. We’re wasting so much time designing and drawing one sketch after another. I said to myself, I’m going to make a model," Kinoshita told the Rafu Shimpo in a 2004 interview. "Then one day, the art director sees the model. He says, ‘Give me that thing.’ He grabbed it and ran. ... Ten minutes later, he comes running back and puts the model back on my desk and says, ‘Draw it!’" Watch Kinoshita and his colleagues talking about the construction of Robby the Robot: Robby the Robot's construction The 1956 classic sci-fi movie "Forbidden Planet" — based on Shakespeare's "The Tempest" — went on to be nominated for a special effects Oscar. Kinoshita later served as art director on the 1960s sci-fi TV series "Lost in Space," creating the arm-flailing robot — named B9 — who delivered the classic line "Danger! Danger, Will Robinson!" That robot received as much fan mail as the actual humans on the show, according to the Reporter. Watch the robot's feud with "Lost in Space's" Dr. Smith: The robot vs. Dr. Smith The "Lost in Space" robot even inspired a B9 Robot Builders Club, featured in Forbes. Kinoshita sent a message in 2000 to the club, thanking them for their support for the robot he originally nicknamed "Blinky." "I'm truly flabbergasted and honored by your support for 'Blinky!' It's a well-designed little beauty," Kinoshita wrote. "Your thoughtful remembrance is something we designers seldom are lucky enough to receive." Kinoshita described the thought process behind its design in a 1998 interview. "You're laying in bed, and something comes to you," he said. "Until, finally, you get to a point where you say, 'This could work,' 'OK, let's see what the boss man says.' And you present it to him." He told the Rafu Shimpo that he tried to create his robots to disguise the fact that there was a person inside. "I tried to camouflage it enough so you’d wonder where the hell the human was," he said. Both the Japanese-American Kinoshita and his wife, Lillian, were sent to an Arizona internment camp during World War II, though they were able to get out before the end of the war and moved to Wisconsin, according to the Reporter. While in Wisconsin, Kinoshita learned industrial design and plastic fabrication, designing washing machines for the Army and Air Force before returning to California, according to the Rafu Shimpo. Kinoshita said that he had to overcome racial prejudice to break into working in Hollywood. Kinoshita attributed his long life to clean living — along with daily doses of apple cider vinegar, family friend Clark told the Reporter. Kinoshita also worked as a designer and art director on numerous classic TV shows, including "Kojak," "Barnaby Jones," "Hawaii Five-O," "Bat Masterson," "Sea Hunt," "Tombstone Territory," "Star Trek" creator Gene Roddenberry's "Planet Earth" and more, according to his IMDB. His last TV show was 1984's "Cover Up." Kinoshita grew up in Boyle Heights, according to the Reporter, attending Maryknoll Japanese Catholic School, Roosevelt High School and USC's School of Architecture. His career began with work on 1937's "100 Men and a Girl." Kinoshita graduated cum laude from USC, according to the Rafu Shimpo. Watch Kinoshita speak at his 95th birthday gathering with the B9 Robot Builders Club. He said he hoped to make it to 100, and he ended up doing so. Kinoshita's 95th birthday speech This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
ot Marvel teases reboot of their comics for the first time: What is 'Secret Wars'? By www.scpr.org Published On :: Wed, 21 Jan 2015 05:30:43 -0800 The covers to the last issues of the current runs of "Avengers" and "New Avengers," leading into "Secret Wars."; Credit: Marvel Mike RoeMarvel Comics held a press conference this week announcing details about "Secret Wars," a company-wide comic book crossover that they promise will change everything. Promises of change in comics often don't amount to much, but here's why this one just might, with Marvel teasing that it will produce a whole new world for its characters. "We see this as putting an endcap to decades of stories and starting a new era," said Marvel Editor-in-Chief Axel Alonso. "And when you see the scope of the event, you see what we're doing, what we're willing to do, this is a place where we're going to be bringing new pieces onto the board and taking old pieces off. You guys will be yelling and screaming, you'll be loving, hating, and in equal measure." Reboot history Rival DC Comics has always been quick to have stories designed to streamline their history, with the "Crisis on Infinite Earths" being the most famous one — a story that destroyed the DC Comics universe of the time, birthing a new timeline that gave us the versions of DC's heroes we know today. Several minor and major reboots followed, with the biggest since then being 2011's New 52 (and a tease of another one with this April's "Convergence"). Meanwhile, Marvel still refers back to stories from their early days, beginning with the first issue of "Marvel Comics" in 1939, and more so since the launch of "Fantastic Four" and the interlinked Marvel Universe in the 1960s, led by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby. Marvel previously launched a line of comics meant to offer a fresh vision of the Marvel characters called Ultimate Comics, but now the worlds of those characters and the traditional Marvel universe are getting combined thanks to "Secret Wars." "The Ultimate Universe, the Marvel Universe, they're going to smash together," said Alonso. "This is the Marvel Universe moving forward." "We've never done anything like this, ever," said Marvel senior vice president and executive editor Tom Brevoort. "And what we're going to do to top it, I don't know. Hopefully that will be somebody else's problem." The stories leading to "Secret Wars," and what is Battleworld? The story that's been built up so far has to do with different universes colliding into each other — and in the first issue of "Secret Wars," the Marvel and Ultimate Earths collide, with the heroes of those worlds unable to stop it. What's left behind is what Marvel is calling "Battleworld," a patchwork planet with different parts of it inhabited by the characters from different famous Marvel crossovers of the past (you can see some of those past titles in the slideshow above). Marvel released this video to help you visualize what exactly Battleworld is: Battleworld video See a map of Battleworld here, showing the different worlds made up of old storylines to be explored in "Secret Wars" (and click to enlarge): Brevoort described Battleworld as "The little melting pot in which the new Marvel Universe will be created" after the Marvel and Ultimate versions of Earth are destroyed. He said that Battleworld is what Marvel is going to be "during, through and after" the beginning of "Secret Wars." "Once you hit 'Secret Wars' 1, there is no Marvel Universe. There is no Ultimate Universe. All there is is Battleworld, and a whole lot of empty void," Brevoort said. "Every single piece of this world is a building block for the Marvel Universe moving forward," Alonso said. "None of these stories are Elseworlds, or What Ifs, or alternative reality stories. They aren't set in the past or the future. They're not set in an alternate reality. They're set in the reality of the Marvel Universe." It's also a story that uses an old name — the original "Secret Wars" involved an alien taking heroes from Earth and forcing them into battle for the fate of the universe. It remains unclear if the villain from that crossover will play a role here. Why is Marvel rebooting? Observers were quick to speculate on some of the behind-the-scenes reasons for the change. Combining the Ultimate Universe with the traditional Marvel Universe would let them incorporate the half-black, half-Latino Spider-Man from the Ultimate line that grabbed headlines a few years ago. It would let them do something different with characters like the X-Men and the Fantastic Four, who have been a flashpoint for controversy due to Fox retaining rights in perpetuity to any films based on those characters. It also opens the door to a longtime comic book trope: Bringing back to life the dead. "If we were to want to resurrect Gwen Stacy, this would be the place to do it, wouldn't it?" Alonso said. What do creators and fans think about "Secret Wars"? Speaking of the death of Gwen Stacy, the writer who pulled the trigger on killing her, Gerry Conway, tells Newsarama that he's on board. "I think like with any idea, the execution will matter more than the idea itself. The idea of a reset is, by itself, not a bad idea," Conway said. One who's less on board with it: longtime Spider-Man artist John Romita. "My guess is new fans will be okay with it, and old fans will grumble," Romita told Newsarama. "I’m not a businessman, but I do know that comic companies, for almost 100 years now, do whatever they can for shock value. They grab attention. Personally, I hate all the goofy things they do. When I was there, I used to fight stuff like this. But you can’t stop them." Current Marvel writers have been sworn to secrecy about what happens once "Secret Wars" is done: Dan Slott tweet The lack of certainty about what this all means has led fans to wildly speculate, as well as poke fun at what might happen: Fan tweet 1 Fan tweet 2 It's a story that's been years in the making. "Every single time we've done an event, we've always had to be mindful of 'Secret Wars,' and we've had to make decisions based on the fact that we knew that 'Secret Wars' was headed our way," Alonso said. Brevoort said that Hickman proposed a version of "Secret Wars" years ago, but that vision has since become significantly larger. "It sounds like typical Stan lee hyperbole — and there's nothing wrong with typical Stan Lee hyperbole — but it is difficult to imagine something that would be larger in scope, in scale, than what we are doing with 'Secret Wars,'" Brevoort said. That father of the modern Marvel comics world, Stan Lee, tells Newsarama that the reboot is "probably good." "Anything they do that’s unexpected and different usually captures the attention of the fans," Lee said. "It sounds intriguing to me." Lee also tells Newsarama that if he were to do it all again, he'd do it basically the same, describing what he did as "the right way to go, and maybe sometimes, even the perfect way to go." "I liked making the Fantastic Four superheroes without a secret identity. I liked the tragedy of Spider-Man’s origin, the ‘with great power, there must also come great responsibility.’ I thought it was the right way of doing things at the time. And I still like what I’ve done," Lee said. "I can’t think, off the top of my head, of anything I’d really want to change." What does "Secret Wars" mean for fans? More details are promised in the weeks to come, with a free preview issue being released on Free Comic Book Day, May 2. While fans wait, they may want to heed the wait-and-see approach advocated by Conway and famed "Thor" artist Walt Simonson. "Maybe this is coming back out of my old geology days, but I try not to have instant reactions to things and say, ‘Oh my God! That’s terrible!’" Simonson told Newsarama. "My basic reaction is usually ‘let’s see the evidence in the field.’ Let’s come back in a year and see what we’ve got. That will tell the story.” And for those who say that Marvel is ruining their childhood by messing with the history of their favorite characters, Conway tells Newsarama: "I would say to them, no, your childhood is still your childhood. There’s a point to be made, and it’s a universal one: We have to see that there’s a difference between what people do today, and what they did yesterday. Yesterday still exists, those stories still exist. Now someone else is getting a chance at a new childhood. And that’s nice." Watch the full "Secret Wars" live press conference below: Secret Wars press conference video This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
ot Oscars 2015: Printable Oscar ballots and bingo cards By www.scpr.org Published On :: Sat, 21 Feb 2015 16:53:10 -0800 Announcement cards and envelopes by designer Marc Friedland which are used by presenters at the Oscars to announce winners are on display at the food and decor preview Feb. 4, 2015 of this years Governors Ball, the post-Oscar celebration which follows the 87th Oscars ceremony on Feb. 22 in Hollywood.; Credit: Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty Images Lisa Brenner and Mike RoeReady for your 2015 Oscars party? We've got printable Oscars ballots and the bingo cards you need to prove your superiority over your movie-loving friends during your Academy Awards viewing party. Here are the party printables you'll need to play along with Sunday's show, with TV coverage kicking off at 4 p.m. Pacific. (Get caught up on KPCC's 2015 Oscars coverage right here to have more fun and help make your picks!) Printable official Oscars ballot Download, print, and play at home. Listen to "The Frame's" preview of the Academy Awards, see what "FilmWeek's" critics have to say about who will win, then make your own decisions on Sunday. Our crystal ball Oscars predictor/awards tracker can also help the prognostication efforts with a rundown of nominee buzz, awards already won, official trailers, photos and more. You can also play along with friends online on the official Academy Awards site or with the New York Times. (If you want to see KPCC's Mike Roe's picks and play against him in either online game, go here for the official site and here for the New York Times.) 2015 Oscars ballot Printable Oscars bingo cards Download, print and play at home. Use our custom generator to create as many cards as you need for your party. How to play: Mark off each block when you hear these words or see these things happen during the Oscars telecast on Sunday. When you get five blocks in a row (horizontally, vertically, or diagonally) stand up and shout "OSCAR!!" Alternate rules: Play as a drinking game and for every block, take a sip. Finished a row? Finish your scotch. Interactive Oscars bingo cards WNYC pays tribute to the annual exercise in entertainment award show parody with a portable, computerized bingo. Play on your phone, iPad, computer or print a card. Refresh for new combinations. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
ot 4 ways to follow the Dodgers other than on cable TV By www.scpr.org Published On :: Tue, 27 Mar 2018 13:04:00 -0700 File: A general view during player introductions before game one of the National League Division Series between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the New York Mets at Dodger Stadium on Oct. 9, 2015 in Los Angeles.; Credit: Stephen Dunn/Getty Images Mike RoeDo you want to track the Dodgers as the new season gets underway, but either don't have cable or are at work during the game? Maybe you want to keep an eye on the boys in blue but have an office job that gives you checks in black and white, and you want to keep your bleeding red for your favorite team from sending your bank account into the red as well. Or maybe you just aren’t going to have access to a TV at the time. Here are four ways to check the Dodgers out this season. 1. Track what’s happening with MLB.com’s free Gameday service Want to see what’s going on as if the Dodgers game was a video game? You have to pay if you want to watch video (with alternate angles!) or listen to audio with Major League Baseball's MLB.tv service — but you can watch virtual avatars simulating the game with MLB Gameday for free. Just visit MLB.com/scores, then click on the Gameday button beneath the game you want to follow. Or, you can keep it more old school by tracking scores on the scores page — alongside video highlights. 2. Follow what’s going on on Twitter Want to keep an eye on things but don’t want to stare at a streaming video feed? You can follow what’s happening with Twitter. The Dodgers themselves tweet highlights and results at @Dodgers, plus you can do a search for “Dodgers” or track what’s happening on various popular hashtags, including #Dodgers, #ThinkBlue and #ITFDB (It’s Time For Dodgers Baseball). 3. Listen to the radio, over the air or online The official Dodgers radio broadcaster in L.A. is AM 570 L.A. Sports. As noted above, you can also pay to listen to audio from MLB.tv — but the service isn't available for local, "in-market" games, which are blacked out as part of their contracts with local broadcasters. The Dodgers broadcasts are also available in Spanish on 1020 AM KTNQ. 4. Stream ESPN on your computer, phone or tablet ESPN lets you watch the opening day game and others throughout the season online... well, some of you, at least. Due to various cable company deals and other red tape, you have to already be a cable subscriber — sorry, cord cutters — but most major cable company subscribers can log in and stream the Dodgers online, or using ESPN's mobile apps available on iOS and Android. That also means you can find a friend who has cable, and team up with them to watch online — or just hang out at their place for the foreseeable future. Many other Dodgers games throughout the season will be on SportsNet L.A., but you have to subscribe to Charter Spectrum, Time Warner, or Bright House in the L.A. area to get this channel. However, five of the games this season will be shown on KTLA, expanding your options for potentially checking the Dodgers out. You can find out more in the SportsNet L.A. FAQ. How are you tracking the Dodgers? Let us know in the comments or by tweeting us at @KPCC. This story has been updated; it was originally published in 2013. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
ot How airlines at LAX handled the airport shooting last week By www.scpr.org Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2013 12:47:33 -0800 Business Update with Mark LacterPolice say TSA agent Gerardo Hernandez was shot and killed last Friday at the base of the escalators of LAX Terminal 3, and not at the checkpoint gates. Paul Ciancia is accused of killing Hernandez and wounding several others. Ciancia remains hospitalized in critical condition. Steve Julian: Business analyst Mark Lacter, how did the airlines respond to shooting and its aftermath? Mark Lacter: Generally pretty well, Steve, considering that the airport was effectively closed for several hours on Friday, and most of Terminal 3 was out of commission until Saturday afternoon. You know, there's always this precarious balance in operating airlines and airports, even in the best of circumstances. Just so many flights coming in and going out, and so many thousands people using the facility at any given time - and it really doesn't take much to upset the balance. So, when you have something horrific take place and you see all those travelers stranded outside the terminals, the ripple effects are enormous - not just at LAX but all over the country. Julian: More than a thousand flights were either canceled or delayed on Friday. Lacter: And, there was a further complication because the airlines flying out of Terminal 3 are not the legacy carriers like United, American, and Delta that have all kinds of resources, but smaller operations with less flexibility. It's not like there's an empty aircraft just sitting in a hangar waiting to take passengers wherever they want to go. Actually, the airlines have gotten better at arranging re-bookings when there's a snowstorm or some other emergency that gives them advance warning. But obviously, there was no advance warning last Friday, so the carriers needed to improvise in handling passengers whose flights were cancelled. Julian: What did they do? Lacter: One step was waiving the fees normally charged to re-book flights (and that's gotten to be a pretty penny). Another was waiving the difference in the price of the original ticket and the re-booked ticket. But, the policies varied according to the airline, and we heard about travelers not receiving hotel or food vouchers, or having to buy a brand new ticket on another airline if they wanted to avoid the wait - and that can be expensive. Which raises another issue: planes tend to be completely full these days because airlines have been cutting back on the number of flights. And that can be a problem if you're taking a route that doesn't have too many flights in the first place. So, it gets really complicated. Julian: Why do you think we haven't we heard more horror stories from passengers? Lacter: Well, look at the cities that the airlines in Terminal 3 fly to - New York, San Francisco, Seattle, Dallas. They're all served by several other carriers. L.A. to New York, in particular, is one of the busiest routes in the world, which means that it's also one of the most competitive. So, even if your flight was cancelled, there's a good chance you'd be able to find space by Saturday (which is normally a slower day for air travel). This is a big reason, in general, why people like LAX. Julian: Why don't other local airports handle more of the load? Lacter: You might remember a few years ago local officials were promoting something called "regionalization" - the idea was that as LAX maxed out on the number of passengers it was allowed to handle each year, then other airports would make up the difference - places like Ontario, Bob Hope in Burbank, and John Wayne in Orange County. Julian: Right, and they talked about easing traffic congestion by spreading around the flights. Lacter: Well, regionalization never happened because, first of all, passenger levels at L.A. International didn't come close to maxing out. But, more importantly, because the airlines decided that using LAX was more efficient for everything from handling baggage to arranging international connections. So, through the first nine months of the year, passenger traffic at LAX is up 4.2 percent from a year earlier, while at Ontario traffic was down 9.3 percent. And, we've seen that John Wayne, Bob Hope, and Long Beach are all struggling. Of course, the challenge at a busy place like LAX is making it as safe as possible, and that will no doubt become a priority in the weeks ahead. Mark Lacter writes for Los Angeles Magazine and pens the business blog at LA Observed.com. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
ot Starting later, but not sleeping in By www.scpr.org Published On :: Tue, 11 Sep 2012 15:49:03 -0700 Larry MantleWe started our new schedule for "AirTalk" this week. With the expansion of "Brand & Martinez" to two hours, we're now on from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Friday's Film Week on AirTalk moves into the noon hour. I’ve been asked many times in the past couple of days how I feel about the shift. My answer is that it’s working out great for our “AirTalk” team. We still get in at 8 each morning, but now have three hours to prepare our timeliest topics. It also puts us into the noon hour, where we have the chance to connect with folks heading to lunch. I know it’s not all good for some listeners, who might have a harder time listening an hour later. There are also, undoubtedly, fans of “The World” who would’ve rather had it stay at noon instead of moving to 2 p.m. I hope you’ll give us a chance in the new slot and that you find the new lineup still fits your schedule. If it doesn’t, remember that you can hear all of our local programs online, at the time of your choosing, at www.kpcc.org. As for the irreplaceable Patt Morrison, she’ll continue to provide her talents to KPCC listeners with regular features and interviews throughout our day. Though I know many fans of Patt are very sad to see her daily program end, I think Patt’s high-profile segments will be a terrific boost to all the other shows where they’ll be heard. This will make Patt a presence everywhere on our schedule, including “AirTalk,” which is pretty exciting.This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
ot The "amazing" list of banished words is "literally" "awesome" By www.scpr.org Published On :: Wed, 02 Jan 2013 16:06:57 -0800 Larry MantleWhen "Offramp" host John Rabe's father, Bill, created the list at Lake Superior State University in Michigan he likely didn't know it would thrive nearly 40 years later. As language evolves there should never be a shortage of words and phrases we want to "kick to the curb." This morning on "AirTalk," I asked listeners to pick the ones they "hate on." We got some good ones, including my overused "unpack," as in "let's unpack that idea." Falling into word patterns can happen so subtly that we don't even know it until someone points it out. My nomination for the list -- "it is what it is." What are yours?This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
ot What the "Up" series of documentaries tells us about stages of life By www.scpr.org Published On :: Fri, 18 Jan 2013 14:42:57 -0800 Director Michael Apted (L) with Larry Mantle in the AirTalk studio. Larry MantleThis past Wednesday on "AirTalk," film director Michael Apted came in to talk with us about his eighth documentary in the series that's followed the lives of 13 people, beginning in 1964 when the kids were seven. They've shared their stories with Apted every seven years, and he's clearly invested a lot of emotion into this project. "56 Up" is wonderful for how it shows the mid-life evolution of the participants. Apted includes scenes from earlier interviews, so that we see what aspects of today's 56-year-olds were present in childhood and what turns their lives have made over these years. "56 Up" is showing at the Nuart in West Los Angeles, and Apted will be doing Q-and-A at some of the screenings. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
ot Rooting for the 49ers taps into California's rivalries By www.scpr.org Published On :: Mon, 21 Jan 2013 16:25:57 -0800 Larry MantleAfter the San Francisco 49ers beat the Atlanta Falcons for the right to go to the Super Bowl, I tweeted my appreciation of a California team going to the game. If no local team is in the running (or exists), I'm always glad to root for a Bay Area team that makes it. My tweet got responses from some Southern Californians who have no interest in supporting a San Francisco team, especially given the Giants' World Series championship. It goes without saying that many Dodger fans are loathe to support the Giants, under any circumstances. Given the historic bad blood between the teams, that's no surprise, but I think it runs even deeper. The divide between Northern and Southern California is about more than sports, or even water rights. It's rooted in distinct cultural differences between the two. However, California has evolved to the point where the bigger cultural divide now might be between coastal and inland regions. Rural Northern Californians typically dislike San Francisco far more than Angelenos do. Similarly, inland Southern California residents often see Los Angeles as the prohibitively expensive home of two-hour traffic jams. Until the Inland Empire or the San Joaquin Valley get major league teams, we won't see that rivalry playing out at a stadium near you. In the meantime, I'm cheering on the Niners, and my state, on February 3rd.This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
ot 13 REASONS WHY NOT By www.scpr.org Published On :: Mon, 22 May 2017 00:00:00 -0700 The Loh Life Life is already hard enough, but with teen daughters— of which I have two, ages 15 and 16 -- well, let's just say that, what with everything going on these days, my mind is a bit addled. And my latest TV obsession isn't exactly helping. "I have such a sense of dystopia," I complained to my friend Carol. She replied: "Maybe you should stop binge-watching The Handmaid's Tale! It's true. I've watched so many hours of The Handmaid's Tale, I've started to involuntarily greet people with, "Blessed be the day," "Blessed be!" If that's not familiar to you, you're probably not aware that in the oppressive futuristic society depicted here—? Fertile young women are farmed out to "commanders" and forced to have sex with them between their wives' legs, in order to birth mutant babies. . . I'm old enough to remember "Happy Days." Do you remember the sitcom "Happy Days"? What was it about? Days. . . that were Happy! Teens hanging around the jukebox! With poodle skirts! The Fonz! Having shenanigans! So I resolve to turn off the news— Except for the headlines that actually leap out of the radio— And maul you, like a wolverine— Ever seen that? Anyway— I also take a break from The Handmaid's Tale— I turn instead to the comedy Grace and Frankie, with Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin! I embrace their comforting presences like the stylish pashmina throw either might wear— If The Cheese Nun was still on? I would binge-watch that! Very reassuring. The Cheese and the Nun. But then I start getting emails -- the Concerned Parent E-Blasts I don't recall ever signing up for, a la—? "Does your teen get enough sleep?" No. "Is your teen ready for the SAT?" No. "Does your teen eat too much sugar and waste a lot of time?" Yes. Apparently that's abnormal behavior and there's medication for that. Good to know! Well— The truly alarming news is that— Often unbeknownst to their parents— All of our teens are secretly watching this new TV series called "13 Reasons Why." As in, 13 reasons why this teenage girl commits suicide. She leaves behind the reasons in a box of tapes. One reason is rape. Shown on screen. It's a long way from Happy Days. As a responsible parent, I need to talk to my daughters. . . about this show. Next week: A Visit with Dr. Mom. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
ot 13 REASONS WHY NOT By www.scpr.org Published On :: Mon, 29 May 2017 00:00:00 -0700 The Loh Life Life is stressful enough. And now—? I've been getting all these alarming missives from parenting organizations about the Netflix series "13 Reasons Why." As in, 13 reasons why this teenaged girl commits suicide— Which is depicted on screen, as is a rape! Yikes! Apparently all teens are secretly streaming it, so we parents need to open up the conversation. But then I'm thinking: What if my two teen daughters are the only teens not watching it? And then my raising the topic would be—what do you call it? A trigger? It's so confusing these days! College campuses are full of "safe spaces"— But middle schoolers can stream suicide shows! And my younger daughter? She's already fluttery, like a leaf. Sample text—and I can't convey how terrifying these words look on one's phone: "Mom. Mom. Mom. Please! I'm so scared. I don't know what to do! Help me!" Situation? She was in the bathroom at Starbucks and the toilet wouldn't flush. Fortunately Dr. Mom was right outside the door. So with this one, driving home from school, I just ask, with an odd vague heartiness: "So. . . What movies or TV shows are all the kids watching these days?" "All the kids?" she says. "What are you talking about? What kids?" "You kids!" I say. "You! You and your peeps!" "What?" she says. "Nothing." She goes on instead to describe her traumatic field trip. Instead of studying tide pools at a nice quiet museum, her class went to the actual beach! She slipped on a rock and all these kids from the Medical Magnet too-eagerly stormed her with gauze and bandages! Okay. I'll let that fragile kid be. Now it's on to my older, more sophisticated daughter. The one with the nose ring—at least it's fake. I ask her bluntly: "So, what's the deal with this '13 Reasons Why' show?" She groans. "I already read the book back in sixth grade." "In sixth grade?" I exclaim. Apparently at her old middle school, everyone was reading books about teen suicide— Which appears to have been an actual cottage industry, possibly it's own Young Adult genre. Sheesh! What happened to Nancy Drew? She says she did watch the show but stopped during the rape scene, which was a bit much. In fact, now, on social media, the show's premise had surfaced as a joke meme. As in, "I asked to borrow a pencil. You said you didn't have one." Ominous pause. "It's one of the 13 Reasons Why." Ba-dum-bum. In the end, Dr. Mom felt a bit out of her league. I guess I'll just have to trust that the teens are going to be fine. And to be on hand to flush the toilet.} This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
ot Wil Wheaton and other Star Trek alumni perform in 'War of the Worlds' benefit By www.scpr.org Published On :: Wed, 14 Jan 2015 05:30:14 -0800 John RabeThere are still a couple dozen tickets left for one of the most interestingly-cast performances of H.G. Wells, Orson Welles and Howard Koch's "War of the Worlds." On Saturday, Jan. 17, generations of Star Trek actors will take on the world's most famous radio show. The cast — directed by Jim Fall — features: René Auberjonois (“Star Trek: Deep Space Nine”), Michael Dorn (“Star Trek: TNG”), Dean Haglund (“The X-Files”), Walter Koenig ("Star Trek"), Linda Park ("Star Trek: Enterprise"), Jason Ritter (“The Event”), Tim Russ (“Star Trek: Voyager”), Armin Shimerman (“Star Trek: Deep Space Nine”) and Wil Wheaton, playing... Orson Welles. The performance is a fundraiser for Sci-Fest LA, the new annual science fiction play festival, so tickets aren't cheap — but they're scarce, and this looks like a memorable night. KPCC and "Off-Ramp" celebrated the 75th anniversary of the broadcast last year by distributing the original 1938 performance, and a new documentary, internationally... introduced by George Takei, another original Trek actor you might have heard of. War of the Worlds: Sat., Jan. 17, 8 PM; The Acme Theatre, 135 North La Brea Ave. LA CA 90036 This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
ot The Huntington unveils big changes, but not too big By www.scpr.org Published On :: Wed, 21 Jan 2015 08:17:07 -0800 New entrance at The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens. ; Credit: Tim Street-Porter/The Huntington Marc HaefeleFor years, I’d feared the worst. Behind that intrusive belt of chain link and green canvas fence, with all the hidden noise of power digging machines, smashing jackhammers and growling tractors going on behind it, and heaps of dirt piled high, I dreaded that something terrible was going on in the dark, hidden heart of our dear old Huntington. We were promised a new visitor center, a new store, a new cafe and restaurant. I imagined the Disney-fied worst: Henry Huntington’s Roller Coaster Red Car Ride; Pinky’s Pinkberry Parlor. The Blue Boy Fashion Center. Maybe even a giant Rem Koolhaas-LACMA style amoeba of purple reinforced concrete sprawling all over the lawns between the library and the old gallery. My fears were groundless. The $68 million (not much more than the Getty paid for its new Manet) 52,000 square foot Education and Visitor Center addition is in perfect harmony with the early 20th Century original library and art gallery, perhaps more so than some previous increments, such as the nearby and blankly imposing Munger Research Center. The addition is named after outgoing Huntington chief Steven S. Koblik, who engineered much of the funding and planning for the facility. He’s got something to be proud of in his retirement: a new garden-centered segment of new facilities that founder, pioneer transit tycoon Henry Huntington, would probably have enthused over. (The Huntington Store at The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens. Photo: Tim Porter-Street/The Huntington) With its mighty $400 million endowment and the muscular fundraising power that enticed squillionaire Charlie Munger to donate hugely to this project (not to mention that research center), the venerable Huntington institution could have easily erected something expensively and grandiloquently modern. But its directorate and patrons seem to understand an important fact about the place: Most visitors don’t go there to be dazzled. We go there to be enthralled, even comforted by the century-old institution’s enduring and deeply reassuring ambiance that we are privileged to inhabit during our visits to its galleries of great art, its acreage of exquisite gardens and Arcadian vistas. The Huntington possesses what designer Sheryl Barton, who co-created the new landscaping with the Huntington’s Jim Folsom, spoke of at the opening press conference as “the choreography of experience.” That experience includes the new California-Mediterranean groves and gardens and the low-lying new structure that includes an expanded store, new classrooms, courts, cafes and an auditorium. With its simple, Tuscan-columned loggias and red-tiled roofs (and, oh, yes, even that showy glass dome on the Rose Hills Foundation Garden Court), it all effortlessly blends into the traditional whole. Although the Huntington doesn’t seem to be planning on a new influx of visitors, it’s hard to see this new, more user-friendly front office isn’t going to attract more people to its San Marino location than the current 600,000 per year. Particularly considering how regional museum attendance in general has boomed over recent decades. Will this abate the quiet private experience many of us Huntington fans have shared and treasured over the years? (The Huntington will be installing this Alexander Calder sculpture, the Jerusalem Stabile, this spring. Here, it's seen at the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam. Calder Foundation; gift of the Philip & Muriel Berman Foundation to the Calder Foundation. Copyright © 2015 Calder Foundation /Artists Rights Society (ARS) Used with permission of The Huntington) Probably. But there will also be important new things to see — like Alexander Calder’s 12-by-20-foot Jerusalem Stabile, which beckons you into the new addition, and two powerful, newly acquired murals by the great 20th Century California artists Millard Sheets and Doyle Lane. Plus a new and glorious vista from the cafe’s terrace over to the original old Huntington villa — now gallery — where all this began, over a century ago. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
ot Famed Hmong Singer Dies In Fresno Shooting By www.scpr.org Published On :: Fri, 13 Dec 2019 01:23:00 -0800 Screengrab from video on XY Lee's YouTube channel.; Credit: via YouTube Josie HuangFans of Hmong YouTuber Xy Lee are in mourning today. The singer, who has ties to Long Beach, was among four killed in a Sunday night shooting in Fresno. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
ot Westminster Voters To Decide Whether To Recall Three Top Officials By www.scpr.org Published On :: Tue, 31 Dec 2019 00:41:00 -0800 The Asian Garden Mall in Westminster, where voters will make a choice about whether to recall city leaders.; Credit: Dorian Merina/KPCC Josie HuangVoters in Westminster will decide this spring whether to recall its mayor and two city councilmembers. The Orange County Registrar of Voters has signed off on petitions for a recall election. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
ot Iranian General's Killing Stirs Strong Emotions In L.A.'s Iranian Community By www.scpr.org Published On :: Fri, 03 Jan 2020 00:11:00 -0800 Albert Rad, a mobile phone wholesaler who fled religious persecution in Iran decades ago, said that he fully backs President Trump's decision to assassinate Iran's top military commander. ; Credit: Josie Huang/LAist Josie HuangLos Angeles is home to the largest Iranian population outside of Iran. The killing of top Iranian commander Qassem Suleimani is generating some strong emotions here. KPPC’s Josie Huang reports from Persian Square in Westwood. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
ot Homeless Advocates Protest Echo Park Cleanup By www.scpr.org Published On :: Tue, 18 Feb 2020 16:50:12 -0800 Homeless advocates erected a line of tents outside the Echo Park office of City Councilman Mitchell O'Farrell Feb. 12, 2020 to pressure him into meeting with them.; Credit: FILE PHOTO Sharon McNaryMembers of several groups of homeless advocates from across Los Angeles converged on a homeless encampment at the north end of Echo Park Lake on Feb. 12 to protest the routine weekly litter collection. A cleanup crew assisted by park rangers and city police officers did a once-through the campsite for miscellaneous trash, followed closely by a chanting and critical crowd of protesters. The homeless advocates had erected extra tents that morning in protest of what they consider invasive cleanups. They also were trying to get City Councilman Mitchell O'Farrell to agree to meet with them as a group, same as he has met with other local organizations of homeowners and residents. O'Farrell's spokesman Tony Aranga had insisted staffers were willing to meet with individuals to address their housing and other support needs. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
ot Randy Newman Wrote A Quarantine Song For Us: 'Stay Away From Me' By laist.com Published On :: Wed, 08 Apr 2020 12:00:00 -0700 ; Credit: Courtesy Randy Newman LAist"Stay away from me / Baby, keep your distance, please / Stay away from me / Words of love in times like these" Listen to the whole song here.Read the full article at LAist Full Article
ot Patt's Hats: Raid your grandmother's closet! By www.scpr.org Published On :: Mon, 13 May 2013 14:58:48 -0700 ; Credit: Michelle Lanz/KPCC Patt MorrisonFrom brights the other day to mutes today. You could call this color palette "blush and sand," which sounds like the title of a romance novel with a Valentino lookalike on the cover! This is exactly the kind of sweater I used to tease my grandmother about wearing, the elaborately beaded 1950s cardigans that you saw on everyone from Babe Paley to Lucille Ball to … your grandmother. Of course, now I wish I had more of them! The best are the silk-lined cashmere or merino wool ones made in what was, for more than 150 years, the British Crown Colony of Hong Kong. The work of Hong Kong tailors is legendary, and now all the 1950s and early 1960s pieces are enjoying a tremendous vogue. In this case the colors – bronze, blush and sand – are hushed, which lets the beading look more pronounced. The sleeveless top is a silk jersey criss-crossed with stitched bands of darker silk chiffon. King’s X? And then the skirt is bias-cut chiffon in very quiet hues. If designers gave quirky names to prints the way cosmetics makers do to lipstick and cheek color, we could call this one, "Shhh! This is a library!’" So I’m glad that the shoes get paroled to holler. The nude patent color is ladylike, not loud, which is why I’m surprised but gratified that it’s hung around for a couple of seasons now. It’s a very versatile hue, even if it’s not making it as Pantone's color of the year. No, the troublemaker part of this ensemble is the jeweled heels. Paul Simon sang of diamonds on the soles of one’s shoes; these are big dazzling rhinestones on the heels of mine. They gleam, they coruscate, they twinkle, they flash – amid all these well-behaved quiet colors, they send out a wink and a message that "I’m really a lively girl at heart, and at my feet." This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
ot Home Depot says malware affected 56M payment cards By www.scpr.org Published On :: Thu, 18 Sep 2014 13:58:28 -0700 File photo: Customers enter a Home Depot store on May 21, 2013 in El Cerrito, Calif.; Credit: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images The Home Depot says it has eliminated malware from its U.S. and Canadian networks that affected 56 million unique payment cards between April and September. The Atlanta-based home improvement retailer said Thursday it has also completed a "major" payment security project that provides enhanced encryption of customers' payment data in the company's U.S. stores. Home Depot also is confirming its sales-growth estimates for the fiscal year and expects to earn $4.54 per share in fiscal 2014, up 2 cents from its prior guidance. Full Article
ot Warner Brothers job cuts determined by financial target By www.scpr.org Published On :: Thu, 18 Sep 2014 17:19:39 -0700 We reported last week that layoffs were coming soon to Warner Brothers, but how many positions will be cut is still unknown. A spokesman for Warner Brothers Entertainment, Paul McGuire, told KPCC there's no exact number yet. "There is no headcount reduction target, but there is a substantial financial target," Maguire said. “This is a budget issue, not a head count issue,” Dee Dee Myers, Warner Brothers Vice President of Corporation Communications told Variety. The trade publication reports that Warner Brothers is expected to eliminate as many as 1,000 positions worldwide - or about 10 percent of its workforce: Senior managers are currently assessing their businesses to come up with ways to trim overhead. Only at the end of that process will an exact reduction figure be known. It could be somewhat lower than the current numbers being speculated, but cuts are expected to be substantial. News of coming layoffs became public two weeks ago, when KPCC and other media outlets obtained an internal memo written by Warner Bros. Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Kevin Tsujihara. "It pains me to say this, positions will be eliminated—at every level—across the Studio," Tsujihara wrote in the memo. Morningstar Analyst Neil Macker told KPCC that management at Warner Brothers is trying to protect the company from another takeover play by Rupert Murdoch. In July, Murdoch offered to buy parent company Time Warner for $80 billion. He withdrew the offer in August. Full Article
ot Indonesia's Indosat, GoTo launch local language AI model By cio.economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 14:09:31 +0530 Sahabat-AI would enable Indonesians to build artificial intelligence-based services and applications in Bahasa Indonesia and various other local languages, with the understanding of local context, the companies said in a joint statement. Full Article
ot Pirate’s Booty Carrot Snacks By www.snackandbakery.com Published On :: Tue, 10 Mar 2015 14:00:00 -0400 Pirate’s Booty Carrot Snacks are the newest non-GMO product from Pirate’s Booty. Full Article
ot Little Bites Snacks debuts LTO Hot Cocoa muffins By www.snackandbakery.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 16:20:00 -0500 The muffins are reportedly infused with flavors of rich cocoa and sweet mini marshmallows. Full Article