Tag Archives: NPR

Sunday Scraps 78

1. FRISK: A 17-year-old in New York City secretly recorded two cops harassing him for his race and appearance and threatening to beat him, all part of the legal policy known as “Stop and Frisk” (The Atlantic).

2. WEIGHT: Roxane Gay writes for the Wall Street Journal on how, despite the recent rash of plus-sized women on  screen, their weight is still the punch line to a joke instead of just one feature of many.

3. KISS: You know that famous VJ Day kiss photo? Turns out that the story isn’t quite what we thought it was, and a whole lot less romantic (Mother Jones).

4. INTERWEBZ: Reddit’s #1 creeper (creator of such subreddits as “jailbait” and “creeshots”) was recently outed by Gawker. Given the guy has made his name posting other people’s photos and claiming “if they didn’t want us to see it, they wouldn’t have put it on Facebook,” it seems ironic that he’s so pissed about being exposed. Dude, if you didn’t want people to know you’re a creeper, don’t be a creeper.

5. GIRLS: This week’s International Day of the Girl had the likes of Melinda Gates, Christiane Amanpour and Oprah offering advice to their 15-year-old selves.

6. INIGO: Homeland standout Mandy Patinkin was interviewed by NPR about the 25th anniversary of The Princess Bride. He said, “My name is Inigo Montoya, you killed…”

Related Post: Sunday 77 – the worst bride ever, Urban Cusp, replacement refs

Related Post: Sunday 76 – Zadie Smith, xkcd founder, Vice 

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Filed under Body Image, Hollywood, Media, Politics, Really Good Writing by Other People

Sunday Scraps 70

1. LOUIE: My fictional love affair with Louis CK continues with this AV Club interview about his fan-friendly ticketing system, comedy innovation, etc.

2. GENDER: Another good, complex piece from the NYT about how parents react to young children who want to experiment with gender expression.

3. BOOKS: Top 100 teen books from NPR. I’ve read 39, you?

4. FOOD: Post-Chick-fil-A, the LA Times has mapped the political inclinations of chain restaurants and stores. Shockingly, Whole Foods patrons will be voting Obama.

5. OLYMPICS: Behind the scenes of the Olympics Village’s party scene, with more detail than just a condom count (ESPN).

6. PATRIOTISM: 30% of the U.S. women have medaled this Olympics, 15% of the men. If the U.S. women were their own country, they’d have the fifth most medals (Mother Jones).

Related Post: Sunday 69 – books and bikinis, diving faces, gun culture with Kiese Laymon.

Related Post: Sunday 68 – Being in your 20s, the POV of a condom, Jason Alexander.

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Filed under Books, Food, Gender, Hollywood, Media, Politics, Really Good Writing by Other People, Sports

Sunday Scraps 67

1. TELEVISION: Someone took the time to make a Lego-animated recap of The Wire. It’s disconcertinly accurate, down to McNulty’s boozing and Lester’s dollhouses (via The Atlantic Wire).

2. NAMES: File this under things “Things I Worry About A Lot.” NPR investigates what happens when hyphen-girl meets hyphen boy and they try to name their offspring.

3. CRIME: Great, complex New York Times Magazine essay on the fate of Greg Ousley, who killed his parents at age fourteen, was tried as an adult, and is now a “model” prisoner.

4. BOOKS: Do you like books? Do you like the history of books? How about the history of the deckle edge (that rough, uneven way that some printers style book pages)? Then this piece from The Millions is for you.

5. BEAUTY: Just a little reminder that we could all be supermodels if we had the resources, and cheekbones. Or, at bare minimum, supermodels are really just very tall normal people when you take off the make-up.

6. TECH: TimesCast interviews Caterina Fake, co-founder of Flickr, about her new project, Pinwheel.

Related Post: Sunday 66: Library propaganda, Nancy Pelosi, dying languages, etc.

Related Post: Sunday 65: Nicki Minaj, Margaret Atwood on Twitter, lady scientists.

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Sunday Scraps 66

1. WORK: Great Chicago Reader essay on how the phrase “work hard, play hard” sometimes means the opposite, and how 35, single, and broke might not be the worst thing.

2. BOOKS: Troy, Michigan employed a creative campaign in reverse psychology to save their local library.

3. LGBTQ: William McGowan at Slate profiles an extortion ring that targeted closeted gay men in the 1960s.

4. CUTE: NPR reporter “interviews” his 5-year-old about why she cut her 3-year-old sister’s hair.

5. LANGUAGE: National Geographic has a slideshow of speakers of dying languages. Fun fact, a language dies every fourteen days.

6. WORDS: Think you read a lot? Think again. Nancy Pelosi is interviewed on her reading habits by the Atlantic Wire.

Related Post: Saturday 65: Nicki Minaj on double standards, Margaret Atwood on Twitter, lady scientists

Related Post: Sunday 64: Word games, comic strips, Genevieve Bell

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Filed under Advertising, Books, Chicago, Media, Politics, Really Good Writing by Other People

Sunday Scraps 46

1. DISNEY: The most epic Disney a capella medley ever. Costume changes included. Prepare yourself, it’s seven minutes long.

2. TAPE: Artist Max Zorn uses only brown packing tape and a scalpel to make these images.

3. TECH: Geek out with me over this sweet graph tracking browser usage. Watch the life and death of AOL, the rise of Mozilla, and ridiculous longevity of Internet Explorer.

4. SAVAGE: Dan Savage + Ira Glass. Done and done.

5. WHALES: Salon has a fascinating look at the history and veracity of the man-in-whale folklore. Is it possible to come out the other side, as so many myths would suggest?

6. CHOICE: Really excellent essay about why pro-life advocate John Saveland supports Planned Parenthood. Imagine how much further this conversation could go if everyone employed such rationality and logic!

Related Post: Sunday 45: Peggy Orenstin, Tim Gunn, and Loving family photos.

Related Post: Sunday 44: Tween feminists, booty call rules, Margaret Cho

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Filed under Art, Politics, Really Good Writing by Other People, Sex

Sunday Scraps 40

1. NPR: The voices of NPR as artist Gaelen Kelly assumes they look. Not too far off, eh?

2. PHOTO: Buzzfeed has a collection of the most powerful photos from the year.

3. BELLY: From xojane comes the Real Belly Project. Dozens of pictures of real women’s actual tummies. Some are flat, some are not. Some are smooth, some are not.

4. DANCE: Skip to 1:10 to watch the most bad-ass pole-dancing video you’ve ever seen. Safe for work, unless the fact that “pole dancing” is in the title is a problem in your office.

5. WWII: Life Magazine‘s archive of photos of women during WWII, like these ladies putting out a fire at Pearl Harbor.

6. DAUGHTERS: Louis CK writes for Fast Company about why he’s glad to have daughters, and how he thinks the next Steve Jobs will most definitely be a chick.

Related Post: Last Sunday, Siri caused a fit, the Republican candidates rose and fell, and look, it’s an upside down Christmas tree!

Related Post: Two Sundays ago, everything got pepper-sprayed, Time Magazine showed us why Americans suck, and Emily Nussbaum explained the problem with Whitney.

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Filed under Art, Body Image, Gender, Hollywood, Media

Sunday Scraps 34

1. TOLLBOOTH: Fun NPR story from Norton Juster, about the accidental way his first novel, The Phantom Tollbooth, became a masterpiece still beloved 50 years later.

2. HALLOWEEN: Great WBEZ piece from Claire Zulkey imagining the internal monologues of Halloween costume models.

3. BEAUTY: 2 minute trailer for Miss Representation, the documentary about media representations of women. The sequence of images of political women and the ridiculous accompanying commentary is pretty impactful.

4. EURO: Absolutely awesome infographic from the New York Times about the Euro crisis. Now I kind of sort of feel like I understand what’s going on. Maybe.

5. BELUGA: I was afraid of this video of the Shedd Aquarium’s beluga whale giving birth, but it is remarkably awesome and not at all scary. Plus, they set it to music.

6. RACE: Really interesting graphs about explicit and and implicit racial assumptions in Hollywood casting calls. Ok, fine, I guess Harry Potter has to be white, but why can’t more people follow Shonda Rimes’ lead?

Related Post: Sunday 33

Related Post: Sunday 32

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Filed under Body Image, Books, Chicago, Gender, Hollywood, Media, Politics

Sunday Scraps 24

1. CHICAGO: @Astro_Ron has been tweeting pictures from outer space. This is Chicago.

2. JOB PROSPECTS: For Lack of a Better Comic tackles the predicament of an English major in this job market.

3. DOMINATRIX: It’s fun to hear Terry Gross say dirty words. Also, this NPR interview with former dominatrix, current college professor Melissa Febos is super interesting.

4. PRETTY BOY: Autostraddle has a piece about the rise of gender bending model superstar Andrej Pejic. He’s got the Bardot look, minus the boobs.

5. RAPE JOKES: As if I needed another reason not to see Horrible Bosses, Feministing itemizes the ridiculous quantity of rape jokes. Male rape and sexual harrassment are hilaaaarious.

6. WRITE: Fun times… plug in a sample of your writing to I Write Like and it’ll tell you who you’re copying. Apparently, I write like Cory Doctorow.

Related Post: Last Sunday

Related Post: Two Sundays Ago

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Filed under Art, Chicago, Gender, Hollywood, Media, Sex

A GOOD SCHOOL FOR YOUNG FEMALEZ

First there was the school in Memphis with 90 pregnant students, then there was the inevitable celebrity commentary on all this pregnancy (thankyouverymuch Kim Kardashian). And then there was this story on Chicago’s WBEZ radio station about Simpson Academy for Young Women. Simpson is an alternative school for pregnant middle (!!) and high schoolers who are attempting to continue educating themselves despite the absence of support and assistance. CPS is operating on the fraying end of a shoe string, unable to help the kids on the straight and narrow, much less the ones who need extra attention. This is what makes the WBEZ story about Simpson so amazing.

Principal Joi Kidd Stamps: One of the things about Simpson is we absolutely understand that young mothers have different needs, different priorities from a regular, typical high school student. So we offer the colloquiums, which are every single week [covering topics like choosing child care and nutrition].

Soo Ji Min (Director of Illinois Caucus for Health) adds, “Just because a young person becomes a parent it should not negatively impact their educational outcomes” and says of Simpson, “It emphasizes the link between education and sexual health and how they impact each other.” Wait… are you saying that sexual health is an important part of educating teenagers if we want them to become productive contributing members of society? THAT’S CRAZY TALK.

Fourteen percent of babies born in Chicago are from teen moms (WBEZ). You can’t just hand condoms to 13-year-olds and expect that they will use them if/when they need it. Having it in your purse is one thing, convincing your boyfriend (often significantly older) to use it is a different set of skills entirely. If we have any hope of reducing teen pregnancy rates, sex education can’t be about mechanics , it absolutely has to be about communication, body confidence, self-respect and healthy decision-making.

While I was reading about Simpson, I found a message board where many students thanked their Simpson teachers, or talked about their lives and children as they stand now. And then there were messages like this:

I BELIEVE THAT SIMPSON IS A GOOD SCHOOL FOR YOUNG FEMALEZ.THEY CAN STILL GET THEIR ED. WHILE THEY IN SCHOOL. THEY WONT MISS OUT ON ANY CREDIS OR ANYTHING. MOST GIRLS DROP OUT WHEN THEY GET PREGNANT,INSTEAD OF DROPPING OUT  THEY CAN JUST GO TO SIMPSON. I REALLY… WANT TO GO TO SIMPAON MYSELF.BUT I THINK THAT ITS GOING TO BE TOO LATE.

Related Post: Sexual health advice from porn stars, courtesy of the AVN convention.

Related Post: Thoughts on Karen Owen (Duke Fuck List author), The Atlantic, and NY Mag’s Sex Diary of the Week.

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Filed under Body Image, Education, Politics, Sex