Thursday, March 31, 2011

Patt Morrison for Friday, April 1, 2011

PATT MORRISON SCHEDULE

Friday, April 1, 2011

1-3 p.m.

 

CALL-IN @ 866-893-5722, 866-893-KPCC; OR JOIN THE CONVERSATION ONLINE ON THE PATT MORRISON BLOG AT KPCC-DOT-ORG

 

 

1:06 – 1:19

Mr. Independence:  inside Obama’s quest to be energy independent

On Wednesday President Obama made a speech on the goal of energy independence, calling for a one-third cut in oil imports by 2025 to reduce U.S. reliance on foreign petroleum.  It would seem counterintuitive to ask for a decrease in foreign oil supplies at the very time that oil is pushing $110/barrel, driving up the prices of gasoline and all kinds of consumer goods.  But the president has a long view of energy production and argues that forced rationing of foreign oil will spur development of domestic energy sources, from natural gas to solar and wind power.  How realistic is the goal of reducing foreign oil and the dramatic ramping up of domestic energy production?  The president himself said “there are no easy fixes,” and of course every American president for the past 40 years has called upon Americans to conserve energy and seek alternatives to oil.  Can President Obama pull off the, up-until-now, impossible?

 

Guests:

Heather Zichal, Deputy Assistant to the President for Energy & Climate Change

SHE CALLS US:

 

 

1:21 – 1:39

New leadership, tough times and difficult choices at UTLA

It’s a tough time to be a teacher—sympathize or not with the plight of public school teachers, the perpetual threat of being laid off, the budget cuts, the increased class sizes and the pay scale being stuck at the mid-level make the teaching profession less than ideal.  So a change in leadership at UTLA, the 40,000-member-strong teachers union, coming at a time when shared sacrifice has become a necessity in the face of sustained budget cuts, is significant both for L.A.’s teachers and L.A.’s students.  Enter Warren Fletcher, the upset winner of UTLA’s presidency who cobbled together a coalition of teachers unhappy with the union’s direction, displaced school nurses and substitute nurses to defeat the hand-picked successor of outgoing president A.J. Duffy.  Fletcher promised to defend the rights of teachers while working with LAUSD on school reform.  The L.A. Times quotes Fletcher as saying, “"If when I say I'm going to focus on pay and benefits, you think that means UTLA would be opposed to education reform? That's a nonsensical statement. The fact that I like pizza doesn't mean I'm opposed to spaghetti.”  Meet the man who will guide L.A.’s teachers into uncertain times. 

 

Guest:

Warren Fletcher, newly elected president of United Teachers Los Angeles; teacher at City of Angels school in Highland Park, a K-12 LAUSD alternative school

IN STUDIO

 

 

 

1:41 – 1:58:30

Fashion fur pause—PETA calls a truce with the fashion industry, for now

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) has been famous for making a scene at runway shows from New York and Milan. However, the amount of fur on the runways has been increasing recently. Rather than protest the fur picket-style, PETA activists are moving their efforts to the inside of the fashion industry. Instead of storming runways and throwing tofu at uncooperative designers, they are holding informational sessions with fashion students, and throwing parties. Will this strategy work, or is PETA losing its activist roots?

 

Guests:

UNCONFIRMED

Representative of PETA

 

Tim Gunn, judge on Lifetime’s Project Runway, former teacher and administrator at Parsons the New School for Design in New York; creative director and "brand ambassador" for the Liz Claiborne company and his new book is Gunn's Golden Rules: Life's Little Lessons for Making It Work

 

 

 

2:06 – 2:58:30

Confronting the challenges to Boyle Heights: health care, housing & harmony

Walk through the neighborhood of Boyle Heights, just east of downtown Los Angeles, and you see the history of the city unfold before your eyes. From the Boyle Hotel built in 1889 to historic synagogues and Mariachi Plaza. The cultural, religious and ethnic melting pot that is Los Angeles starts in Boyle Heights and emanates outward.  The challenges facing the residents of Boyle Heights are familiar: access to affordable housing and high-quality health care, but some are unique.  Boyle Heights has a disproportionate share of public housing developments, some of which were at one time the largest west of the Mississippi.  The conversion of those units to private ownership threatens the low-income residents who inhabit the decades-old buildings adorned with vibrant murals. Boyle Heights is faced with mitigating the environmental health impacts of its surroundings—freeways and rail lines that run next to children’s playgrounds, housing and schools and diminishing the influence of gangs and helping to heal the psychological wounds of violence.  But the promise of Boyle Heights is unmistakable and hopes are high as crime is down, education reform comes into focus, middle class families work to gain prominence and economic and cultural development begins to blossom.  Join us as we talk about the health, housing and planning issues of Boyle Heights.

 

HEALTH Guests:

Dr. Astrid Heger, executive director, Violence Intervention Program (VIP)  

Dr. Albert Pacheco, executive director, Clinica Monsenor Oscar A. Romero

Dr. Paul Giboney, medical director, Clinica Monsenor Oscar A. Romero 

 

 

HOUSING Guests:

Elizabeth Blaney, co-director, Union de Vecinos

 

Maria Cabildo, co-founder, East LA Community Corporation (ELACC)

 

Jose Huizar, Los Angeles City Councilman representing Boyle Heights

 

Faisal Roble, senior city planner, Los Angeles City Planning Department

 

 

PLANNING Guests:

Faisal Roble, senior city planner, Los Angeles City Planning Department

 

Jose Huizar, Los Angeles City Councilman representing Boyle Heights

 

Cynthia Sanchez, executive director, Proyecto Pastoral

 

Maria Brenes, executive director, InnerCity Struggle

 

 

 

Jonathan Serviss
Senior Producer, Patt Morrison
Southern California Public Radio
NPR Affiliate for Los Angeles
89.3 KPCC-FM | 89.1 KUOR-FM | 90.3 KPCV-FM
626.583.5171, office
415.497.2131, mobile
jserviss@kpcc.org / jserviss@scpr.org
www.scpr.org

 

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Patt Morrison for Thursday, March 31, 2011

PATT MORRISON SCHEDULE

Thursday, March 31, 2011

1-3 p.m.

 

CALL-IN @ 866-893-5722, 866-893-KPCC; OR JOIN THE CONVERSATION ONLINE ON THE PATT MORRISON BLOG AT KPCC-DOT-ORG

 

 

1:06 – 1:19

OPEN

 

 

1:21 – 1:39

The difficult case of “foothold babies”: is it time for America’s immigration laws to be rewritten?

Last week the San Gabriel city inspector office stumbled upon a very unusual discovery:  a full fledged baby nursery operating out of a townhouse, catering to Chinese mothers who were legally in the U.S. on tourist visas for the sole purpose of giving birth to a would-be American citizen.  The debate over “anchor babies,” usually the children of Latino illegal immigrants born in the U.S. with the intent of keeping undocumented parents legally in the country, is a fierce and politically charged one that’s been underway for years.  But the discovery in San Gabriel is not the same debate, rather a new wrinkle in the gaming of American immigration laws.  What’s the motivation for Chinese mothers to give birth to their children here; is there anything illegal in that action; is there any way (or reason) to stop it?  And is the idea of birthright citizenship simply becoming outdated?

 

Guest:

TBD

 

 

 

1:41 – 1:58:30

The Hollywood Sign: Fantasy and Reality of an American Icon

Somehow, the Hollywood sign never gets old.  When tourists see it, they know that they have reached their destination at last.  Even for native Angelenos, catching a glimpse of the sign can gild a dull commute with a touch of glamour and golden dream.  In his book The Hollywood Sign: Fantasy and Reality of an American Icon, Leo Braudy tells the story of the sign, which started as a temporary real estate promotional tool in 1923, was almost torn down at one point, but then was reconstructed in the 1970s thanks to an unlikely alliance including Alice Cooper and Hugh Hefner.  And from the story of the sign comes the like-none-other history of the movie industry and the social, economic, and artistic development of Los Angeles—and specifically, of HOLLYWOOD.

 

Guest:

Leo Braudy, author of The Hollywood Sign: Fantasy and Reality of an American Icon

IN STUDIO

 

 

 

2:06 – 2:19

OPEN

 

 

 

2:21 – 2:39

Can you call a police officer a fat slob and get away with it?

A man in Lowell, Massachusetts yelled at the police officer on his front lawn, “You’re a coward, hiding behind your badge.”  He was arrested for disorderly conduct, challenged his arrest in court and last week a judge found the officer was liable for false arrest.  In 2009 a federal judge ruled against a Pittsburgh police officer who issued a citation against a man who gave him the middle finger.  And last week the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals allowed a lawsuit against a small police department in Kentucky to go forward, after a man was arrested in 2005 for calling an officer a “fat slob.”  What ties all of these cases together is the use of a disorderly conduct charge to arrest the offending culprit, and the fact that the arrestee was verbally abusive or rude to the arresting officer.  What’s often described as “contempt of cop,” offending a police officer can often land you in jail.  How far can you go in insulting a cop without getting arrested?

 

Guests:

UNCONFIRMED

Jon Shane, assistant professor of police policy & practice at John Jay College of Criminal Justice; former Newark police captain for 16 years

 

Tom Nolan, associate professor of criminal justice at Boston University; former Boston police officer for 27 years

 

 

2:41 – 2:58:30

Born to be wild 3D 

 

Guest:

Dr. Biruté Mary Galdikas, researcher, conservationist, and educator; featured in Born to be Wild 3D

IN STUDIO

 

 

Jonathan Serviss
Senior Producer, Patt Morrison
Southern California Public Radio
NPR Affiliate for Los Angeles
89.3 KPCC-FM | 89.1 KUOR-FM | 90.3 KPCV-FM
626.583.5171, office
415.497.2131, mobile
jserviss@kpcc.org / jserviss@scpr.org
www.scpr.org

 

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Patt Morrison for Wednesday, March 30, 2011

PATT MORRISON SCHEDULE

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

1-3 p.m.

 

CALL-IN @ 866-893-5722, 866-893-KPCC; OR JOIN THE CONVERSATION ONLINE ON THE PATT MORRISON BLOG AT KPCC-DOT-ORG

 

 

1:06 – 1:39

OPEN

 

 

1:41 – 1:58:30

City council approves downtown sign district

It’s a bird, it’s a plane, it’s a 10 floor-high flashing LED advertisement! The city council yesterday approved the first digital signage in the city since the 9th Circuit Court upheld the city’s ban on new billboards last year. The tops of the 45-story Wilshire Grand Hotel and its accompanying 65-story office tower will flash advertisements for the buildings’ owner and major tenants, while the middle sections will display noncommercial images like flora and fauna. Councilman Ed Reyes said he believes the “architectural lighting” is “art” that “adds more culture” to Los Angeles. Lone dissenter Councilman Bill Rosendahl said the city should at least have found a way to make a profit off the new digital advertising, none of which will be going to city coffers. Other proponents said it would create roughly 7,300 construction jobs, while opponents say the flashing signs distract motorists and are a blight on the city.

 

Guests:

NOT CONFIRMED

Bill Rosendahl, City Councilman, 11th district and the lone dissenting vote in yesterday’s council meeting

CALL HIM:

 

Jan Perry, City Councilwoman, 9th district and a 2013 mayoral candidate who enthusiastically backed the Wilshire Grand complex

CALL HER @

 

 

 

2:06 – 2:58:30

Take a walk through Boyle Heights and see the problems & the promise of L.A.

Walk through the neighborhood of Boyle Heights, just east of downtown Los Angeles, and you see the history of the city unfold before your eyes. From the Boyle Hotel built in 1889 to historic synagogues and Mariachi Plaza. The cultural, religious and ethnic melting pot that is Los Angeles starts in Boyle Heights and emanates outward.  The challenges facing the residents of Boyle Heights are familiar: access to affordable housing and high-quality health care, but some are unique.  Boyle Heights has a disproportionate share of public housing developments, some of which were at one time the largest west of the Mississippi.  The conversion of those units to private ownership threatens the low-income residents who inhabit the decades-old buildings adorned with vibrant murals. Boyle Heights is faced with mitigating the environmental health impacts of its surroundings—freeways and rail lines that run next to children’s playgrounds, housing and schools and diminishing the influence of gangs and helping to heal the psychological wounds of violence.  But the promise of Boyle Heights is unmistakable and hopes are high as crime is down, education reform comes into focus, middle class families work to gain prominence and economic and cultural development begins to blossom.  Join us as we take a walk through Boyle Heights and take in the past, present and future.

 

Guests:

Antonio Villaraigosa, Mayor of the City of Los Angeles

 

Maria Cabildo, president and co-founder of the East L.A. Community Corporation

 

Jose Huizar, L.A. City Councilman representing the 14th District, including Boyle Heights

 

Father Gregory Boyle, founder & executive director of Homeboy Industries & pastor of Dolores Mission in Boyle Heights

 

George Sarabia, former gang member and current gang interventionist for Legacy LA

 

Lou Calanche, executive director of Legacy L.A

 

David Kipen, owner of Libros Schmibros bookstore & lending library in Boyle Heights

 

Dr. Astrid Heger, pediatrician and executive director of the Violence Intervention Program in East LA

 

Josefina Lopez, artistic director or Casa 0101, theater and art space in Boyle Heights

 

Sanford Riggs, housing services director for the Housing Authority for the City of Los Angeles (HACLA)

 

 

 

Jonathan Serviss
Senior Producer, Patt Morrison
Southern California Public Radio
NPR Affiliate for Los Angeles
89.3 KPCC-FM | 89.1 KUOR-FM | 90.3 KPCV-FM
626.583.5171, office
415.497.2131, mobile
jserviss@kpcc.org / jserviss@scpr.org
www.scpr.org

 

Monday, March 28, 2011

Patt Morrison for Tuesday, March 29, 2011

PATT MORRISON SCHEDULE

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

1-3 p.m.

 

CALL-IN @ 866-893-5722, 866-893-KPCC; OR JOIN THE CONVERSATION ONLINE ON THE PATT MORRISON BLOG AT KPCC-DOT-ORG

 

 

1:06 – 1:58:30

OPEN

 

 

2:06 – 2:30

How to do your taxes like GE: make $5.1 billion, pay Uncle Sam $0

General Electric last year reported $14.2 billion in profits, $5.1 billion of which was made on American soil, but the company paid $0 in federal taxes. In fact, they were so good at dodging the bullet through a series of fierce lobbying efforts, overseas loopholes and imaginative accounting, that at the end of the day on April 15th, the federal government owed them money—$3.2 billion, to be exact—giving a whole new meaning to the GE slogan, “imagination at work.” In the 1950s, 30% of all federal revenue came from corporate taxes, whereas by 2009, that had shrunk to 6.6%. How is it that the United States has one of the highest corporate tax rates in the world at 35% but companies increasing pay less and less?

 

Guests:

NOT CONFIRMED:

Charles Rossotti, former commissioner of the IRS; senior advisor, Carlyle Group

CALL HIM @

 

 

2:30 – 2:58:30
Losing your job to a machine
How would you feel about a vending machine, instead of a person, serving you your warm pizza, with your topping of choice; asking you if you’d like to buy boxers or briefs; and dispensing your morning coffee or box of cigarettes at the gas station? To cut costs, companies are increasingly turning to machines instead of humans to dispense everything from clothing, including shoes, to electronics to hot food and even gold and silver for nervous investors. Some see this automation as the enemy since the retail industry has been a reliable, often last-resort, source of employment in tough times. Others claim that retail automation will free up low-skill workers to learn more advanced skills. Once gas stations had attendants who pumped for you, and elevators had attendants who pushed for you. Now both are self service. At Fresh & Easy Markets, there is no choice now but do-it-yourself checkout. Do you like it that way, or have operate-it-yourself elevators and pump-it-yourself gas stations conditioned you to prefer machines to people?

 

Guests:
Martin Ford, author of The Lights in the Tunnel: Automation, Accelerating Technology and the Economy of the Future; has his own blog – EconFuture; founder of Silicon Valley-based software development firm

CALL HIM:

 

Brentt Arcement, vice president of investor relations for AVT Inc, the vending machine firm that produces fully automated gas stations and vending machines that dispense pizza, hamburgers, gold and silver, movies, electronics, shoes, bathing suits, and Armani underwear, among other items

CALL HIM:

 

 

Jonathan Serviss
Senior Producer, Patt Morrison
Southern California Public Radio
NPR Affiliate for Los Angeles
89.3 KPCC-FM | 89.1 KUOR-FM | 90.3 KPCV-FM
626.583.5171, office
415.497.2131, mobile
jserviss@kpcc.org / jserviss@scpr.org
www.scpr.org

 

Friday, March 25, 2011

Patt Morrison for Monday, March 28, 2011

PATT MORRISON SCHEDULE

Monday, March 28, 2011

1-3 p.m.

 

CALL-IN @ 866-893-5722, 866-893-KPCC; OR JOIN THE CONVERSATION ONLINE ON THE PATT MORRISON BLOG AT KPCC-DOT-ORG

 

 

1:06 – 1:39

OPEN

 

 

1:41 – 1:58:30

Educated and contributing to society, but not good enough: illegal status takes a toll

Elían González caused quite a stir in 2000 when he arrived in Miami. This boy, an illegal immigrant, was subjected to the intense politics of immigration. Eventually he was returned to Cuba. However, the debate caused by this event still is relevant today: what is the place of immigrant children in American society? There is the hard-line approach: the idea that an illegal immigrant is illegal, and should be deported. However, some people take a different stance on children. Since many believe children are the future, and can learn and be useful to society despite their illegal status, are they a special case? Today we will discuss the story of Ruben Vives, a boy who was almost sent away as an illegal immigrant, but managed to stay in the U.S., get an education, and is now contending for a Pulitzer Prize.

 

Guests:

Ruben Vives, reporter for the Los Angeles Times

CALL HIM:

 

Shawn Hubler, columnist who wrote a profile of Ruben Vives for the Orange Coast magazine

 

 

 

2:06 – 2:19

OPEN

 

 

2:21 – 2:39

You have the right to remain silent—unless you’re a terrorism suspect

When Barack Obama was elected president his most liberal supporters were hopeful that he would make the reversal of several Bush-era terrorism laws a priority—from the Patriot Act to Guantanamo Bay, candidate and President Obama said he would implement a new approach to the rule of law, even for terrorism suspects.  Two years into his term, President Obama has disappointed many of those liberal supporters by affirming and carrying on the Bush-era terror rules, and last week he took one rule even further than his predecessor.  A memorandum from the Obama Department of Justice further whittled away Miranda rights (you have the right to remain silent, etc.) for terrorism suspects, allowing investigators to hold suspected domestic terrorists longer than others without reading their rights.  The new rules give interrogators more latitude and flexibility to define what counts as an appropriate circumstance to waive Miranda rights.  Is this a necessary step for national security or an erosion of personal liberties?

 

Guests:

Steven Engel, partner at the law firm Dechert LLP; former deputy assistant attorney general in the Office of Legal Counsel for the Department of Justice during the Bush administration

CALL HIM:

 

Stephen Saltzberg, professor of law & co-director of the Litigation & Dispute Resolution Program at George Washington University

CALL HIM @

-         Thinks the Obama administration is beginning to align closely with Bushs policies.

-         He is a member of the American Bar Association Task Force on Terrorism & the Law & the ABA’s Advisory Group on Citizen Detention & Enemy Combatant Issues.

 

 

2:41 – 2:58:30

Joseph Nye's The Future of Power

In a world where China and India are growing in influence, what is the place of the perennial superpower the United States? Nye, an international relations theorist, works on answering this question in his book The Future of Power. In this book, he focuses on applying his theory of ‘smart power’ to explain past historical events. Rather than merely outlining the uses of soft power (i.e. diplomatic power and cultural influence) and hard power (military force), he looks at the historical uses of power relative to the goals of a nation. This book then helps analyze the future of American power, and again Nye pushes for the future of soft power and his vision of ‘smart power.’

 

Guest:

Joseph Nye, former dean of Harvard's Kennedy School and originator of the term "soft power." His latest book is The Future of Power

IN-STUDIO

-         Nye served in the Carter and Clinton administrations in the state and defense departments, respectively.

-         Nye's written about the changing nature of power in the global information age—particularly the US's future prospects against the rise of China, India and other countries (he's optimistic), cyberpower and security, and the voice that the internet has given non-government organizations in world politics.  Mr. Nye … cast[s] doubt on the idea that America is in precipitate decline.

 

Jonathan Serviss
Senior Producer, Patt Morrison
Southern California Public Radio
NPR Affiliate for Los Angeles
89.3 KPCC-FM | 89.1 KUOR-FM | 90.3 KPCV-FM
626.583.5171, office
415.497.2131, mobile
jserviss@kpcc.org / jserviss@scpr.org
www.scpr.org

 

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Patt Morrison for Friday, March 25, 2011

PATT MORRISON SCHEDULE

Friday, March 25, 2011

1-3 p.m.

 

CALL-IN @ 866-893-5722, 866-893-KPCC; OR JOIN THE CONVERSATION ONLINE ON THE PATT MORRISON BLOG AT KPCC-DOT-ORG

 

 

1:06 – 1:19

OPEN

 

 

1:21 – 1:30

L.A. city unions reach landmark agreement, take to the streets on Saturday to rally organized labor

 

Guests:

ALL UNCONFIRMED

Alice Goff, president of AFSCME Local 3090

Tom Morello, guitarist for Rage Against the Machine & an organized labor advocate

James P. Hoffa, president, International Brotherhood of Teamsters

 

 

1:41 – 1:58:30

Should physical book & e-book sales be protected from the elusive danger of library e-book checkouts?

When a library buys a book, it buys it once.  This was the case for e-books as well.  Now, HarperCollins is making its e-books expire for libraries after 26 checkouts.  In other words, it’s treating an e-book like an e-subscription to a magazine, such that the library never actually owns the book outright.  And libraries are outraged; some are even boycotting all HarperCollins books, which include those by Anne Rice, Sarah Palin, and Michael Crichton.  Libraries claim that, as demand for e-books skyrockets, they cannot afford to re-buy e-books.  HarperCollins, which is owned by Rupert Murdoch, claims that this move is necessary to protect e-book retail sales, physical book sales, and brick-and-mortar bookstores.  Do you think that all publishers should take this move to protect book sales?  Or do you side with libraries, which are already pinched for money as state budgets are slashed across the country?  Would you like to see the price of e-books be kept from going too low or do you see e-books as a natural progression that should not be tampered with?

 

NOTE: ~3/21/11 LAT article (since Murdoch owns HarperCollins): Murdoch’s new #2, named Chase Carey, motto: "everyone pays." He’s demanding “subscription payments, whether at the wholesale level from cable TV operators or local TV stations, or at the retail level from individuals paying for iPad newspaper subscriptions” (LAT). Treating an e-book as like an e-subscription to a magazine, such that you never really own it outright the way you own a printed book, fits this pattern.

 

Guests:

Michael Johnson, chief potential officer, Full Potential Associates, a strategic consulting firm that specializes in the blend between technology, publishing, and education

CALL HIM:

 

Deb Czarnik, Library Manager for Technical Services and Collection Development, Lee County Library System in Florida

CALL HER:

 

 

 

2:06 – 2:30

All we do is win: The American (in)equality mentality

William Dean Howells once said, “Inequality is as dear to the American heart as liberty itself.” However, inequality seems to be a non-issue in the U.S. Or is it? A new study finds Americans are all kinds of confused about the reality of inequality in this nation—our social strata is similar to that of Russia, although we think it’s more like the equitable Sweden, and we’d ideally like it to look like a kibbutz. Do Americans care? And why or why not? Some say Americans are just more comfortable with the idea of the wealthy. Others like Allan Greenspan argue inequality isn’t ‘real’ because consumption is still possible even at low income levels. A third posits that the American identity claims equality as part of its identity, and thus Americans ignore all instances of inequity. At the end of the day, are Americans living with a lottery mentality, believing that despite limited access to quality education and jobs, they too could hit the jack-pot? Or are we aware of how the gap between the very rich and the very poor continues to widen?

 

Guests:

NOT CONFIRMED:

Chrystia Freeland, global editor-at-large at Thomson Reuters

 

Leslie McCall, sociology professor and fellow at the Institute for Policy Research at Northwestern University.

  • She is finishing a book on American attitudes about income inequality, economic opportunity and redistribution.

 

 

 

2:30 – 2:58:30

It’s your funeral: Choosing Burial Practices

“I’m not dead yet.” Aside from being a famous quote from the film Monty Python and the Holy Grail, this idea speaks to the conundrum many people encounter as they choose their funeral today. There are many funeral choices: you can be buried in an environmentally friendly way, frozen in time, burnt into ashes, or embalmed. These choices reflect the social and cultural environment of the times: in what other era could you find a “green burial” of a wealthy patron? Keith Eggener studies the history of the American cemetery, and discusses the interaction between the dead and living as we think about our last resting place.

 

Guests:

Keith Eggener, associate professor of American Art and Architecture at the University of Missouri. His book, Cemeteries, was just published as a Library of Congress Visual Sourcebook in Architecture, Design and Engineering.
CALL HIM:

 

 

Jonathan Serviss
Senior Producer, Patt Morrison
Southern California Public Radio
NPR Affiliate for Los Angeles
89.3 KPCC-FM | 89.1 KUOR-FM | 90.3 KPCV-FM
626.583.5171, office
415.497.2131, mobile
jserviss@kpcc.org / jserviss@scpr.org
www.scpr.org

 

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Patt Morrison for Thurs, 3/24/2011

PATT MORRISON SCHEDULE

Thursday, March 24, 2011

1-3 p.m.

 

CALL-IN @ 866-893-5722, 866-893-KPCC; OR JOIN THE CONVERSATION ONLINE ON THE PATT MORRISON BLOG AT KPCC-DOT-ORG

 

 

1:00 – 1:40

OPEN

 

1:40 – 2:00

Mentally ill & playing with anthrax: was Ivins 9/11’s “anthrax killer”?

One week after 9/11: anonymous anthrax-laced letters start to show up—killing five people, weakening seventeen, crippling mail delivery, and resulting in the closure of a Senate office building for three months. Who was this mysterious anthrax killer? A panel of psychiatrists has released a report saying all arrows point to Bruce Ivins—the microbiologist who committed suicide in 2008. The panel highlights, as evidence of Ivins’ mental illness, his boyhood with a mother who stabbed and threatened to kill his father, his obsession with sorority Kappa Kappa Gamma, and Ivins writing a ? next to “Hallucinations” and “Improbably Beliefs” on a medical form. Could the US’s worst bioterrorism attack have been prevented if Ivins’ mental health had been more closely examined before he was granted clearance to work with deadly pathogens? Was Ivins the anthrax killer or, as those close to him claim, is he being blamed posthumously simply to close a case in which the first accused suspect received a $5.82-million government settlement?

 

Guest:

David Willman, author of The Mirage Man: Bruce Ivins, the Anthrax Attacks, and America's Rush to War, to be released in July 2011

CALL HIM

 

 

2:00 – 2:30

Is the “good life” a happy life?

Happiness: people want it, spend their lives trying to find it, some even try to buy it. Yet even when we get it, that good feeling often leaves before we have a chance to savor it. So how are we to feel about this coveted idea of happiness? A study headed by Dr. Carol Ryff at the University of Wisconsin asserts that happiness associated with a good meal, a win for one’s favorite sports team, or buying a new pair of shoes, (known as “hedonic well-being” to the psychological community) is short term, often times fleeting and really not that good for your health. So if that’s the case, if we can’t be happy all the time and a happy life today doesn’t connote a happy life in the long term… how are we to live? Is happiness really overrated?

 

Guest:

Carol RyfF, professor of psychology and director of the Institute on Aging at the University of Wisconsin

CALL HER:

Mid-life in the U.S.: A National Study of Health and Well-Being

http://www.midus.wisc.edu/

 

WSJ: Is Happiness Overrated?

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704893604576200471545379388.html

 

2:30 – 2:40

OPEN

 

2:40 – 3:00

Dan Savage to gay teens: “It Gets Better!”

Following the deaths of several gay teens last fall, “Savage Love” columnist Dan Savage and his husband launched the “It Gets Better Project” to support gay/lesbian/bisexual/transsexual youth. The idea was that discouraged gay teens would realize their lives were worth living if older gay people offered hope and encouragement. So Savage and his husband, Terry Miller, created a YouTube video about their own experiences being bullied as teens, to tell teenagers a simple message about the future: It gets better. The movement began with a YouTube video that went viral and evolved into a collection of testimonials and stories. The latest incarnation of the project is a book they co-edited together, combining transcribed videos and essays from President Obama, David Sedaris, Bishop Gene Robinson, Murray Hill and Ellen DeGeneres, among others. All essays contain the same message: bullied youth should not be self-destructive; their lives can and will get better. Dan joins Patt to share his experience and hear yours.

 

Guest:

Dan Savage, syndicated columnist, “Savage Love,” and the editor of The StrangerSeattle’s weekly newspaper. His latest book is It Gets Better: Coming Out, Overcoming Bullying, and Creating a Life Worth Living

IN STUDIO

 

 

-         Almost 10,000 videos have been posted to support the “It Gets Better Project.”

-         Note: Dan hates the word “partner,” and prefers the term “boyfriend” to refer to Terry

 

PATT: DAN WILL BE READING FROM HIS NEW BOOK IT GETS BETTER TONIGHT AT 8 PM AT THE RENBERG THEATER IN WEST HOLLYOWOD. FOR MORE INFORMATION CHECK OUT THE PATT MORRISON WEB PAGE AT WWW-DOT-KPCC-DOT-ORG

 

WEB PLEASE LINK:

Buy the book: http://www.amazon.com/Gets-Better-Overcoming-Bullying-Creating/dp/0525952330

Listen to Terry Gross’s interview with Dan Savage: http://www.npr.org/2011/03/23/134628750/dan-savage-for-gay-teens-life-gets-better

Visit the “It Gets Better Project” : http://www.itgetsbetter.org/pages/about-it-gets-better-project/