in praise of Public Radio

I never listen to NPR. Instead I subscribe to my favourite National Public Radio shows as podcasts in iTunes.

My favourites:

On The Media
This American Life
Fresh Air
Pop Culture
Story of the Day
World Story of the Day

Roger Ebert:

… I’ve written before about the disintegration of journalism, of the lowered standards everywhere in today’s media. As a nation we once said, give us the facts and we’ll make up our own minds. Now we say, spare us the facts and make up our minds for us. We have grown impatient, and the national attention span shrinks until even a 10-minute video on YouTube can seem unendurable. …

Midnight at the oasis

In that post Ebert explains why he loves Public Radio. It’s as good as ever, a font of smart commentary with a positive world view.

… Recently some have claimed it is leftist. That baffles me. No one ever seems to cite something they heard that offended them. They just believe in general that it’s left wing. …

Click PLAY or watch a charming NPR “Rap” on YouTube. (only 4min 30sec!)

combining savings with lottery

I’ve always considered lottery tickets a government sanctioned tax on stupidity. About 50% of Americans buy them every year.

… Don’t tell me Americans get $60 billion entertainment value from them. Gambling is addictive.

But I’ve no rant on the topic. Often a percentage of that tax money goes to good works, including amateur sport.

But couldn’t we spend those misguidedly optimistic dollars more wisely?

Here’s one way – Prize-Linked Savings (PLS).

I learned about it on Freakonomics:

… PLS is a kind of savings account that pools some of the interest from all depositors and pays out a big lottery prize every month or so. It combines the thrill of the lottery with the safety of a savings account. It’s sometimes called a “no-lose lottery,” since a depositor is automatically entered into the lottery but can’t lose the original money she deposits.

And while PLS might play well in the poorest parts of Africa and Asia, there’s a group of researchers who feel that PLS is very badly needed right here in the U.S. …

Freakonomics Radio: Could a Lottery Be the Answer to America’s Poor Savings Rate?

The only problem, it’s illegal almost everywhere in the USA, aside from Michigan.

Here’s the first “Save to Win” winner, an 87-year-old Michigan woman who had deposited $75.

This is innovative thinking. The best way I’ve heard to encourage people to actually put some of their dollars into a savings account.

A similar savings scheme has been working in the U.K. for over 50yrs.

Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything is a 2005 non-fiction book by University of Chicago economist Steven Levitt and New York Times journalist Stephen J. Dubner.

Freakonomics Radio is an audiocast by the same two guys available from iTunes. I recommend it.

CBC audiocast – Wiretap

I love this comedy radio show and podcast. Very smart funny.

This week on the season premiere of WireTap, Jonathan speaks with a professional Rainbow Chaser about extreme weather tracking. …

cbc.ca/wiretap

RainbowChasers.net

shout out for Climate Change activists

My buddy Morgen Hartford is on the road (by bike) …

… on a memorial journey through the Pacific Northwest. Honoring old friends, creating new connections. Learning about the systems that power and shape the way we live.

Here he is with a broken spoke on his most recent 1200mi ride.

His excellent blog – A Wild and Sacred Day – documents the trip.

Two of his causes are healthy food and Climate Action.

My main source of information from Climate Change activists is the excellent audiocast Living on Earth, Steve Curwood’s news, features, interviews and commentary on a broad range of ecological issues.

Personally I’m a Climate Change agnostic having done almost no research on the topic aside from reading The Skeptical Environmentalist.

My friend Brian Mason has done exhaustive research concluding that there’s almost no evidence (yet) that man has significantly altered climate. … My gut tells me that’s probably true.

Even if it is, Climate Change activists are doing far more good than harm. Improving Life on Earth. Kudos!

What inspired this post? … I started reading this book, Ectopia (1975) …

The book is set in 1999 (25 years in the future, as seen from 1974) …

Ecotopia, a newly formed country that broke from the USA in 1980. … The new nation of Ecotopia consists of Northern California, Oregon and Washington; it is hinted that Southern California is a lost cause. …

Though the book was a serious vision of ecologists in 1975, it reads as a most hilarious parody in 2010. Funny because the author didn’t intend it to be funny.

Cars are banned. Farms are run by collectives. Women run the government. They enjoy a 20hr work week. And marijuana.

Who today could believe that California would legalize marijuana?

… The link above is an Economist audiocast of Roger Salazar of Public Safety First and Ethan Nadelmann of the Drug Policy Alliance debating California’s proposition 19, by far the best analysis of the issue I’ve ever seen.

Stop Getting Ripped Off

Why Consumers Get Screwed, and How You Can Always Get a Fair Deal

I heard an interview with the author Bob Sullivan who has good advice for us. Especially regarding our mobile phones, banks, credit cards, insurance and vehicles.

… evade the financial traps big businesses set for unwary consumers—and shows you how to get the best possible deals every single time.

Today’s marketplace is full of hidden fees, fine print, and other booby traps designed to trip you up and take your money. You may be losing big even when you think you’re getting a steal! But with Sullivan’s keen guidance and sensible advice, you can save money and regain control of your financial life.

Clearly and concisely, Sullivan reveals

• why American consumers make such easy targets for corporate America (you’ll be stunned, for example, at how poor our math skills are)

• how Wall Street will skim off one third of your retirement money (avoid this trap with Sullivan’s new “Pitfall-Proof Pyramid”)

• the myths behind credit-card reward programs and “the 21st-Century Bank Account”

• the real numbers to focus on when buying a new car

• why you should spend more time shopping for your mortgage than your home

• the key questions you must ask before buying life insurance

• the secrets to saving for college and paying off student loans the right way

• the best deals on cell phones and pay-TV service

Stop Getting Ripped Off – Amazon

when did CBC radio get cool?

For decades I was a devoted listener of Canadian Broadcasting Corporation AM radio.

Commercial free talk radio was the best option for me … until the launch of audiocasts.

Now I listen only to these CBC programs, downloaded to me automatically as podcasts:

Definitely Not the Opera
Dispatches
Spark

Brian and co. just convinced me to subscribe to Wiretap starring Jonathan Goldstein. That’s easy to do from the iTunes store. And free.

WireTapArtistPoster

People are telling me that both Radio One and Radio Two have been much improved in recent months. Modernized. Much more hip. “Chasing a younger audience” (age-35+), some say.

Nice. I’ll have to give it another chance.

CBC Radio operates three English language networks.

CBC Radio One – Primarily news and information, CBC Radio One broadcasts to most communities across Canada. Until 1997, it was known as “CBC Radio”.

CBC Radio 2 – Broadcasts music, arts and culture programming, including opera, classical music, jazz and theatre. It was previously known as “CBC Radio Two”, and before that “CBC Stereo”.

CBC Radio 3 – Broadcasts a youth-oriented indie rock format on Internet radio and Sirius Satellite Radio.

Wikipedia

One more thing, Jonathan Goldstein’s most recent book: Ladies And Gentlemen The Bible!

Apple 3rd generation iPod Shuffle

Love it. Love it. Love it.

But only because of the proprietary Apple headphones system added with the 3rd generation.

Click PLAY or watch a review on YouTube.

My only complaint is the 10hr battery life. That’s much shorter than my iTouch used only for audio.

The feature Apple doesn’t explain on their website is this:

• Double-click and hold the center button to fast-forward
• Triple-click and hold the center button to rewind

Macintouch

Essential for audio books and podcasts.

Now, Steve, when can you sell me an iPod with decent wireless headphones?

battle over New York City’s worst teachers

Another example of how Unions and especially government Unions have outlived their usefulness.

Many are raving about a long, detailed New Yorker story published by Steven Brill.

His story is called THE RUBBER ROOM.

… It’s a June morning, and there are fifteen people in the room, four of them fast asleep, their heads lying on a card table. Three are playing a board game. Most of the others stand around chatting. Two are arguing over one of the folding chairs. But there are no children here.

The inhabitants are all New York City schoolteachers who have been sent to what is officially called a Temporary Reassignment Center but which everyone calls the Rubber Room.

These fifteen teachers, along with about six hundred others, in six larger Rubber Rooms in the city’s five boroughs, have been accused of misconduct, such as hitting or molesting a student, or, in some cases, of incompetence, in a system that rarely calls anyone incompetent. …

read it – THE RUBBER ROOM

The Teacher’s Union is blamed by many for the waste of money and resources that is the Rubber Room.

If you no longer read, like me, you can listen to the story on NPR’s This American Life. Click PLAY Full Episode.

CORY DOCTOROW linked to a preview of a documentary being put together by one of the teachers from the Rubber Room. The other side of the story.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Same situation in the Los Angeles Unified School District.

is mainstream media dead?

A theme on this blog is the steady decline of BIG media.

And the rise of independent voices: blogs, podcasts, social networks.

But one of the big media players is thriving. National Public Radio in the USA.

nprlogo

Why?

… NPR’s ratings have increased steadily since 2000, and they’ve managed to hold on to much of their 2008 election coverage listenership bump (with over 26 million people tuning in each week so far in 2009), unlike many of their mainstream media counterparts.

Compared to cable news, where most networks are shedding viewers, and newspapers, where circulation continues to plummet, NPR is starting to look like they have the future of news all figured out. Or at least, they appear to doing a lot better at it than the rest of the traditional media.

But what is NPR doing differently that’s causing their listener numbers to swell? They basically have a three-pronged strategy that is helping them not only grow now, but also prepare for the future media landscape where traditional methods of consumption (TV, radio, print) could be greatly marginalized in favor of digital distribution. …

This reviewer sees NPR doing 3 things right:

  • A Focus On Local
  • A Focus On Social Media
  • A Focus On Ubiquitous Access
  • Of the three, the third is most important to me.

    Read the entire article on Mashable – Why NPR is the Future of Mainstream Media

    As a non-profit, NPR is less tied to the old media bias of shareholders, perhaps.

    I’m a regular listener, subscribing to a number of their audiocasts.

    new header for Rockin’s podcast page

    I helped Ron post a new header on his Barbecue Secrets podcast blog.

    Barbecue Secrets - Rockin' Ronnie
    Barbecue Secrets - Rockin' Ronnie

    Ron and Kate are in Calgary right now. He’s on the book flogging tour.

    His latest cookbook — Barbecue Secrets DELUXE! — is the #1 cookbook in B.C. right now.