archive
NPR Double Take
Double Take 'Toons: Poor Climate For Change?
December 7, 2012 At the U.N. climate conference, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon urged wealthier nations to "take leadership" in fighting climate change. But will enough be done to combat effects such as accelerating polar ice cap melts? Sue Dewar and Joel Pett look at the possible consequences of inaction.
StoryCorps
3 Years After Parents' Divorce, Son Looks Back
December 7, 2012 In a visit to StoryCorps, Sarah Avant and her 12-year-old son discuss how his life was changed by his parents' divorce in 2009. Anand Hernandez admits that the stress was hard on him. But lately, things have been looking up, he says.
13.7: Cosmos And Culture
Dear Readers: Have You Yelled At Me Recently? Thank You!
December 6, 2012 When her blog posts are contested and corrected, this evokes gratitude in commentator Barbara J. King. Fresh from an anthropology conference presentation on "co-constructing knowledge through blogging," King says it's the blogger-reader connection that brings her writing alive.
Movie Interviews
In 'This Is 40,' Family Life In All Its Glory
December 6, 2012 Judd Apatow draws on his own experiences as a husband and father in a new comedy that explores the ups and downs of family life. The film stays close to home, literally and figuratively. It stars his wife, Leslie Mann, as well as their two daughters, and was filmed a few doors down from his house.
NPR Double Take
Double Take 'Toons: Law Of Gravidity?
December 6, 2012 The duke and duchess of Cambridge, aka William and Kate, are expecting a baby. Aislin is also expecting ... a media meltdown, while Mike Graston thinks that even round-the-clock coverage will leave some royals watchers feeling shortchanged.
Best Books Of 2012
Time Passages: The Year's Best Historical Fiction
December 6, 2012 To bring the past to life and make it matter, historical fiction must do more than conjure up an exotic backdrop for a conventional story. These six books challenge our preconceptions and help show how the past shaped the world we live in today.
Movies
Revisiting, Reappraising Cimino's 'Heaven's Gate'
December 5, 2012 When it was released 32 years ago, Michael Cimino's revisionist Western was considered one of the most colossal flops in Hollywood history. Critic John Powers takes a second look at the film and concludes that it's clearly "the work of one man and ... he wanted you to remember it forever."
Monkey See
40 Years After 'Free To Be,' A New Album Says 'It's Okay To Do Stuff'
December 5, 2012 The new album It's Okay To Do Stuff pays tribute — sort of — to the 40-year-old Free To Be ... You And Me.
Krulwich Wonders...
Strange-Looking Tombstone Tells Of Moving Ice, Ancient Climates And A Restless Mind
December 5, 2012 It's a tombstone like no other. A rough, clumpy hunk of granite, carried across Europe on a sea of ice, dumped in a valley, shipped across the Atlantic, lugged to Massachusetts — all to honor a restless man.
Monkey See
Jimmy Fallon And The Roots Help Restore The Charm Of Mariah Carey's Christmas Classic
December 5, 2012 Jimmy Fallon, The Roots, and Mariah Carey perform a stripped-down holiday standard.
NPR Double Take
Double Take 'Toons: The Cliff: All Take, No Give?
December 5, 2012 Now that House Republicans have responded with a counteroffer to President Obama's proposal for avoiding the "fiscal cliff," the two sides seem even further apart. Signe Wilkinson argues that the GOP offer doesn't go far enough, while Lisa Benson thinks the president wants way too much.
PG-13: Risky Reads
Feminism Turns Fatal In A 1970s Classic
December 5, 2012 Lois Duncan's 1979 novel, Daughters of Eve, takes revenge to a whole new level. Author Mary Stewart Atwell explains why this classic novel is still relevant. Do you have a favorite story of revenge that goes too far? Tell us in the comments.



