Respect for elders is universal among primates, Mona Lisa had high cholesterol and guess who’s getting rich off those invasive body scanners? All this and more on today’s list.
On a regular basis, Truthdig brings you the news items and odds and ends that found their way to Larry Gross, director of the USC Annenberg School for Communication. A specialist in media and culture, art and communication, visual communication and media portrayals of minorities, Gross helped found the field of gay and lesbian studies.
The TSA Scan Scam
The TSA has a dismal record of enriching private corporations with failed technologies. Will the “digital strip search” device just bring more of the same?
Federal Appeals Court Gives Washington State Felons Right to Vote
Yesterday, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that Washington State’s law denying the vote to people with felony convictions is racially discriminatory and violates the Voting Rights Act (VRA).
Mona Lisa May Have Suffered From High Cholesterol
Is she enjoying a private joke? Is she sneaking a sly glance at an unseen lover? Or is the glint in the Mona Lisa’s eye in fact the result of a build-up of fatty acids around her eye socket, a sure sign that she wasn’t watching her cholesterol?
Cultured Personals
Every so often I check out the personals in the New York Review of Books. They’re sort of like the brainy, geriatric version of the ads on Match.com.
In Praise of Infidelity [to the Score]
In an interview last April, before his performance of Wagner’s “Lohengrin” at London’s Covent Garden, the noted opera and orchestral conductor Semyon Bychkov stated: “You start trying to be faithful to a composer’s score but great masterpieces give you enormous possibilities for interpretation.
Mobile Phone: Call It What You Will
How you use your mobile phone has long reflected where you live. But the spirit of the machines may be wiping away cultural differences
Respect for Elders: Monkey See, Monkey Do
Respect for elders may be universal in primates. Monkeys – just like humans – pay their elders special attention during conversation, apparently in order to garner some of the older animals’ wisdom.
What Doesn’t Work in America
These days, everyone has experienced a little moment of shock when the unimaginable became American.
Less Politics, More Poetry: China’s Colleges Eye the Liberal Arts
A mandarin silk jacket buttoned over his chest, Philip Webb paces theatrically across the classroom and informs his students they will each have 15 seconds to address the class on a topic—any topic.
We are launching a major overhaul of our comments section.
In addition to more robust spam filtering and moderation, new features include the ability to rate other comments, sort how they are displayed and respond directly via e-mail or in a thread.
Unfortunately, commenters will lose their existing Truthdig identities. It's a pain, we know, but on the plus side you will now be able to log in with a plethora of options, including Google, Twitter, Facebook and Disqus accounts.
Before launching this system we spent months in discussion with our top commenters. We listened to the feedback and we hope you like what we've come up with.
Please direct any problems or concerns to us via our contact page.