Women's Wear is Far from Fitting (Originally aired June 15, 2017)

Women's Wear is Far from Fitting (Originally aired June 15, 2017)

Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Radio Archive, Episode 664 , Segment 5

Episode: Rebuilding After Disasters, Poison Frogs, Bitcoin

  • Oct 19, 2017 11:00 pm
  • 13:51 mins

Guest: Anne Bissonnette, PhD, Associate Professor of Material Culture and Curatorship, Curator of Clothing and Textiles Collection, University of Alberta It’s just a fact of life that our bodies change in shape and size as we age. Sudden, or even subtle, shifts in weight can require a whole new wardrobe. Why are clothes in the Western world designed so that even a slight gain in the hips or belly requires a new pant size? On the other hand, the one-size-fits-all sari from India is proof that clothing can both fit and flex with the normal shifts in a body.

Other Segments

How Bitcoin Changes the World Economy (Originally aired June 21, 2017)

21 MINS

Guest: Paul Vigna, Journalist, The Wall Street Journal, Author, "The Age of Cryptocurrency: How Bitcoin and the Blockchain Are Challenging the Global Economic Order" The next time you swipe your card at your local 7-Eleven, think about this: Before the money can leave your bank account and end up in 7-Eleven’s, there are at least five different organizations that will handle your credit card information. It’s an invisible bureaucracy of banks and finance companies and government agencies that set interest rates, charge fees, and control nearly everything about the way we use money.  The electronic currency called bitcoin sidesteps all of that in a way that could save a lot of money. But bitcoin also has features that make it really attractive to drug dealers and hackers. So is bitcoin something to fear or embrace?

Guest: Paul Vigna, Journalist, The Wall Street Journal, Author, "The Age of Cryptocurrency: How Bitcoin and the Blockchain Are Challenging the Global Economic Order" The next time you swipe your card at your local 7-Eleven, think about this: Before the money can leave your bank account and end up in 7-Eleven’s, there are at least five different organizations that will handle your credit card information. It’s an invisible bureaucracy of banks and finance companies and government agencies that set interest rates, charge fees, and control nearly everything about the way we use money.  The electronic currency called bitcoin sidesteps all of that in a way that could save a lot of money. But bitcoin also has features that make it really attractive to drug dealers and hackers. So is bitcoin something to fear or embrace?