Love Stories Are Not Good for UsTop of Mind with Julie Rose • Season 1, Episode 603, Segment 6
Jul 26, 2017 • 25m
Guest: Mandy Len Catron, Lecturer at University of British Columbia, Author of "How to Fall In Love with Anyone" Happily-ever-after fairytales and romantic comedies are not a realistic take on romantic love, but we buy into their subtler messages anyway. Just look at the language we use to talk about it: We’re head-over-heels, swept-off-our-feet. We fall in love - it’s always falling. And usually “when we least expect it.” So, love is something that happens to us whether we want it or not, right? It’s beyond our control.  Listen to Arthur Aron talk with Top of Mind about his 36 questions to fall in love

How to Save the World's Ugly AnimalsJul 26, 201717mGuest: Diogo Verissimo, Conversation Research Fellow, Johns Hopkins University When you donate to the World Wildlife Fund, you can get a tote bag with an unbelievably cute and cuddly Giant panda on it. You can even get a stuffed Panda to cuddle. Would you be as keen to donate if that tote had a blobfish on it? I mean, the gelatinous pink blobby fish with a big nose and grumpy frown is so ugly I dare you to look at a picture of it and not cringe.  But the blobfish is endangered, just like the Giant panda. Ugly creatures deserve saving, too, right? But how to get people to donate for them is the question. Conservation research fellow Diogo Verissimo at Johns Hopkins University is convinced the answer is marketing. Maybe the blobfish or the purple frog – seriously, look that one up, it’s hideous – just need some spiffy spin to get donors in their corner.
Guest: Diogo Verissimo, Conversation Research Fellow, Johns Hopkins University When you donate to the World Wildlife Fund, you can get a tote bag with an unbelievably cute and cuddly Giant panda on it. You can even get a stuffed Panda to cuddle. Would you be as keen to donate if that tote had a blobfish on it? I mean, the gelatinous pink blobby fish with a big nose and grumpy frown is so ugly I dare you to look at a picture of it and not cringe.  But the blobfish is endangered, just like the Giant panda. Ugly creatures deserve saving, too, right? But how to get people to donate for them is the question. Conservation research fellow Diogo Verissimo at Johns Hopkins University is convinced the answer is marketing. Maybe the blobfish or the purple frog – seriously, look that one up, it’s hideous – just need some spiffy spin to get donors in their corner.