Water Matters, Quest for Quiet, Exercise Slows Down Parkinson'sTop of Mind with Julie Rose • Season 1, Episode 797
Apr 24, 2018 • 1h 42m
Water Matters
Guest: Radhika Fox, Executive Director, Value of Water Campaign, and CEO, US Water Alliance
There’s a one-in-ten chance your house has a leaky toilet, shower or faucet that’s wasting 90 gallons or more per day, according to the EPA. That obviously adds up on your monthly water bill. But it’s also part of an enormous nationwide problem – trillions of gallons of water lost every year through leaky drinking water, stormwater and sewer pipes.
What will it take to tackle America’s water waste problem?
Quest for Quiet
Guest: Matthew Jordan, PhD, Associate Professor of Media Studies, Pennsylvania State University
In the hit suspense film “A Quiet Place” we watch a family struggling to live their lives in complete silence so as not to attract vicious aliens with super-sensitive hearing. Silence is safety. Sudden noise brings sure death. Penn State University media studies professor Matthew Jordan wonders if the movie is doing so well with audiences because of our own complicated relationship to noise.
Prestigious Companies Treated Differently in Court
Guest: Brayden King, PhD, Professor of Management and Organization, Max McGraw Chair of Management and the Environment, Northwestern University
Google is facing several lawsuits over gender discrimination and sexual harassment in the workplace. Remember how Google’s motto was “Don’t be evil”? Now it’s “Do the right thing.” So what happens when a successful, well-respected company that holds itself up as a pillar of the community, goes before a jury on allegations that it did not do the right thing? Does prestige buy a company some benefit of the doubt? Or does a prestigious company get judged more harshly because we expect more of them?
Prosthetic Memory
Guest: Robert Hampson, PhD, Professor of Physiology/Pharmacology and Neurology, Wake Forest University School of Medicine
When you hit middle age, you start to fear those “senior moments” when you forget things more frequently. People turn to memory-boosting pills like gingko or fish oil. But the