
Personal Data Safety, Psychological Hardiness, Visiting Your Dermatologist, Psychology of Comics, Kids and Individuality, Diary of a Future President
The Lisa Show - Season 1, Episode 348
- Jan 22, 2020 7:00 am
- 100:29
Personal Data Safety (0:00:00) We love sharing our photos and life updates with friends and family on social media. Butwe have to be carefulwhat we post online. Our Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook pages can be treasure troves of information for people on the internet who are actively trying to steal personal data and sell it for others to exploit. Joining us is Kelvin Coleman, the national director of the National Cyber Security Alliance in Washington, DC. We want to talk with him about how our data is threatened online and how we can protect it. The Power of Psychological Hardiness (0:16:10) In the movie “Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day,” one family undergoes a series of calamities including failing a driving exam… setting shirt sleeves on fire in front of employers… and getting kicked by a Kangaroo. Does this kind of day sound familiar? Just like this movie, we all have very bad days where everything that could possibly go wrong does. And this can cause a lot of stress in our lives. Here to talk about how to turn the stress caused by our terrible days into success is Dr. Steven Stein, a psychologist and author of the book "Hardiness." Visiting Your Dermatologist (0:30:47) Did you know that approximately one in five Americans is expected to develop skin cancer during some point in their lives? With this shockingly high likelihood of us being affected, how many of us check ourselves on a regular basis? How many of us know how to perform self-evaluations? Well we’ve invited dermatologist Cynthia Bailey on the show to share everything we need to know about self-checks, as well as what to ask the dermatologist during our visits. Psychology of Comics (0:50:39) We’re all familiar with the Marvel and DC superheroes that light up the big screen every year. But before we saw these popular characters in movies, many of us read about them in comic books. If you grew up reading comics, your parents might have begged you to read a “real book.” Pictures and text bubbles saying “Boom!” an