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RINGBACK RINGBACK RINGBACK RINGBACK RINGBACK. Thank you for calling the National Security Agency My name is Gregory how can I help you hi great very Yeah I'm here what happens is that my laptop just died and my only copy of my thesis is on the hard drive and I don't know what to do I don't have a backup anywhere and I just lost a year and a half's worth of work I I just don't know what to do all right let me have a look here just to verify your Julie Malloy Yeah Ok great and you live it for 88 West George Street apartment 4 b. . Yeah and you have a you have a dog that's named Bartholomew covens. It says here that you took him to the vet back in January and since then you've had to buy special food to to manage his blood pressure that's right if this is the right one this is you that's that's me how do you know all of this I mean I only just told you that my computer crashed Oh yeah right sorry Julie what happens is when you call your number comes up on the screen here and I just auto populate a few fields it's just it's just help us find these files a little bit quicker Well yeah I mean like I said I was just wondering if you have a copy of my thesis in your backup storage somewhere let me check your IP address that came up as well. See what was the name of the document you saved Julie's thesis Ok Julie's these is. I do see a few backups here oh my god. Do you have my thesis let me have a look at the last week and if you guys have it yeah it looks like I do have a backup from yesterday from 8 o'clock pm 9 pm 10 pm 11 pm and midnight Oh my God this is amazing Would any of these work yeah I stopped around 1230 so I guess midnight Oh Great Well that's perfect you know I have to make up a little bit of that last last half hour or so but everything else should be there you are lifesaver you're literally saving my life right now thank you so much what I'm going to do is I'm going to do an email and there should be a download link in there you should see that in your email box in just a just a couple minutes here I will do you need my email or anything is it still Julie b. Malloy Jamiel. Yeah I. Think so again thanks for calling by. I'm Jonathan who bear host of the state we're in from Radio Netherlands Worldwide and this is our story of the week. Because of the book on the scheme. Imagine you lost your whole life savings in a Ponzi scheme what would you do by name is Billy ments I'm a documentary filmmaker I was ripped off in a Ponzi scheme and upon finding out about that I brought a camera crew together and a private investigator and traveled across North America to find the perpetrator Canadian documentary maker Billy ments lost $20000.00 in a Ponzi scheme it was all the money he had just enough Marcus you know. You are going to confront the guy. When did the penny dropped that all of it all of your 20 grand was gone. It came in an e-mail that my friend sent me and it was by the mail fraud police you know like the f.b.i. I was intrigued by what a Ponzi scheme was I was intrigued that I got ripped off I was intrigued that I was in the middle of this story that I knew nothing about and so I kind of looked at it right away as well this was a $20000.00 investment in my next project. So you'd lost all this money you realized it was gone and probably gone for good what's the 1st thing you did I wanted to face him him was a man named Bradley. Billy finally tracked down Bradley Eisner's address they wanted to film him but how do you get a man who has so many enemies and is the subject of an f.b.i. Investigation to you know open the door. To Billy's car pulling up in front of Eisner's gigantic house in a leafy green New York suburb and Billy has a pizza box in his hands all right so we're we're at Bradley. Brick. Wall is beating a mile a minute. You have this big empty pizza box you're pretending that you're delivering a pizza what kind of a house did he have it was huge it was a huge like I actually knew it was a $4000000.00 house that he just bought a couple months before what do you think of that and not only that but I had seen all the other houses he bought in the cars he bought I you know it was he was on a free for all with with our money was like what a guy like this guy is unbelievable this guy's a character and I just can't believe he had the balls to do something like this. You walk up to the house before the door opens what was going through your head. Well I don't think I'd ever been so scared this was the confrontation of everything I was afraid of even just being aggressive even being confrontational imposing on somebody's space maybe getting shot. A pizza or no. Yeah well what did you say to him What did you say to him when you saw him the 2nd you saw him when you say I said are you Bradley Eisener and he went to shut the door I asked him if he was aware of the amount of people that were severely hurt by his actions and he listened I can only think that there had some effect on how he helped the f.b.i. 1st of all he was shown that he could be found very easily had I been somebody with sinister intentions as most people explained in the film you know that could have been it for so I think that it offered him a sense of it's real there's people out there who you know you affected greatly and that was my job was to just tell him that you know when you know that like how many people lost their it's like I did some research of other people that invested it's like people have like you know they lost their home they're. Like Did anybody not understand you're being so understanding and kind to Eisner it's actually a response that I get a lot Well what do they say what are they going to like they they hit me or they're like I can't believe you didn't seem even to him I can't believe you didn't do you didn't you didn't punch him you know it gives people the experience that they want to deck him and then another people is like you know they're very understanding in there and it's this sort of sweet moment of. Of forgiveness. When you started off to make the film you were looking for a kind of justice. Did you get. Yes. The story of the week comes from the state we're in from Radio Netherlands Worldwide and you can hear the entire program online act. Dot. That's tis Week dot org. Card then hand. Them hand to move. Them. Back home and. Everything according. To the 3rd. Tour Pyrex remains mostly. It's an overcast Friday afternoon and Sharon McGee is getting ready to go on her weekly shopping trip to Target in Columbia Heights normally McGee would catch the $96.00 bus from the d.c. Armory to 14th Street in northwest then she would transfer to the 52 up to Columbia Heights but today she caught a ride along with her friend Bree Archie you know I was going to buy just a bit of a few things but it is the coming child of this team but they're running most. Of us go to get the what they want is the lose. Cookies for them they choose to not shop in a Wal-Mart in is more than target this is Mickey's 2nd trip of the day to Northwest earlier she loaded 2 of her 4 children on to $96.00 bus to take them to daycare. Up the company to get the kids the couple. Was little Santa son of the calculus of Transportation is part of McGee's reality these days since moving. D.c. General last New Year's Eve to give his life has been spent trying to figure out how to get from here to there as cheaply as possible McGee is 27 with short black hair and a relaxed manner she's a graduate of T.C.'s Dunbar High School and the mother of 4 children the 2 youngest a rambunctious 3 year old named Mari and Jim Myra his 4 year old sister live with McGee at the shelter the 2 oldest 14 year old and a 7 year old stay with relatives elsewhere giving her kids the stability she lacked growing up is McGee's sole focus if you have still in of the whole way even I was a trash can or something Mickey's room in the shelters generous she pushed the mattresses together to make one big bed and she in. Kids snuggle there at night but shutting yourself in a room is no way to live so McGee is trying to be proactive she wants to be the kind of mom who takes charge of her life the business is Ok but is handling your business when everybody is there is going to. Get myself up in the morning. It's a several you need to get a little get to acting go get the itch to. Get up. You know those attorneys filled in the business so you could be out the bill or the. Gist of the good jobs and you'll. Be better to take it. So that's what I did that McGee is unemployed and landing a job has been impossible she says because she doesn't have a valid id her purse was stolen a year and a half ago and it's been a clerical nightmare to get a new driver's license and Social Security card she's close now though her replacement social security card came last week Maggie says she's hoping to land a job at a new discount store coming to their mall in Northeast d.c. But would she really wants to do is cook when I was young and I want you all of these on the phone to the days of so I said I want to be a cook. And I'm still sticking with a good. One of the current look on. And on when it's a kid again so I would hear the sounds of. And there's the rub as a mom who lives in a homeless shelter with 2 kids it's tough for McGee to make headway on her dreams her days are spent filling out reams of paperwork shopping for food taking parenting classes keeping her kids out of trouble and trying to extricate herself from d.c. General and a lot of her time is spent in transit. When McGee finally arrives at Target she's focused she and her friend take a quick look at the bathing suits before heading to the grocery section of the shelter doesn't have to Sillett is where residents can talk and the kids won't leave the prepared food there because it's gross she says so she buys them food they will eat cold cereal. This is made in favor of new. Come back to. See him do. The same again. This is for now to move out if all goes well again her kids will be set up in their own apartment soon likely in one of the city's transitional housing units McGhee would like her new home to be closer to a store like Target but she just be happy in a place she can call her own I'm Lauren. 55. Weeks. Especially. Not going to run away from here machination. We're going to strap it to a rocket and light the fuse. This is public radio remakes. When Ronald was 10 years old his father died of a heart attack Ron was devastated and wanted to see his father again so he set out to build a time machine from junk he found in his basement now 50 years later the theoretical physicist Dr Ronald Mallett has developed the equations to build a real time machine this is time traveler by producer Emily Corio. You can create a circulating beam of light and a number of different ways you can actually bounce light the errors different people come back create in different ways. Einstein's work and the General Theory of Relativity has to do with gravity the stronger gravity is the more time slows down you know we're used to the notion that matter can create gravity for example the Earth creates gravity which pulls us doubt we call that our weight the thing is is that not only can matter produce gravity but also light if gravity can affect time. And light. Can create gravity what can light. Like for the 1st time. After my father died I mean I was shattered and they were worried about me and I used to be an outgoing kid but I turned them on myself and now things were very difficult for the family as well plunged into Probably it was just a very very very bad time Ron was 10 years old and like a lot of kids he idolized his father grandfather was his role model his teacher it was homework checker rule enforcer and gift giver runs father was the elemental force around which his world evolved. So it starts to make sense at 10 years old that runs father's death simply sent him spinning out of orbit the year after Di when I was 11 I came across h.g. Wells as the time machine in a magazine that was called Classics Illustrated and I looked at the cover and I thought maybe I could you know use this so I actually after I read it several times I went back and I tried to put together a bicycle tires and in my life my father was a television repairman and was electronic technician and he had electronic parts all over the house and my mother had kept those so I tried putting those. The chassis s. And everything that were left I tried to put it back together and make something that I thought roughly looked like the Time Machine course when I turned the thing on nothing happened but it did I mean I was I was disappointed but I I realized that I was going to have to learn more about science pretty soon Ron was obsessed with time machines in you that if he told his family or friends or even teachers they would tell him that going back in time is impossible. And he knew that if going back in time is impossible he would have to say goodbye to his father. Maybe it's because he kept his dreams a secret insulating himself from. Senekal discouraging world that Ronald Mallett was able to figure out the equations that no scientist before him has been able to come up with. Equations that could facilitate the building of a real time machine what I realized is that if I would tell them that I want to build a time machine I knew that that might not be something I want to deal the consequences with so I didn't tell anyone anything about Ron was still only a kid and he was still keeping his obsession with time travel a secret when he discovered a book called The Universe and Dr Einstein I actually discovered the book and. Used Book section of the Salvation Army that was all I could afford at that time it had a picture of Einstein on the cover next to an hourglass I said our must have something to do with time and when I tried reading the book the book was a popular level book but it was very hard going but it did say that Einstein said that time can be changed that time is not something that moves independent of us that I knew that if I could understand what Einstein did then I would be able to really understand how to put time machine together Ron had an appetite for science whether that be omes line is high school electronics class or science fiction like Ray Bradbury and The Twilight Zone. If followed his love of science to the Air Force then to study physics on the g.i. Bill and later the University of Connecticut as a professor of theoretical physics of then surely when I got the position that you can as you can imagine when I came in for the interview I did not say planning on building a time machine but it turns out that there was something that's associated with the universe which is very weird itself that allowed me a cover story not as a black hole as a black hole is just simply a star that has collapsed to a point that all the like the tries to go out gets pulled back to it if you were to bring a Clarke closer and closer and closer to a black hole what you would find is that time for that clock would start slowing down and if you got right near the black hole time would come nearly to a halt so I knew that if I could study the theory of black holes and use this is my career then I could keep on the slide this notion of what I was really interested in was trying to build a time machine many many times during my During my life from the time I was a child to the time it was a teenager to you know even now I would sometimes imagine going back and having built the time machine and seeing my father get by the time on turn 45 he began to feel discouraged after all it had been 34 years since he built that 1st time machine and his dream was still well just a dream. Run stopped working and he took a leave of absence from the university. He was losing hope and he decided to confide in a colleague. Only instead of laughing at his ideas about time travel the colleague said hey you're behind the times he said other scientists were studying time travel to and from better hurry up and get back to it. Pretty soon Ron was engrossed in his research again studying furiously sleeping eating a radically energized by his renewed belief that time travel may really be possible . Imagine that you have right now a cup of coffee in front of you think of that coffee in the cup as being like empty space. Think of your spoon as being like circulating like big now what happens if I take the spoon and stir the coffee the coffee starts swirling around well that's exactly what the circulating lightning does to the empty space if I take a sugar cube and I drop it into the coffee as I stir the coffee around the sugar cube will get dragged around by the coffee Now the thing that plays the role of the sugar cube is in subatomic particle call a neutron which is a part of every atom if I put that neutron into the empty space and then I turn on the circulating light being as a circulating white being twisty empty space the empty space would drag the neutron around so as I twist the empty space if I twisted violently about what will eventually happen is that time normally we think of time for a straight line that we all move toward in the past and present to the future well that straight line of Todd what Ventura get twisted into a loop itself and so as we move along that loop we can go from the past to the present to the future with we're on a loop so we can actually go from the future back into the past that was pretty sure he had finally figured out the equations he needed but almost none of his colleagues even knew about his interest in time travel after all he'd been keeping the whole thing a secret since he was 11 years old. Decided to present his discovery at a conference on relativity at Howard University one of the people in the audience was really one of the giants in relativity physics his name was Bryce the web and he was one of these people that didn't suffer fools gladly and that they guess that he made me nervous so the thing that surprised me was a remark and he could have made this you know to me after the talk but he made this to the audience and what he said was is that I don't know if you ever see or for. Father again but he would have been proud of you Ron was moved but he was also confused why wouldn't he be able to see his father again and when he figured out what time travel is possible how come we don't we're not inundated with time travelers all around us you know time travel tours should be you know all over the place what I realized was that you cannot go back to the past earlier than when the time machine is turned on and suppose that I turn it on today and I leave it on what's a 400 years that someone could travel back 255075 years all the way back to the point that I turn the machine on but they can't go earlier than that because the device is what's creating the conditions and there's nothing for the time traveler to materialize into into the past but as I said I have faith that eventually this is going to lead to a fundamental breakthrough for the human race I think is just a pun intended a matter of time. Dr Ronald Mallett time traveler produced by Emily coral and this is the Public Radio Exchange. We're going to run for the predictable right here the boy the owner of your cover who are political This is Public Radio reports check it out taking all the good bits of public radio most of them up and make them are things. That. I've been looking. Girl and wanting for the. Nation to be at or above my. Next. Thing I like giving a presentation that. Most theaters don't give anymore. Truck reminiscent of the old movie going days in the thirty's and forty's are swimming with you know some quite old fashioned. Intermission music and things like that and it was like stepping back in time to like. Big kids have a huge box light feeling for them and this has a homey feeling you can smell the oil flowing but then it's himself as I hope you can see how the planet has moved by that the British film is. This no this is no question about it you walk in the floors Creek in. The seats are somewhat uncomfortable. It doesn't matter and it's real it's just real. In the late 1900 so. Too late the other had stopped operating. A couple of years before that and the town sort of had a need and I had a need I want to do it and 41 years later we're still here. 35 millimeter back before. In 20 minute increments or 20 minutes or less and you would change the reels back and forth to each projection room had to projectors and. You didn't leave the projection room they were like bound to the projection room you kind of enjoyed it but there was stuff to do the whole time checking the arcs of the reels and reminding the film in it was ugly became a craft and I learned that way when I was a little kid in this very theater. Concern that. He's going to have to go. Whatever called digital. Studios 20th Century Fox and Disney and water brothers and universal and Paramount of Columbia all of those pushing for the digital You got to go digital just last Christmas one of the Christmas movies was Nebraska and Paramount told my booker be sure to tell done this is the last 35 millimeter we're striking to have. The digital switches to survival tactic for the studios and for the theaters it's much less expensive to create a digital print whereas a $35.00 millimeter print can cost up to $10000.00 or so a digital hard drive cost them less than $150.00 being a purist envy experience or $35.70 millimeter Iranian projectors almost all my life it's a big change like what happened. It's sad and it's hired hard you know it's hard to swallow but digital projection equipment is is what it is it cost me about $52000.00 I still need probably another $15000.00 for that screen to make it work I don't like to beg. Peterborough. Fundraisers they kept trying to raise money from the community I think they did a Kickstarter. Does not want to do that and like having my tin cup I hope I want to earn it if I watch my pennies the payments I made I work alone a lot now more so than I did in the past like I do my own janitorial work I work the counter I work the projection rooms I do it myself to a void expenses that I can avoid and that helps with. This year to run this theater a little will to New Hampshire I easily work at least 80 hours a week I do it because I want to and I do it because I love it but it has to be not . Going to happen much longer. That's not. How people now people associate themselves with. What people used to. Rush to see a film before it went out a lot of people's reaction is Al just wait for it on video I'll just wait for it on Netflix it's going to go away. You know try to keep them keep it around for a while. But people that. Love old theaters and people of the old movies don't aren't all going to be gone. This story was produced by Meghan shank for assault radio. Director Andrew Stanton on the clues to a great story Ted 21 of the jaws television host Mr Rogers always carried in his wallet a quote from a social worker but that frankly there isn't anyone you couldn't learn to love once you've heard their story. Mr Rogers is always right never this is public radio remains to be with you. My name is Emily Cortlandt I mean assistant remakes are here helping out Roman Mars the host you know and love the piece you're about to hear it's special it's the $1000.00 story to get staggered into the big bubbling brew that is remakes it comes from producer Eric Molinsky and it's about Star Trek actually it's really about Ronald Moore who's an original Trekkie he grew up with Star Trek in the 1970 s. But when he was getting teased for the Captain Kirk poster he hung in his college dorm room he had no idea he'd end up where he is today statement. Be the captain of this enterprise was a spot find a logical reason for sparing the Hulk and make it stick Star Trek was originally on the air on n.b.c. From the 1966 to early 1960 s. 3 seasons 79 episodes and I didn't really start watching it until 1073974 so he was in strip syndication where he was on 5 days a week even better because then I could watch it every day after school where a human being with love. We can stop we can admit that we're killers but we're not going to kill I was a Kirk fan I mean I thought Kirk was was the ultimate hero and I wanted to be Kirk he just he had it all had a sense of humor and yet there was this sort of loneliness of command that they always play and there's something noble about that and so there's of sacrifice of always you know his only mistress was his ship and then something about that sort of romantic idea and then I'm sure I was just kind of spoke turns of. Well to me. I started pirating my own episodes I had an audio recorder. You know a standard audio cassette recorder that my dad had and let me. And I would set it next to the television speaker and record episodes and many a night I can remember drifting off to bed listening to episodes of those Starship Enterprise and to this day I'll watch an episode from the original series say and I'll know exactly what sound true is coming but I might be surprised by what's actually on screen because I kind of remember it like a radio show. Scotty. There ready to be much I don't know that I was aware of the nerdy Trekkie kind of stereotype for quite some time and mercifully so I was in college and I had a Captain Kirk poster in my employ dorm room and people started going one of those geeks and I was like what I mean it's like everybody like Star Trek don't you. I left Cornell my senior year I sort of forked out sort of when you stop going to class completely they call it flunking out they ask you to leave so I left and I just sort of started life over when I didn't have a future anymore and I moved away and was sleeping on a friend's floor and taking a bunch of odd jobs and eventually I started dating this girl who found out that I was a fan of the original Star Trek series and she had a connection to Star Trek The Next Generation which was in its 2nd season of production at that point and she said oh you know well I know people over at next gen and I could get you a tour of the sets as a oh my God this is amazing and then I just sat down and I took a shot for no real reason I just decided I was going to write an episode. And I sat down and wrote an episode a next generation and I tucked it under my arm and I brought it with me on the set . And I con the guy that was giving me the set 2 or into reading it and he liked it . And it turned out he was one of Gene Roddenberry's assistants. And suddenly I was there and I was writing for Star Trek and I wrote the adventures in a prize week after week stood on its bridge I sat in its captain's chair and eventually I would kill Captain Kirk. I wrote co-wrote Star Trek Generations and in that movie you killed Captain Kirk and you know I literally killed my childhood he was. Going to. Make a difference. In a difference. They started. The company in the book. It's a very deep tender place on some level I really wanted to do that to write the last chapter because then that made him human and made him one of us and somehow it made him real. Leak. This story comes to you from producer Eric Molinsky. This is bike on blank distributed by p.r. X. The Public Radio Exchange I'm David care like. Sometimes you just have to get the stories that you've heard on take before they're lost forever that's what Joe Smith did Joe Smith was a long time record executive who helped sign bands like The Grateful Dead chicken Hendrix Van Morrison James Taylor and then in the 1980 s. Smith had an epiphany he needed to record America's music legends in their own words before they died so we set out to interview dozens of icons for a book called off the record but no one. Never heard the tapes of these conversations until now. That. This is America I don't give a damn what did that take to Samantha and I love it so if somebody don't like some I do this his or her Parag get it just like it's mine. Ray Charles in June of 1970 Joe Smith donated this tape and more than 200 hours of interviews to the Library of Congress this is our 1st collaboration to bring these interviews to life snow mom told me a lot man a lot about minding your own business and even other people been is alone and let them think what they want I mean I can't help what I sound like what I sound I guess what I am you know I cannot be anything other than what I am. Saying just as you like to reckon I sing Georgia true I say Hit the Road Jack true I say what I say true Each night I was saying it the way I feel that now. They know when an insane jogging to same way I've played on the day cuz I'm I have to go and study myself in learned I mean it really would be a chore that's why I can't live say he. Somebody asked me one time I wanna feel about being called a genius do I feel I have to live up to so I mean didn't that kind of ballgame I feel that whatever people say about me and call me you know I mean all the little adjectives and different things that people have put on me and thanks I've said it but I had nothing to do with that I never said I was a genius I never said I was a cornerstone I've never said I'm a legend in mountain and you know what I'm saying and like that and what I have to live up to is being myself if. If I do that the risk of taking it south. 'd that think that most great artists who are extremely known it would intimidate a lot of people I don't want to do that to people but I but but I know I did yes when I'm having a rehearsal and then new guys who come in to try for the job. That my conductor really rehearsing because I don't want to die to you to get bent out of shape because I walk in I always stay out of her you know when they 1st come in they would still have a chance to play a little bit and then I walk in because I've seen guys fall apart man. I remember the 1st time I went to kind of hard and normally you would think you'd be. Yeah I mean it's such a supposed to be in the cyclone the whatever but who are in for me as opposed to be in Skid I was so glad it is some point on if I ever got to cut your we have something in mind and you said all along this is it to me out of my cold I couldn't reach to get out of the stories to dishonor never was I was so happy to be able to play kind of your and be there I guess I didn't take that as a live through you better get now that it's about the respect. Of. The public is supporting me man did you know that even when I was nobody even through all the trials and tribulations or suffering the stuff I've went through they still stand by me and that's why I believe in giving the public the best I got. And. If you've got a 5000 I work to say may cause I want those 500. A blue. Ray Charles we've also animated this episode for our series with p.b.s. Digital Studios watch it on You Tube and it blank blank dot org I'm David Gerlach keep listening. To. You're listening to public radio me. On satellite exim 123 and on public radio stations coast to coast. And you know. I'm Stephanie fish and new listening to stage dive today Neon Trees check 12 Brandon Campbell bass specialist healing Bradley Kris Allen and I recently interviewed them in their cozy tour bus in Mountain View Yeah they drove to the show turns out. Not so great when it comes to flying Tyler starts off the story. Of planes going to a show for the 4th of July what year or 2 years ago. We were sitting in the emergency row so they always ask they say oh you know Are you Ok with the responsibilities of sitting in the seat and every other airline you know if you just nod your head like they're. Not the flight attendant on this plane but this weighty very honorary. It didn't happen like that immediately. I was going to bed in here until the trip what happened she asked like a normal human being and then Brandon and John didn't say yes John such a moment is really the time and friends very quickly and he's very very friendly like spread out with people and he said something like Of course she's not going to be brought down with us and she was like I need us news like of course and she was like I need a yes and John was like willing to help and they were just they just kept on words not. What they said yes. The guys didn't think of themselves as rebels we're not anti-authority in a bad attitude right now and she with every variant answer she became more and more upset and volatile. Enough times Tyler how did this. Had a Mohawk and some people sitting behind him or making comments about it because they never do interviews I mean it doesn't get into the. Pledge attendant Sawtelle or whispering and ran over and then she goes back and says Are you still talking about this you're going to get off my plate for a time or tries to explain he's like I'm sorry I wasn't talking about you and she's like yeah right you weren't. Tyler is a rock star and he dresses the part but he's also a very nice fellow so he doesn't like people being mean to him because of his Mohawk Tyler the arty feeling judged and looked down and. Just. Said What is the new racism no and she said if you guys are going to continue to take this I will have you ask ordered off the plane manager is sticking up for us and he said Don't worry we'll take care of her he meant they lodge a complaint upon landing but the flight attendant. Get that meaning so she reports that as a physical threat and calls in to have security waiting for us at the gate. Meanwhile I wasn't sitting next to any of these people so I had no idea what was going on I don't know where I was off the plane I was like where is my group everyone has left the plane no one else is coming out then I see the police go onto the plane I'm like. The rest of the group was detained by the f.b.i. I was rooms in like all the police movies and you're like just sitting alone in the chair and then you have like a metal toilet that. We were told that when we were in the air the flight attendants have the same authority as an f.b.i. Agent I think we were like We should probably start to take this. Because they're not letting us go how. Do you say you want to make a phone call to call your attorney and they take your cell phones in your eyes we could disappear. Flashback to 4th and 5th grade cried again to the principal's office like a tearing night in full on like cry. To worked after about 2 hours determined that the. Threat. Threatening. And so they let them go to their show we had an incredible concert. On the 4th of July so it's very American. Freedom. Doesn't truly represent the American spirit. Happy Independence Day everyone as you're enjoying the fireworks turn up. All the music in this piece. And don't forget to catch them on tour this summer thanks for listening to stage. At stage Cast dot com. And until next time. When my mom's car ran out of gas we stopped in the middle of the street one night trapped its flashlight on night told and then went to a doctor and. Had to cut off my nose playing x. Box and a character jumps out on the screen. And I thank the head open I said oh I got shot for my cheer because my pants are running together and I thought somebody put attack under but my sister got lost at a shopping mall in California I thought she was lost forever when my sister said to go set Cider House driving really slow looking at us so no doubt stickers on my channel thought I would die in the haunted house at the community center when a clown walked up to my face being left on my 1st birthday while my parents read getting. These. Lyrics. Oh I know I like to use it in the like a suit. Of armor much like my name is my and I played bass drum in the what year brigade were 18 people we don't have a leader we came together to make pretty loud and amplified. People. On May 21st one on our recess Tour 2007 started out 9 o'clock in the morning or just a feat in itself because some of the numbers were a band don't really know what and that's all about we just need to go play for 5 minutes right now for the 1st leg with a lead because we're great. Yes good daughter but we got pretty much everyone in the band to take off the day from work or school or whatever they were doing and we all got new uniforms. And we showed up at the 1st well over $79.00 and played for a couple of the fact that it was. Chilly So that's when I came here. To her is some a good number of kids who look pained and are holding their hand there that yes I was watching one little girl she's actually my god daughter this is Rosemary Grant she is the principal of c.b.s. Highland our I was watching your face and she just she didn't blink at all she wasn't smiling she was just like. The whole time they were playing and it's like she's kind of link eventually but then she clapped at the end so I think she liked it but there's a bigger portion of kids who are you know freaking out there shaking trying to get out there saying. There was a woman running into each other or anybody that all. Thank . You. Thank you. Thank you said we'll. See you get to see. I was going to go to some. Else so fine thank you very much. Thank you think it doesn't matter if you. Have to love the way because they do it loud. It's always all about the money get. Sick. One of our drummers has an alter ego as a percent of that he always performs as chop chop. Was 1000 was. His. Far and away sort of the centerpiece visually of our band being Go figure he's a drumming champ but that translates to children to him and they were just climbing all over him and being like. Thank you so we. Thank you. I think that's pretty funny and there was one point at which he was getting swarmed by literally about 200 children and he looked genuinely afraid and it was pretty awesome. To see. I'm young enough soul to really be able to remember school pretty clearly and truly carrying a lot of the time and I think we really. Well blew up that week possibly the month I would say if not the year maybe but. That's a great feeling we're at the learning community a Central Falls charter school that just started 2 years ago maybe 3 been here a couple of times this is where we got our recess Stevie's together they're really good we visited the learning community about 8 months after the band formed because Kathy Connelly was a good personal friend and she is an administrator of the learning I just loved the idea of surprising all of the kids in the school something that's this is fun you know the look on their faces when all of a sudden these people March in just for them and really it's just it's magical it's beautiful and that percolate into an idea of you know we should really take this on the road like of course this is a universal thing it's not just kids of the learning community we've got to spread it around so we got a grant and we're going to do it again it's like best tour ever. I know you want to clap some more but we've got one problem all you have to go for thank you I want to thank you. This story comes from Meghan hall. There's something rather magical about her life rock she sort of invisible energy. This area can actually take off and offer this energy to power this primitive receiver and. It has no battery you relies entirely on harnessing the energy to regulate he. Told her harnessing the power of radio when we are pure extreme. This bird is considered one of the best imitators It's called the liar bird and it copies the songs of all kinds of different birds and so it shows off for potential mates. He can imitate at least. This is David Attenborough from the b.b.c. Was narrating a wildlife documentary about a liar bird this clip you're listening to was posted online and went totally viral people couldn't believe the sounds that bird could make it does far more than just mimic bird songs. That was a commercial. And again. And now a camera with Dr. A now this sounds your promises and the chains are working thereby. Thank. You. The World According To sound is made by Christophe and Sam Our next. Paul Stamets mushrooms and saving the wild we are so blind man is mushrooms Oh perishable that is 5 days when you have mushroom that can feed you it can kill you and make you high and he will you and it's on your visual for a few days is naturally for humans to board that which is powerful books mysterious to the Sunday morning at 6 am on. Top of. You know. Next time on Philosophy Talk extreme altruism donating over 50 percent of your annual income to charity Well I think that's extremely specially if you have anyone else depending on your but surely would be better to feed a starving tiled than say by your 10 year old a smartphone Well yeah but are we morally obliged to the. Big screen down through isn't fun for us to be taught Sunday morning at 11 on Calle w 91.7 if. You're listening to p.r. X. Remax taking you through the early Sunday hours here on $91.00. San Francisco. From p.r. X. The Public Radio Exchange this is how sound your. Welcome to House sound the backstory to great radio storytelling. This may Studs Terkel return 100 years old if he was still alive he was born May 16th 1912 Studs was well it's hard to sum up but Studs was America's interviewer he chronicled the history of the 20th century through the voices Well I don't want to say average or regular Americans that's that's a bit trite. He gives us ourselves that is perfect that's perfect Studs Terkel gives us ourselves by the way that Sidney Lewis said worked with studs for about 25 years his oral history books really provide in my opinion a great view of the 20th century from the ground from people talking about their experience of history as it's happening history not according to the officials and the authorities and for much of the 20th century white men in suits but from all kinds of people talking about what they saw felt good lived and believed Studds books include Division Street about life in Chicago hard times it was an oral history about the Depression one of his books was called working and other was race there's also the good war which was a Pulitzer Prize winning book about World War 2 even though these books are considered oral histories Studds didn't think of them.

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