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Watch: 'One and Two' Trailer Introduces Two Kids With a Very Special Ability

I’m hesitant to even share this trailer for One and Two because the best way to see it is without really knowing anything about it. That’s how I came across it at the South by Southwest Film Festival earlier this year, when some friends were raving about it and all they’d say was “It’s about two kids with special abilities.”

So when Andrew Droz Palermo’s movie shows off those “special abilities” for the first time, it came as a pretty big surprise. Admittedly the movie doesn’t hide their abilities. They’re not some last minute plot twist, they’re the entire impetus for the story about two special kids (Kiernan Shipka and Timothee Chalamet) growing up on an isolated farm who start to challenge their overbearing father’s control over their lives. But there’s definitely a gift in not quite knowing what to expect, and unfortunately if you watch this trailer, it’s going to take away a lot of that surprise.

But, it’s also a good trailer that shows off one of the more unique, young adult supernatural stories you can see as an alternative to the mega budget Hollywood movies that dominate the landscape. I didn’t even love One and Two as much as those who first recommended it to me, but it’s hard to deny that it’s got a very special quality to it that’s worth seeing.

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How An 11-Year-Old Boy Invented The Popsicle

A vintage ad for Popsicle

A vintage ad for Popsicle The National Archives hide caption

itoggle caption The National Archives

The next time you pop a Popsicle in your mouth, think about this: You’re enjoying the fruits of an 11-year-old entrepreneur’s labor.

Back in 1905, a San Francisco Bay Area kid by the name of Frank Epperson accidentally invented the summertime treat. He had mixed some sugary soda powder with water and left it out overnight. It was a cold night, and the mixture froze. In the morning, Epperson devoured the icy concoction, licking it off the wooden stirrer. He declared it an Epsicle, a portmanteau of icicle and his name, and started selling the treat around his neighborhood.

In 1923, Epperson decided to expand sales beyond his neighborhood. He started selling the treat at Neptune Beach, a nearby amusement park. Dubbed a “West Coast Coney Island,” the park featured roller coasters, baseball, and an Olympic-sized swimming pool. Neptune flourished in the pre-Depression days, and consumers eagerly consumed Epsicles and snow cones (which also made their debut at Neptune).

Buoyed by this success, Epperson applied for a patent for his “frozen confection of attractive appearance, which can be conveniently consumed without contamination by contact with the hand and without the need for a plate, spoon, fork or other implement” in 1924. The patent illustrates the requirements for a perfect ice pop, including recommendations on the best wood for the stick: wood-bass, birch and poplar. Eventually, Epperson’s children urged him to change the ice pop’s name to what they called it: a Pop’s ‘Sicle, or Popsicle.

A 1917 ad for Alameda’s Neptune Beach, where Epperson sold his frozen “Epsicle” treats in the early 1920s. Courtesy of Alamedainfo.com hide caption

itoggle caption Courtesy of Alamedainfo.com

This origin story is charming, if somewhat apocryphal (sources differ on the details), but it didn’t have a happy ending for the inventor. A broke Epperson sold the rights to his creation to the Joe Lowe Company in the 1920s, much to his regret: “I was flat and had to liquidate all my assets,” he later said. “I haven’t been the same since.”

The Lowe Company went on to catapult Epperson’s invention to national success. During the Great Depression, the company debuted the two-stick version of the popsicle to help consumers stretch their dollar – the duo sold for five cents.

The patent Frank Epperson filed in 1924 for his "frozen confectionery."

The patent Frank Epperson filed in 1924 for his “frozen confectionery.” United States Patent and Trademark Office hide caption

itoggle caption United States Patent and Trademark Office

But this delicious duo faced competition from Good Humor – which had recently debuted its own chocolate-covered ice cream on a stick – and Lowe was sued for copyright infringement. The court’s compromise? Popsicle could sell water-based treats, and Good Humor could sell ice cream pops. Popsicle tested the limits of the agreement, selling a “Milk Popsicle,” and the two companies tussled in court about the definitions of sherbert and ice cream over the years through a series of lawsuits.

The giant food corporation Unilever scooped up the Popsicle brand in 1989, expanding the brand beyond its original fruity flavors. It also bought Good Humor, ending the feud between the two icy competitors.

Over the years, Epperson’s childhood invention has achieved iconic status, standing in for any frozen treat the way Kleenex means a tissue. Which explains why also over the years, Unilever has worked to keep the name Popsicle its and its alone: In 2010, the company threatened legal action against artisan Brooklyn ice pop makers People’s Pops for using the word “popsicle” on its blog.

As for Epperson, he died in 1983 and is buried in Oakland’s Mountain View Cemetery, where he’s featured on a tour celebrating local food luminaries – including chocolate mogul Domingo Ghirardelli and mai tai inventor Victor “Trader Vic” Bergeron.

But his story lives on in many forms — from the official Popsicle website, where it’s illustrated in comic form, to an inspirational Christian self-help book about trusting in God’s grand plan for your life. Epperson’s childhood invention, born randomly on a freezing night, has also proved to be even more successful than he could have imagined: These days, some 2 billion Popsicles are sold each year.

Shelby Pope is a freelance writer living and eating her way through Oakland, Calif. A version of this story first appeared on KQED’s Bay Area Bites blog.

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For Kids With Tourette's, At-Home Training Could Help

To reduce public tics, children can try therapy at home.

To reduce public tics, children can try therapy at home. Tomas Rodriguez/Corbis hide caption

itoggle caption Tomas Rodriguez/Corbis

If you’ve ever had hiccups in a quiet room, you know how embarrassing and completely uncontrollable they can feel. What if, instead of the hiccups, your body jerked involuntarily or you blurted out words without meaning to? That’s a rough idea of what living with Tourette syndrome can be like.

Designers of a new computer program called TicHelper hope that they will be able to help children recognize and control these impulses themselves.

People with Tourette’s perform repetitive movements or vocalizations called tics. A simple tic might be something like head jerking, eye blinking, or throat clearing, and a complex tic might involve patterns of movement or saying multiple words or phrases.

We don’t know exactly what causes Tourette’s, says Douglas Woods, a psychologist at Texas A&M University. Woods, who is also co-chair of the Tourette Association of America Medical Advisory Board, is one of the minds behind TicHelper.

Tourette’s affects more boys than girls, and symptoms usually start between ages 3-7.

A view of TicHelper.com

A view of TicHelper.com via TicHelper.com hide caption

itoggle caption via TicHelper.com

“Sometimes kids will grow out of [Tourette’s],” Woods says. But if the wait-and-see approach isn’t working, and the tics are interfering with daily life, there are a few treatment options.

One option is medication. Woods says there are a few different antipsychotic drugs that are used to manage Tourette syndrome, but they have side effects and don’t always work. An alternative to pharmaceutical treatment is behavioral therapy.

A form of behavioral therapy called comprehensive behavioral intervention for tics, or CBIT for short, is commonly used. CBIT training teaches people with Tourette’s to recognize the onset of a tic and to perform a different behavior when they feel one coming on.

“The idea is that when someone has a tic, they tend to have an urge,” says clinical psychologist Eric Storch, a professor at the University of South Florida and Clinical Director of Pediatrics at Rogers Memorial Hospital in Tampa. “It’s like when you’re about to yawn. You know just before it happens that a yawn’s coming. [CBIT] teaches a person to be aware.”

And it gives them the tools to manage tics. Storch describes a patient whose tic was rubbing two fingers together, to the point of rubbing off skin. With CBIT, the boy was able to recognize the onset of a tic and instead unobtrusively press down on his kneecap until the urge went away.

A typical CBIT training program involves eight sessions with a therapist, spread over 10 weeks. Results, Woods says, can be maintained up to six months.

Both psychologists say that CBIT is at least as effective as medical treatments. The problem is that it requires specially trained therapists — and there aren’t that many of them. Which is where TicHelper comes in.

“It’s essentially a self-help, self-guided program that leads the patient through a CBIT treatment,” Woods says. He and his colleagues received funding from the National Institute of Mental Health to develop TicHelper, which is now being tested. So far, the results look promising. “The kids that go through it, enjoy it,” Woods says. They’re able to do the skills,”

The program has four main sections: tic education, reducing tic triggers, tic awareness and tic blocking. Videos featuring a friendly actress guide patients thorough each section. The program personalizes treatment based on feedback from the patient. Woods says the testing will help the designers modify and improve it based on user feedback. Though TicHelper isn’t available yet, interested patients or doctors can sign up to receive updates on its progress.

The website currently lists the cost of an 8-week program through TicHelper at $150, but Woods says that the price isn’t set.

Storch, who is unaffiliated with TicHelper, is enthusiastic about the idea of at-home treatment for tics. “I really think it’s an exciting development that has a lot of practicality,” he says. “We know what behavioral treatments work well for tics, but the dissemination is really terrible.”

Storch says the biggest advantage of TicHelper will be its accessibility. CBIT, he says, works well and is incredibly safe compared with pharmaceuticals. TicHelper would maximize the benefits of CBIT by making it more inexpensive and easier to get to than therapy.

Which is not to say that Storch or Woods would recommend TicHelper as the only form of tic management. Both psychologists suggest that this program might work best as part of a management plan. One option, Woods says, might be to start treatment with TicHelper at first diagnosis and proceed to more intensive care if in-home treatment isn’t working.

Storch thinks that ideally the patient would work with the program, but touch base periodically with an experienced therapist or health care provider to check progress. But, he says, “we don’t have enough providers.” And some treatment, he says, is better than no treatment at all.

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For Love Or Money: Fans, Businesses Flock To Fantasy Sports

Kelly Hirano, vice president of engineering, demonstrates the Yahoo Sports Daily Fantasy contest during a product launch in July in San Francisco. Yahoo has designed this experience for the mobile fantasy player and offers Daily Fantasy, Full Season Fantasy, and real-time sports news and scores as an all-in-one experience.
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Kelly Hirano, vice president of engineering, demonstrates the Yahoo Sports Daily Fantasy contest during a product launch in July in San Francisco. Yahoo has designed this experience for the mobile fantasy player and offers Daily Fantasy, Full Season Fantasy, and real-time sports news and scores as an all-in-one experience. Eric Risberg/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Eric Risberg/AP

In the famous Disney movie, a carpenter named Geppetto longed to have a son. He carved a puppet of a boy, and, wouldn’t you know it, the wooden Pinocchio magically became a real child. Fantasy games are the Pinocchio of sport, for all who play them become Geppettos. Isn’t it the dream of every fan to construct his or her own team, as Geppetto wanted to carve out a son?

And fantasy sports allows you to do that. You draft your own players for your make-believe team, and then you bet based on how your real players perform in real games. But then, we call that fantasy. According to federal law, it’s legal for you to bet on your make-believe team when it plays other make-believe teams, but you cannot bet on real teams when they play other real teams.

The rationale is that in selecting players for your team— let’s say the San Francisco Giants— your analysis of baseball qualifies the activity as a game of skill. But you can’t legally bet on the actual San Francisco Giants as an entity, even though you would be applying the same skills to evaluate your wager. It isn’t just fantasy sports, it’s fantasy jurisprudence.

But it is hardly any dreamland. Fantasy sports are now estimated to be a $2 billion business in the U.S., with 57 million players. Each year the numbers explode, with more serious investors happy to broker the action.

Just this month, Yahoo threw in big-time to fantasy sports, booking games every day. It’s no fantasy that Yahoo will bank 10 percent of what they take in. To make it even more bizarre, while professional sports leagues all have taken hysterical stands against changing the federal law — which prohibits gambling on actual games — the sanctimonious leagues also have partnerships with various fantasy sites.

The word fan was originally carved out of “fanatic” but now it would more properly be identified with “fantasy.” You have to wonder, with a lot of fans, if fantasy hasn’t already begun to trump reality. A fan may root for an actual team, but it’s only an emotional attachment. With his fantasy team, he’s put cash on the barrelhead. Ah, for love, or money?

Pinocchio eventually became a real boy. Geppetto’s fantasy beat reality. If the popularity of fantasy sports keeps growing, someday we may play real games just to support our fantasy habit.

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Today in Movie Culture: 'Ant-Man' Lego Trailer, 'Jurassic Park' High Heels Edition and More

Here are a bunch of little bites to satisfy your hunger for movie culture:

Trailer Remake of the Day:

This obligatory Lego version of the Ant-Man trailer is a little late, but it’s very well made (via Design Taxi):

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Movie Parody of the Day:

We’re still making fun of the scene in Jurassic World where Bryce Dallas Howard runs in heels. XVP Comedy has added similar footwear to the feet of every character — human and dinosaur — throughout the Jurassic Park series for a new special edition (via A.V. Club):

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Alternate Dimension Movie of the Day:

In another world, maybe Clark Gable could have played Iron Man, though he died three years before the Marvel superhero’s debut. See more posters for comic book movies starring Golden Age movie stars, including Marilyn Monroe, Humphrey Bogart and James Cagney at Comics Alliance.

Fake movie of the day:

In the following Funny or Die video, Clint Howard pitches a new Pippi Longstocking action movie with a superhero angle with Milla Jovovich in the lead:

Vintage Image of the Day:

Orson Welles as Charles Foster Kane in Citizen Kane, which was just named the greatest American film of all time in a BBC critics’ poll. Those reflections represent how many times this movie tops a list like that.

Movie Countdown of the Day:

Oh, there’s Citizen Kane again, on a new counted-down ranking by CineFix of the 10 most beautiful movies of all time:

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Movie Take-Down of the Day:

In honor of Pixels opening this weekend, Honest Trailers flushes the Super Mario Bros. movie down the toilet:

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Cosplay of the Day:

It’s too funny how much this guy looks exacty like Hiccup from How to Train Your Dragon compared to how little this girl looks like Toothless (via Fashionably Geek):

Fan Build of the Day:

While you wait to buy your own Lexus brand hoverboard, you can build your own replica of the Mattel hoverboard from Back to the Future Part II by following this instructional video from the DIY Pro Shop (via Geek Tyrant):

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Classic Trailer or the Day:

Today is Robin Williams‘s birthday, and he would have been 64 had he not died last year. The occasion is made sadder when you note the song used in the original trailer for The World According to Garp, which opened this week 23 years ago.

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New VOD and Digital Releases, Plus: How to Watch 'The Divergent Series: Insurgent' at Home Now Before Disc

Our resident VOD expert tells you what’s new to rent and/or own this week via various Digital HD providers such as cable Movies On Demand, Amazon, iTunes, Vudu and, of course, Netflix.

Cable Movies On Demand: Same-day-as-disc releases, older titles and pretheatrical exclusives for rent, priced from $3-$10, in 24- or 48-hour periods

Before We Go (Chris Evans-directed romantic comedy; Chris Evans, Alice Eve, Maria Breyman; pretheatrical release premieres 7/21; rated PG-13)

Unexpected (comedy-drama; Anders Holm, Cobie Smulders; premieres 7/24 on cable MOD and in theaters; rated R)

Digital HD: Rent from $4-$7 or own from $13-$20 (HD may cost more than SD)

Vudu

Offers the same movies as cable Movies On Demand for rent and/or download. Plus:

(YA sci-fi adventure; Shailene Woodley, Theo James, Octavia Spencer, Kate Winslet, Naomi Watts, Jai Courtney; available now to download to own—not rent—two weeks before disc; rated PG-13)

Child 44 (suspense; Tom Hardy, Gary Oldman, Noomi Rapace, Joel Kinnaman; available now to download to own—not rent—two weeks before disc; rated R)

The Wolfpack (coming-of-age drama-documentary; the Angulo brothers; available now to rent only; rated R)

Google Play

Offers none of the movies listed on Movies On Demand. Plus:

The Divergent Series: Insurgent, Child 44, The Wolfpack

iTunes

Offers the same movies as cable Movies On Demand for rent and/or download. Plus:

The Divergent Series: Insurgent, Child 44, The Wolfpack

Amazon

Offers the same movies as cable Movies On Demand for rent and/or download except for Unexpected. Plus:

The Divergent Series: Insurgent, Child 44, The Wolfpack

Netflix Watch Instantly: $8.99 per month for unlimited streaming

New This Week:

(7/25): The Guest

Follow Robert B. DeSalvo @zuulboy

MORE FROM AROUND THE WEB:

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FCC Set To Approve AT&T-DirecTV Merger

FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler has circulated an order to his fellow commissioners on the Federal Communications Commission to approve the $48.5 billion merger between AT&T and DirecTV.

In a statement, Wheeler said the move would bring more competition to the broadband marketplace and benefit consumers.

“If the conditions are approved by my colleagues, 12.5 million customer locations will have access to a competitive high-speed fiber connection,” Wheeler said. “This additional build-out is about 10 times the size of AT&T’s current fiber-to-the-premise deployment, increases the entire nation’s residential fiber build by more than 40 percent, and more than triples the number of metropolitan areas AT&T has announced plans to serve.”

Under the terms of the order, AT&T will not be allowed to place data caps on rivals offering video and other content, and it will be required to submit all completed interconnection agreements to the FCC.

The Wall Street Journal reports that the Justice Department has signed off on the deal.

The two companies announced the merger in May 2014. As NPR’s Jim Zarroli reported at the time:

“The merger will unite one of the nation’s most powerful telecommunications companies with one of its leading pay-TV services. Together, the two companies will have 26 million pay-TV customers. And the deal will allow AT&T to offer a much more varied menu of services to potential customers.”

The deal would also, in the words of The Journal, lift “the shadow of AT&T’s bungled attempt to buy T-Mobile US Inc. in 2011 that was blocked by the Justice Department, a misstep that cost the company more than $4 billion in break-up fees and other penalties.”

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How Vandalism And Fear Ended Abortion In Northwest Montana

Susan Cahill, owner of All Families Healthcare, stands in front of the first building where she opened her practice. Missoula is now the nearest place for women in the Flathead to find abortion services.
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Susan Cahill, owner of All Families Healthcare, stands in front of the first building where she opened her practice. Missoula is now the nearest place for women in the Flathead to find abortion services. Corin Cates-Carney/MTPR hide caption

itoggle caption Corin Cates-Carney/MTPR

There has never been a welcome mat for abortion service providers in the Flathead Valley, a vast county that stretches over 5,000 square miles in the Northwest corner of Montana. Susan Cahill began providing abortions in 1976 in the first clinic to offer the service in the Flathead.

“But that had an arson fire, and then we rebuilt that,” she says. “Then we had the anti-choice people try to arrest me for doing abortions when I wasn’t a doctor.”

Cahill performed abortions as a physician assistant for 38 years. Police testified in a recent trial that in March of 2014, Zachary Klundt took a hammer to the photos in Cahill’s office, poured iodine on the floor and tossed files from cabinets. Klundt damaged the building’s heating and plumbing and discharged a fire extinguisher. He said he broke into the clinic looking for prescription drugs.

Everything was destroyed in Cahill’s clinic.

“I’ve worked since I was 17,” she says. “Everything I’ve had, I’ve worked for.”

The clinic was in Kalispell, population 20,000. It’s the hub of the Flathead Valley, and the largest employer is Kalispell Regional Medical Center. In a town full of health care professionals, Cahill was the only one providing abortions.

“Because I was the only one, I got targeted,” she says.

Cahill’s clinic was a general family practice; her patients have had to find other health care. For abortion care, the options are more limited.

According to the Guttmacher Institute, in 2008 about a third of American women seeking access to abortion services traveled more than 25 miles to get them. Today, a woman in Kalispell has to drive 120 miles — each way — to Missoula to get an abortion. And some women are doing just that, says Melissa Barcroft, of Planned Parenthood of Montana, in Missoula.

“Anytime a provider stops providing services, the need doesn’t go away,” Barcroft says. “Patients still need that care.”

The loss of Cahill’s clinic has been frustrating, Barcroft says.

“I know from talking with our providers that we have seen a definite increase of patients from the Flathead area,” she says.

Cahill says she worries most about poor women, or those from the town of Browning, on the Blackfeet Indian reservation.

“The disadvantaged are always the ones that lose,” Cahill says. “Now you’ve got people who are on Medicaid, or who are from Browning, and are teenagers.” It can be much harder for them to get to Missoula, she says. “I used to give gas money for people to go home. Now … it is just a harder struggle for them.”

Cahill says plenty of local physicians can perform abortions, but they’re afraid.

Samantha Avery trained under Cahill at All Families Healthcare. At the time, Avery thought about going to medical school to pursue a career like Cahill’s.

“I know that she wanted me to be the one to take over her clinic,” Avery says. “End even before all of this, I told her, ‘I just don’t know if I could do that to my family — my future family. I can’t be the Susan Cahill. I’m not that brave of a person.’ “

Zachary Klundt and his sister in court.

Zachary Klundt and his sister in court. Corin Cates-Carney/MTPR hide caption

itoggle caption Corin Cates-Carney/MTPR

Avery decided instead to work for the Public Health Department in Flathead County. She says it was hard for her to watch Cahill lose everything so quickly. The weight of the community’s opposition to abortion is difficult to counter, she says — citing Zachary Klundt, who was convicted in the attack against the clinic, as just one example.

Klundt’s mother was on the board of Hope Pregnancy Ministries, which advocates for alternatives to abortion. She resigned after the attack.

Michelle Reimer, the executive director of Hope Pregnancy Ministries, says that what happened to Cahill and her clinic was terrible, and totally against her group’s mission.

“There is not a place for it in a Christian organization,” Reimer says. “There is always going to be the outlier, the one who represents us poorly, or who says the wrong thing, or — as we all would with a very volatile topic like abortion — expresses [himself or herself] passionately rather than logically. And I think we see that on both sides.”

Reimer says at the core of her faith is compassion — and telling a woman that regardless of what she chooses, she is loved.

In June, Klundt was sentenced to 20 years, with 15 years of that suspended. He was also ordered to pay restitution. In the courtroom, Klundt read Cahill an apology.

“I cannot even believe I did that to another soul,” he says. “But I did that to you. I know what it’s like to live with fear, and for me to do that to you is awful. And I am truly so sorry.”

He said his actions do not represent his faith.

For women in the Flathead Valley, Susan Cahill says, getting reproductive care is not any easier now that Klundt is sentenced. Her clinic is still gone.


This story is part of NPR’s reporting partnership with Montana Public Radio and Kaiser Health News.

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A Return To Ragas: Family Matters For Sitar Player Anoushka Shankar

Anoushka Shankar's new album, Home, marks a return to the Indian classical music her father, Ravi Shankar, taught her.
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Anoushka Shankar’s new album, Home, marks a return to the Indian classical music her father, Ravi Shankar, taught her. Laura Lewis / Deutsche Grammophon/Courtesy of the artist hide caption

itoggle caption Laura Lewis / Deutsche Grammophon/Courtesy of the artist

In the 1960s, the late musician Ravi Shankar became an ambassador for Indian classical music. He performed at Woodstock, collaborated with the Beatles and introduced Western audiences to the sitar, the Indian stringed instrument. For the last two decades of his life, Shankar was often joined on stage by his most dedicated student: his daughter Anoushka.

Along with performing alongside her father, Anoushka Shankar has experimented with DJs, made an album of flamenco music and teamed up with her half-sister Norah Jones. But on her latest album, Home, Shankar has returned to her father’s classical training. She told All Things Considered that it’s a collection she’s wanted to make for a long time, but it happened to come together just two years after her father passed away.

“He taught me right from the beginning,” Anoushka Shankar says. “So, in a way, the album did sort of feel like a real focusing on him and a process of reconnecting with him through playing the music that I’ve learned from him.”

In the booklet for Home, Shankar included an essay written by her father in the 1960s as an introduction to Indian classical music — but she also encourages listeners to approach the music without learning about it first.

“I think sometimes when you speak about something like ‘Indian classical music’ and ‘ragas,’ and all of that’s new to people, it can be quite intimidating, in the same way that I have sometimes found opera and Wagner intimidating — one doesn’t know where to begin sometimes,” she says. “So I’m quite keen to just say, ‘You know, just listen.’ If one’s curious and wants to know more, one can, but in the beginning you can also just listen.”

The listening, Shankar says, should take some time. “This music is a slow burn, you know? If someone’s used to the average two-and-a-half-minute song on the radio, it can be hard to understand what’s going on, because at two and a half minutes we’re still just playing the first notes and establishing things,” she says. “Give it the time to open up and play, and then it sort of seeps under your skin, and it has a very profound impact as a result.”

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Ravi Shankar understood this effect, and while he didn’t get to hear Home before his death, Anoushka says he had faith in her appreciation of the music. “He’s been really supportive of all the albums I’ve made in the last years, and I’m sure if he were alive he would feel particularly proud of this one,” she says. “But I think he felt very confident, especially in the final years that we were performing together, in the way I was playing — that that classical music was sort of safe in me, so to speak. I don’t think he felt the need for me to have to do it in his time.”

Hear the rest of the conversation with Anoushka Shankar, as well as excerpts from Home, in the audio link.

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The Ghost In The Car May Be A Hacker

Chris Valasek (left) and Charlie Miller talk about hacking into vehicle computer systems during the Black Hat USA 2014 hacker conference in Las Vegas last August.

Chris Valasek (left) and Charlie Miller talk about hacking into vehicle computer systems during the Black Hat USA 2014 hacker conference in Las Vegas last August. Steve Marcus/Reuters/Landov hide caption

itoggle caption Steve Marcus/Reuters/Landov

Andy Greenberg was minding his own business, driving a Jeep Cherokee on the highway in St. Louis when the SUV’s air vents suddenly started blasting cold air. Then the radio switched stations and began blaring hip hop at full volume. Spinning the radio control knobs did nothing. Soon, the windshield wipers turned on and wiper fluid obscured Greenberg’s view.

Then things started getting really interesting.

Let’s stop the story for a moment. Greenberg is a senior writer for Wired and he knew he was taking part in a demonstration by Charlie Miller and Chris Valasek. For years, the two researchers have been hacking cars’ onboard computers to show that modern autos are vulnerable to various cyber exploits.

You may remember that NPR’s Steve Henn reported on their experiments in 2013. Back then, Miller and Valasek demonstrated that they could jerk the wheel of a Prius or kill the brakes of a Ford Escape — using laptops wired to the cars’ computer systems.

This time, though, they didn’t have to be in the car — or anywhere near it — to wreak havoc on the controls. From miles away, the researchers were able to use a cellular connection to access the Jeep with Greenberg behind the wheel.

Now, back to Greenberg’s 70 mph drive from hell:

“As the two hackers remotely toyed with the air-conditioning, radio, and windshield wipers, I mentally congratulated myself on my courage under pressure. That’s when they cut the transmission.

“Immediately my accelerator stopped working. As I frantically pressed the pedal and watched the RPMs climb, the Jeep lost half its speed, then slowed to a crawl. This occurred just as I reached a long overpass, with no shoulder to offer an escape. The experiment had ceased to be fun… .

“Cars lined up behind my bumper before passing me, honking. I could see an 18-wheeler approaching in my rearview mirror.

Greenberg didn’t end up in an ambulance. He was able to roll the Jeep down an exit ramp and regain full control after turning the ignition off and on.

Miller and Valasek had taken over the Jeep after detecting a vulnerability in Uconnect, the computer system Chrysler uses. Greenberg explains in his Wired report:

“Uconnect, an Internet-connected computer feature in hundreds of thousands of Fiat Chrysler cars, SUVs, and trucks, controls the vehicle’s entertainment and navigation, enables phone calls, and even offers a Wi-Fi hot spot.”

Chrysler has issued a notice on its website that a free patch for the vulnerability is available for download or through dealers. “The security and confidence of our customers is important.,” the company says. “Similar to a smartphone or tablet, vehicle software can require updates for improved security protection to reduce the potential risk of unauthorized and unlawful access to vehicle systems.”

And on Tuesday, Sens. Edward Markey, D-Mass., and Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., introduced legislation that would require the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and the Federal Trade Commission to “establish federal standards to secure our cars and protect drivers’ privacy.” Their bill would also establish a rating system to let consumers know how well their cars protect drivers’ security and privacy.

Earlier this year, Markey issued a report warning of wireless vulnerabilities similar to those that Miller and Valasek demonstrated.

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