On Jan. 15, DNTO featured all the stories below. Then on Jan 25, Your DNTO
featured the
stories and music in bold below, plus calls from DNTO listeners
Judy, Ian, David and Michael.
- Anne Marie Scheffler on
what she learned in an upside-down school bus.
- Portland bus driver Dan Christensen on his
experiences behind the wheel.
- Grant Lawrence on the
incredibly awkward bus ride that changed his life
- Naomi Ragen on her "Rosa Parks"
moment on a "kosher" bus in Israel.
- Marika Wheeler on confronting the bullies on her bus.
- Jonathan Mooney on how
riding the "short bus" changed his view of the world.
- Sook-Yin jumps on The Meligrove
Band's tour bus
- Sarah Armenia rode the bus from hell in Europe and
explains why you should too.
- Lauren
Emberson explains why hearing "halfalogues" on the bus affects how we think.
Listen to the entire episode of Your DNTO here: (one
link)
Listen to the entire episode of DNTO here: (one link)
Sometimes, you make a major discovery by looking at the world from a
different perspective. We'll find out how
Anne Marie Scheffler learned a
major life lesson when she found herself in an upside-down school
bus.
Now there's one person on the bus who doesn't have much choice as to
where he or she sits: the driver. A couple of years back, Portland bus driver
Dan Christensen
started a blog where he wrote about his funny, zany and sometimes sad
experiences moving people all over Portland. We'll talk to Dan about his
experiences behind the wheel.
As a high school student, Marika Wheeler
was bullied on the bus almost every single day. But one day an egg salad
sandwhich changed everything... She'll tell us how.
When
Jonathan Mooney was eight years old,
he was told he would have to ride on the "short bus" - the half-size bus that
takes the kids with disabilities to their special ed classes. But that bus
became more than a mode of transport for Jonathan - it became a symbol of how
our culture looks at disability. He'll tell us how riding the "short bus"
changed his view of the world.
Grant Lawrence tells us
how one incredibly awkward bus ride became a life-changing moment for him...
thanks to the unbelievable behaviour of one unruly passenger.
How do you
spend your time on the bus? Sook-Yin sits down to ask some commuters.
The
story of Rosa Parks - the black woman who refused to move to the "back of the
bus" in the 1950s - has become legendary. Which is why it's so surprising that
segregation can still occur on a public bus... in a democratic and generally
progressive nation. It was in 2004 that
Naomi Ragen - an American-born author, who
now lives in Israel - had her own "Rosa Parks" moment. She's been fighting
against segregation on buses ever since... and just last week, she finally got a
decision from the highest
court in the land. She'll tell us what happened, and why the Israeli Supreme
Court's ruling is a mixed victory.
Sook-Yin jumps on the tour bus owned
by
The Meligrove Band to find out what
life on a band bus is really like - and why the Meligrove bus is currently
parked.
So picture this: you're on a bus, and someone next to you answers
his or her cell phone. It's intrusive, it's annoying, and it's made all the
worse because you can only hear one half of the conversation. There's a term for
this - it's called "halfalogue." And according to Brown University PhD
candidate
Lauren
Emberson, being forced to listen to these "halfalogues" isn't just
irritating... it's affecting the way we think. She'll explain how.
Sarah
Armenia took the bus ride from hell while traveling in Europe...and she'll
explain why you should take it too.
Playlist: (Jan 15 and Jan 25 in
bold)
Adele - "Rolling In the
Deep"
The Dinning
Sisters - "Love On a Greyhound Bus"
The White Stripes - "Hotel Yorba"
* Kathleen
Edwards - "Six O'Clock News"
The Parkas - "Bus Station
Blues"
* The
Hollies> - "Bus Stop"
* Imaginary
Cities - "Ride This Out"
The Meligrove Band - "This
Work" (live)
The Dears -
"Unsung"
Ruth Moody - "We Can Only
Listen"