Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Emily Bobrow"


25 mentions found


With the war in Gaza dividing college campuses across the country, Greg Lukianoff believes this difficult moment reveals the depth of the free-speech crisis in higher education. As president of the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, a nonprofit organization devoted to protecting speech, Lukianoff has observed up close the dissolution of campus discourse over the past decade. “It’s particularly ugly right now, but things have been bad for a long time,” he says. Lukianoff’s nonpartisan group, known as FIRE, pledges to fight censorship from all directions. This means backing an economics professor at the University of Southern California who has been barred from campus for making anti-Hamas remarks to pro-Palestinian student protesters but also defending chapters of Students for Justice in Palestine against bans at various public universities.
Persons: Greg Lukianoff, Lukianoff, , Organizations: Foundation, Rights, University of Southern, Palestinian, Justice Locations: Gaza, University of Southern California, Palestine
An Astronaut With ‘Bad Eyesight and a Fear of Heights’
  + stars: | 2023-11-24 | by ( Emily Bobrow | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
As a NASA astronaut, Mike Massimino spacewalked four times to repair the Hubble Space Telescope. When he retired in 2014 and began giving talks about his experiences, he assumed audiences would want to hear about the thrills of those exploits. Instead, he found himself fielding questions that were broader and deeper: How did he weather disappointments? Why didn’t he give up when NASA rejected him three times before accepting him? “The space stories just help them remember the takeaways, the lessons I learned from making mistakes.”
Persons: Mike Massimino spacewalked, , ” Massimino Organizations: NASA, Hubble, American Museum of, Columbia University Locations: Manhattan
At 20 years old, golf phenom Rose Zhang has a reputation for poise under pressure—for being calm and disciplined in her approach to the game and her expectations about herself. Although known for breaking records and dominating the competition as an amateur, in June when she became the first woman in more than 70 years to win her professional golf debut, she expressed surprise: “I honestly didn’t even expect to make the cut.” After tying for third in the Maybank Championship in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, in late October, she said she just feels “really lucky,” adding: “I still have lots to learn.”Under that demeanor is a fierce drive. “Even though I’m considered pretty mellow, pretty chill, I definitely do have a very competitive spirit,” Zhang says over video from Malaysia just before the Maybank tournament. She has admitted that as a rising star on golf’s junior circuit in Southern California, she kept her 25 or so gold medals but threw away up to 20 silver ones, because who cares about second place? “I think that fight in me, that grind, has definitely allowed me to be where I am now,” she says.
Persons: Rose Zhang, , I’m, ” Zhang, Locations: Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Southern California
“A lot of animals are going to go extinct in our lifetime, and here we have an example of how we managed to save that from happening,” says Burns. Yet he is reluctant to call this a happy ending. “I think the dimensions of the tragedy are so immense that you can’t just congratulate yourself for pulling out of a nosedive,” he says.
Persons: , Burns
A Tech Pioneer Focused on Making AI a Force for Good
  + stars: | 2023-11-03 | by ( Emily Bobrow | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Fei-Fei Li , a renowned pioneer in artificial intelligence, says a conversation with her mother changed the course of her career. She notes that her parents, who brought her to the U.S. from China when she was 15 with hopes for a better life, had always been supportive of her work. That feat is now widely credited with helping to spawn the “deep learning” revolution in AI. Her mom was intrigued but unmoved. “What,” she pointedly asked, “can AI do to help people?”
Persons: Fei, Fei Li, “ Fei, Li, ” Li, Locations: China
Alice McDermott recalls reading the novel “The Quiet American” as a college student in the 1970s and being struck by the ridiculousness of Graham Greene ’s female characters: “They were clichés, childish and unbelievable.” Although she was impressed by how “brilliantly” he foresaw the “political fiasco” of America’s time in Vietnam, she bristled over a scene in which the book’s narrator, a grizzled British journalist, gazes at some clean-looking “American girls” eating ice cream in the Saigon heat and envies their simple “sterilized world.” “It was so dismissive,” she says. “I remember, even at 19, thinking, ‘No, that can’t be right.’”“Absolution,” McDermott’s ninth novel, considers the rich interior lives of some of these seemingly ordinary “girls.” “Telling a familiar story from an unfamiliar perspective appeals to me,” says McDermott, 70, who lives in Bethesda, Md., with her husband, David Armstrong , a retired neuroscientist and the father of her three adult children. She says that reading Tom Stoppard ’s absurdist play about Hamlet’s friends, “Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead,” reinforced her fascination with what she calls “the underside of a story.” “I want to know what the minor characters are up to behind the scenes,” she says.
Persons: Alice McDermott, Graham Greene ’, , gazes, , , can’t, McDermott, David Armstrong, Tom Stoppard ’, “ Rosencrantz, Guildenstern Locations: Vietnam, British, Saigon, Bethesda, Md
Matthew McConaughey insists that “the only” role he ever truly wanted to play was that of dad. “It just seemed like it was the greatest thing a man can do,” he says. “I was shaking everyone’s hands, saying, ‘Nice to meet you, sir,’ and what hit me in that moment was that all of them were fathers,” he says. The churchgoing McConaugheys live on the quiet outskirts of Austin with his nonagenarian mother, having fled the paparazzi-plagued beaches of Malibu over a decade ago. When McConaughey travels for work, his family comes, too.
Persons: Matthew McConaughey, , , , Miller, Camila Alves McConaughey, McConaughey Organizations: Triumph Thunderbird Locations: Uvalde , Texas, ” McConaughey’s Texas, Austin, Malibu
Ken Burns says he has been thinking about the American buffalo all of his life: “It may be the most important mammal in the history of the United States.” He explains that this “magnificent” yet beleaguered animal, which roamed the Great Plains in the tens of millions less than 200 years ago, has often stalked the background of his films—figuratively and literally—during his career as a documentarian of Americana. “The buffalo intersects with all these interesting parts of American history,” he says, which is why he’s been plotting a project about its fate for nearly 40 years. But he’s glad that he waited. Time, he says, has helped him to better understand the nuances of what he calls an “epic American calamity.”
Persons: Ken Burns, , he’s Locations: United States
Jhumpa Lahiri Has Found a Place of Contentment
  + stars: | 2023-10-06 | by ( Emily Bobrow | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
When Jhumpa Lahiri decided to move to Rome with her family in 2012, it was partly because of her love of the Italian language, but also to flee her public persona as a writer in the U.S. She explains that her quiet, reserved fiction comes from a quiet, reserved place, and she had mixed feelings about losing her anonymity to literary celebrity after winning the Pulitzer Prize for her first book in 1999. “I think my natural inclinations are to be more of an invisible person,” she says.
Persons: Jhumpa Lahiri, Locations: Rome, U.S
Werner Herzog is renowned for his strange and novel filmmaking—and for the lengths to which he’ll go to get a shot. In “Fitzcarraldo,” his 1982 film about an opera-loving madman who hauls a steamship over a mountain in pursuit of rubber in the Amazonian jungle, Herzog had his crew haul an actual 320-ton boat on pulleys over a muddy mountain in the Amazon, even though a Brazilian engineer quit after warning that it was too dangerous. “I swear to God it’s not a special effect,” says Herzog, who disdains them. “Audiences can tell right away.”
Persons: Werner Herzog, he’ll, Fitzcarraldo, , Herzog, it’s Locations: Brazilian
Werner Herzog is renowned for his strange and novel filmmaking—and for the lengths to which he’ll go to get a shot. In “Fitzcarraldo,” his 1982 film about an opera-loving madman who hauls a steamship over a mountain in pursuit of rubber in the Amazonian jungle, Herzog had his crew haul an actual 320-ton boat on pulleys over a muddy mountain in the Amazon, even though a Brazilian engineer quit after warning that it was too dangerous. “I swear to God it’s not a special effect,” says Herzog, who disdains them. “Audiences can tell right away.”
Persons: Werner Herzog, he’ll, Fitzcarraldo, , Herzog, it’s Locations: Brazilian
Ken Follett Says Readers Still Like Epic Books
  + stars: | 2023-09-24 | by ( Emily Bobrow | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. Distribution and use of this material are governed by our Subscriber Agreement and by copyright law. For non-personal use or to order multiple copies, please contact Dow Jones Reprints at 1-800-843-0008 or visit www.djreprints.com. https://www.wsj.com/arts-culture/ken-follett-says-readers-still-like-epic-books-39695bc6
Persons: Dow Jones
Sheila Johnson could have retired when Black Entertainment Television (BET), the company she founded with her then-husband Robert Johnson , sold to Viacom in a deal worth $3 billion in 2001, making her the first Black female billionaire. But the music-teacher-turned-media-mogul says she was too restless, too eager to prove herself after her divorce went through in 2002. “I think I was pissed off,” she says, nodding to her years “as the little woman behind the man.” She adds: “There was a lot of me left on the table.”
Persons: Sheila Johnson, Robert Johnson, , Organizations: Black Entertainment Television, BET, Viacom
CEO Ted Fischer Knows Older People Still Need to Play
  + stars: | 2023-09-01 | by ( Emily Bobrow | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Robotic pets make some people squeamish. Should man’s best friend run on batteries? “We’ve had plenty of naysayers tell us this is a little weird,” says Ted Fischer, co-founder and CEO of Ageless Innovation, a company that creates products for older adults, including animatronic dogs and cats. “But all you have to do is watch what happens when someone gets one,” he insists. “When the cat rolls over for the first time, people just go crazy.”
Persons: We’ve, Ted Fischer, , Organizations: Ageless
Edna Adan Ismail Fights for the Health of African Women
  + stars: | 2023-08-25 | by ( Emily Bobrow | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Edna Adan Ismail is renowned for her work as a nurse-midwife, but at first the job held little appeal. “Poo-poo, pee-pee, breast milk, babies screaming—midwifery was not really my first choice,” she admits. “It wasn’t even on my list of choices.” As the first Somaliland woman to receive formal nursing training in Britain, in the 1950s, she preferred the drama of surgery. She changed course only after her physician father, who had seen two of his children die due to obstetric mishaps, asked: “But how will you handle all the pregnant women who need your help?”
Persons: Edna Adan Ismail, , Locations: Britain
Emily Bobrow — Reporter at The Wall Street Journal
  + stars: | 2023-08-24 | by ( Emily Bobrow | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Emily BobrowEmily Bobrow is a staff reporter for The Wall Street Journal’s Review section, where she writes the weekly profile column Weekend Confidential. Previously, she worked as a staff editor and writer at The Economist, covering culture, politics and policy in New York, London and Washington, D.C. She has contributed features and reviews to the New York Times Magazine, NewYorker.com, The Economist’s 1843 and The Atlantic, among other publications.
Persons: Emily Bobrow Emily Bobrow Organizations: New York Times Magazine Locations: New York, London, Washington
Max Tegmark has long believed in the promise of artificial intelligence. As a physicist and AI researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a co-founder of the Future of Life Institute, which studies technology, he has envisioned a near future in which superintelligent computers could fight climate change, find cures for cancer and generally solve our thorniest problems. As long as proper safety standards are in place, he argued, “the sky’s the limit.”
Persons: Max Tegmark Organizations: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Life Institute
Pixar’s Ed Catmull Believes in Stepping Into Change
  + stars: | 2023-08-04 | by ( Emily Bobrow | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Before “Toy Story” came out in 1995, Pixar had been hemorrhaging money. The studio seemed to be losing its gamble on using computer animation to create nuanced storytelling for the whole family. Suddenly it had a hit that critics loved and audiences rushed to see, making “Toy Story” the top-grossing film of the year. It felt like the culmination of nearly a lifetime of work for Ed Catmull , who co-founded Pixar Animation Studios with Steve Jobs and Alvy Ray Smith in 1986.
Persons: , Ed Catmull, Steve Jobs, Alvy Ray Smith Organizations: Pixar, Pixar Animation
Simu Liu Went From Business School to Hollywood
  + stars: | 2023-07-22 | by ( Emily Bobrow | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
When Simu Liu first threw himself into acting in 2012, he says his dream was to be “that one Asian guy that says one line and then gets shot.” He tailored his ambitions to fit the roles available, finding work as “Hong Kong desk cop number one” and “Asian EMT number two.” With chagrin, he recalls an independent film in which he played a Japanese mob boss who spoke in guttural gibberish: “The director didn’t know Japanese and neither do I, so he said just make it up.”
Persons: Simu Liu, didn’t, Locations: Hong Kong, Japanese
This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. Distribution and use of this material are governed by our Subscriber Agreement and by copyright law. For non-personal use or to order multiple copies, please contact Dow Jones Reprints at 1-800-843-0008 or visit www.djreprints.com. https://www.wsj.com/articles/video-game-pioneer-john-romero-saw-the-birth-of-an-art-form-80d05b9e
Persons: Dow Jones, romero
Laurel Braitman Teaches Doctors the Power of Storytelling
  + stars: | 2023-07-07 | by ( Emily Bobrow | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
When Laurel Braitman first began teaching writing and communication skills to healthcare workers and students at the Stanford University School of Medicine in 2016, she assumed she would get some papers about blood, bones and cadavers. Instead, she read all too many essays about anxiety, depression and thoughts of suicide.
Persons: Laurel Braitman Organizations: Stanford University School of Medicine
Nasim Alikhani Brings the Flavors of Iran to America
  + stars: | 2023-06-16 | by ( Emily Bobrow | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Nasim Alikhani says she was a 23-year-old “twig of a girl” when she left her war-torn home in Iran, arriving alone in New Jersey in 1983. Poor and disoriented, she commuted to Queens College to study English and threw herself into the cheap comforts of American fast food. “There was a McDonald’s and a Dunkin’ Donuts right next to the college, and you could pay a dollar for this massive bucket of fries,” she recalls. Yet she soon found her new diet unsustainable: “I gained about 20 pounds in a month.”
Persons: Nasim Alikhani, Organizations: Queens College Locations: Iran, New Jersey
The Moral Hazards of Being Beautiful
  + stars: | 2023-06-10 | by ( Emily Bobrow | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Beauty has its privileges. Studies reliably show that the most physically attractive among us tend to get more attention from parents, better grades in school, more money at work and more satisfaction from life. A study published in January in the Journal of Economics and Business found that good-looking banking CEOs take in over $1 million more in total compensation, on average, than their lesser-looking peers. “Good looks pay off,” the authors write.
Persons: Organizations: Economics, Business
Peter Grant Has Documented Evolution in Action
  + stars: | 2023-06-03 | by ( Emily Bobrow | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Around two million years ago, a group of birds from South America flew 600 miles west to make their home on the Galápagos Islands. They belonged to a single species, but by the time Charles Darwin arrived in the Galápagos in the 1830s he found nearly 10 different species, with beaks of various shapes and sizes. He deduced that the birds, now known as Darwin’s finches, developed these differences to keep from competing for the same food: pointy beaks were better for catching insects, broad beaks were handy for cracking seeds.
Persons: Charles Darwin Organizations: South America Locations: South, Galápagos
Emily Adams Bode Aujla Finds Luxury in Upcycling
  + stars: | 2023-05-28 | by ( Emily Bobrow | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
When Emily Adams Bode Aujla launched her menswear brand Bode in 2016, she knew she wanted to build it herself, without investors. She says she had always hoped to create a business that she could pass down to her children. She also understood that her vision seemed to defy economic common sense. How do you scale up a label that reworks vintage quilts and antique feedsacks into one-of-a-kind luxury clothes?
Total: 25