WBUR.ORG
Support WBUR Receive e-Newsletter
Dick Gordon: Host of The ConnectionHome
Home
   
 10/11/2008

How Do I Listen?
Archived programs are streamed in the Real Audio Format.
Click here to download
 
Problems Listening?
Try this Direct Listen Link if the "Listen to Show" button to the right does not work
 

Hosted by: Dick Gordon Show Originally Aired: 1/28/2004
CALL 1 800-423-TALK
Ambivalently Connected
Businessmen talk on cell phones (AP)
Businessmen talk on cell phones (AP)

Email to friend

The telephonic cellularization of the public domain is turning many Americans off.

A new survey from the Lemelson-MIT program shows that people now regard the cell phone as the invention they hate the most, but cannot live without. Most often, its other people's cell phones that drive us out of our minds; with their high pitched jangle, all those distracted drivers, and the people talking to nobody. For the generation that still remembers the rotary phone, the cell is tiny agent of social change; challenging notions of space, time, and control. Those born into the world of Nokia and Motorola have a whole new measure of mobility and good manners.
LISTEN TO SHOW
Related Shows


Love Poetry
The Connection (12/01/2003)

An Ode to Clutter
The Connection (01/24/2003)

Toni Morrison
The Connection (10/29/2003)

The Order of Things
The Connection (09/02/2003)

The Order of Things (Rebroadcast)
The Connection (11/28/2003)

A Multitude of Sins
The Connection (02/26/2002)
Related Links

Lemelson-MIT Program

"No Sense of Place" by Joshua Meyrowitz, on amazon.com

"Emotional Design" by Donald A. Norman

"Smart Mobs" by Howard Rheingold, on amazon.com
 



Joshua Meyrowitz, Department of Communication, University of New Hampshire, author of "No Sense of Place: The Impact of Electronic Media on Social Behavior"

Donald A. Norman, Professor of Computer Science and Psychology, Northwestern University, author of "Emotional Design: Why We Love (Or Hate) Everyday Things"

Howard Rheingold, author of Smart Mobs

· The Soul of a Village II
Joe Zawinul: The Rise And Fall Of The Third Stream
· Rabbit in Your Headlights
U.N.K.L.E.: Psyence Fiction
wbur.org    © Copyright 2008. Trustees of Boston University and WBUR