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Movies I've Seen A Million Times
1:37 pm
Sun August 26, 2012

The Movie Regina King Has 'Seen A Million Times'

Originally published on Sun August 26, 2012 4:04 pm

The weekends on All Things Considered series Movies I've Seen A Million Times features filmmakers, actors, writers and directors talking about the movies that they never get tired of watching.

For actress Regina King, whose credits include Jerry Maguire and Ray, and who currently stars on the TNT TV show Southland, the movie she could watch a million times is The Sandlot.


INTERVIEW HIGHLIGHTS

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Monkey See
7:07 am
Sun August 26, 2012

It's Who You Know: Predicting How 'The Newsroom' Will Get Its Next Scoop

Credit Melissa Moseley / HBO
Jeff Daniels as Will McAvoy on HBO's The Newsroom knows people who know people, fortunately for him.

If there's one thing that HBO's The Newsroom is especially good at, it's portraying journalists who aren't especially good at journalism.

Well, maybe that's not fair. The fact is, they haven't had much opportunity to engage in journalism, since every major story that's come their way has been cracked not through know-how, persistence and telephonic grunt work but through the fortuitous involvement of people with whom the fictional News Night staffers happen to already be good buddies.

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Books
5:24 am
Sun August 26, 2012

Faith, Family, And Forgiveness In 'We Sinners'

Credit
Author Hanna Pylvainen based We Sinners on her own childhood experiences.

Originally published on Sun August 26, 2012 11:32 am

Hanna Pylvainen's debut novel, We Sinners, is about a large — very large — family that belongs to a small religious sect in Finland originating in the dim distant past. The sect, Laestadianism, calls for very strictly regulated behavior — think Amish, with possible overtones of Lutheran, purified by a schism or two. The novel is told from the point of view of family members, each of whom get a chapter, and the story goes forward in time with each person.

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Author Interviews
5:24 am
Sun August 26, 2012

'The Ethicist' Explains How To 'Be Good'

Credit Courtesy Chronicle Books
Randy Cohen served as "The Ethicist" for The New York Times Magazine for 12 years.

Originally published on Sun August 26, 2012 11:32 am

After 12 years writing a column on ethics, Randy Cohen is convinced ethics is not a moving target, unique to time or place.

"I believe there are a set of principles that are so profound and so essentially moral that if I were just slightly smarter and slightly more eloquent, I could travel everywhere and persuade everyone that they should apply," he tells Weekend Edition guest host Linda Wertheimer.

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Sunday Puzzle
11:03 pm
Sat August 25, 2012

What Hat Holds The Answer?

Credit NPR Graphic

Originally published on Sun August 26, 2012 11:32 am

On-air challenge: Every answer is a two-word phrase in which one of the words starts with W and the other word is the same with the W removed. For example, if you were given the clue "desires scurrying insects," the answer would be "wants ants."

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Monkey See
4:12 pm
Sat August 25, 2012

Alan Ball On Leaving 'True Blood' Behind

Originally published on Sun August 26, 2012 8:00 am

Nothing panics the fans of a show quite like the departure of the creator. That's just what's happening at True Blood, where creator Alan Ball is leaving after five seasons, but the show goes on. As he tells Laura Sullivan on weekends on All Things Considered, he feels some nostalgia, but he's ready.

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Author Interviews
4:12 pm
Sat August 25, 2012

Struggling With Parenthood In Utopic 'Motherland'

Originally published on Mon August 27, 2012 9:16 am

Park Slope has become the "it" neighborhood to raise a family in Brooklyn. The new novel Motherland gives a tour of the neighborhood's brownstones, European coffee shops and personalities — in particular, the mothers of Park Slope, who definitely have a certain look.

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The Salt
8:13 am
Sat August 25, 2012

On A Quest To Roll Out The Bourbon Barrel And Fill It With Hot Sauce

Credit Scott Olson / Getty Images
Used bourbon barrels like these at the Goose Island Brewery in Chicago are finding new life by bringing distinctive flavor to beer, cocktails and hot sauce.

Originally published on Mon October 15, 2012 9:39 am

Washington, D.C. blogger Sam Hiersteiner is a hot sauce fan turned maker. He's already harvested two pounds of chiles — serranos, jalapenos, and habaneros — from his 30-plant pepper garden this month, and he's ready to mash them into hot sauce as soon as more ripen. Last year, he mashed fifty pounds total.While he loved the results, he thought it would be even better with a whisper of the flavor imparted by a barrel used for aging bourbon.

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Arts & Life
5:28 am
Sat August 25, 2012

For Writers, The School Of Hard Cops

Credit Vince Stewart
Retired Sgt. Derek Pacifico trains screenwriters and novelists to bring more realism into their police procedurals.

Originally published on Sun August 26, 2012 5:51 am

Police procedurals are the spaghetti and meatballs of television programming. With so many permutations of Laws and Order, CSI and wisecracking cops, you can practically see yellow crime-scene tape stretched around the prime-time schedule.

Sgt. Derek Pacifico spent more than two decades with the San Bernardino County (Calif.) Sherriff's Department, responding to emergency calls and walking a beat. He has investigated close to 200 murders, shootings and other crime cases.

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Television
5:28 am
Sat August 25, 2012

Meet Peter Lassally, Late Night 'Host Whisperer'

Credit Mark Mainz / Getty Images for AFI
Longtime late night producer Peter Lassally tells Scott Simon that being interviewed for NPR is a "big, frightening experience." "I'm not a performer," he says. "I'm a quiet person who doesn't like to blow his own horn."

Originally published on Sat August 25, 2012 9:16 am

Peter Lassally is known as "the host whisperer." If you've ever watched a late night show with an opening monologue, a couch and guests bouncing off each other, then you've seen his work — he practically invented the form.

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