Disneynature's Born in China

Disneynature's Born in China

Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Season 1, Episode 538 , Segment 5

Will Shortz Crossword King, Film Scoring, Born in China

Episode: Will Shortz Crossword King, Film Scoring, Born in China

  • Apr 24, 2017 11:00 pm
  • 12:29 mins

Guest: Shawn O’Neill, BYUradio Producer, Movie Reviewer Disney’s new nature documentary “Born in China” debuted on Saturday - Earth Day, which was no coincidence. The film, which Disneynature says is its most ambitious project to date, takes moviegoers on a grand journey into the wilds of China following a trio of families that includes an unbelievably cute a baby panda, a young golden monkey and a female snow leopard.

Other Segments

Understanding Your Own Bias

Apr 24, 2017
20 m

Guest: Sara Taylor, President and Founder of deepSEE Consulting, author of "Filter Shift: How Effective People SEE the World" None of us like to think that we’re prejudiced toward others. Many of us go to great lengths not to let our biases show – but making that effort also acknowledges that our biases exist. They exist on the unconscious level, driving the assumptions we make and conclusions we jump to without even realizing it. And because they’re happening so automatically, they’re a little like blind spots as we roll down the road of life. When you unintentionally offend someone with a comment you thought was innocuous, you’ve probably veered into a blind spot. When a conversation with a colleague or customer suddenly turns tense, just when you thought things were going great, unconscious bias was probably involved.

Guest: Sara Taylor, President and Founder of deepSEE Consulting, author of "Filter Shift: How Effective People SEE the World" None of us like to think that we’re prejudiced toward others. Many of us go to great lengths not to let our biases show – but making that effort also acknowledges that our biases exist. They exist on the unconscious level, driving the assumptions we make and conclusions we jump to without even realizing it. And because they’re happening so automatically, they’re a little like blind spots as we roll down the road of life. When you unintentionally offend someone with a comment you thought was innocuous, you’ve probably veered into a blind spot. When a conversation with a colleague or customer suddenly turns tense, just when you thought things were going great, unconscious bias was probably involved.