Myanmar Ethnic Cleansing, Exercise Incentives, Men "Marry Up"

Myanmar Ethnic Cleansing, Exercise Incentives, Men "Marry Up"

Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Season 1, Episode 637

  • Sep 12, 2017 6:00 am
  • 1:44:12 mins
Download the BYURadio Apps Listen on Apple podcastsListen on SpotifyListen on YouTube

Three World Events: UN Sanctions on NK, Ethnic Cleansing in Myanmar, Independence Referenda Guest: Quinn Mecham, PhD, Professor of Political Science, Brigham Young University  Why sanctions won't work against North Korea; the roots of ethnic cleansing in Myanmar; referenda on independence in Kurdish Iraq and in Catalonia, Spain.  Money Won't Get You to the Gym Guest: Mark Stehr, PhD, Associate Professor of Economics, LeBow College of Business, Drexel University Do you think you would go to the gym more if you got paid to do it? Think again. A new study indicates that money has very little effect on American exercise habits.  Young Athletes in Danger Guest: Neeru Jayanthi, MD, Sports Medicine Physician, Emory University Tiger Woods started golfing at the age of three. Serena Williams picked up her first tennis racket at the age of four and went pro at 14. Swimmer Missy Franklin had won four Olympic gold medals by the age of 17. The message is clear – great athletes start young. But Tiger, Serena and Missy have also all experienced serious injuries related to their sport. Dr. Neeru Jayanthi studies injuries in young athletes and says the risk seems to be increasing as more and more kids specialize in one sport from an early age.  A New Digital Handshake Guest: Amy Schmitz, JD, Professor of Law, University of Missouri School of Law Has this ever happened to you? You spend $15 on a bottle of hair product online that turns out to be a knock off of the real thing. You can't find any contact info on the website to log your complaint, so after about 20 minutes of angry searching for a way to reach someone at the company, you drop it and vow to be smarter about buying stuff from random websites. Maybe you worked harder to get a refund because your purchase was worth more than $15. Still, it's a huge hassle. Where customer service is concerned, the web is still pretty much the Wild West and sellers count on you not having the time or resources to follow through on a complaint. But we may be at a tipping point. O

Episode Segments

A New Digital Handshake

Sep 12, 2017
18 m

Guest: Amy Schmitz, JD, Professor of Law, University of Missouri School of Law Has this ever happened to you? You spend $15 on a bottle of hair product online that turns out to be a knock off of the real thing. You can't find any contact info on the website to log your complaint, so after about 20 minutes of angry searching for a way to reach someone at the company, you drop it and vow to be smarter about buying stuff from random websites. Maybe you worked harder to get a refund because your purchase was worth more than $15. Still, it's a huge hassle. Where customer service is concerned, the web is still pretty much the Wild West and sellers count on you not having the time or resources to follow through on a complaint. But we may be at a tipping point. Online purchasing is so ubiquitous that customers and regulators are beginning to call for dispute resolution standards.

Guest: Amy Schmitz, JD, Professor of Law, University of Missouri School of Law Has this ever happened to you? You spend $15 on a bottle of hair product online that turns out to be a knock off of the real thing. You can't find any contact info on the website to log your complaint, so after about 20 minutes of angry searching for a way to reach someone at the company, you drop it and vow to be smarter about buying stuff from random websites. Maybe you worked harder to get a refund because your purchase was worth more than $15. Still, it's a huge hassle. Where customer service is concerned, the web is still pretty much the Wild West and sellers count on you not having the time or resources to follow through on a complaint. But we may be at a tipping point. Online purchasing is so ubiquitous that customers and regulators are beginning to call for dispute resolution standards.