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In Japan, 'Herbivore' Boys Subvert Ideas Of Manhood

NPR - 2 hours, 13 minutes ago

The sensitive New Age man has finally arrived in the land of the salaryman. Known as "herbivores," these Japanese men are drawn to a quieter, less competitive life. But their lack of interest in sex is a worry in Japan, where the declining birthrate is causing alarm.

  • A 'Ninja Assassin,' Out For Blood (And Revenge) NPR - Tue Nov 24, 5:00 PM ET

    Splattered blood and severed limbs abound, but James McTeigue's new martial-arts extravaganza is more video game than convincingly violent action flick. Hardly realistic, but still a hoot for martial-arts fans, Ninja Assassin makes an entertainingly edgy option among more saccharine seasonal fare.

  • Exploring The Politics Of 'Defamation' NPR - Tue Nov 24, 5:00 PM ET

    Israeli filmmaker Yoav Shamir's documentary is a bracing inquiry into arguments about the prevalence of anti-Semitism today. If the filmmaker displays an anthropologist's openness to complicated truths, he also has a contrarian's impish appetite for the opposing view — the more intemperately expressed the better, it would seem.

  • 'Me And Orson': Welles, He's Quite A Character NPR - Tue Nov 24, 5:00 PM ET

    Zac Efron is the nominal draw in Me and Orson Welles, a backstage drama set during the iconic director's 1937 production of Julius Caesar. But while Efron might bring the audiences, it's Christian McKay's turn as Orson Welles that's the real crowd-pleaser.

  • Recipe: Classic French Bread NPR - Tue Nov 24, 3:17 PM ET

    Peter Reinhart's recipe for Classic French Bread from Artisan Breads Every Day: Fast and Easy Recipes for World-Class Breads.

  • French Chef Puts Spin On Thanksgiving Dinner NPR - Tue Nov 24, 3:00 PM ET

    Dominique Crenn was raised in Versailles, France. She now makes an incredible Thanksgiving dinner, but when she first came to the U.S., the entire holiday threw her off. In France, turkey is eaten at Christmas. So the American phenomenon of Thanksgiving turkey and dressing mystified her.

  • In China, Creating A Menagerie Through Mimicry NPR - Tue Nov 24, 2:50 PM ET

    Professional mimics in China used to imitate sounds as a form of entertainment. Not many practitioners are left, but one family is trying to preserve the art. Cheng Jiaqiang, who learned his skills from his grandfather, has a barnyard repertoire but specializes in bird songs.

  • Excerpt: 'Vanity Fair's Proust Questionnaire' NPR - Tue Nov 24, 1:07 PM ET

    Vanity Fair's Proust Questionnaire collects celebrity answers to deep (and not-so-deep) questions.

  • Sam Fuller, Embodying The Best Of Pulp Fiction NPR - Tue Nov 24, 12:30 PM ET

    Martin Scorsese said of Sam Fuller's work, "If you don't like the films of Sam Fuller, then you just don't like cinema." The maverick screenwriter and director died in 1997, but a new 7-disc selection of his work embodies what's most enjoyable and enduring about pulp fiction.

  • Big And Beautiful: Best Gift Books of 2009 NPR - Tue Nov 24, 11:15 AM ET

    Reviewer John McAlley selects gems from the worlds of fine art, fashion, photography, science, lit-crit and cartoons. These luxe volumes will be gracing coffee tables long after the lights and wrapping paper are gone.

  • The World's Largest Camera Is On Wheels NPR - Tue Nov 24, 10:37 AM ET

    Photographer Shaun Irving has transformed a truck into the world's largest, mobile camera.

  • Excerpt: 'The Family' NPR - Tue Nov 24, 9:58 AM ET
  • The Secret Political Reach Of 'The Family' NPR - Tue Nov 24, 9:55 AM ET

    A secretive fellowship of powerful Christian politicians includes some names that have recently been prominent in the headlines: Sen. John Ensign, Rep. Bart Stupak and Rep. Joe Pitts. Writer Jeff Sharlet describes the men's involvement with the Family, and discusses recent developments within the group.

  • What We're Reading: Nov. 24 - 30, 2009 NPR - Tue Nov 24, 9:00 AM ET

    This week, Michael Crichton's last book, ever, sails the seas of pirate adventure. In story collections: Alice Munro's strong and subtly mysterious women; Ha Jin's immigrants caught between two worlds. And a space-program history finds surprising drama in the unmanned voyages.

  • For Disney's New Princess, Short Courtiers Swarm NPR - Tue Nov 24, 7:30 AM ET

    Lots of young fans — and many of their moms and dads — are excited about the arrival of Tiana, the heroine of The Princess and the Frog, the latest animated Walt Disney film. It's more than just a new movie to many: Tiana is Disney's first African-American princess, a role model many parents have been waiting for for a long time.

  • For First Lady, Protocol Critical For State Dinner NPR - Tue Nov 24, 12:39 AM ET

    The Obamas host Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Tuesday night at the most formal of all dinners. First lady Michelle Obama said she and the president will be like swans, gliding with poise and serenity — while paddling furiously to get things right.

  • Pass The Dessert: America's Thanksgiving Recipes NPR - Tue Nov 24, 12:30 AM ET

    For many of us, Thanksgiving is linked to memories of turkey, stuffing and cranberry dressing. But a culinary history of the "other" American holiday shows that a rich variety of desserts have been in and out of fashion over the decades. Chris Kimball of America's Test Kitchen features Thanksgiving favorites from days gone by.

  • Excerpt: 'A New Literary History of America' NPR - Tue Nov 24, 12:00 AM ET

    Editors Greil Marcus and Werner Sollers curated this new anthology of essays about American culture

  • John Hillcoat, Chasing Humanity On A Grim 'Road' NPR - Tue Nov 24, 12:00 AM ET

    Based on Cormac McCarthy's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, Hillcoat's new movie is a dystopian tale of survival in a physically and morally ravaged world. The director talks to NPR's Steve Inskeep about the challenges of visualizing a post-apocalyptic landscape — and why the bleak tale is really a story of human goodness.

  • Recipe: Roasted Fennel and Green Beans NPR - Mon Nov 23, 4:40 PM ET

    Barbara Lynch's recipe for Roasted Fennel and Green Beans from Stir: Mixing It Up in the Italian Tradition.

  • Recipe: Barbecued Pork NPR - Mon Nov 23, 4:23 PM ET

    Eileen Yin-Fei Lo's recipe for Barbecued Pork from Mastering the Art of Chinese Cooking.

  • Recipe: Linguine With Smoked Salmon Sauce NPR - Mon Nov 23, 4:20 PM ET

    Judith Jone's recipe for Linguine with Smoked Salmon Sauce from The Pleasures of Cooking for One.

  • Alan Cheuse's Book Picks To Warm A Winter's Night NPR - Mon Nov 23, 1:15 PM ET

    Book reviewer Alan Cheuse selects the highlights of this holiday season: futuristic dystopias; things that go bump in the night; portraits from Norman Rockwell's America; gay New York; a celebration of our immigrant adventures; one writer's journey to manhood; and, of course, Long John Silver.

  • Larry David's Dysfunctional Family Reunion NPR - Mon Nov 23, 1:00 PM ET

    The seventh season finale of Curb Your Enthusiasm capped a year-long storyline about Larry finally agreeing to a produce a reunion episode of Seinfeld which he co-created with Jerry Seinfeld. TV critic David Bianculli explains how both programs — the show and the show within the show — were a comedic coup and a perfect end to the season.

  • Excerpt: 'City Boy' NPR - Mon Nov 23, 12:45 PM ET

    The latest installment of Edmund White's biography remembers gay life in 1960s and '70s New York.

  • Excerpt: 'American Fantastic Tales' NPR - Mon Nov 23, 12:27 PM ET

    This collection — edited by Peter Straub — draws from 300 years of American horror and fantasy.

  • Speculation Begins On Who Will Be Oprah's Final Guest NPR - Mon Nov 23, 12:00 PM ET

    Media magnate Oprah Winfrey recently announced plans to end her "The Oprah Winfrey Show" in 2011, after 25 seasons. In a tearful message to viewers on Friday, Winfrey promised the top-rated program's final leg would be one to remember. Guest host Jennifer Ludden talks reporter Marcus Leshock, of WGN-TV and blogger for "Chicago Now." Leshock recently posted a blog, speculating who might be the final guest for Winfrey's last program.

  • Wes Anderson Covers New Ground With 'Mr. Fox' NPR - Mon Nov 23, 10:07 AM ET

    Director Wes Anderson has worked on a lot of film projects, but with his latest film, Fantastic Mr. Fox, he ventured into new territory: animation. Anderson says that making a stop-motion picture is the most involved filmmaking he's ever done, but he also says that the process has "a sort of magic."

  • Recipe: Boeuf Bourguignon NPR - Mon Nov 23, 10:01 AM ET

    Judith Jone's recipe for Boeuf Bourguignon from The Pleasures of Cooking for One.

  • Viewers Make Their Pix In Nat Geo's Photo Contest NPR - Mon Nov 23, 9:49 AM ET

    The winners from National Geographic's International Photography Contest will be announced in early December, but viewers have been voting on their favorites for the past few weeks. View a selection of a "viewer's choice" photographs.

  • Excerpt: 'Becoming Americans' NPR - Mon Nov 23, 8:47 AM ET

    400 years of poems, essays and stories about coming to America, edited by Ilan Stavans.

  • Excerpt: 'The Complete Stories of J.G. Ballard' NPR - Mon Nov 23, 8:42 AM ET

    Nearly 100 stories from the celebrated author of Crash and Empire of the Sun.

  • Growing Up With Orson Welles As Her Father NPR - Sun Nov 22, 8:00 AM ET

    The name Orson Welles has the power to jog millions of memories. His radio work sent the nation into a panic. Host Liane Hansen speaks with Chris Welles Feder about her new book, In My Father's Shadow, an account of her life growing up as the daughter of Orson Welles.

  • A Child's Doctor Turns To Iraq War's Youngest Victims NPR - Sun Nov 22, 8:00 AM ET

    Dr. Chris Coppola was a pediatrician in the U.S. before he shipped off to Iraq. As a military surgeon, he expected to treat soldiers, but he found himself helping war-ravaged Iraqi children as well. Host Liane Hansen speaks with Dr. Coppola about his memoir, Coppola: A Pediatric Surgeon in Iraq.

  • Berry Bad: Threat To Trees Lurks On Holiday Tables NPR - Sat Nov 21, 12:01 AM ET

    Its alluring crimson fruit makes it an enduring star of the Thanksgiving centerpiece, but Asiatic bittersweet is strangling trees across New England. In many states, it's illegal to collect or move the invasive vine.

  • Real-Life Physics Problems Star On TV NPR - Fri Nov 20, 1:00 PM ET

    The stars of The Big Bang Theory are two fictional Caltech physicists, but the physics problems they study are real. Bill Prady, the program's co-creator and executive producer, talks about including real-world science in the script, from dark matter to magnetic monopoles.

  • James Franco Checks In To 'General Hospital' NPR - Fri Nov 20, 11:00 AM ET

    The star of Milk and Pineapple Express — and a little movie franchise called Spider-Man — will be spending some time in Port Charles over the next couple of months. His guest-starring stint may help "freshen the image of daytime," says the soap opera's executive producer.

  • Judd Apatow On The Alchemy Of 'Funny People' NPR - Fri Nov 20, 9:53 AM ET

    Judd Apatow, known for films like The 40 Year Old Virgin and Knocked Up, was the guiding force behind the comedy Funny People, out now on DVD. The movie focuses on a comedian (Adam Sandler) who reassesses his life after a dire medical diagnosis. Apatow, a former comic himself, talks about why he made the movie — and what he finds funny.

  • Tim Burton's Drawings On Display NPR - Fri Nov 20, 9:13 AM ET

    By Claire O'Neill Tim Burton is probably the only person who could get away with using a monster's mouth as the entrance to an art exhibition. You know him for his films Edward Scissorhands and The Nightmare Before Christmas. Of all film director-pr...

  • 'The Onion': Mocking All Who Deserve It Since 1988 NPR - Fri Nov 20, 7:00 AM ET

    America's Finest News Source has released a book celebrating its 21 years of satire (with a wink). Onion editors Joe Randazzo and Joe Garden talk with Renee Montagne about the serious business of being funny. Also: See the fun The Onion has had at NPR's expense.

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