Ozarks At Large

Latest Edition of Ozarks at Large

Sunday, November 10, 2013
Ahead on this edition of Weekend Ozarks, the effort to create Nerdies, a project designed to give young people not interested in sports a place to explore other hobbies and passions. We'll also visit a piece of land in Fayetteville that will soon be a teaching farm, letting young students get a hands-on approach to growing and eating healthy foods. Plus Christian Howes, one of the most critically acclaimed jazz musicians performing talks to Robert Ginsburg about Howes's upcoming concert at Walton Arts Center. And what's really happening in our brain when we listen to that music we really like again . . . and again . . .and again. We'll talk briefly to Lisa Margulis about her new book On Repeat: How Music Plays the Mind.
The Bike Route is one of the sponsors of LifeSource International's Hike or Bike Against Hunger event. The bike shop owner offers advice on selecting and caring for a bicycle.
Here the group performs the song "Quarter to Four" from inside the Firmin-Garner Performance Studio.
Crystal Lake Farms in Decatur uses old and new methods to raise chickens.
"Chickens in Love" by Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros
Becca Martin Brown wears us out with details of how performers will soar through the air during the production of The Wizard of Oz.
Here are the ten clips from this morning's salute to beds and bedding materials: 1. The Australian group Midnight Oil sings its biggest American hit, Beds are Burning. 2. John Lennon speaks from the John and Yoko "bed in" in Montreal. 3. Music from the (somewhat odd) Disney movie, Bedknobs and Broomsticks. 4. Linda Blair's bed levitates in The Exorcist. 5. Gromit forces Wallace out of bed in The Wrong Trousers. 6. The Bangles sing My Side of the Bed. 7. Doris Day and Rock Hudson spar in Pillow Talk. 8. David Jack's version of Five Little Monkeys. 9. Florence and the Machine sing Hospital Beds. 10. Meg Ryan and Tom Hanks discuss a famous quote from The Godfather in the movie You've Got Mail.
at end of show, "The Break Through" by Hank Mobley