2021
February
24
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

February 24, 2021
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It’s the ultimate in social distancing: Alone in a boat for 70 days on end.

On Saturday, Jasmine Harrison, 21, became the youngest woman to row solo across the Atlantic, traversing from the Canary Islands to Antigua.

She missed her family, her dogs, and cold drinking water. But she wasn’t lonely. “They always say that loneliness is one of the biggest sort of issues, but I’ve not really found that. ... It’s actually taken me quite a long time to actually realize that I’m by myself,” she told the BBC.

In a time of lockdowns, Ms. Harrison embraced her alone time. Yes, she did call her mum almost daily on a satellite phone. But she says she relished the feeling of freedom and independence, even on a tiny boat.

Of course, the 3,000-mile journey was challenging. She rowed 12 hours a day, capsized twice, and was almost hit by a ship. But she also encountered whales, a baby turtle, pilot fish, and was escorted by a pod of Risso’s dolphins for a few days. And Ms. Harrison raised more than $26,000 for two charities, the Blue Marine Foundation and ShelterBox.

The swimming teacher from Thirsk, England, says she hopes to flip the narrative on the pandemic, which has reduced opportunities and options for many people (as we noted in our 21 in '21 project). “I just want to inspire people to change your mindset to what you can do, not what you can’t,” she told The Guardian.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Ethical and legal questions dog Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s use of misleading information and pugnacious style. Our reporter looks at whether a generational shift in leadership values is emerging in New York.

Jason Redmond/Reuters/File
Libertarian Jeff Jared of Kirkland, Washington, holds a sign in support of third parties before former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz spoke during his book tour in Seattle on Jan. 31, 2019. Mr. Schultz considered running for the White House as an independent in the 2020 cycle, but ultimately opted against it.

Most Americans agree the two-party system is broken, hindering rather than helping solve societal problems. We look at whether the time for a viable third party has arrived.

Shaped by its Nazi past, German democracy has provisions that can curb the free speech and individual rights of extremists. What might other democracies learn from Germany?

Essay

William A. Smith/AP/File
The Rev. Daniel Berrigan (right) and defense lawyer William M. Kunstler of New York talk with reporters in Baltimore, Maryland, Nov. 9, 1968, after Father Berrigan and eight other Catholics were sentenced to prison after being convicted of burning Selective Service records to protest the Vietnam War.

Our commentator examines what history – specifically a 1968 all-white protest – tells us about addressing injustice today, such as white privilege and the Jan. 6 Capitol assault. 

Difference-maker

Noah Robertson/The Christian Science Monitor
Ryan Farmer, seen here at William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, is preparing a portfolio after finishing his medical school application test, Feb. 15, 2021.

What makes people devote their lives to serving others? Inspired by the selfless courage of health care workers, more students are channeling a desire to serve into the medical profession. We talked to students about what drives that choice.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
A big screen displays fans watching a Premier League soccer match between Leeds United and Southampton in Leeds, Britain, Feb. 23.

In mid-February, two National Hockey League games were played in the great outdoors at scenic Lake Tahoe on a temporary rink. The teams battled it out surrounded by mountains, trees, and a spectacular lake – but no fans in stands.

The players agreed they loved the venue, just as predicted by Steve Mayer, the NHL’s chief content officer, in The New York Times. “Once the puck is dropped the players will feel a little like they’re playing back when they were kids, for the love of the game.”

The NHL has played games outdoors in the past but hoped the change would seem even more refreshing to fans watching on TV and cooped up inside during a pandemic. Future games in New York’s Central Park and on the National Mall in Washington remain a possibility.

Surprisingly, ratings for televised sports in the United States have been down during the pandemic, sometimes dramatically. The NHL suffered a 61% drop in viewers for its Stanley Cup Final. Viewers of the National Basketball Association Finals dropped 51%, and Major League Baseball’s World Series was its lowest rated, with a 30% dip from the previous year. Even this year’s Feb. 7 Super Bowl game between the Kansas City Chiefs and Tampa Bay Buccaneers was down 9% compared with 2020.

No one answer explains what’s happening. But a few hypotheses make sense to those who follow sports and media.

For one thing, in 2020 many sports had their seasons abbreviated or shifted to later in the year. By last fall professional baseball, football, hockey, soccer, and basketball were all available for viewing at the same time. Not to mention golf’s prestigious Masters Tournament, pushed back from its traditional spring tee time.

With fewer workers commuting, that time separating the workday from relaxing in front of TV at home disappeared.

“People’s behaviors are shifting,” Senior Vice President Daniel Cohen at Octagon, a sports marketing agency, told SportsPro. “If you’re going to be working from home from 8 to 6:30 every day, are you going to turn on that baseball game or are you going to go for your bike ride now?” s

One other reason: Viewers’ time for sports may have been squeezed by big news on COVID-19 and the 2020 presidential election. Catching up on highlights via a phone app might have sufficed.

Trying to figure out how professional sports will adjust during this year presents a challenge. Most pro leagues’ financial models include big contributions from ticket and concession sales to live attendees, not stadiums populated by cardboard cutouts of fans. If a quick return to something approaching normal attendance isn’t possible, the ramifications could be severe.

In one bright spot outside the U.S., home TV viewing of Britain’s Premier League soccer matches jumped 13% this past year, caused in part by the closure of pubs and other traditional viewing venues. A recent showdown between rivals Manchester United and Liverpool yielded a record audience.

As with all sports, the matches provide “so many new stories to enjoy, so many more scores to argue over,” soccer podcaster Musa Okwonga told the Financial Times.

Groups of fans now are creating “watchalongs,” turning down the audio on their sets and then offering their own commentary to friends via social media.

Fans may be stuck at home for a while more, but they will eventually find a way to express their joy of sports. The letdowns of the past year could result in an innovative comeback later this year.


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

Reasoning from a spiritual standpoint when faced with discomfort, a man was healed by realizing that he could only ever express good qualities – qualities that have their source in God.


A message of love

Ahmed Jadallah/Reuters
A worker feeds a cat at the Ailuromania Cat Cafe, which offers therapy to humans and adoption to cats in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, on Feb. 24, 2021. (The cafe's name comes from a word that means a perhaps-excessive love of – what else? – cats.)
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow: We’re working on a story about third acts, when older adults shift gears and try new careers. 

More issues

2021
February
24
Wednesday

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