2020
September
18
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 18, 2020
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Linda Feldmann
Washington Bureau Chief

In normal times, the National Zoo in Washington can be a haven from hectic city (and political) life. Now it’s a special source of joy – home to a 4-week-old giant panda cub, which just had its first, quick checkup and is doing great. Gender still unknown, it weighed in at about 1.5 pounds, squawks loudly, and is getting its little black-and-white panda markings

That this baby exists at all is a story to behold. The mama panda, Mei Xiang, was considered almost certainly too old to reproduce again. But in March, a week after the pandemic forced the zoo to close, she entered a brief window of “heat” and a small crew of panda reproduction specialists artificially inseminated her. On Aug. 21, Mei Xiang gave birth.

Aside from providing a welcome distraction to humans via peeks at cute pictures and the zoo’s “panda cam,” the cub is also a reminder of a more hopeful time in U.S.-Chinese ties. “Panda diplomacy” has been an enduring legacy of the Nixon era. Whether it lasts may be the least important question hanging over the fraught relationship. But for now, the baby panda remains a happy story. 

“People need this,” Brandie Smith, the zoo’s deputy director, told The New Yorker right after the cub’s improbable birth. “It’s the story of hope, and the story of success, and the story of joy.”


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The U.N. flag is seen during the World Climate Change Conference 2015 (COP21) at Le Bourget, near Paris, France, December 8, 2015.
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Claudia Bustillos takes online classes at home as her mother, Maria Elena, works at a computer amid the outbreak of the coronavirus in La Paz, Bolivia, Sept. 1, 2020.
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Malte and Rasmus Bruhn play a video game in Berlin on April 1, 2020. Increasingly, gaming is being shown to have an impact on the learning of languages.

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Ann Hermes/Staff
Summer in New York City looked a bit different this year. Many restaurants are closed, the parks are full, and backyards are hard to come by. In a bid to spend the warmer weeks socializing in safety, New Yorkers have taken to their stoops. The iconic architectural features were originally designed to separate main doorways from trade entrances, or to increase the distance between manure-covered streets and clean living spaces. Today, whether it be a wide and sturdy stairway to the door of an old brownstone, or just two or three simple steps outside an apartment complex, the stoop is the hottest spot to see and be seen. “We do this all the time,” says Brooklyn resident Philipp Hoffman as he shares a picnic with friends on his front steps. “We don’t have a backyard, so this is it!” With colder weather on the way, it’s hard to imagine what outdoor socializing will look like in the future. But so far, New Yorkers have made the most of the space between the front door and the sidewalk. Winter entertaining will surely be elevated. - Ann Hermes/Staff
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. To catch up on the latest headlines, please check out our First Look page. 

And come back Monday, when the Monitor’s Story Hinckley looks at the politics of unrest in Kenosha and the Minneapolis suburbs – both in presidential battleground states.

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2020
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