2020
April
28
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 28, 2020
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Today’s five selected stories cover shifting U.S. values in a pandemic, a Canadian profile in leadership, history lessons about navigating  financial hardship, challenging misinformation with an African song, and what nature teaches us about resilience. 

I have a soft spot for the drive-in movie. My first glimpse of that big screen magic came on a tropical summer night as a 4-year-old in pj’s peering out the back of our Ford station wagon. My first date with the girl in high school who became my wife was to a drive-in movie. My daughters and their friends grew up loving the premovie picnic and pickup soccer before settling in for a double feature. 

Now this almost forgotten American pastime is seeing a renaissance. People are desperate to get out. In some states, it may violate the spirit of shelter-in-place, but one Florida drive-in owner argues that your car is really an extension of your living room. Many open-air theaters have closed their concession stands to uphold social distancing rules.

In Queen Creek, Arizona, Schnepf Farms just put a movie screen on a tractor-trailer in a field to help replace its lost wedding and festival business. At $15 per carload, the new 60-car drive-in has sold out every night since opening two weeks ago. The popularity “caught us by surprise,” Mark Schnepf told KPHO-TV in Phoenix.  

It shouldn’t have, really. For me, the drive-in represents family bonding. A silver lining to this tragic pandemic is that a new generation is being introduced to a unique community event, and getting to experience the childlike anticipation that builds as the sun slowly sets and the air fills with a chorus of crickets and the perfume of popcorn. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

Mike Segar/Reuters
Sisters Stephanie (left) and Sylvia Falcomer (right) hold a “socially distant” birthday party for their mother, Marcella Falcomer, in West Nyack, New York.

Stepping Up

Profiles in Leadership
Tijana Martin/The Canadian Press/AP
Ontario Premier Doug Ford responds to a question in Toronto on April 11, 2020. In mid-March Mr. Ford began to win over critics by communicating with empathy and deferring to experts during his daily COVID-19 update.

Precedented

Lessons from history

The COVID-19 economic crisis will hurt. But history offers hope.

The COVID-19 economic crisis will hurt. But history offers hope.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/The Christian Science Monitor
Robert Kyagulanyi, aka Bobi Wine, gives an interview at his home, on Aug. 13, 2019, in Magere Village outside Kampala, Uganda. Mr. Wine is a politician, businessman, philanthropist, musician, and actor.

Essay

Jacob Turcotte/Staff

The Monitor's View

Reuters
A man walks in front of a currency exchange bureau in Cairo, Egypt, April 20.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Jens Meyer/AP
A Haflinger foal relaxes during this years's first turn-out to grass at Europe's largest Haflinger stud-farm in Meura, Germany, April 28, 2020. More than 300 Haflinger horses are living there.

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow for a story about the poems that Monitor staffers turn to when seeking comfort. 

More issues

2020
April
28
Tuesday
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