CBS ’ Grammys Telecast Skips Closed Captions For Bad Bunny & Displays “Singing Non-English” Instead
Bad Bunny opened the 2023 Grammy Awards with an explosive performance that even had Taylor Swift dancing to his hit songs. Throughout the live ceremony, CBS provided closed captioning for individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing. However, during Bad Bunny’s performance, the captions only…#badbunny #taylorswift #badbunnys #singingnonenglish #speakingnonenglish #grammys #spanish #sundancefilmfestival #magazinedreams #urbanaalbum (Source: Reuters: Health)
Source: Reuters: Health - February 6, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Universities need to ‘ redouble their efforts ’ to support disabled staff
Higher education delegates in Newcastle voted yesterday to build on the success of UNISON’s Year of Disabled Workers 2022, and continue to work to improve the experience of disabled members. Sanchia Alasia of the national disabled members’ committee proposed a motion aimed at “securing the legacy” of the campaign’s achievements, “because disabled staff still face discrimination in our universities.” The union used the Year of Disabled Workers to highlight the important contribution disabled members make to the union, to improve terms and conditions for disabled workers, including in higher education, and to c...
Source: UNISON Health care news - February 3, 2023 Category: UK Health Authors: Demetrios Matheou Tags: Article News 2023 National Higher Education Conference 2023 year of Black Workers year of the disabled worker Source Type: news

Guilford College president inspires with Spirit Lecture
<img width="100" src="https://factor.niehs.nih.gov/sites/niehs-factor/files/styles/large/public/2017/4/beyond-the-bench/spiritlecture/thumb814363.jpg?itok=x9KotQ_d" /><br /><p>Jane Fernandes, Ph.D., first deaf woman to lead an American college or university, delivered an inspiring Spirit Lecture.</p> (read more) (Source: Environmental Factor - NIEHS Newsletter)
Source: Environmental Factor - NIEHS Newsletter - February 3, 2023 Category: Environmental Health Source Type: news

Humans Still Understand Chimpanzee and Bonobo Gestures
The discovery of gestures used by great apes provides evidence of intentional communication outside human language; over 80 such signals have now been identified (Source: Disabled World)
Source: Disabled World - January 24, 2023 Category: Disability Tags: Deaf Communication Source Type: news

Film Festivals – and All Movie Theaters
Filmmaker Alison O’Daniel appears in the Next section of the Sundance Film Festival with “The Tuba Thieves,” an innovative feature commentary on deafness. Here, she writes about the agony of closed-captioning at film festivals, and the long-overdue adoption of open captions for all movie theaters…#sundancefilmfestival #tubathieves #southerncalifornia #sundance #captiview #genzandmillennials #ellaglendening (Source: Reuters: Health)
Source: Reuters: Health - January 23, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

What Are Potential Treatments for Hyperacusis?
Discussion Hearing is functional in human fetuses at approximately 25-27 weeks gestation.. The aural anatomical structures are developed by ~32 weeks gestation. Hyperacusis does not have a specific definition but in general is an increased sensitivity to sounds (either intensity or loudness). Some authors describe it as “…decreased sound tolerance where there is a negative reaction to the physical characteristics of the sound,” and other authors use “…increased sensitivity to sound in levels that would not trouble a normal individual.” Phonophobia is a true fear of sounds with anticipati...
Source: PediatricEducation.org - January 23, 2023 Category: Pediatrics Authors: Pediatric Education Tags: Uncategorized Source Type: news

Marlee Matlin Slams Kidz Bop at Sundance Amid Claims They Passed Over Deaf Talent Due to Interpreter Cost: ‘F
Marlee Matlin no doubt had a busy Friday morning in Park City, where she’s serving on the U.S. Dramatic Competition jury for this year’s Sundance Film Festival. However, she did manage to sneak in a few minutes of an oh-so-common pastime: scrolling on social media. What she saw left her fuming. “I…#marleematlin #parkcity #matlin #randallpark #zackarydrucker #aletheaarnaquqbari #kidzbop #savannah #savvy #asl (Source: Reuters: Health)
Source: Reuters: Health - January 22, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Sundance Jury Walks Out of ‘Magazine Dreams’ Premiere After Festival Fails to Provide Captioning for Juror Marlee Matlin (EXCLUSIVE)
Jurors for Sundance’s U.S. Dramatic Competition walked out of the premiere of “Magazine Dreams” on Friday night over an incident in which the festival failed to provide adequate captioning for deaf and hearing impaired audience members — including juror Marlee Matlin. Members of the dramatic jury…#marleematlin #jeremyoharris #elizahittman #matlin #sundance #cannes #venice #magazinedreams #utah #joanavicente (Source: Reuters: Health)
Source: Reuters: Health - January 21, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Marlee Matlin Slams Kidz Bop at Sundance Amid Claims They Passed Over Deaf Talent Due to Interpreter Cost: “F***ing Ridiculous”
Marlee Matlin no doubt had a busy Friday morning here in Park City, where she’s serving on the U.S. Dramatic Competition jury for this year’s Sundance Film Festival. However, she did manage to sneak in a few minutes of an oh-so-common pastime: scrolling on social media. What she saw left her…#marleematlin #parkcity #matlin #randallpark #zackarydrucker #aletheaarnaquqbari #kidzbop #savannah #savvy #asl (Source: Reuters: Health)
Source: Reuters: Health - January 21, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Marlee Matlin & Randall Park Talk Marvel ’s Deaf Superhero, Taika Waititi & Diversity At Sundance
Marvel superhero Echo, aka Maya Lopez, played by deaf Native American actress Alaqua Cox, signifies progress in a Hollywood that’s still a real challenge for diverse talent, but there’s so much more to ve done, said Marlee Matlin today at the Sundance Film Festival. The groundbreaking Academy…#echo #mayalopez #nativeamerican #alaquacox #hollywood #marleematlin #sundancefilmfestival #academyaward #oscarwinner #coda (Source: Reuters: Health)
Source: Reuters: Health - January 21, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

I Can Not See, I Can Not Hear, But Somehow I Know
A study involving blind and deaf people shows that the brain innately possesses a specific architecture to integrate information coming from the senses (Source: Disabled World)
Source: Disabled World - January 16, 2023 Category: Disability Tags: Medical Research News Source Type: news

How These Sign Language Experts Are Bringing More Diversity to Theater
Zavier Sabio, who focused on authenticity in sign language interpreting for “A Soldier’s Play,” which tackles race in the military. Many deaf people have been calling for racial alignment of the interpreters onstage when ASL services are provided for theaters. Anyone can read what you share. As…#deafandblack #michellebanks #camilleabrowns #afrolatina #tdf #gallaudetuniversity #keithwann #enuf #deaf #asl (Source: Reuters: Health)
Source: Reuters: Health - January 7, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Tuning in to Your Most-Ignored Sense Can Make You Happier
Somewhere along the long, winding road of evolution, a bunch of genes got together in a conference room and decided it would probably be most optimal for human survival if we were forced to take in every sound all around us at all times. Thus, the ear was born. Unlike their neighbors the eyes, the ears came with no on/off option. This is a great safety feature if you’re living in a cave surrounded by predators, but it’s since been hijacked by a world in which you’re more likely to find yourself trying to sleep through a neighbor’s car alarm blaring at 1 A.M. [time-brightcove not-tgx=”trueR...
Source: TIME: Health - January 6, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Haley Weiss Tags: Uncategorized healthscienceclimate Mental Health Wellbeing Source Type: news

Living Another Year Dangerously
By Anis ChowdhurySYDNEY, Jan 2 2023 (IPS) 2022 has been a year of great uncertainty when it seemed the world perilously reached the brink of self-destruction – be it human-induced climate change or military conflict. Welcoming 2022, we had enough reasons to be optimistic; but it was another ‘year of living dangerously’ – Tahun vivere pericoloso in the words of Soekarno, or an annus horribilis in the words of the late Queen Elizabeth. Anis ChowdhuryNo end to Covid-19 The joy of the COVID vaccine discovery quickly vanished as the ‘vaccine apartheid‘ blatantly prioritised lives in rich nations, especially...
Source: IPS Inter Press Service - Health - January 2, 2023 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Authors: Anis Chowdhury Tags: Armed Conflicts Climate Change COVID-19 Economy & Trade Environment Global Headlines Health Human Rights Humanitarian Emergencies TerraViva United Nations IPS UN Bureau Source Type: news

Oscar ’s Final Frontier: Movies Featuring Disabilities
The best picture Oscar for “CODA” was historic for many reasons — including the fact that it honored a film with authentic casting of Deaf people, after the disabled have been historically ignored or misrepresented in Hollywood. So can we expect a flood of movies about the disabled? Maybe. The…#zacefron #beerrun #greatestbeerrunever #cooperraiff #neurotypical #ladychatterleys #blackpanther #russellharvard #wakandaforever #macgregorarney (Source: Reuters: Health)
Source: Reuters: Health - December 31, 2022 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news