This article appeared in the March 09, 2018 edition of the Monitor Daily.

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Monitor Daily Intro for March 9, 2018

Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

The idea of “adjusted expectations” can carry a whiff of compromise. This week brought reminders that the adjustment can also be upward.

It began with post-Oscar buzz about Frances McDormand’s rousing call for “inclusion riders” – at least one production company quickly got on board. Melinda Gates would opine about the transformative power of putting money in “the hands of women who have the authority to use it.”

It was mostly symbolic that some outlets of American cultural juggernaut McDonald’s flipped the logo to form a W in a salute to women. It was arguably at least a small cultural shift when carmakers at a major international auto show shed the tradition of decorative “booth babes.”

Then there were those penguins. A supercolony of more than 1.5 million birds – Adélies, thought to be in rapid decline – is now known to exist on the northern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula. Perspective about the tiny birds’ plight was shifted from space. Satellite images had revealed massive guano fields.

Finally, a development on solar power in California. The state is overproducing relative to its goals. It set two big records this month alone. That stands to renew a push to adopt much more aggressive targets. Old mandate: half the state’s electricity from renewable sources by 2030. Now, how about 100 percent by 2045? That’s raising expectations.

Now to our five stories for your Friday, highlighting the importance of equal opportunity, of always favoring a closer look, and of choosing innovation over closing doors.


This article appeared in the March 09, 2018 edition of the Monitor Daily.

Read 03/09 edition
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