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It's a hot summer day outside Lincoln, Neb., and Jack Chappelle is knee-deep in trash. He's wading in to rotting vegetables, half-eaten burgers and tater tots. Lots of tater tots.

"You can get a lot of tater tots out of schools," Chappelle says. "It doesn't matter if it's elementary, middle school or high school. Tater tots. Bar none."

Chappelle is a solid waste consultant with Engineering Solutions & Design in Kansas City, Kan. Local governments hire his crew to literally sort through their garbage and find out what it's made of. On this day, he's trudging through Lincoln's Bluff Road Landfill.

"In the country you get more peelings," Chappelle explained. "You get more vegetables."

A lot of the waste he finds is food — from homes, restaurants, stores and schools.

"When you're in the city, you get a lot more fast-food containers with half-eaten food in them," Chappelle says. "A lot more pizza boxes."

Food is the largest single source of waste in the U.S. More food ends up in landfills than plastic or paper.

According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 20 percent of what goes into municipal landfills is food. Food waste tipped the scale at 35 million tons in 2012, the most recent year for which estimates are available.

More In This Series

Read more stories in Harvest Public Media's series on food waste.

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To Stop Picky Eaters From Tossing The Broccoli, Give Them Choices

The Salt

Supermarkets Waste Tons Of Food As They Woo Shoppers

The Salt

Everything But The Squeal: How The Hog Industry Cuts Food Waste

The enormous amount of wasted food is weighing on our food system.

"Forty percent of all the food in this country never makes it to the table — at a cost of $165 billion to the U.S. economy," says Dan Nickey, associate director of the Iowa Waste Reduction Center, which works with businesses to cut back on how much food goes into the garbage.

There are lots of reasons for food waste. Some crops are never harvested. Some foods are thrown out if they don't meet cosmetic standards. Restaurants often prepare more food than they sell. And grocery stores pull food off the shelf when it starts going stale.

Still, Nickey says, part of the problem is that consumers can afford to waste.

"It's so cheap to buy food [that] we just look at it as a given, that it will always be there — 'I can go buy more tomorrow,' " he says.

It's a big problem, and Nickey tries to be realistic about solving it.

"Zero food waste would be ideal, but that's not reality, OK?" he says. "If you're in your kitchen and a water pipe bursts in your kitchen, you're not going to stop and think, 'How can I use this water in a socially and environmentally responsible manner?' No, you're going to stop and turn the water off. And that's what we need to do first."

To reduce the food heading to landfills, food companies, grocery stores and restaurants will have to take some responsibility. And many are. But many of us — American consumers — are not.

"Forty to 50 percent of food waste comes from consumers, and 50 to 60 percent from businesses," says the EPA's Ashley Zanolli. She helped create a new program to teach consumers to be more efficient in the kitchen. It's called Food: Too Good to Waste. Until it's rolled out nationwide, a handful of cities are trying it out — including Iowa City, Iowa.

That's where Sherri Erkel's family is part of a study measuring how much food people throw out at home.

It's fajita night at the Erkel home, and some half-eaten tortillas, picked over beans — all the scraps — are going into a green bucket on the kitchen counter. Once a week, Erkel pulls out the plastic liner to weigh what they've thrown out.

"We're at 4 pounds of food waste for a couple days," she says. "These aren't watermelon rinds or anything, so that's just food on our plate we didn't eat."

The EPA's Zanolli says until they measure what they're wasting, people often fault others for tossing out food.

"It's their brother-in-law who wastes so much food, or, oh, my gosh, their neighbor down the street," she says of consumer attitudes. "And unlike recycling, where you can create some peer pressure by noticing whether your neighbor has their blue bin down at the end of the driveway, it's a little different with household behaviors."

To put less food in her green bucket, Sherri Erkel is following tips from the EPA.

For starters, she plans her meals for the week and puts them on a calendar. And she uses that menu to make her shopping list. One tip suggests dedicating a shelf in the fridge for food that needs to be eaten before spoiling. It boils down to buying what you need and eating what you buy.

Saving money is part of Erkel's motivation, but so, too, is guilt: 1 in 7 families in the U.S. struggles with hunger.

"Food production is not an issue," Erkel notes. "Like, we produce enough food, but we're throwing away all this food, and a mile away, people don't have enough. So that's kind of the first step, I think."

A step, she says, toward taking personal responsibility not only for what's eaten, but also for what's wasted.

This story is part of a series on food waste from Harvest Public Media, a public radio reporting project focusing on agriculture and food production.

food waste

If you're an impressionable young kid hitting your teens right now, chances are pretty good you've been watching and enjoying some Batman — either Christian Bale in Christopher Nolan's just-completed Dark Knight trilogy, or the prequel series, Gotham, now showing on Fox. If you came of age a generation ago, your Batman of choice was likely to have been the big-screen caped crusader played by Michael Keaton or George Clooney. Or maybe even Val Kilmer.

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Cesar Romero played the Joker on the '60s show. Courtesy of Warner Bros. Home Entertainment hide caption

itoggle caption Courtesy of Warner Bros. Home Entertainment

Cesar Romero played the Joker on the '60s show.

Courtesy of Warner Bros. Home Entertainment

But between 1966 and 1968, long before any of those versions of the DC Comics hero, Batman came to the screen in a much lighter, and brighter, ABC series, starring Adam West. The Dark Knight it wasn't. This Batman was played for laughs, with its star's no-nonsense delivery making it all the more tongue-in-cheek.

With its pop-art sensibility, vibrant colors and rogue's gallery of playful guest stars, Batman was a brief but major hit. Frank Gorshin as the Riddler, Cesar Romero as the Joker, Burgess Meredith as the Penguin and Julie Newmar as Catwoman — these were some of the original villains who made this Batman a TV phenomenon right from the start. That first season, ABC presented two episodes per week in a serialized cliffhanger format — and both installments made that year's Top 10.

“ With its pop-art sensibility, vibrant colors and rogue's gallery of playful guest stars, Batman was a brief but major hit.

Yet, until now, this particular incarnation of Batman has never been released on home video — not on DVD, not even on VHS. But Warner Bros. Home Video has just released the entire Adam West Batman series on DVD and Blu-Ray, including a limited-edition collectible box set that comes with a set of Batman trading cards and even a Hot Wheels Batmobile. Some collectors, I guess, will geek out over all that extra stuff — but personally, I love the extras that come on the bonus disc, like the original screen test of Burt Ward, who won the role of Robin, and the original pilot for a planned Batgirl spinoff, and a new documentary, which has various Batman experts placing the TV series squarely in the pop-art movement of the mid '60s.

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Burt Ward (left) played Robin and Adam West (right) played Batman in the show that was played for laughs. Courtesy of Warner Bros. Home Entertainment hide caption

itoggle caption Courtesy of Warner Bros. Home Entertainment

Burt Ward (left) played Robin and Adam West (right) played Batman in the show that was played for laughs.

Courtesy of Warner Bros. Home Entertainment

Most of all, of course, I love these old Batman episodes themselves. Certainly, that goes for the classics, like the ones with the original Catwoman, and those pop-art fight scenes.

But, to be honest, I also enjoy watching the really obscure, justifiably forgotten, admittedly bad ones. Who remembers Zsa Zsa Gabor as Minerva, or Ida Lupino as Dr. Cassandra? I didn't. But I do remember Joan Collins, in a pre-Dynasty role at her most alluring, playing the seductive villainess known as the Siren. Her high-pitched, mini-skirted spell worked well, and not just on Commissioner Gordon.

I remember the Siren, and especially Catwoman, very fondly indeed. Various rights issues have kept Batman from home-video release until now, so younger viewers — those seeing this goofy, playful comic-book TV version for the first time — may be very pleasantly surprised by the fun to be had here. And for fans of a certain age, who are old enough to remember the '60s, I'm fairly certain this long-delayed box set will be worth the wait. Holy sensory overload, Batman!

David Bianculli is founder and editor of the website TV Worth Watching.

The Original Folk & Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm

The Complete First Edition

by Jacob Grimm, Wilhelm Grimm, Jack Zipes and Andrea Dezso

Hardcover, 519 pages | purchase

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It's well-known that our favorite fairy tales started out darker than the ones Disney animators brought to life. But you might be surprised by how much darker the originals were.

For the first time, a new translation of the Brothers Grimm's tales reveals exactly how unsanitized and murderous the bedtime stories really were. Jack Zipes, author of The Original Folk and Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm, is the only person who has ever translated the first edition of their tales into English.

"Some of them are extremely dark and harrowing," Zipes tells NPR's Rachel Martin. "Many are somewhat erotic and deal with incest. Most of them are not what we call fairy tales; they tend to be animal tales or warning tales."

Take, for example, Snow White. In the modern version of the tale, the Evil Queen is Snow White's stepmother. But in the first edition, Snow White is only 7 years old, and it's her biological mother who wants to murder her for her beauty.

The stories are hardly appropriate for children by today's standards, and at the outset, they weren't intended to be. The Grimms "collected these tales to show what life was like," says Zipes. "And they wanted to reveal what they considered the divine truths of the tales."

And the tales endure. Zipes says that's because they resonate in every era. "I think they speak to the human condition. ... They also provide hope. For the most part, there is social justice in these tales and ... we need that. We need the hope that these tales provide."

Read an excerpt of The Original Folk & Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm

Brothers Grimm

Fairy tales

Snow White

Preserved human parts — including an infant's head, a baby's foot and an adult heart — stolen from a medical museum in Thailand last month were discovered over the weekend by workers at a parcel-delivery company who put three Las Vegas-bound boxes labeled toys into an X-ray machine.

Thai police, whom the workers at DHL alerted to their discovery, say they identified the man who shipped the boxes as Ryan McPherson, a 31-year-old American tourist. Police say they questioned McPherson and another American, Daniel Tanner, 33, about the packages that contained five body parts.

McPherson reportedly told them he had found the parts at a night market in Bangkok.

"He said he thought the body parts were bizarre and wanted to send them to his friends in the U.S.," Police Col. Chumpol Pumpuang said.

His comments were reported by The Associated Press.

Both McPherson and Tanner were released and left the country this morning and were now in Cambodia, police said. Police also said they were contacting the FBI about those people to whom the packages were addressed.

Meanwhile, Udom Kachintorn, dean of the faculty of medicine at Bangkok's Siriraj Hospital, said today that the human remains were stolen from the facility's museums. He said McPherson and Tanner had visited the museums last week, but surveillance video did not show them taking anything.

Thailand

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