May 29, 2015

Recent Listenin's

Haven't posted on here in a long time, but I recently made a list of podcast episodes I enjoyed of late, so I thought I would post that here, at the very least to save it as a record for myself.





Reply All: Exit & Return 1 (Very good, get it in the itunes store)


This is also an interview with Jon Ronson, this is about online public shaming. 





Dark and sad, but well done.

April 18, 2013

Recent Quality Listening


Interview with Sonali Deraniyagala about her experience surviving the 2004 tsunami and the loss of her family.

NPR story on the morning after pill and abortion. 

ER Cast had its annual rant-off. Even if you're not planning on putting in a central line or placing a nerve block anytime soon it's worth a listen.

September 10, 2012

Stuff on a Monday from NPR

Radiolab's statement on Jonah Lehrer - I sought this out after I heard an old Radiolab featuring Jonah Lehrer on the radio on WNYC this past weekend. Like a lot of commenters on this post, I hoped that Radiolab would do a more thoughtful examination of Jonah Lehrer's involvement. Considering his sizable contribution to the show I think a more comprehensive post was in order.

TV Writers Script Safe Sex 'Product Placement' by Neda Ulaby

Can We Learn To Forget Our Memories? by Alix Spiegel


July 28, 2012

Olympic Sound Design


The sound designer for the Olympic games, Dennis Baxter, describes on NPR how the events are miked, or in some cases, synced live to match the action. My personal favorite Olympic   event to hear is the balance beam in gymnastics (minus the commentary) with the rhythmic sounds of feet landing.

PHOTO:PRUITTALLEN

July 24, 2012

Foot in the Door


NPR's Morning Edition offers a engaging nugget of behavioral psychology with an abbreviated overview of research into manipulation by Shankar Vedantam. The research he alludes to is outlined more specifically in the web story here.


PHOTO: CHRISTINEU

July 20, 2012

NPR's Dating Tips


I love how NPR's coverage of social issues or popular culture often makes young people sound like insects. Human female speaks to human male about ownership of human currencyThis story by Jennifer Ludden takes a look at how student debt affects dating.
At the very least check out the amazing title of her story and the stock photo.

PHOTO:AJMEXICO

July 17, 2012

Catching Up

  Under a crush of work and schoolwork I haven't had time to record my listening habits here lately. Now that I finally have a brief respite here's a rundown of some recent and not-so-recent notable stories:

Bullseye: Jesse Thorn interviews Moshe Kasher, author of Kasher in the Rye: The True Tale of a White Boy from Oakland Who Became a Drug Addict, Criminal, Mental Patient, and Then Turned 16

Radiolab Shorts: A War We Need
A friend is in school to be an ocean virologist and that seemed like a really random career until I heard this.


Radiolab Colors
 The first part of this episode includes a chorus hired to sing different combinations of wavelengths of light.



Slate's XX Gabfest

April 1, 2012

JJGO Episode #203

I used to listen to Jordan Jesse Go pretty regularly in their early days but I haven't been a faithful listener in a long time. In a spate of boredom I looked through their recent catalog and found several great episodes, including Episode #203 with guest Maria Thayer. As Jesse alludes to in the introduction this episode stands out for being unusually monomaniacal, "We engage in what might be longest segment in Jordan Jesse Go History." Clocking in at almost two hours it eventually serves as workshop for Jesse to process a lot of his feelings about producing radio. An extended examination of whether or not to apply for a Peabody award becomes woven into a general conversation about The Sound of Young America, motivations for making art and Jesse's occasional doubts about what he's doing. Much of it is not really funny but I enjoyed it a lot more than many of their episodes. I found myself wishing Jesse could bring more of that honest sensibility to his Sound of Young America/Bullseye interviews. It was refreshing to hear him not trying to be funny. On The Sound of Young America he's steadily improved in his selection of interviewees and in his interview structure and I think he can get even better. I was left feeling that I've underestimated what the serious, less comedically driven Jesse Thorn can do. Funny that I heard it on his non-broadcast comedy podcast.

January 10, 2012

Un tagging


I rarely listen to Talk of the Nation but I ran across this recent episode about how Facebook tries to tackle unwanted or inappropriate photos and people tagged in them. Facebook engineer Arthuro Bejar talks about how the issue has evolved, the misunderstandings, the anxieties, and how Facebook is trying to influence how the disputes are resolved, even when they can't intervene. I found myself surprised to be reminded how little authority or control Facebook has or choses to have in some areas, which seems to contradict our associations between technology and authority, order, control and efficiency. I think in many ways users expect Facebook to operate like their other technology products, like their phones or software, that is, relatively bug free, with customer service, accountability and clear standards. But what is a desire to control how the program works and what is a desire to control other people and their behavior?



PHOTO:LUMACHROME