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When you think of “hard news”, a company that once published an article called “13 Potatoes That Look Like Channing Tatum” probably isn't the first thing that comes to mind. Yes, in this episode Hannah and Maia are tackling Buzzfeed - the millennial fluff aggregator that managed to be on the cutting edge of digital journalism for a bit there. And in the process, changed the way we consume news, and maybe even the societal flow of information altogether. Journalism is in crisis… and is Buzzfeed to blame? Listen for riveting discussions such as: the digital media gold rush and its inevitable demise; is Trump the attention economy personified? Is Justin Bieber one of the four horsemen of the news apocalypse? And… does Anna Wintour really have a f*ck ass bob? SOURCES: Jill Abramson, “Why BuzzFeed and Vice Couldn't Make News Work” Vanity Fair (2023). Domagoj Bebić, “Viral journalism: The rise of a new form” Medij. Istraž, vol. 22, (2016). David Elliot Berman, “The Spaces of Sensationalism: A Comparative Case Study of the New York Journal and BuzzFeed” International Journal of Communication, vol. 15 (2021). Ken Bensinger and Miriam Elder, “These Reports Allege Trump Has Deep Ties To Russia” Buzzfeed News (2017). Kathryn Bowd, “Social media and news media: Building new publics or fragmenting audiences?” in Making Publics, Making Places, ed. Mary Griffiths and Kim Barbour, University of Adelaide Press (2016). Bob Franklin, “The Future of Journalism in an Age of Digital Media and Economic Uncertainty” Journalism Studies, vol. 15 (2014). Josh Gerstein, “BuzzFeed Deletes Post Critical of Dove, a BuzzFeed Advertiser” Politico (2021). David A. Graham, The Trouble With Publishing the Trump Dossier” The Atlantic (2017). John Herrman, “The News Went Viral: The media bet its future on Facebook. Did it learn from that mistake?” New York Mag (2023). Nathan J. Robinson, “The Collapse of BuzzFeed News Shows Why For-Profit Journalism is a Disaster” Current Affairs (2023). Rachel Sanders, “BuzzFeed Doesn't Deserve Its Newsroom” The Nation (2022). Mia Sato, “The unbearable lightness of BuzzFeed” The Verge (2022). Alyson Shontell, “Inside Buzzfeed: The Story Of How Jonah Peretti Built The Web's Most Beloved New Media Brand” Buzzfeed Insider (2012). Ravi Somaiya, “BuzzFeed Restores 2 Posts Its Editor Deleted” The New York Times (2015). J.K Trotter, “BuzzFeed Deletes Post Critical of Dove, a BuzzFeed Advertiser” Gawker (2015).
October is Sudden Infant Death Syndrome awareness month. Dr. Richard Goldstein, director of the Robert's Program on Sudden Unexplained Death in Pediatrics, provides an overview of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), including historical perspectives, definitions, current understanding of potential etiologies, and emerging research. Additionally, Dr. Goldstein offers practical tips for speaking with caregivers about SIDS. After this podcast, listeners will be able to: -Learn the historical background of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) -Describe key terminology regarding SIDS and Sudden Unexplained Death in Pediatrics -Identify some of the proposed mechanisms related to SIDS -Present practical advice for speaking with families and caregivers Publication date: October 21, 2022. Articles referenced: • Goldstein RD, Kinney HC, Guttmacher AE. Only Halfway There with Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. N Engl J Med. 2022;386(20):1873-1875. (0:44) • MacDorman MF, Rosenberg HM. Trends in infant mortality by cause of death and other characteristics, 1960-88. Vital Health Stat 20. 1993;(20):1-57. (2:40) • Mitchell EA, Thach BT, Thompson JMD, Williams S, for the New Zealand Cot Death Study. Changing Infants' Sleep Position Increases Risk of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 1999;153(11):1136–1141. (2:48) • Haynes RL, Frelinger AL 3rd, Giles EK, et al. High serum serotonin in sudden infant death syndrome. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017;114(29):7695-7700. (17:20) • Kinney HC, Haynes RL, Armstrong DD, et. al. Abnormalities of the Hippocampus in Sudden and Unexpected Death in Early Life. In: Duncan JR, Byard RW, eds. SIDS Sudden Infant and Early Childhood Death: The Past, the Present and the Future. University of Adelaide Press; 2018. (19:09) • Koh HY, Haghighi A, Keywan C, et al. Genetic Determinants of Sudden Unexpected Death in Pediatrics. Genet Med. 2022;24(4):839-850. (22:50) • Miller MB, Huang AY, Kim J, et al. Somatic genomic changes in single Alzheimer's disease neurons. Nature. 2022;604(7907):714-722. (30:45) • Warland J, O'Leary J, McCutcheon H, Williamson V. Parenting paradox: parenting after infant loss. Midwifery. 2011;27(5):e163-e169. (36:10) • Kinney HC, Richerson GB, Dymecki SM, Darnall RA, Nattie EE. The brainstem and serotonin in the sudden infant death syndrome. Annu Rev Pathol. 2009;4:517-550. (42:01) Additional references: • Back to Sleep campaign: https://safetosleep.nichd.nih.gov/act... • https://www.childrenshospital.org/pro... • https://undiagnosed.hms.harvard.edu/ • https://www.broadinstitute.org/ • https://medicine.uiowa.edu/humangenet... • https://www.genomeweb.com/informatics... • https://med.nyu.edu/departments-insti... • https://www.australiangenomics.org.au.... • https://ojrd.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13023-021-02089-5 Citation: Goldstein R, Daniel D, Wolbrink T. Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. 10/22. Online Podcast. OPENPediatrics. https://youtu.be/pu-gnSCHDhw. Please visit: www.openpediatrics.org OPENPediatrics™ is an interactive digital learning platform for healthcare clinicians sponsored by Boston Children's Hospital and in collaboration with the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies. It is designed to promote the exchange of knowledge between healthcare providers around the world caring for critically ill children in all resource settings. The content includes internationally recognized experts teaching the full range of topics on the care of critically ill children. All content is peer-reviewed and open access-and thus at no expense to the user. For further information on how to enroll, please email: openpediatrics@childrens.harvard.edu
McRae S. Hemostasia fisiológica. En: Fitridge R, Thompson M, editores. Mecanismos de la enfermedad vascular: un libro de referencia para especialistas vasculares [Internet]. Adelaide (AU): University of Adelaide Press; 2011. 9. Disponible en: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK534253/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/las-poderosas-celulas-nk/message
Tara Lynn Marta, Author & Teacher from Scranton, speaking about her new novel, "Look Back to Yesterday" issued by Adelaide Press, in anticipation of an online book event presented by the Abington Community Library in Clarks Summit, PA, on Thursday, August 27, 2020, from 7:00 to 8:00 via Zoom. For more information on Facebook.com/TaraLynnMartaWriter or on Twitter @taralynnmarta
Does your nervous system make you nervous? Or better yet - are you concerned that your nervous system might betray you? Then read on and be prepared to 'revise' what you've been 'thinking' about brain function and aging and provide your body with what it needs to keep your brain function high and vital! It turns out you can influence how powerfully and adequately your brain function remains intact throughout your lifetime. For example, physical exercise seems to slow the loss of nerve cells in areas of the brain involved in memory. Such exercise also helps keep the remaining nerve cells functioning. On the other hand, consuming two or more drinks of alcohol a day can speed the decline in brain function. And, using therapeutic, highly absorbed magnesium and mineral supplements have significant implications for health, longevity and cognitive function. In 2011, the University of Adelaide Press published a comprehensive study titled Magnesium and the Central Nervous System. In it the editors provided comprehensive documentation about the role of magnesium in a normal brain, in neurological diseases such as learning and memory, headache and migraine, pain, cerebral ischemia, clinical stroke, and Parkinson’s as well as magnesium in psychiatric diseases such as Alzheimer’s, stress, neuroses, autism, depression and addiction. You can download a copy of the book here. The good news is in most every case these symptoms can is improved or prevented with the appropriate magnesium and mineral therapy such as our very own ReMag Magnesium Solution, a 60,000 ppm concentration of 99.99% pure elemental magnesium and ReMyte, our very same mineral product, both designed to slip right into the mineral channels of your cells and saturate your entire body with magnesium delight!
Does your nervous system make you nervous? Or better yet - are you concerned that your nervous system might betray you? Then read on and be prepared to 'revise' what you've been 'thinking' about brain function and aging and provide your body with what it needs to keep your brain function high and vital! It turns out you can influence how powerfully and adequately your brain function remains intact throughout your lifetime. For example, physical exercise seems to slow the loss of nerve cells in areas of the brain involved in memory. Such exercise also helps keep the remaining nerve cells functioning. On the other hand, consuming two or more drinks of alcohol a day can speed the decline in brain function. And, using therapeutic, highly absorbed magnesium and mineral supplements have significant implications for health, longevity and cognitive function. In 2011, the University of Adelaide Press published a comprehensive study titled Magnesium and the Central Nervous System. In it the editors provided comprehensive documentation about the role of magnesium in a normal brain, in neurological diseases such as learning and memory, headache and migraine, pain, cerebral ischemia, clinical stroke, and Parkinson’s as well as magnesium in psychiatric diseases such as Alzheimer’s, stress, neuroses, autism, depression and addiction. You can download a copy of the book here. The good news is in most every case these symptoms can is improved or prevented with the appropriate magnesium and mineral therapy such as our very own ReMag Magnesium Solution, a 60,000 ppm concentration of 99.99% pure elemental magnesium and ReMyte, our very same mineral product, both designed to slip right into the mineral channels of your cells and saturate your entire body with magnesium delight!
Port Adelaide defence coach Nathan Bassett speaks to the media after the Power's 28-point win against Sydney at the SCG on Saturday. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This past week Dr. Carolyn Dean wrote a blog titled: Magnesium the Anti-Aging Miracle and once you read the article I think you'll agree with me: your brain with magnesium and without magnesium behaves as two completely different organs and has significant implications for health, longevity and cognitive function. In addition to the studies and research Dr. Dean provides in her article we also site the 2011 the University of Adelaide Press comprehensive study titled Magnesium and the Central Nervous System. In the study the editors provide comprehensive documentation about the role of magnesium in a normal brain, in neurological diseases such as learning and memory, headache and migraine, pain, cerebral ischemia, clinical stroke, and Parkinson’s as well as magnesium in psychiatric diseases such as Alzheimer’s, stress, neuroses, autism, depression and addiction.
This past week Dr. Carolyn Dean wrote a blog titled: Magnesium the Anti-Aging Miracle and once you read the article I think you'll agree with me: your brain with magnesium and without magnesium behaves as two completely different organs and has significant implications for health, longevity and cognitive function. In addition to the studies and research Dr. Dean provides in her article we also site the 2011 the University of Adelaide Press comprehensive study titled Magnesium and the Central Nervous System. In the study the editors provide comprehensive documentation about the role of magnesium in a normal brain, in neurological diseases such as learning and memory, headache and migraine, pain, cerebral ischemia, clinical stroke, and Parkinson’s as well as magnesium in psychiatric diseases such as Alzheimer’s, stress, neuroses, autism, depression and addiction. On tonight's radio broadcast we'll be talking about magnesium and much more!
This past week Dr. Carolyn Dean wrote a blog titled: Magnesium the Anti-Aging Miracle and once you read the article I think you'll agree with me: your brain with magnesium and without magnesium behaves as two completely different organs and has significant implications for health, longevity and cognitive function. In addition to the studies and research Dr. Dean provides in her article we also site the 2011 the University of Adelaide Press comprehensive study titled Magnesium and the Central Nervous System. In the study the editors provide comprehensive documentation about the role of magnesium in a normal brain, in neurological diseases such as learning and memory, headache and migraine, pain, cerebral ischemia, clinical stroke, and Parkinson’s as well as magnesium in psychiatric diseases such as Alzheimer’s, stress, neuroses, autism, depression and addiction.
This past week Dr. Carolyn Dean wrote a blog titled: Magnesium the Anti-Aging Miracle and once you read the article I think you'll agree with me: your brain with magnesium and without magnesium behaves as two completely different organs and has significant implications for health, longevity and cognitive function. In addition to the studies and research Dr. Dean provides in her article we also site the 2011 the University of Adelaide Press comprehensive study titled Magnesium and the Central Nervous System. In the study the editors provide comprehensive documentation about the role of magnesium in a normal brain, in neurological diseases such as learning and memory, headache and migraine, pain, cerebral ischemia, clinical stroke, and Parkinson’s as well as magnesium in psychiatric diseases such as Alzheimer’s, stress, neuroses, autism, depression and addiction. On tonight's radio broadcast we'll be talking about magnesium and much more!
Your brain. Your brain on drugs. Any questions? Remember that advertising campaign? Well, today’s blog is of a similar vein: Your brain with and without magnesium is two completely different organs and has significant implications for health, longevity and cognitive function. And, you probably have questions! In 2011 the University of Adelaide Press published a comprehensive study titled Magnesium and the Central Nervous System. In it the editors provided comprehensive documentation about the role of magnesium in a normal brain, in neurological diseases such as learning and memory, headache and migraine, pain, cerebral ischemia, clinical stroke, and Parkinson’s as well as magnesium in psychiatric diseases such as Alzheimer’s, stress, neuroses, autism, depression and addiction. You can download a copy of the book here. The good news is in most every case these symptoms can is improved or prevented with the appropriate magnesium therapy such as our very own ReMag Magnesium Solution, a 60,000 ppm concentration of 99.99% pure elemental magnesium designed to slip right into the mineral channels of your cells and saturate your entire body with magnesium delight!
Your brain. Your brain on drugs. Any questions? Remember that advertising campaign? Well, today’s blog is of a similar vein: Your brain with and without magnesium is two completely different organs and has significant implications for health, longevity and cognitive function. And, you probably have questions! In 2011 the University of Adelaide Press published a comprehensive study titled Magnesium and the Central Nervous System. In it the editors provided comprehensive documentation about the role of magnesium in a normal brain, in neurological diseases such as learning and memory, headache and migraine, pain, cerebral ischemia, clinical stroke, and Parkinson’s as well as magnesium in psychiatric diseases such as Alzheimer’s, stress, neuroses, autism, depression and addiction. You can download a copy of the book here. The good news is in most every case these symptoms can is improved or prevented with the appropriate magnesium therapy such as our very own ReMag Magnesium Solution, a 60,000 ppm concentration of 99.99% pure elemental magnesium designed to slip right into the mineral channels of your cells and saturate your entire body with magnesium delight!
Your brain. Your brain on drugs. Any questions? Remember that advertising campaign? Well, today’s blog is of a similar vein: Your brain with and without magnesium is two completely different organs and has significant implications for health, longevity and cognitive function. And, you probably have questions! In 2011 the University of Adelaide Press published a comprehensive study titled Magnesium and the Central Nervous System. In it the editors provided comprehensive documentation about the role of magnesium in a normal brain, in neurological diseases such as learning and memory, headache and migraine, pain, cerebral ischemia, clinical stroke, and Parkinson’s as well as magnesium in psychiatric diseases such as Alzheimer’s, stress, neuroses, autism, depression and addiction. You can download a copy of the book here. The good news is in most every case these symptoms can is improved or prevented with the appropriate magnesium therapy such as our very own ReMag Magnesium Solution, a 60,000 ppm concentration of 99.99% pure elemental magnesium designed to slip right into the mineral channels of your cells and saturate your entire body with magnesium delight!
Your brain. Your brain on drugs. Any questions? Remember that advertising campaign? Well, today’s blog is of a similar vein: Your brain with and without magnesium is two completely different organs and has significant implications for health, longevity and cognitive function. And, you probably have questions! In 2011 the University of Adelaide Press published a comprehensive study titled Magnesium and the Central Nervous System. In it the editors provided comprehensive documentation about the role of magnesium in a normal brain, in neurological diseases such as learning and memory, headache and migraine, pain, cerebral ischemia, clinical stroke, and Parkinson’s as well as magnesium in psychiatric diseases such as Alzheimer’s, stress, neuroses, autism, depression and addiction. You can download a copy of the book here. The good news is in most every case these symptoms can is improved or prevented with the appropriate magnesium therapy such as our very own ReMag Magnesium Solution, a 60,000 ppm concentration of 99.99% pure elemental magnesium designed to slip right into the mineral channels of your cells and saturate your entire body with magnesium delight!
This podcast is presented and produced by Kieron Yates. Although he’s one of France’s most widely read and popular authors of the twentieth century, Boris Vian has never won the international recognition gained by friends and contemporaries such as Jean Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir. Kieron Yates talks to Alistair Rolls, Associate Professor in the School of Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Newcastle, Australia about the life and work of Boris Vian Even within France, apart from a few doctoral studies, Vian’s work has remained outside the consideration of academia and to some degree is still frowned upon by scholars. The closest most English speaking audiences will have come to Vian’s work is probably Michel Gondry’s 2004 film, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind which drew inspiration from two of Vian’s novels. More recently Gondry has directed a film of Vian’s most famous book, L’Ecume des Jours. Titled Mood Indigo for English speaking audiences, the film stars Audrey Tautou and gets its US and UK cinema release this summer. A recent translation of Vian’s poems and short stories – If I say If- published by the University of Adelaide Press, and co-edited by Alistair Rolls means that for the first time all of Vian’s short stories are available in English. Born in 1920 at Ville D’Avray, a bourgeois town on the western edge of Paris, Boris Vian was raised in a world of imagination fuelled by literature and society games. His parents were well-off and his early life was carefree and comfortable. But, in 1929 the stock-market crash ended the Vian fortune. The Vian’s were forced to move into the caretaker’s cottage of the family home so they could rent out the main house. At the age of twelve Vian was diagnosed with a heart condition that consigned him to his bedroom and to the care of his mother. Boris’s health improved in his teenage years and he went on to become a brilliant scholar who, reputedly, had read everything. Alistair Rolls: He was clearly very talented from an early age. One of his next door neighbours as a child was Yehudi Menuhin and Menuhin and he used to play chess together. He was very sharp. He was very mathematically alert… very musically alert early on and he was brought up in a very culturally alert environment so he was exposed early on to opera and all kinds of classical music. I kept on coming across the expression, “Il a tout lu”…he’s read everything. No one’s read everything. Then the people in the Boris Vian Foundation in Paris took me aside and said , “You have to understand that you know that we publish more now than we used to publish.” So back in the 1920′s it was not possible to read everything but you could give it a damn good shot. So he had this ongoing heart condition which he had from early on. I think it wasn’t just the heart condition that stifled Vian. It was then people’s reaction to the heart condition notably his mother. So he was certainly over mothered when he was young and I think he rebelled against that. And then you have this overwhelming thesis which is such that Vian killed himself by living. He lived too hard and brought about his own death. KY: Boris’s obsession with literature and language led to him cultivating a passion for punning and wordplay. He also began to learn English in his spare time. Music also played a major role in Boris’s teenage life. At the age of 16 he developed a passion for jazz and went on to become not only a competent trumpeter and band leader but a highly regarded critic and editor for jazz magazines. In the immediate post-war years Vian could be found in the trendy hotspots of Saint-Germain-des-Prés, rubbing shoulders and exchanging ideas with other luminaries of the area or simply playing his trumpet in the lively clubs. MUSIC: Basin Street Blues – Boris Vian with Radiodifussion France introduction: It was around this time that Vian’s first literary works began to be published.