Podcast appearances and mentions of chioke i anson

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Best podcasts about chioke i anson

Latest podcast episodes about chioke i anson

Reinvention
Dr. Chioke I'Anson

Reinvention

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2021 43:04


African American Studies professor and National Public Radio star Dr. Chioke I’Anson discusses motorcycles, breaking into voice work, podcasting while black, and the secret Hegelian lessons acorns and oak trees can tell you about your career.To learn more visit the The Media Center and Everything is Alive Podcast.Transcript is here.

Resettled
Bonus: Reclaiming the Refugee Narrative

Resettled

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2020 69:34


In this stripped down conversation, Ahmed Badr speaks with Dr. Chioke I’Anson of the VPM+ICA Community Media Center about the ethics of storytelling, the power of creative platforms, and techniques for community-engaged media. They discuss how podcast producers can push back against the dominant singular, two-dimensional narratives around displacement, and instead share thoughtful and nuanced stories, all while informing the audience. Guests include Justin Gandy of the International Rescue Committee, as well as Fatimah, whose story was featured in the Education episode of Resettled.

Live Wire with Luke Burbank
Chioke l’Anson, Leah Sottile, and Justin Townes Earle

Live Wire with Luke Burbank

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2020 53:10


Host Luke Burbank and announcer Elena Passarello share what they wish they had been talked out of; Chioke I’Anson, the voice of NPR’s underwriting, admits to feeling self-conscious about the sound of his own voice; journalist Leah Sottile unpacks the symbiotic relationship between the federal government and fringe patriot groups, as investigated in her podcast Bundyville; and we pay tribute to the late singer-songwriter Justin Townes Earle by sharing his 2017 performance of "Maybe a Moment."

npr justin townes earle leah sottile bundyville elena passarello chioke i anson
Good Morning, RVA!
Good morning, RVA: 996↗️ • 17↘️; protests return to downtown; Devil's Half Acre concepts

Good Morning, RVA!

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2020


Good morning, RVA! It’s 75 °F, and highs will top out near 90 °F with plenty of humidity thrown in for good measure. Keep an eye on the sky this afternoon and evening for possible storms.Water coolerAs of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 996↗️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 17↘️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 193↗️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 69, Henrico: 85, and Richmond: 39). Since this pandemic began, 307 people have died in the Richmond region. The seven-day average of new reported cases in Henrico (78) is more than double the same seven-day average Richmond (31). The graph of that stat in Chesterfield, Henrico, and Richmond over time is kind of startling, but keep in mind we’re running way more tests now than we were back in June (but fewer than we were in July). Still, though, I’m startled!Protestors hit the streets of downtown Richmond last night and the CT’s Hannah Eason tagged along and put together this Twitter thread and this interactive map of the protest’s route through the city. Protestors smashed windows at the John Marshall Courts Building again, tagged the Dominion building, and broke some more windows downtown. From what I can tell both protestors and police stayed out of each other’s hair, and we, thankfully, avoided another night of tear-gas filled neighborhood streets. Since no one offered to listen to the two hours worth of audio from the recent Task Force to Reimagine Public Safety meeting, I guess I’ll need to make time for it. Will the Task Force act boldly enough to address the concerns of protestors? What even are the concerns, which I do feel stretch deeper and broader than this list? It’s a good list, but I want a far-reaching plan to make systemic change in how we do public safety in Richmond—or at least I want this Task Force to say as much out loud.You should read this piece by Michael Paul Williams in the Richmond Times-Dispatch about what’s going on with the Richmond Transparency and Accountability Project. You’ll remember RTAP from opening up the Richmond Police Department’s data and teaching everyone about Civilian Review Boards. There is a lot to unpack in here, and the core of the problem seems to be white advocates taking up space (too much space?) in a black-led movement. Rather than do the same, I want to encourage you to read the MPW piece and then spend some time scrolling through the RTAP twitter timeline.Is this new or just new to me? The Lumpkin’s Slave Jail Site / Devil’s Half Acre Project website has some conceptual design and imagery of what a new “memorial-museum” could look like, and whoa. For a space trapped between a railroad, a highway, and a major urban corridor, the concepts look like a pretty nice place to spend some time. I think this forward progress ties in with the Mayor’s recent commitment of $25–50 million in the City’s Capital Improvement Program for this specific project. So maybe we’ll start seeing some next steps or cost estimates soon? To be honest, I feel out of the loop on this entire project.Mark Robinson at the RTD has the details on what Mayor Stoney would like from our state-level legislators at next week’s special legislative session. Robinson’s piece focuses on legalizing marijuana, which, yes, let’s do it, right now. If you’re unconvinced about the impact legalizing would have on equity, check out this mind-blowing stat the Mayor dropped: “Not only do marijuana arrests comprise a majority of the total arrests in Virginia, but out of those arrests a disproportionate number are of Black people,” A majority of total arrests?? That’s wild! Plus, from the economic side of things, legalizing marijuana right now seems like a great way to create a new source of revenue during a coronarecession. Here’s the full text of the letter Mayor Stoney sent to the Governor.As a Richmond Public Schools parent with a student heading back to school in a couple of weeks (in as much as students are heading back anywhere), I appreciate this #ReopenWithLove Family Checklist the Superintendent put together. Everything is new and different this school year, and I am bound to forget some critical piece which will catch me a withering stare from my son. I like to avoid withering stares from my family, if at all possible.This is rad: RVAHub says that the Institute for Contemporary Art and VPM will partner to create a community media center in the ICA: “The VPM+ICA Community Media Center will create new opportunities for storytelling, train and educate the next generation of audio producers, and amplify voices often missing from traditional media.” This sounds exceedingly cool, and that Chioke I’Anson will head up the program is even exceedingly cooler.This morning’s patron longreadImmunology Is Where Intuition Goes to DieSubmitted by Patron Gretchen. I read this piece yesterday and then, while scrolling through Twitter this morning, came across a tweet from an immunologist that literally says the words “sorry, immunology is complicated.”Even the word immunity creates confusion. When immunologists use it, they simply mean that the immune system has responded to a pathogen—for example, by producing antibodies or mustering defensive cells. When everyone else uses the term, they mean (and hope) that they are protected from infection—that they are immune. But, annoyingly, an immune response doesn’t necessarily provide immunity in this colloquial sense. It all depends on how effective, numerous, and durable those antibodies and cells are. Immunity, then, is usually a matter of degrees, not absolutes. And it lies at the heart of many of the COVID-19 pandemic’s biggest questions. Why do some people become extremely ill and others don’t?If you’d like your longread to show up here, go chip in a couple bucks on the ol’ Patreon.

Live Wire with Luke Burbank
"Voice of Reason" with Chioke l’Anson, Leah Sottile, and Joseph

Live Wire with Luke Burbank

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2020 53:19


Host Luke Burbank and announcer Elena Passarello swap stories about their failed musical auditions; Chioke I’Anson, the voice of NPR’s underwriting, admits to feeling self-conscious about the sound of his own voice; journalist Leah Sottile unpacks the symbiotic relationship between the federal government and fringe patriot groups, as investigated in her podcast Bundyville; and indie folk trio Joseph perform “Green Eyes” from their new album "Good Luck, Kid."

The Drabblecast Audio Fiction Podcast
Drabblecast 410 – Go Between

The Drabblecast Audio Fiction Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2019 46:00


On this week’s Drabblecast, Norm and NPR’s Chioke I’Anson bring you stories about the voices in your head, including “Go Between” by acclaimed writer China Mieville. “Go Between” tells the tale of a man who, for several years, has been receiving strange instructions to deliver seemingly random items from location to location. Agonizing over effect […] The post Drabblecast 410 – Go Between appeared first on The Drabblecast.

The Gist
The Candace Owens Sideshow

The Gist

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2019 36:27


On The Gist, Candance Owens isn't digging herself out of this ahistorical, Hitler-relativizing hole.  In the interview, Ian Chillag is back with another season of Everything Is Alive, a podcast where he interviews the everyday objects around us that we don’t think of. Chioke I’Anson is here too because he played a grain of sand with a surprising amount of philosophy packed in (he’s a philosopher himself). Is sand more Kantian or Heideggerian? And what’s it like to think as a collective?  In the Spiel, president Trump’s public insult of Sen. Mazie Hirono rumbles on. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Slate Daily Feed
Gist: The Candace Owens Sideshow

Slate Daily Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2019 36:27


On The Gist, Candance Owens isn't digging herself out of this ahistorical, Hitler-relativizing hole.  In the interview, Ian Chillag is back with another season of Everything Is Alive, a podcast where he interviews the everyday objects around us that we don’t think of. Chioke I’Anson is here too because he played a grain of sand with a surprising amount of philosophy packed in (he’s a philosopher himself). Is sand more Kantian or Heideggerian? And what’s it like to think as a collective?  In the Spiel, president Trump’s public insult of Sen. Mazie Hirono rumbles on. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

TBTL: Too Beautiful To Live
Episode #2839: Motorcycles and Ninja Stars with Chioke I’Anson

TBTL: Too Beautiful To Live

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2019 78:34


Luke checks in from Joshua Tree California, home of the Outdoorsy Hipster and chats with Chioke I'Anson, voice of NPR underwriting and Horror Enthusiast. Special thanks this episode to Lou Haney of Charlottesville VA and Hilary Dolinksy of Washington DC! . . . Today's show is sponsored by Grove Collaborative. Visit Grove.co/tbtl to get a free $30 Mrs. Meyer's gift set with your first order.

With Good Reason
Pulitzer 100 Encounters at the Heart of the World

With Good Reason

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2016 51:58


While most Americans know Native American tribes like the Lakota or Cherokee, the Mandan are less well known. In her Pulitzer Prize-winning book Encounters at the Heart of the World, historian Elizabeth Fenn recounts the story of the Plains Mandan tribe as they rose to a population of 12,000, before being nearly wiped out in a few short years. Fenn turns to untraditional sources from archeology to climatology to tell a history that supposedly couldn’t be written. Later in the show: It’s been a year since the mass shooting of churchgoers in Charleston, South Carolina by a gunman whose online manifesto includes photos of himself with emblems of white supremacy. The shooting sparked national conversation about the removal of Confederate battle flags and monuments from public spaces. In a candid conversation, Chioke I’Anson and Kelley Libby share their thoughts on Richmond, Virginia’s Confederate monuments, racism, and growing up in the Deep South.