Podcasts about iu bloomington

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Best podcasts about iu bloomington

Latest podcast episodes about iu bloomington

Local Legends with Lark Farlee
IU Bloomington Lore & Legends

Local Legends with Lark Farlee

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2025 36:57


In today's episode we will be covering the local legends surround IU Bloomington. We've got ghosts, murder, stalking, tunnels, disappearing bodies, birdmen, etc. We'll be going through it all and covering the legends surrounding the college.

IUSTV Podcasts
My Animated Life - Ep. 22

IUSTV Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2025 29:57


Mental health is back on the topic! We talked about movies, now we're showing some cozy shows to put on to soothe the mind during this stressful period of politics, finals, and other projects.Host: Declan ManganProducers: Declan Mangan and Angela Carraher» Read more of this week's stories:⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.iustv.com/⁠⁠⁠⁠ Follow IUSTV on social media! » IUSTV on Instagram:⁠⁠⁠⁠  / iustv  ⁠⁠⁠⁠ » IUSTV on Twitter:⁠⁠⁠⁠  / iustv  ⁠⁠⁠⁠IU Student Television is a completely student-run television station located on the IU Bloomington campus. Created in 2002, IUSTV exists to produce high-quality news, sports, and entertainment programming for the IU campus and Bloomington communities, while at the same time giving students hands-on opportunities to create media content. Members gain experience in a wide variety of areas including production, reporting, anchoring, editing, writing, podcasting, and much more.

Brownfield Ag News
Indiana Player with Heart: Sierra Hawley

Brownfield Ag News

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2025 0:59


Sierra Hawley was nominated as a Beck's Player with Heart for her commitment and passion on and off the court. Along with the good and bad experiences that sports have put her through, she would say the thing she loves most about high school sports is the way these experiences have shaped her and will continue to impact her for the rest of her life. Sports at her high school is something that brings the community together as a whole, and it's an amazing feeling to see a full crowd support her. She loves the feeling of stepping on the field or court, knowing that all her hard work is about to be tested. No one likes to lose, but she's come to realize that she learns the most from losing, and she can't grow until she fails. Beyond the competition aspect, high school sports have allowed her to surround herself with teammates and coaches who have pushed and supported her through everything. The countless hours of dedication she's given to three different sports over the last few years have taught her discipline, leadership, resilience, and teamwork. At school, Sierra is involved in varsity volleyball, basketball, and tennis. Outside of sports, she is involved in the National Honor Society (NHS), Spanish club, art club, Student Council, prom committee, and FFA. Outside school, she is involved in Kosciusko Youth Leadership Academy (KYLA), Leadership Marshall County Emerge (LMC), 4-H, and Jr. Leaders. Sierra's KYLA group puts boxes in local schools, churches, and banks to collect donated clothing, hygiene items, and craft supplies, which they then set up a little "shop" at Cardinal Services in Warsaw. Cardinal provides services for children and adults with disabilities. With the remaining donations, they bring them to local homeless shelters. Her involvement with Jr. Leaders through 4-H has allowed her to participate in various community service projects such as volunteering at the humane society, local food pantries, and Cultivate Food Rescue. In FFA, she completes many community service projects as well. Every year she makes tie blankets to give to Riley's Children's Hospital, participates in roadside cleanup, and attends the Farmers Breakfast, where they make pancakes and sausage for their local farmers to come in and eat for free. Most people think agriculture is just farming, but it means more to Sierra. To her, it means hard work, responsibility, and a way of life that feeds and sustains her community. Being involved in 4-H and FFA for eight years has given her hands-on experience that has deepened her respect for the farmers and agricultural leaders of the world. Whether she's raising livestock or working on a 4-H project, she's come to understand the dedication it takes to succeed in agriculture. It has taught her leadership, problem-solving, and the importance of innovation in this advancing industry. In a way, agriculture brings communities together and she is proud to say she's a part of something that plays such a vital role in everyday life. Sierra's plans aren't fully set in stone, but she knows she wants to do something in the medical field so she can help people. As of right now, she wants to pursue a career in radiology and potentially attend the University of IU Bloomington.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

IUSTV Podcasts
My Animated Life - Ep. 21

IUSTV Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2025 47:08


Valentine's Day has come and gone and in this episode, we talk about some of the most relatable couples in animated cartoons. From gay witches to Fairly Oddparents to iconic ogres, I give you some of the best couples in animation.Host: Declan ManganProducers: Declan Mangan and Angela Carraher» Read more of this week's stories:⁠⁠⁠https://www.iustv.com/⁠⁠⁠ Follow IUSTV on social media! » IUSTV on Instagram:⁠⁠⁠  / iustv  ⁠⁠⁠ » IUSTV on Twitter:⁠⁠⁠  / iustv  ⁠⁠⁠IU Student Television is a completely student-run television station located on the IU Bloomington campus. Created in 2002, IUSTV exists to produce high-quality news, sports, and entertainment programming for the IU campus and Bloomington communities, while at the same time giving students hands-on opportunities to create media content. Members gain experience in a wide variety of areas including production, reporting, anchoring, editing, writing, podcasting, and much more.

IUSTV Podcasts
My Animated Life - Ep. 20

IUSTV Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 45:54


Mental health is something we obviously need to keep in check. In this first episode of a two-parter we talk about animated films with deeper messages about unchecked mental health and healthy coping mechanisms from aspies to emotions to facing your fears.Host: Declan ManganProducers: Declan Mangan and Angela Carraher» Read more of this week's stories:⁠⁠https://www.iustv.com/⁠⁠ Follow IUSTV on social media! » IUSTV on Instagram:⁠⁠  / iustv  ⁠⁠ » IUSTV on Twitter:⁠⁠  / iustv  ⁠⁠IU Student Television is a completely student-run television station located on the IU Bloomington campus. Created in 2002, IUSTV exists to produce high-quality news, sports, and entertainment programming for the IU campus and Bloomington communities, while at the same time giving students hands-on opportunities to create media content. Members gain experience in a wide variety of areas including production, reporting, anchoring, editing, writing, podcasting, and much more.

FACET
Ep 8 - Bernice Pescosolido

FACET

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2025 30:06


Music: Faces of FACET by Claire Eckstein Senior Lecturer in Accounting Katie Metz and FACET Director Michael Morrone talk with Bernice Pescosolido, FACET Class of 1989, in another episode of FACET Teachers: Reflection on Critical Teaching. Pescosolido is a Distinguished Professor of Sociology at IU Bloomington, and she shares how she had started advocating for teaching, learning, and excellence from the beginning of her career.

FACET
Ep 5 - David Pace

FACET

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2025 31:18


Music: Faces of FACET by Claire Eckstein Senior Lecturer in Accounting Katie Metz and FACET Director Michael Morrone talk with David Pace, FACET Class of 1994, in another episode of FACET Teachers: Reflection on Critical Teaching. Pace is an Emeritus Professor in the Department of History at IU Bloomington, and he shares about the importance of enhancing one's teaching in a way that will include all students by not adhering to the analogy of "the ivory tower," as discussed on his website, Decoding the Ivory Tower.

IUSTV Podcasts
My Animated Life - Ep. 19

IUSTV Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2025 34:29


Award season is here! And what better way to return to this animated podcast than to look at the Grammy nominations? We talk about the nominations and some achievements that come alongside the animation nominations!*Note this was recorded before the winner Flow was selected. This is strictly about the nominationsHost: Declan ManganProducers: Angela Carraher and Declan Mangan» Read more of this week's stories:⁠https://www.iustv.com/⁠ Follow IUSTV on social media! » IUSTV on Instagram:⁠  / iustv  ⁠ » IUSTV on Twitter:⁠  / iustv  ⁠IU Student Television is a completely student-run television station located on the IU Bloomington campus. Created in 2002, IUSTV exists to produce high-quality news, sports, and entertainment programming for the IU campus and Bloomington communities, while at the same time giving students hands-on opportunities to create media content. Members gain experience in a wide variety of areas including production, reporting, anchoring, editing, writing, podcasting, and much more.

Major Choices
Episode 49--Turning Rejection into Redirection

Major Choices

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2025 23:36


Jed and Mallory welcome a new voice on major choices, Treston, as they discuss how to cope with not meeting the threshold for admission into The Kelley School of Business here at IU Bloomington. This episode breaks down some of the feelings students may be feeling, and help them answer the question of “what do I do now?” Tune in as Jed, Mallory, and Treston help you make the most of the new opportunities available to you. Plus, they welcome Megan Ray, a special guest from Kelley who knows all-too-well how you might be feeling.  

FACET
Ep 42 - Sandra Ortiz

FACET

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2025 32:37


Sandra Ortiz, Class of 2024, is a Senior Lecturer of Spanish and Portuguese at IU Bloomington.

IUSTV Podcasts
Hop On - S2 E1

IUSTV Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2025 35:21


Hop On is back and better than ever. In this episode, we break down the foundations of confidence: how to acquire, practice, and maintain it. Hosts: Jasmine Halpern and Abby Altschul Producers: Jasmine Halpern, Abby Altschul, and Ryan Schlyer » Read more of this week's stories: https://www.iustv.com/ Follow IUSTV on social media! » IUSTV on Instagram:   / iustv   » IUSTV on Twitter:   / iustv   IU Student Television is a completely student-run television station located on the IU Bloomington campus. Created in 2002, IUSTV exists to produce high-quality news, sports, and entertainment programming for the IU campus and Bloomington communities, while at the same time giving students hands-on opportunities to create media content. Members gain experience in a wide variety of areas including production, reporting, anchoring, editing, writing, podcasting, and much more.

FACET
Ep 41 - Eric Sader

FACET

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2025 28:08


Eric Sader, Class of 2024, Lecturer of Business Law & Ethics at IU Bloomington.

Noon Edition
IU Bloomington ranks 5th in number of students studying abroad

Noon Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2025 53:28


Stream the show LIVEIU Bloomington ranked fifth nationally in number of students studying abroad during the 2022-23 academic year. Nearly 4,000 students from all IU campuses traveled to more than 70 countries. Over the past two decades, IU ranks in the top 20 among schools in number of students who studied abroad.Read more: IU launches Ghana Gateway, hopes to grow African partnerships IU Education Abroad's most popular programs include Amsterdam, Kenya, Grand Cayman Islands and Japan.IU Indianapolis, Kokomo, and South Bend also have study abroad programs where students can go to Germany, Poland, Austria and Amsterdam. IU Bloomington has more students traveling abroad than any other university in the state. IU Bloomington also ranks in the top 40 of universities in hosting international students. It has more than 6,300 international students from over 120 countries. This week on Noon Edition, we'll talk with directors and student advisors about IU's Education Abroad growth. Guest: Jennifer Engel, Associate Vice President for Education Abroad Shelby Gosser, Education Abroad peer Advisor  Liz Utley, Education Abroad peer Adviso

Eunoia: Beautiful Thinkers
Season VIII | Episode 3: Lee Feinstein, Former Policy Planner. Ambassador. Founding Dean. Beautiful Thinker.

Eunoia: Beautiful Thinkers

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2024 30:24


Our third episode of Season VIII “Polarity”: IU Edition, welcomes Lee Feinstein, founding dean at the Hamilton Lugar School of International and Global Studies, President of McLarty Associates, and researcher for the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC. In this episode, Feinstein shares insights on the importance of establishing a global and international studies school at IU Bloomington, reflecting on his experiences working in Poland, and contributing to Holocaust research and remembrance efforts for the Holocaust museum. He also provides informative insights on the upcoming 2024 election and its involvement concerning international relations, and emphasizes the importance of education in fostering awareness and understanding of foreign relations tied to the United States.

FACET
Ep 39 - Ben Storey

FACET

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2024 37:01


Ben Storey, Class of 2024, Lecturer of English, IU Bloomington

FACET
Ep 38 - Jeanette Heidewald

FACET

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2024 42:42


Jeanette Heidewald, Class of 2022, Teaching Professor of Business Communication at IU Bloomington.

Bring It On! – WFHB
Bring It On! – June 17, 2024: Juneteenth 2024 at Indiana University

Bring It On! – WFHB

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2024 59:00


On today’s edition of Bring It On!, host and executive producer, Clarence Boone speaks with Shatoyia Moss, Interim Director of the Community and Family Resources Department (CFRD) for the City of Bloomington, and, Dr. Gloria Howell, Director of the Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center on the IU Bloomington campus. On Saturday, June 15th, the City of …

News 8 Daily
Administrators at IU Bloomington defend their response to Pro-Palestinian protests

News 8 Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2024 9:19


ALSO: Police identify man killed in Allen County police shooting... Efforts to make the Monon trail safer... PLUS... When the Original Farmers' Market makes its return. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

FACET
Ep 30 - Brenda Bailey-Hughes

FACET

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2024 30:18


Brenda Bailey-Hughes, FACET Class of 2023, Teaching Professor of Business Communication at IU Bloomington.

Cultural Manifesto
Women's History Month - Pioneers of Hoosier Music

Cultural Manifesto

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2024 46:47


This week on Cultural Manifesto, celebrate Women's History Month by learning about the women pioneers of Hoosier music, including Vivian Carter, Dena El Saffar, Mary Byrne, Priscilla Mclean, Margaret Hills and Anna Mae Winburn. Vivian Carter was a legendary disc jockey and co-founder of Gary, Indiana's Vee Jay Records. Vee Jay released hit songs by artists including The Impressions, The Dells, Gladys Knight, John Lee Hooker, and Gene Chandler. Vee Jay also issued significant jazz and gospel titles, including the first full-length LP by the Staple Singers, and Wayne Shorter's debut album as a leader. In February of 1963 Vee Jay became the first American record label to issue music from The Beatles. Vee Jay's release of ”Please Please Me” pre-dated The Beatles' first Capitol Records release by a year. Mary Byrne is the founder of Labyris, an influential feminist lesbian bar that operated in Downton Indianapolis from 1978-1984. During the 1980s, Byrne also served as director of the National Women's Music Festival in Bloomington, Indiana. Byrne's work creating stages for women performers in Indiana was unprecedented at the time, and remains a significant achievement in the history of Indiana music. Anna Mae Winburn was raised in Kokomo, Indiana. Winburn gained international notoriety as the bandleader and vocalist for the International Sweethearts of Rhythm, a trailblazing multi-racial, all female big band that was active from 1937 to 1949.  The multi-instrumentalist and composer Dena El Saffar is the founder of Salaam, a Bloomington-based Middle Eastern music ensemble. The music of Salaam draws from El Saffar's Iraqi heritage. For over 30 years, Salaam have educated audiences around the country about the music and culture of Iraq.  Kokomo, Indiana's Margaret Hillis was an influential figure in American choral music and a trailblazing pioneer for women in classical music. Hillis is best remembered as the founder and director of the Chicago Symphony Chorus, she led the ensemble from 1957 to 1994. Hillis' work with the chorus earned her nine Grammy Awards.  Composer Priscilla Mclean studied electronic music at IU Bloomington during the late 1960s. During the 1970s, Mclean created groundbreaking electronic music works at IU South Bend. Mclean was among the first Hoosier women to attain national notoriety in the world of electronic music.

Cultural Manifesto
Women's History Month - Pioneers of Hoosier Music

Cultural Manifesto

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2024 46:47


This week on Cultural Manifesto, celebrate Women's History Month by learning about the women pioneers of Hoosier music, including Vivian Carter, Dena El Saffar, Mary Byrne, Priscilla Mclean, Margaret Hills and Anna Mae Winburn. Vivian Carter was a legendary disc jockey and co-founder of Gary, Indiana's Vee Jay Records. Vee Jay released hit songs by artists including The Impressions, The Dells, Gladys Knight, John Lee Hooker, and Gene Chandler. Vee Jay also issued significant jazz and gospel titles, including the first full-length LP by the Staple Singers, and Wayne Shorter's debut album as a leader. In February of 1963 Vee Jay became the first American record label to issue music from The Beatles. Vee Jay's release of ”Please Please Me” pre-dated The Beatles' first Capitol Records release by a year. Mary Byrne is the founder of Labyris, an influential feminist lesbian bar that operated in Downton Indianapolis from 1978-1984. During the 1980s, Byrne also served as director of the National Women's Music Festival in Bloomington, Indiana. Byrne's work creating stages for women performers in Indiana was unprecedented at the time, and remains a significant achievement in the history of Indiana music. Anna Mae Winburn was raised in Kokomo, Indiana. Winburn gained international notoriety as the bandleader and vocalist for the International Sweethearts of Rhythm, a trailblazing multi-racial, all female big band that was active from 1937 to 1949.  The multi-instrumentalist and composer Dena El Saffar is the founder of Salaam, a Bloomington-based Middle Eastern music ensemble. The music of Salaam draws from El Saffar's Iraqi heritage. For over 30 years, Salaam have educated audiences around the country about the music and culture of Iraq.  Kokomo, Indiana's Margaret Hillis was an influential figure in American choral music and a trailblazing pioneer for women in classical music. Hillis is best remembered as the founder and director of the Chicago Symphony Chorus, she led the ensemble from 1957 to 1994. Hillis' work with the chorus earned her nine Grammy Awards.  Composer Priscilla Mclean studied electronic music at IU Bloomington during the late 1960s. During the 1970s, Mclean created groundbreaking electronic music works at IU South Bend. Mclean was among the first Hoosier women to attain national notoriety in the world of electronic music.

Our City Our Voice
Celebrating Black History: Crispus Attucks Museum

Our City Our Voice

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2024 2:01


All month long, WISH-TV is highlighting people and places where you can celebrate Black History Month.Created back in 1998 by Gilbert Taylor and housed inside Crispus Attucks High School, Indianapolis' first segregated black high school, the Crispus Attucks Museum took eight years to put together. At the time, it was more of a collection and it fit in a room not much larger than a closet.Today, it's known by many as the premier history museum in the Midwest. From the achievements of basketball legends like Oscar Robertson to jazz greats like Wes Montgomery, you'll find a number of exhibits. The most recent new edition is The Anti-lynching Exhibits of 1935. The exhibit, a partnership with IU Bloomington and the city of Indianapolis, shows how much America has overcome and the varying layers of resilience it's taken to get here.If you would like to check out the museum, it is located at 1140 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. St. You can make an appointment between 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Friday or 10 a.m.-3 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

FUTURE FOSSILS

✨ Subscribe and review at Apple Podcasts and/or Spotify. Unborn archaeologists thank you!Merry Christmas, Future Fossils!  This is Michael Garfield welcoming you to episode 214 of the podcast that explores our place in time — and as demonstrated in the Dr. Who and Aliens franchises, Blade Runner 2049, and Batman Returns, Christmas is a fruitful backdrop for the pondering of big ideas — a moment in which we can see with greater clarity than usual the unity of everyday mundane humanity and transcendental cosmic matters.  In other words, perfect timing for this episode's conversation about cybernetics and the philosophy of the weird with Megan Phipps, Phil Ford, and J.F. Martel.  Megan studies new media at the University of Amsterdam and writes immensely trippy and insightful papers on topics like Brian Eno, circuit bending, and surveillance capitalism.  Phil is an author and musician who teaches musicology at IU Bloomington and infuses his curricula with the profundity he has polished through years of committed Zen practice.  J.F. is an author, film-maker, and para-academic online course instructor in media studies and magick, who runs Dungeon and Dragons campaigns on the side.  Together, J.F. and Phil host the delicious Weird Studies Podcast, every episode of which triggers in me the Holy Grail of podcast affective listener programming: namely, that I wish I were in the room and part of these discussions.  Luckily, I've had that opportunity before, to talk about my writing on the material agency of glass in our scientific era…and both of them have been on Future Fossils also, both alone and together.  But getting all four of us on one call is a rare and precious thing — and now's the perfect moment to rap about the emergence of the cybernetic era as a kind of numinous event in human history, a divine invasion that transfigures us and forces us to think about which boundaries *should* melt away and which should stay where evolution learned to put them.  You see, we live in an age of multilayer networks — and when our view of humankind transmogrifies from the static image of divine forms to a fluid wash of interweaving processes, the self becomes a metamorphic fugitive and  a work of art. When everything's connected, politics is an aesthetic act and art acquires moral force. Advanced   technologies have granted us godlike powers to reshape the world in our image…but “life finds a way” and there are always gremlins, aliens, dinosaurs, and elves lurking latent in the tidy systems diagrams. The beauty of progress necessarily conceals the ugly externalities, the entropy exported in our efforts to arrange wild nature into an image of our lost garden. So what does cybernetics as a way of seeing change for us in terms of how we live?  What does it mean to be human in an age of very lively, seemingly intelligent machines?    But before we dive headlong into this recording of a conversation so good our first attempt was erased by trickster intervention, let me express my thanks to everyone who has helped me and Future Fossils through a year of (what I hope remains) extraordinary challenge. This show is weird and obstinate in its refusal of clear definition. I follow my muses where they lead me and leave these discussions and soliloquys as fossils of a process of discovery and creativity…and staying true to this defies the logic of the market, which would have us classify ourselves as tidily as possible so we are pre-chewed for the algorithms that determine whether what we make is ever noticed by those over the horizon of organic peer-to-peer suggestion networks. If you're listening, chances are a friend told you about this show — I'd be surprised if you just found it randomly, and definitely not because a sponsor amplified it. I started Future Fossils under pressure from my friends but keep it going as a kind of Benedictine prayer.  However it might seem, it's lonely work — but every now and then I find I've reached somebody where it counts, that I've inspired a major life change or just helped you orient yourselves amidst the wider movements of a transformation that once seemed chaotic and now seems symphonic.  That's why I keep this going.  Every single time I check my email to discover someone else finds value in my work and shows appreciation with a Patreon, Substack, or Bandcamp sub, it makes my day and takes a little of the sting away from my ongoing balancing of kids and unemployment.  I'd like to make this work sustainable in 2024 but I'm still very far from that…so thank you, each and all, for everything you do to help me run this ultramarathon.New patrons I would like to thank include Ian Benouis, EGH2128, Lynn Amores, Robert Cummings, Katie Teague, Slow Dancing Fool, and Brian Mapes.Thank you!  And thank you to EVERYONE who chips in every month, or who has left or will ever leave a good review on Spotify or Apple Podcasts, or who shares this show with your friends…and a special thanks to Suzy Lanza of Ahara Rasa Ghee for shipping me a sweet little care package with her delicious ghee as a gesture of appreciation for this show — she's not a sponsor but I do endorse her work and recommend you check out iloveghee.com. Lastly, thanks to Noonautics.org for inviting me to join their advisory board and for their continued support of efforts to explore and map and understand the realms beyond.And now onto the main course!  Let's start somewhere else: in the “trash stratum” of a dirty manger, in the mess of our kinship and identity with the nonhuman (animal, vegetable, AND mineral). In the revelation of our contiguous, nested, and modular interbeing — we begin our conversation…guided here by visitations from a higher realm in which communication and control are aspects of some secret third thing that transcends duality. The information age is one in which we cannot separate the bomb from the computer from the drug and in this way, in spite of all the grimy cyberpunk and body horror of our media environment, the trillion-eyed panopticon the Web became appears to us like the archangel Gabriel: “Be not afraid,” dear listeners. Enjoy this awesome conversation, and enjoy your holidays!✨ Support My Work:• Subscribe on Substack, Patreon, and/or Bandcamp for MANY extras, including a insiders-only discussion group and extra channels on our public Discord Server.• Browse my art and buy original paintings and prints (or commission new work).• Show music:  “Sonnet A” from my Double-Edged Sword EP (Bandcamp, Spotify).• Buy the books we mention on the show at the Future Fossils Bookshop.org page.• Make one-off donations directly at @futurefossils on Venmo, $manfredmacx on CashApp, or @michaelgarfield on PayPal.• Save up to $70 on an Apollo Neuro wearable from 12/1-12/31 with my affiliate code.✨ Related Weird Studies Episodes:26 - Living in a Glass Age, with Michael Garfield42 - On Pauline Oliveros, with Kerry O'Brien131 - Knocking on the Abyssal Door: Live at the Diverse Intelligences Summer Institute151 - The Real and the Possible: Live at the Diverse Intelligences Summer Institute, with Jacob G. Foster153 - Celestial Machine: On the Temperance Card in the Tarot157 - Long Live the New Flesh: On David Cronenberg's 'Videodrome'160 - The Way of All Flesh: On John Carpenter's 'The Thing'✨ Related Future Fossils Episodes:18 - JF Martel (Art, Magic, & The Terrifying Zone of Uncanny Awesomeness)65 - John David Ebert (Hypermodernity & Blade Runner 2049)71 - JF Martel (On Sequels & Simulacra, Blade Runner 2049 & Stranger Things 2)117 - Eric Wargo on Time Loops: Precognition, Retrocausation, and the Unconscious126 - Phil Ford & JF Martel on Weird Studies & Plural Realities157 - Phil Ford on Taboo: Time and Belief in Exotica171 - Eric Wargo on Precognitive Dreamwork and The Philosophy of Time Travel212 - Manfred Laubichler & Geoffrey West on Life In The Anthropocene & Living Inside The Technosphere✨ Additional Mentioned & Related Media:Zygmunt Bauman - Liquid ModernityMitch Waldrop - The Dream MachineMichel Houellebecq – The Elementary ParticlesWilliam Shakespeare – OthelloMark Fisher – Flatline Constructs: Gothic Materialism and Cybernetic Theory-FictionEzra Klein interviews Erik Davis — “The Culture Creating A.I. Is Weird. Here's Why That Matters.”Richard Brautigan – “All Watched Over By Machines of Loving Grace”Megan Phipps interviews Erik Davis — “New Cybernetic Psychedelia”Brian Eno – “The Studio As A Compositional Tool”Michael Garfield's “Reader's Rig” pedalboard teardown feature at Guitar ModerneMichael Garfield – “Advertisement is Psychedelic Art is Advertisement”Phil Ford waxes poetic about Wagner's Ring Cycle on the Brute Norse PodcastDror Poleg on the future of a highly automated economy on Infinite Loops PodcastErik Wargo – “The Passion of The Space Jockey”Diverse Intelligences Summer Institute (DISI)Man of Steel (2013)Digibarn.com Jeffrey KripalMichael LevinDadaSam Arbesman on Coding As Magic and The Magic of CodeThank you for listening and for your support! This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit michaelgarfield.substack.com/subscribe

FACET
Ep 26 - Janet Decker

FACET

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2023 27:08


Janet Decker, FACET Class of 2022, Associate Professor of Education at IU Bloomington. She primarily researches legal and policy issues in special education, but also studies the legal literacy of educators and administrators.

Eunoia: Beautiful Thinkers
Dr. Edward Hirt

Eunoia: Beautiful Thinkers

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2023 26:14


Our first episode of Season VI "Saturated": IU Edition welcomes Professor of Psychological and Brain Sciences at IU Bloomington. Dr.  Hirt discusses  his work  at the HirtLab where he and students study social identity, mental depletion,  replenishment and motivation. In this debut episode, he'll walk us through how saturation impacts our daily lives through the lens of these topics.

Autism Rocks and Rolls
245:Bloom With Adria Nassim

Autism Rocks and Rolls

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2023 55:28


The featured guest on my program is fellow Hoosier Adria Nassim, a supporter of autism. Adria Nassim was born and raised in Floyd County, Indiana. She was diagnosed with a learning disability at age 5, moderate cerebral palsy around the time of birth, and subsequently an autism spectrum disorder around age 20. She is now living in Bloomington, Indiana, and works part-time at the Indiana Institute on Disability and Community on the IU Bloomington campus. She gives college students their special lectures on topics including autism and learning disabilities in kids, teens, and young adults. Adria also writes for the Bloom Magazine section that focuses on autism and developmental impairments as well as the quarterly magazine of the Indiana Resource Center for Autism (a division of the IIDC). Thomas "Mr. T.," a yellow Labrador member of the Indiana Canine Assistant Network (ICAN) who has been trained to assist persons with autism and other disabilities, is an additional support dog that she has. Welcome to Autism Rocks and Rolls, my intriguing friend.

The New Student Pharmacist's Podcast
Celebration of Pioneers in Pharmacology, Drug Design, Bioengineering and Designing Bioisosteres- A Combination of Interviews with- Dr. R. Langer; Dr. L. C. Campeau; Dr. K. Brown; and Dr. L. Jungheim

The New Student Pharmacist's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2023 132:00


In this episode, we combine a wealth of information from pioneers in pharmacology & drug design ( Dr. L. Jungheim ( Former Mentor) & Dr. L.C. Campeau (Associate Vice President, Head of Small Molecule Process R&D at Merck) , bioengineering ( Dr. Robert Langer,Sc.D. - MIT Institute Professor & Co-Founder of Moderna) and designing bioisosteres ( Dr. Kevin Brown, James F. Jackson Professor of Chemistry, IU-Bloomington) ), to present salient and key insights on careers in those areas and advice and skills needed to do well in those fields. Definitely an episode worth listening to! The order of the interviews: 1. Dr. Robert Langer, Sc.D. 2. Dr. L.C. Campeau, Ph.D. 3. Dr. K. Brown, Ph.D. 4. Dr. L. Jungheim, Ph.D. -- Note: The views on this podcast represent those of my guest(s) and I.

The New Student Pharmacist's Podcast
på dansk og engelsk |Remembering a Keystone Moment in Graduate School- Highlights from IU-Bloomington as an ACS Bridge Fellow and GEM Fellow| In English and Danish

The New Student Pharmacist's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 200:08


I denne episode reflekterer jeg over et hjørnestensøjeblik i ph.d.-skolen, inden for hvilket jeg arbejdede på min kandidatafhandling, der var centreret omkring betydningen af et phospholipid (cardiolipin) i neurodegenerative sygdomme, og potentialet af det lipid ved hjælp af lipidomics til at hjælpe yderligere forskning bestræbelser. --- Oplysningerne i denne episode er det eksklusive arbejdsprodukt fra David Ferguson og må ikke gengives, kopieres eller distribueres uden udtrykkeligt skriftligt samtykke fra David Joshua Ferguson. --- In this episode, I reflect on a keystone moment in graduate school, within which I worked on my graduate thesis that was centered around the significance of a phospholipid (cardiolipin) in neurodegenerative diseases, and the potential of that lipid using lipidomics to help further research endeavours. --- The information contained within this episode is the exclusive work product of David Ferguson and is not to be reproduced, copied or distributed without the expressed written consent of David Joshua Ferguson.

Em inglês e português | Remembering a Keystone Moment in Graduate School- Highlights from IU-Bloomington as an ACS Bridge Fellow and GEM Fellow | In English and Portuguese

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2023 184:35


Português:Neste episódio, reflito sobre um momento fundamental na pós-graduação, durante o qual trabalhei em minha tese de pós-graduação centrada na importância de um fosfolipídio (cardiolipina) em doenças neurodegenerativas e no potencial desse lipídio usando lipidômica para ajudar em pesquisas futuras esforços.---As informações contidas neste episódio são produto do trabalho exclusivo de David Ferguson e não devem ser reproduzidas, copiadas ou distribuídas sem o consentimento expresso por escrito de David Joshua Ferguson.---English:In this episode, I reflect on a keystone moment in graduate school, within which I worked on my graduate thesis that was centered around the significance of a phospholipid (cardiolipin) in neurodegenerative diseases, and the potential of that lipid using lipidomics to help further research endeavours.---The information contained within this episode is the exclusive work product of David Ferguson and is not to be reproduced, copied or distributed without the expressed written consent of David Joshua Ferguson.--- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The New Student Pharmacist's Podcast
Em inglês e português | Remembering a Keystone Moment in Graduate School- Highlights from IU-Bloomington as an ACS Bridge Fellow and GEM Fellow | In English and Portuguese

The New Student Pharmacist's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2023 184:35


Português: Neste episódio, reflito sobre um momento fundamental na pós-graduação, durante o qual trabalhei em minha tese de pós-graduação centrada na importância de um fosfolipídio (cardiolipina) em doenças neurodegenerativas e no potencial desse lipídio usando lipidômica para ajudar em pesquisas futuras esforços. --- As informações contidas neste episódio são produto do trabalho exclusivo de David Ferguson e não devem ser reproduzidas, copiadas ou distribuídas sem o consentimento expresso por escrito de David Joshua Ferguson. --- -- English: In this episode, I reflect on a keystone moment in graduate school, within which I worked on my graduate thesis that was centered around the significance of a phospholipid (cardiolipin) in neurodegenerative diseases, and the potential of that lipid using lipidomics to help further research endeavours. --- The information contained within this episode is the exclusive work product of David Ferguson and is not to be reproduced, copied or distributed without the expressed written consent of David Joshua Ferguson. ---

En ingles y español| Remembering a Keystone Moment in Graduate School- Highlights from IU-Bloomington as an ACS Bridge Fellow and GEM Fellow |In English and Spanish

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2023 173:19


---English: In this episode, I reflect on a keystone moment in graduate school, within which I worked on my graduate thesis that was centered around the significance of a phospholipid (cardiolipin) in neurodegenerative diseases, and the potential of that lipid using lipidomics to help further research endeavours.---The information contained within this episode is the exclusive work product of David Ferguson and is not to be reproduced, copied or distributed without the expressed written consent of David Joshua Ferguson.---Español: En este episodio, reflexiono sobre un momento clave en la escuela de posgrado, dentro del cual trabajé en mi tesis de posgrado que se centró en la importancia de un fosfolípido (cardiolipina) en enfermedades neurodegenerativas, y el potencial de ese lípido usando lipidómica para ayudar a futuras investigaciones. esfuerzos---La información contenida en este episodio es producto del trabajo exclusivo de David Ferguson y no debe reproducirse, copiarse ni distribuirse sin el consentimiento expreso por escrito de David Joshua Ferguson. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The New Student Pharmacist's Podcast
En ingles y español| Remembering a Keystone Moment in Graduate School- Highlights from IU-Bloomington as an ACS Bridge Fellow and GEM Fellow |In English and Spanish

The New Student Pharmacist's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2023 173:19


English: In this episode, I reflect on a keystone moment in graduate school, within which I worked on my graduate thesis that was centered around the significance of a phospholipid (cardiolipin) in neurodegenerative diseases, and the potential of that lipid using lipidomics to help further research endeavours. --- The information contained within this episode is the exclusive work product of David Ferguson and is not to be reproduced, copied or distributed without the expressed written consent of David Joshua Ferguson. --- Español: En este episodio, reflexiono sobre un momento clave en la escuela de posgrado, dentro del cual trabajé en mi tesis de posgrado que se centró en la importancia de un fosfolípido (cardiolipina) en enfermedades neurodegenerativas, y el potencial de ese lípido usando lipidómica para ayudar a futuras investigaciones. esfuerzos --- La información contenida en este episodio es producto del trabajo exclusivo de David Ferguson y no debe reproducirse, copiarse ni distribuirse sin el consentimiento expreso por escrito de David Joshua Ferguson.

In inglese e italiano| Remembering a Keystone Moment in Graduate School- Highlights from IU-Bloomington as an ACS Bridge Fellow and GEM Fellow | In English and Italian

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2023 171:03


Italiano:In questo episodio, rifletto su un momento chiave della scuola di specializzazione, all'interno del quale ho lavorato alla mia tesi di laurea incentrata sul significato di un fosfolipide (cardiolipina) nelle malattie neurodegenerative e sul potenziale di quel lipide utilizzando la lipidomica per aiutare ulteriori ricerche sforzi.---Le informazioni contenute in questo episodio sono il prodotto del lavoro esclusivo di David Ferguson e non devono essere riprodotte, copiate o distribuite senza l'espresso consenso scritto di David Joshua Ferguson.---English:In this episode, I reflect on a keystone moment in graduate school, within which I worked on my graduate thesis that was centered around the significance of a phospholipid (cardiolipin) in neurodegenerative diseases, and the potential of that lipid using lipidomics to help further research endeavours.---The information contained within this episode is the exclusive work product of David Ferguson and is not to be reproduced, copied or distributed without the expressed written consent of David Joshua Ferguson.--- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The New Student Pharmacist's Podcast
En anglais et en français | In English and French| Remembering a Keystone Moment in Graduate School- Highlights from IU-Bloomington as an ACS Bridge Fellow and GEM Fellow

The New Student Pharmacist's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2023 174:52


Français: Dans cet épisode, je réfléchis à un moment clé de mes études supérieures, au cours duquel j'ai travaillé sur ma thèse de diplôme centrée sur l'importance d'un phospholipide (cardiolipine) dans les maladies neurodégénératives, et le potentiel de ce lipide utilisant la lipidomique pour aider à poursuivre la recherche. efforts. --- Les informations contenues dans cet épisode sont le produit du travail exclusif de David Ferguson et ne doivent pas être reproduites, copiées ou distribuées sans le consentement écrit exprès de David Joshua Ferguson. --- English: In this episode, I reflect on a keystone moment in graduate school, within which I worked on my graduate thesis that was centered around the significance of a phospholipid (cardiolipin) in neurodegenerative diseases, and the potential of that lipid using lipidomics to help further research endeavours. --- The information contained within this episode is the exclusive work product of David Ferguson and is not to be reproduced, copied or distributed without the expressed written consent of David Joshua Ferguson. ---

The New Student Pharmacist's Podcast
In inglese e italiano| Remembering a Keystone Moment in Graduate School- Highlights from IU-Bloomington as an ACS Bridge Fellow and GEM Fellow | In English and Italian

The New Student Pharmacist's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2023 171:03


Italiano: In questo episodio, rifletto su un momento chiave della scuola di specializzazione, all'interno del quale ho lavorato alla mia tesi di laurea incentrata sul significato di un fosfolipide (cardiolipina) nelle malattie neurodegenerative e sul potenziale di quel lipide utilizzando la lipidomica per aiutare ulteriori ricerche sforzi. --- Le informazioni contenute in questo episodio sono il prodotto del lavoro esclusivo di David Ferguson e non devono essere riprodotte, copiate o distribuite senza l'espresso consenso scritto di David Joshua Ferguson. --- English: In this episode, I reflect on a keystone moment in graduate school, within which I worked on my graduate thesis that was centered around the significance of a phospholipid (cardiolipin) in neurodegenerative diseases, and the potential of that lipid using lipidomics to help further research endeavours. --- The information contained within this episode is the exclusive work product of David Ferguson and is not to be reproduced, copied or distributed without the expressed written consent of David Joshua Ferguson. ---

Men, Sex & Pleasure with Cam Fraser
#173 Fetishization and Body Worship (with Yael Rosenstock Gonzalez)

Men, Sex & Pleasure with Cam Fraser

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2023 55:46


Yael R. Rosenstock Gonzalez (she/her/ella), known as YaeltheSexGeek, is a queer, polyamorous, neurodivergent Nuyorican (Puerto Rican New Yorker) Jewish pleasure activist (a term popularized by adrienne maree brown) who believes that sexual wellness and sexual liberation involve our whole selves. In her coaching and educational offerings she centers identity, values, and social positioning work, playful exploration, and intimacy with self and others. She is the founder of Kaleidoscope Vibrations, LLC (KV), a company dedicated to supporting exploration and creating spaces for individuals to find community and belonging in their identities, and Sex Positive You, which adds to KV's work by centering sex, sexuality, and intimacy. She is the author of An Introguide to a Sex Positive You: Lessons, Tales, & Tips and is a sex writer for The Buzz by Pure Romance. Yael is also currently a Curriculum Strategist, Facilitator, and Coach with the Center for Ethnic, Racial, and Religious Understanding and a Health Behavior doctoral student with the Center for Sexual Health Promotion at IU Bloomington. Her research centers the nuances of identity and power in topics of sex, consent, desire, pleasure, embodiment, agency, and partnering styles with a particular interest in Latines as a population that is underserved within sex-positive work. Key points: Yael introduces herself Internalizing body shaming Our capacity for pleasure Being fetishized by others Fetishization vs Worship Practical tips for exploring pleasure Relevant links: Yael's website: www.sexpositiveyou.com Yael's Instagram: @yaelthesexgeek  Yael's Twitter: https://twitter.com/yaelthesexgeek  --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cam-fraser/message

Off The Dome Radio
Episode 210: Dolly Meckler, Entrepreneur, Content Creator, and Digital Media Consultant

Off The Dome Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2023 78:08


Show Description: Dolly Meckler is an entrepreneur, content creator, and digital/social media consultant. She is the Founder of Challah Dolly (Bread Brand), Creator and Host of "You Have Such a Pretty Face" (Interview Show about fat phobia and body image), Co-Founder of Snaplistings (Real Estate Marketing Company), and former team member of digital content powerhouses HBO and YouTube. In this interview, Dolly talks about her entrepreneurial journey, key lessons learned along the way, and what all successful brands have in common. To learn more about Dolly, you can visit her work at: Website: DollyMeckler.com Instagram: @dollymeckler Show Highlights: 4:00-17:30: Dolly dives into her college background, her entrepreneurial spirit, and how she started her own interview show at IU Bloomington. 17:30-27:15: Dolly talks about her first "real" job after college at HBO and the key lessons she learned in digital marketing, social media management, and copywriting. 27:15-33:30: Dolly discusses another entrepreneurial venture: "Snaplistings," and how it transformed the real estate industry. 33:30-45:00: Dolly dives into the process of moving to Los Angeles, pivoting into starting a bread baking business during the pandemic, and how she evolved her brand marketing into a radio show interviewing women about their experiences with body image. 45:00-56:15: We ask Dolly about the biggest mind shifts she's experienced with brand storytelling and marketing. 56:00-1:04:00: Dolly recaps her move back to New York, how her bread baking business took off, and what made that brand unique. 1:04:00-1:19:00: To end the show, Dolly highlights her future goals, what all successful brands have in common, her final advice to the audience, and how she wants to be remembered.

Talking Hoosier Baseball – iubase.com
Talking Hoosier Baseball – Postgame Media – Xavier Wednesday

Talking Hoosier Baseball – iubase.com

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2023 13:55


Mercer, Tibbitts, and Risedorph discusses midweek road victory By Carl James @jovian34 May 10th, 2023 CINCINNATI, OH - Indiana traveled to Xavier on Wednesday in an RPI Quad-1 matchup. Brock Tibbitts paced the Hoosiers with a pair of two run bombs in his first two at bats. Pitching performances by Ty Bothwell, Connor Foley, and Brayden Risedorph allowed the Hoosiers to hold on for an 8-6 victory. After the game, the media met with Risedorph, head coach Jeff Mercer, and Tibbitts. Brayden Risedorph (Carl James) Brock Tibbitts (Carl James) As it is Finals week at IU-Bloomington, Indiana has no midweek game and will travel to Evanston, Illinois, on Friday for a series with Northwestern. Video: Audio:

Highlights from The New Chemist\'s Podcast-Remembering a Keystone Moment in Graduate School- Highlights from IU-Bloomington as an ACS Bridge Fellow and GEM Fellow

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2023 74:48


In this episode, I reflect on a keystone moment in graduate school, within which I worked on my graduate thesis that was centered around the significance of a phospholipid (cardiolipin) in neurodegenerative diseases, and the potential of that lipid using lipidomics to help further research endeavours.---The information contained within this episode is the exclusive work product of David Ferguson and is not to be reproduced, copied or distributed without the expressed written consent of David Joshua Ferguson. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Talking Hoosier Baseball – iubase.com
Talking Hoosier Baseball – Postgame Media – Maryland Sunday

Talking Hoosier Baseball – iubase.com

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2023 22:24


Mercer and Taylor discusses series finale loss By Carl James @jovian34 April 30th, 2023 Indiana took their first lead of the weekend on Sunday, but couldn't hold on and lost 14-8 to complete Maryland's sweep of the weekend. Devin Taylor made a lot of hard contact including two massive homeruns. Hoosier pitching just couldn't keep the Terrapin bats at bay. The media spoke with head cocah Jeff Mercer and Taylor following the game. As it is Finals week at IU-Bloomington, Indiana has no midweek game and will travel to Evanston, IL, on Friday for a series with Northwestern. Video: [In Process] Audio:

Local Legends with Lark Farlee
The Murder of Hannah Wilson

Local Legends with Lark Farlee

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2023 30:39


Today's episode came highly requested, which is the murder of Hannah Wilson. Hannah was a student at IU Bloomington and was murdered, her body was found in Brown County. We will discuss the details, break down the case, and trial like always!

Sex and Psychology Podcast
Episode 185: The Problem With Porn “Reboot” And Recovery Programs

Sex and Psychology Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2023 32:07


The growing anti-porn movement has fueled the rise of an entire industry centered around selling people on the idea of masturbatory abstinence. Often referred to as a “reboot,” these programs encourage men to forego self-pleasure and orgasm for prolonged periods of time, which they say is necessary to reset the brain and boost testosterone. But do these programs work as advertised? This is the second installment in a 4-part series on the science of porn and, today, we're going to go inside the world of porn addiction recovery programs. I'm joined once again by Dr. Nicole Prause, a licensed psychologist and sex researcher, founder of the sexual biotechnology company Liberos, and a scientist in the Department of Medicine at UCLA. Nicole has studied the experiences of hundreds of men who tried reboot programs, and the results suggest that these programs may actually be causing harm and taking a toll on men's mental health. Some of the topics we discuss include: Where is the rise in anti-porn sentiment coming from? What might a typical reboot program look like? What does a "relapse" mean in the context of a reboot? How common is this kind of relapse? How do men engaged in reboot programs fare in terms of their mental health and sexual function? For individuals who feel distressed about their porn usage, what can they do? Learn more about Nicole and her work over at Liberos and follow her on Twitter @NicoleRPrause. Thank you to our sponsors! The Modern Sex Therapy Institutes is one of the leading sex therapy certification programs in the world, meets all AASECT certification requirements, has 12 other specialty certifications, and a Ph.D. program in Clinical Sexology. Visit modernsextherapyinstitutes.com to learn more. On display now in the Kinsey Institute's Beebe Gallery on the IU Bloomington campus: Universal Language: The Legacy of Sexual and Gender Diversity in the Kinsey Institute Collections. Open to the public on the 3rd floor of Lindley Hall 9:30am - 4pm Monday to Friday. Learn more about upcoming events at kinseyinstitute.org or follow the Kinsey Institute on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. *** Want to learn more about Sex and Psychology? Click here for previous articles or follow the blog on Facebook, Twitter, or Reddit to receive updates. You can also follow Dr. Lehmiller on YouTube and Instagram. Listen and stream all episodes on Apple, Spotify, Google, or Amazon. Subscribe to automatically receive new episodes and please rate and review the podcast! Credits: Precision Podcasting (Podcast editing) and Shutterstock/Florian (Music). Image created with Canva; photos used with permission of guest.

Sex and Psychology Podcast
Episode 183: How Atlanta Became a Southern Hub For Vice

Sex and Psychology Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2023 29:34


Although the Southern United States is often seen as a bastion for conservative sexual values, it has a very deep and rich sexual history worth exploring, especially when you consider a city like Atlanta. Often described as “the strip club capital of America,” Atlanta has long been a home to sex work, as well as LGBTQ nightlife. And these "vice" establishments actually played a vital role in the city's tremendous growth, both as a place to live and visit. In today's show, we're going to pull back the cover on Atlanta's fascinating sexual history. I am joined once again by writer and historian Martin Padgett. His is the author of A Night at the Sweet Gum Head, which tells the story of Atlanta's gay revolution in the 1970s. He is also working on a new book titled The Many Passions of Michael Hardwick, which tells the story of what is arguably the most important gay rights case in history. Some of the topics we discuss include: How did a burgeoning sex scene develop in in the middle of what has historically been a very conservative state? How did the sex scene it Atlanta set the stage for the city's growth? What made Atlanta a popular home and destination for the LGBTQ community? How did the nightlife scene in Atlanta help to galvanize the gay rights movement? How can visiting so-called "vice" establishments also be a virtue in terms of promoting self-acceptance and sex-positivity? Find out more about Martin on his website. Thank you to our sponsors! The Modern Sex Therapy Institutes is one of the leading sex therapy certification programs in the world, meets all AASECT certification requirements, has 12 other specialty certifications, and a Ph.D. program in Clinical Sexology. Visit modernsextherapyinstitutes.com to learn more. Visiting Miami? Check out two art exhibitions from the Kinsey Institute on display at the Wilzig Erotic Art Museum located in the heart of South Beach at 1205 S Washing Ave. Open Monday to Saturday 11am - 6pm. Also, on display now in the Kinsey Institute's Beebe Gallery on the IU Bloomington campus: Universal Language: The Legacy of Sexual and Gender Diversity in the Kinsey Institute Collections. Open to the public on the 3rd floor of Lindley Hall 9:30am - 4pm Monday to Friday. Learn more about upcoming events at kinseyinstitute.org or follow the Kinsey Institute on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. *** Want to learn more about Sex and Psychology? Click here for previous articles or follow the blog on Facebook, Twitter, or Reddit to receive updates. You can also follow Dr. Lehmiller on YouTube and Instagram. Listen and stream all episodes on Apple, Spotify, Google, or Amazon. Subscribe to automatically receive new episodes and please rate and review the podcast! Credits: Precision Podcasting (Podcast editing) and Shutterstock/Florian (Music). Image created with Canva; photos used with permission of guest.

FACET
Ep 15 - Meghan Porter

FACET

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2023 32:39


Meghan Porter, FACET Class of 2021 and Lecturer of Chemistry at IU Bloomington. Porter teaches courses in inorganic and general chemistry, and is especially interested in the development of lab and course assignments involving real-world applications of metals in medicine.

FACET
Ep 10 - Miranda Rodak

FACET

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2023 30:38


Miranda Rodak, FACET Class of 2020 and Clinical Associate Professor of English at IU Bloomington. She also serves as the Director of Undergraduate Teaching, English. Previously, she worked in the Kelley School of Business, teaching, coaching, and developing communication/writing courses in the undergrad, MBA, and online executive MBA programs.

In This Climate
Hoosier history and environmental attitudes

In This Climate

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2022 36:05


Does the history of Indiana shape how Hoosiers relate to the environment today? Conversation with Eric Sandweiss, Professor of History at IU Bloomington

FACET
Ep 7 - Galen Clavio

FACET

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2022 33:38


Galen Clavio, FACET Class of 2022 and Associate Professor of Sports Media at IU Bloomington. He is also the current Director of Undergraduate Studies for the Media School and Director of the National Sports Journalism Center. His research focuses on the impact of new and social media on interactions between consumers, media, and sports entities, including social media's impact on journalism, content creation among fans, and the hybridization of communications and marketing in the digital sphere.

District of Conservation
EP 313: IU Bloomington 'Conservation is Conservative' Speech

District of Conservation

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2022 5:07


In Episode 313 of District of Conservation, Gabriella shares with listeners her announcement: a "Conservation is Conservative" speech at Indiana University in Bloomington happening this Friday, November 4th, at 5pm ET. Tune in to learn how to attend in-person or watch online. SHOW NOTES Poster for IU Speech Livestream Broadcast Link --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/district-of-conservation/support

This is Problematic!
Episode 6: Mekinges with Sara Schumacher

This is Problematic!

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2022 65:11


Sara Schumacher:  Who is Sara? Sara is a recent graduate of the MA Curatorship program at Indiana University Bloomington.  During her time at Bloomington she worked at IUMAA in the Archeology lab with Dr Melody Pope. Their work included rehousing artifacts from the Angel Mounds Collection under the Saving America's Treasures Grant.  Sara also volunteered at the Wiley House Museum, whilst there she worked to maintain the historic heirloom seed saving project and documented artifacts found in the garden.  Prior to this she undertook an Undergraduate degree also at IU Bloomington in Anthropology with a focus in Archeology and a minor Native American & Indigenous Studies. Her time there was funded by the Indiana University Provost Scholarship. Some of her activities whilst there included President of the Lambda Alpha, Kappa Chapter, Anthropological Honors Society and recipient of Mary Ann Savage Archeological Fieldwork Grant in 2019.  She is Conner Prairie's new Curator of Native American Life and History and you can see her official institutional introduction below. Link to Sara's introduction at Conner Prairie: https://www.connerprairie.org/new-curatorial-team-addition-at-conner-prairie-continues-advancing-diversity-in-museums-staff-exhibits-and-experiences/ Sources:   Charles N. Thompson. Sons of the Wilderness (Indiana Historical Society, 1937). **NOT a recommended historically objective or accurate source. Few sources exist so occasionally this is consulted to guide to primary sources. The author was a friend of the family and the narrative is deeply problematic (a topic for another podcast!!)**   John Lauritz Larson & David G. Vanderstel. “Agent of Empire: William Conner on the Indiana Frontier, 1800-1855,” Indiana Magazine of History, Vol. 80, No. 4 (December 1984). Pp. 301-328.   James Brown & Rita Kohn. Long Journey Home: Oral Histories of Contemporary Delaware Indians (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2008).   Ma chun chis. Census of the Delaware Tribe of Indians Within the Delaware Agency Taken February 15th 1862. From “Delaware Trails: Some Tribal Records, 1842-1907”. From Ancestry.com.  Multiple articles at Official Site of Delaware Tribe of Indians accessed at https://delawaretribe.org. **This represents one group of the Lenape people, there are many groups and their stories intersect with the stories told here but are not representative of all experiences**