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Hosts Dave Smith and Kerry Donahue are updating the news, all day, every weekday Welcome! Senate passes same-sex marriage bill [Share] Biden: Unlikely missiles in Poland came from Russia [Share] Markets close down [Share] Musk to tweeps: Get ‘hardcore,' or get out [Share] Scrabble dictionary “stans” new words and “ixnays” bigotry [Share] Please help spread the word! McConnell reelected as Senate leader [Share] Yale and Harvard quit U.S. News law-school rankings [Share] $12 million for former female partner at Goldman Sachs [Share] Childcare shortages mean parents missing work [Share] ‘Walking Dead' producers sue AMC [Share] Thanks for listening!
Hosts Rob Gunther and Kerry Donahue are updating the news, all day, every weekday. Welcome! Zaporizhzhia powers down last reactor [Share] Thousands of Minnesota nurses to go on strike [Share] Wounded Knee site bought by Native tribes [Share] College rankings are out [Share] Carlos Alcaraz wins Grand Slam [Share] Share our stories! We're updating the headlines as news happens What is it actually like to have monkeypox? [Share] Talk to you soon!
Hosts Rebeca Ibarra and Kerry Donahue are updating the news, all day, every weekday. Welcome! The plus side to a resume gap [Share] Talk to you soon!
Hosts Rebeca Ibarra and Kerry Donahue are updating the news, all day, every weekday. Welcome! August jobs: US economy added 315,000 jobs; unemployment ticked up to 3.7% [Share] FBI questioned Brett Favre in Mississippi scandal [Share] Jackson's water crisis continues [Share] Weekend plans? [Share] Share your favorite stories Coming up, we talk with Conan O'Brien's assistant Sona Movsesian Trump floats pardoning Jan 6 rioters [Share] Florida voter fraud case falling apart [Share] NASA releases first direct image of an exoplanet [Share] A mystery about the Pyramids of Giza solved [Share] Air turbulence could worsen in coming decades [Share] I'm Conan O'Brien's assistant of 13 years [Share] Thanks for listening!
Hosts Rebeca Ibarra and Kerry Donahue are updating the news, all day, every weekday. Welcome! No Russian gas for Europe [Share] August jobs: US economy added 315,000 jobs; unemployment ticked up to 3.7% [Share] FBI questioned Brett Favre in Mississippi scandal [Share] Weekend plans? [Share] Share your favorite stories Coming up, we talk with Conan O'Brien's assistant Sona Movsesian Trump floats pardoning Jan 6 rioters [Share] Florida voter fraud case falling apart [Share] NASA releases first direct image of an exoplanet [Share] A mystery about the Pyramids of Giza solved [Share] Air turbulence could worsen in coming decades [Share] I'm Conan O'Brien's assistant of 13 years [Share] Thanks for listening!
Hosts Rebeca Ibarra and Kerry Donahue are updating the news, all day, every weekday. To sign up for Insider's newsletters: https://www.businessinsider.com/subscription/newsletter Here's a segment from The Refresh from Insider Barbiecore is more than just the summer's hottest trend [Share] Follow The Refresh on your favorite podcast app
Hosts Rebeca Ibarra and Kerry Donahue are updating the news, all day, every weekday. To sign up for Insider's newsletters: https://www.businessinsider.com/subscription/newsletter Welcome! China halts climate cooperation with US [Share] Liz Cheney says DOJ must prosecute Trump [Share] Canada bans handgun imports [Share] Bus with undocumented immigrants arrives in New York City [Share] 2 dead after lightning strike near White House [Share] We're updating the news Coming up: Barbiecore Amazon to buy iRobot [Share] Russia and US agree to discuss Brittney Griner prisoner swap [Share] Is Cracker Barrel too “woke”? [Share] Robinhood's terrible, horrible, no good, very bad week [Share] Pony Mayor fights for his office [Share] Barbiecore is more than just the summer's hottest trend [Share] Talk to you soon!
Hosts Rebeca Ibarra and Kerry Donahue are updating the news, all day, every weekday. To sign up for Insider's newsletters: https://www.businessinsider.com/subscription/newsletter Welcome! Man who threatened to kill Dr. Fauci sentenced to prison [Share] Canada bans handgun imports [Share] The economy added 528 THOUSAND jobs in July [Share] 2 dead after lightning strike near White House [Share] Bus with undocumented immigrants arrives in New York City [Share] We're updating the news Coming up: Barbiecore Russia and US agree to discuss Brittney Griner prisoner swap [Share] Amazon to buy iRobot [Share] Robinhood's terrible, horrible, no good, very bad week [Share] Is Cracker Barrel too “woke”? [Share] Combined HBO Max and Discovery Plus coming next year [Share] Barbiecore is more than just the summer's hottest trend [Share] Talk to you soon!
Hosts Rebeca Ibarra and Kerry Donahue are updating the news, all day, every weekday. To sign up for Insider's newsletters: https://www.businessinsider.com/subscription/newsletter Welcome! The economy added 528 THOUSAND jobs in July [Share] Blinken criticizes Chinese military exercises [Share] Senator Kyrsten Sinema agrees to Biden's economic bill [Share] 1 monkeypox vaccine split among 5 people? [Share] Hungary's Viktor Orbán speaks at CPAC [Share] We're updating the news Coming up: Barbiecore Robinhood's terrible, horrible, no good, very bad week [Share] 4 in critical condition after lightning strike near White House [Share] Combined HBO Max and Discovery Plus coming next year [Share] Alex Jones slapped with $4.1m in damages [Share] Russia and US agree to discuss Brittney Griner prisoner swap [Share] Barbiecore is more than just the summer's hottest trend [Share] Talk to you soon!
Hosts Rebeca Ibarra and Kerry Donahue are updating the news, all day, every weekday. Welcome! Lots of bearish market sentiment on Wall Street [Share] China fires missiles toward Taiwan as Pelosi visits South Korea [Share] Scientists develop “synthetic embryos” [Share] Closing arguments begin in Brittney Griner case [Share] LIV golfers sue PGA [Share] Coming up: two headlines and a lie We're updating the news Two Headlines and a Lie [Share] Talk to you soon!
Hosts Rebeca Ibarra and Kerry Donahue are updating the news, all day, every weekday. Welcome! Federal charges against officers involved in Breonna Taylor's death [Share] Governor Ron DeSantis Suspends State Attorney [Share] Brittney Griner sentenced to 9 years in Russian prison [Share] Kentucky recovery efforts continue [Share] Minnesota woman sues pharmacist [Share] We're updating the news Coming up: two headlines and a lie Report: The app Triller lured Black content creators [Share] Jury in Alex Jones defamation case resumes deliberations [Share] Birds are living in our trash [Share] LIV golfers sue PGA [Share] The Great Barrier Reef has some new coral [Share] Two Headlines and a Lie [Share] Talk to you soon!
Insider's Grace Panetta tells Kerry Donahue about a conservative movement urging states to convene a new constitutional convention, which would be dominated by Republican lawmakers. Here's a segment from The Refresh from Insider How a group of Republicans are trying to rewrite the Constitution [Share] Follow The Refresh on your favorite podcast app
Hosts Rebeca Ibarra and Kerry Donahue are updating the news, all day, every weekday. Welcome! Listen to Alex Jones judge dress him down for lying [Share] Biden signs order on abortions [Share] Dodgers' Vin Scully dead at 94 [Share] Congresswoman killed in car accident [Share] Markets jump on waning recession fears [Share] We're updating the news Coming up: the conservative push to rewrite the Constitution Embryos in Georgia are now dependents [Share] Airbnb apologizes for ‘slave cabin' [Share] State Department issues “worldwide caution” [Share] Man trying to burn spider starts wildfire [Share] ‘Batgirl' movie never sees the light of day [Share] How a group of Republicans are trying to rewrite the Constitution [Share] Talk to you soon!
Hosts Rebeca Ibarra and Kerry Donahue are updating the news, all day, every weekday. Welcome! Listen to Alex Jones judge dress him down for lying [Share] Kansas voters reject abortion limits [Share] DOJ sues to project medically necessary abortion [Share] Dodgers' Vin Scully dead at 94 [Share] Airbnb apologizes for ‘slave cabin' [Share] We're updating the news Coming up: the conservative push to rewrite the Constitution Embryos in Georgia are now dependents [Share] Premier League stops taking a knee before all matches [Share] State Department issues “worldwide caution” [Share] Stephen King takes the stand [Share] Man trying to burn spider starts wildfire [Share] How a group of Republicans are trying to rewrite the Constitution [Share] Talk to you soon!
Hosts Rebeca Ibarra and Kerry Donahue are updating the news, all day, every weekday. Here's a segment from The Refresh from Insider Trying to find $182 million in bitcoin in a dump [Share] Follow The Refresh on your favorite podcast app
Hosts Rebeca Ibarra and Kerry Donahue bring you real-time news, updated when it happens. It's fresh like live radio, but on-demand like podcasts. Welcome! Canada suffers huge internet outage [Share] Japan's former PM is assassinated [Share] Biden signs executive order on abortion access [Share] Wisconsin bans ballot drop boxes [Share] Robo taxis in SF ground to a halt [Share] Check back for the latest headlines Coming up: the problem with TikTok Webex by Cisco Texas Gov. Abbott orders state to intercept migrants [Share] US Economy added 372,000 jobs in June [Share] Russia gleeful at Boris Johnson's fall [Share] Elon Musk Twitter deal may be falling apart [Share] The times they are… expensive? [Share] The dangers of TikTok [Share] Have a great weekend!
In part two of this episode of Off-Road Marketing, Janet continues her chat with Kerry Donahue, executive producer of The Refresh from Insider, public radio journalist, editor and instructor. They dive into cross promotion between podcasts, asking for help and Kerry's theory of how the audio format can naturally foster empathy from the audience. Tune in every other Friday for new episodes of ORM!Visit www.podcastfellows.org for more information on Kerry and her podcasting class.
Hosts Rebeca Ibarra and Kerry Donahue bring you real-time news, updated when it happens. It's fresh like live radio, but on-demand like podcasts. Welcome Markets are a bear [SHARE] Crypto catastrophe [SHARE] Jan 6: Barr: Trump detached from reality [SHARE] Idaho police interrupt a possible attack at a pride event [SHARE] SpaceX Starship grounded for now [SHARE] Coming up! Webex by Cisco Bipartisan senators agree on gun safety framework [SHARE] Canada's new cigarette warning [SHARE] Another national shortage: tampons [SHARE] Spacey faces charges in UK court [SHARE] Jennifer Hudson reaches EGOT status [SHARE] The world of golf is getting a big shake-up [SHARE] Talk to you soon!
Hosts Rebeca Ibarra and Kerry Donahue bring you real-time news, updated when it happens. It's fresh like live radio, but on-demand like podcasts. Welcome Jan 6: Barr: Trump detached from reality [SHARE] Markets Midday [SHARE] Idaho police interrupt a possible attack at a pride event [SHARE] Proud boys storm Drag Queen reading hour [SHARE] Jennifer Hudson reaches EGOT status [SHARE] Coming up! Webex by Cisco Bipartisan senators agree on gun safety framework [SHARE] Another national shortage: tampons [SHARE] Items from men lost in Amazon found [SHARE] Russia has a new McDonald's [SHARE] CT gets a new worm [SHARE] The world of golf is getting a big shake-up [SHARE] Talk to you soon!
Hosts Rebeca Ibarra and Kerry Donahue bring you real-time news, updated when it happens. It's fresh like live radio, but on-demand like podcasts. Welcome! Markets close lower [SHARE] Tesla plans 3 for 1 stock split [SHARE] Justice's wife pressured 29 AZ lawmakers [SHARE] US and neighbors to announce migration pact [SHARE] Guy finds 13 stray kittens [SHARE] Missing daughter found [SHARE] Coming up! Webex by Cisco Jan 6th Chair: “An attempted coup” [SHARE] Liz Cheney points to Trump's inner circle [SHARE] Trump's relationship with Proud Boys [SHARE] Trump OK with threats to Pence? [SHARE] Cheney issues stern warning to GOP [SHARE] Now, here's Dave Are online sobriety clubs helpful or harmful? [SHARE] Talk to you soon!
Hosts Rebeca Ibarra and Kerry Donahue bring you real-time news, updated when it happens. It's fresh like live radio, but on-demand like podcasts. Welcome! US and neighbors to announce migration pact [SHARE] Justice's wife pressured 29 AZ lawmakers [SHARE] CPI shows inflation rose to 8.6% [SHARE] DOJ investigating Louisiana State Police [SHARE] Over 400 marches for gun safety Saturday [SHARE] Coming up! Webex by Cisco Jan 6th Chair: “An attempted coup” [SHARE] Liz Cheney points to Trump's inner circle [SHARE] Trump's relationship with Proud Boys [SHARE] Trump OK with threats to Pence? [SHARE] Cheney issues stern warning to GOP [SHARE] Now, here's Dave Are online sobriety clubs helpful or harmful? [SHARE] Talk to you soon!
Hosts Dave Smith and Kerry Donahue bring you real-time news, updated when it happens. It's fresh like live radio, but on-demand like podcasts. Welcome! Biden gives solar energy a boost [SHARE] Deadly weekend of gun violence [SHARE] California approves robo-taxis [SHARE] World's biggest four-day work week program [SHARE] New quarter honors Cherokee leader [SHARE] Coming up! Webex by Cisco Amazing cancer trial results [SHARE] UK tourist sentenced to 15 years in Iraqi prison [SHARE] Gun enthusiasts support reform [SHARE] Lifeguards are in short supply [SHARE] Top Gun soars, Morbius tanks [SHARE] Is grad school a scam? [SHARE] Talk to you soon!
Hosts Dave Smith and Kerry Donahue bring you real-time news, updated when it happens. It's fresh like live radio, but on-demand like podcasts. Welcome! UK PM Boris Johnson survives no confidence vote [SHARE] January 6th Committee goes primetime [SHARE] Musk + Twitter =
Hosts Dave Smith and Kerry Donahue bring you real-time news, updated when it happens. It's fresh like live radio, but on-demand like podcasts. Welcome! Stocks sink [SHARE] DeSantis tries to ban trans-related healthcare [SHARE] Peter Navarro indicted for contempt of Congress [SHARE] Ukraine's top prosecutor looks for signs of genocide [SHARE] Day 2 of the Platinum Jubilee [SHARE] Coming Up! Webex by Cisco Congressman brandishes guns at House hearing [SHARE] May's jobs report is good news [SHARE] Man smashes ancient Greek art [SHARE] Turkey is no longer “Turkey” [SHARE] National Spelling Bee's historic spell-off [SHARE] Do expensive cars make people drive like jerks? [SHARE] Talk to you soon!
In part one of this episode of Off-Road Marketing, Janet talks with Kerry Donahue, executive producer of The Refresh from Insider, public radio journalist, editor and instructor. They discuss how The Refresh is able to update news in real time, melding the immediacy of live radio news with the on-demand features of a podcast. They also touch on the intimacy of the audio medium and the top 3 mistakes rookie podcasters make when starting out. Tune in on Friday 6/17 for part 2 with Kerry!Visit www.podcastfellows.org for more information on Kerry and her podcasting class.
Hosts Dave Smith and Kerry Donahue bring you real-time news, updated when it happens. It's fresh like live radio, but on-demand like podcasts. Welcome! Queen pulls out of Jubilee service [SHARE] Michael Avenatti sentenced to more prison [SHARE] Tulsa shooter's motive [SHARE] Amber Heard looks to appeal [SHARE] Stocks jump for a change [SHARE] Coming up: Two Headlines And A Lie Webex by Cisco Experimental cancer treatment is effective [SHARE] Bees are now fish [SHARE] 3D-printed human ear successfully transplanted [SHARE] White noise podcasters strike gold [SHARE] Dogs detect COVID [SHARE] Two Headlines and a Lie [SHARE] Talk to you soon!
Hosts Dave Smith and Kerry Donahue bring you realtime news, updated when it happens. It's fresh like live radio, but on demand like podcasts. Welcome!Twitter, Tesla stock take a beatingBaby formula factory months away from productionCEOs receive record payJetBlue's hostile bid for Spirit Airlines Netflix to test livestreaming?Coming up: Maximizing your credit cards for travelWebex by CiscoRussia warns NATO over Finland and Sweden“Stop the Steal” Republicans on the PA ballotRussia may give up Brittney Griner, for a priceNo flights in DelawareUkraine wins EurovisionA guide to travel credit cardsTalk to you soon!
Hosts Dave Smith and Kerry Donahue bring you realtime news, updated when it happens. It's fresh like live radio, but on demand like podcasts. Welcome!Markets close up to finish the weekTexas court issues gender-affirming care rulingThe Lancet issues rebuke to SCOTUSBuild-A-Bear employees worn down by “memory bears”Look up for this weekend's lunar eclipseComing Up!Webex by CiscoBrittney Griner's detention is extendedSome pain meds may worsen back painBezos, Ohanian donate to NYC childcareMoon farming?New Kendrick Lamar album is outHow one woman escaped a Chinese internment campTalk to you soon!
Hosts Dave Smith and Kerry Donahue bring you realtime news, updated when it happens. It's fresh like live radio, but on demand like podcasts. Welcome!Markets close up to end the weekTexas court issues gender-affirming care rulingThe Lancet issues rebuke to SCOTUSBuild-A-Bear employees worn down by “memory bears”Look up for this weekend's lunar eclipseComing Up!Webex by CiscoBrittney Griner's detention is extendedSome pain meds may worsen back painBezos, Ohanian donate to NYC childcareMoon farming?New Kendrick Lamar album is outHow one woman escaped a Chinese internment campTalk to you soon!
Hosts Dave Smith and Kerry Donahue bring you realtime news, updated when it happens. It's fresh like live radio, but on demand like podcasts. Welcome!Musk puts Twitter bid on holdTexas court issues gender-affirming care rulingThe Lancet issues rebuke to SCOTUSBuild-A-Bear employees worn down by “memory bears”Look up for this weekend's lunar eclipseComing Up!Webex by CiscoBrittney Griner's detention is extendedSome pain meds may worsen back painApple gives managers anti-union scriptsMoon farming?New Kendrick Lamar album is outHow one woman escaped a Chinese internment campTalk to you soon!
Hosts Dave Smith and Kerry Donahue bring you realtime news, updated when it happens. It's fresh like live radio, but on demand like podcasts. Welcome!Jan 6th committee subpoenas fellow representativesMusk disses American workersGrand Jury subpoenas Trump in records caseFirst image of the Milky Way's black holeGoop's jewel-encrusted diapersComing Up! Webex by CiscoNewsom gears up to fight anti-abortionMeta snubs its Oversight BoardHeinz working on paper ketchup bottlesNew updates to AirbnbNaomi Osaka launches sports agencyTwo Headlines and a LieTalk to you soon!
Hosts Rebeca Ibarra and Kerry Donahue bring you realtime news, updated when it happens. It's fresh like live radio, but on demand like podcasts. Welcome!Spirit rejects JetBlue offerTrump allegedly suggested shooting protestersGrand jury selected in Trump criminal probeNew Mexico offers free child careDon't mow your lawn this May! Description:Coming up: why resume gaps don't have to be daunting Webex by CiscoUkraine admits “Ghost of Kyiv” is a mythMariupol evacuation hopesVote tallying begins in 2nd Amazon union electionAmber Heard fires PR teamBirds Aren't Real isn't realThe plus side to a resume gapTalk to you soon!
Hosts Rebeca Ibarra and Kerry Donahue bring you realtime news, updated when it happens. It's fresh like live radio, but on demand like podcasts. Welcome!Amazon has a rough first quarterColorado poultry worker tests positive for bird fluMusk sells $4b in Tesla sharesTennis star sentenced to prisonCalifornia investigates ExxonMobilComing up: are flying cars ever gonna be a thing? Webex by CiscoRussia attacks KyivUkraine charges 10 RussiansEvacuation planned for Mariupol steel plantNFL Draft is full of surpriseRoger Stone banned from Twitter, againWhen are we gonna get flying cars?Talk to you soon!
Hosts Rebeca Ibarra and Kerry Donahue bring you realtime news, updated when it happens. It's fresh like live radio, but on demand like podcasts. Welcome!Russia attacks KyivUkraine charges 10 RussiansEvacuation planned for Mariupol steel plantTwitter overcounts daily usersRoger Stone banned from Twitter, againComing up: are flying cars ever gonna be a thing? Webex by CiscoAmazon has a rough first quarterCalifornia investigates ExxonMobilNFL Draft is full of surpriseApple posts record quarterly numbersChaos erupts at Israel airportWhen are we gonna get flying cars?Talk to you soon!
Radiotopia Presents and S***hole Country is proud to present a bonus episode from AfroQueer. 2021 has been a really rough year for Ghana's LGBTQI people. Police raided and shut down a queer community center in Accra; 21 people attending a paralegal workshop in the city of Ho were arrested and locked up for 21 days before the case was dropped; and eight MPs have come up with draft legislation that, if adopted, makes it a crime just to be queer or a queer ally. But the LGBT community are fighting back - with a #KilltheBill campaign. Ghanaian filmmaker, Edem Robby, reports on what's been happening and why - and, in a rare interview, she sits down with some of the so-called Ho 21 to hear the horrifying story of their arrests. This episode from AfroQueer was reported by Edem Robby. Produced and written by Penny Dale. Story Editor is Kerry Donahue. AfroQueer is executive Produced by Selly Thiam. Rachel Wamoto is the social media manager, Tevin Sudi, and Mercy Barno are the audio editors. Listen to Human Being (Just like you) by Wanlov The Kubolor that was featured in this episode. S***hole Country is a production of Radiotopia from PRX and part of Radiotopia Presents, a podcast feed debuting limited-run, artist-owned series from new and original voices. Learn more about S***hole Country and access transcripts at radiotopiapresents.fm and discover more shows from across the Radiotopia network at radiotopia.fm.
2021 has been a really rough year for Ghana's LGBTQI people. Police raided and shut down a queer community center in Accra; 21 people attending a paralegal workshop in the city of Ho were arrested and locked up for 21 days before the case was dropped; and eight MPs have come up with draft legislation that, if adopted, makes it a crime just to be queer or a queer ally. But the LGBT community are fighting back - with a #KilltheBill campaign Edem Robby, a Ghanaian filmmaker, reports on what's been happening and why - and, in a rare interview, she sits down with some of the so-called Ho 21 to hear the horrifying story of their arrests. This episode was reported by Edem Robby. Produced and written by Penny Dale. Our Story Editor is Kerry Donahue. AfroQueer is executive Produced by Selly Thiam Rachel Wamoto is our social media manager, Tevin Sudi, and Mercy Barno are our audio editors. Listen to Human being (Just like you) by Wanlov The Kubolor here. Optionally, listen to the episode on these streaming sites : Soundcloud:soundcloud.com/afroqueerpodcast/tracks iTunes: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/afro…er/id1411257149 Chartable: chartable.com/podcasts/afroqueer Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/6ZHmsTo9TgL…84RQyHZsRM6B4U9Q Engage with us : Instagram: www.instagram.com/afroqueerpodcast/ Twitter: twitter.com/Afroqueerpod Youtube: www.youtube.com/channel/UCnaXCpXBwxmp44Ch-zqUGFw Website: afroqueerpodcast.com Patreon: www.patreon.com/afroqueerpodcast
In 2008, after moving to the port city of Kisumu in western Kenya, Paula Abuor decided to open up her house to other LGBTQ people. Meeting in bars and parks was just too risky - and, as one of Kenya's LGBTQ ‘elders', she really wanted young Kenyans setting out on their queer journeys to have a safe space where they could be themselves, embraced by love when their families and friends wouldn't accept them. That's how Annette Atieno found herself there - when she was outed by a relative and her mum sent her away from the family home in Nairobi to Kisumu. Annette takes us on a poignant journey to meet Paula and other people from that era. In doing so, we delve into an important chapter in Kenya's LGBTQ history - and Annette reflects on the role Paula and her Kisumu house played in her own queer journey. We are proud to have partnered on this episode with Africa Writes 2021 festival. Africa Writes is the Royal African Society's literature festival. Each festival showcases established and emerging talent from the African continent and its diaspora in what is now the UK's biggest celebration of contemporary African writing taking place over an exciting weekend at the British Library. The festival features book launches, readings, author appearances, panel discussions, youth and children's workshops, and other activities. Learn more on www.africawrites.org AfroQueer Podcast is produced by AQ Studios and Edited on Hindenburg Systems. This episode was reported by Annette Atieno and Tevin Sudi. Produced by Penny Dale with assistance from Annette Atieno. Written by Penny Dale. Our Story Editor is Kerry Donahue. AfroQueer is executive Produced by Selly Thiam Rachel Wamoto is our social media manager and Tevin Sudi is our audio editor. Engage with us on- Instagram: www.instagram.com/afroqueerpodcast/ Twitter: twitter.com/Afroqueerpod Youtube: www.youtube.com/channel/UCnaXCpXBwxmp44Ch-zqUGFw Website: www.afroqueerpodcast.com Patreon: www.patreon.com/afroqueerpodcast Listen to AfroQueer Podcast here: Soundcloud:soundcloud.com/afroqueerpodcast/tracks iTunes: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/afro…er/id1411257149 Chartable: chartable.com/podcasts/afroqueer Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/6ZHmsTo9TgL…84RQyHZsRM6B4U9Q
In this podcast, we sit down with the President of MAGBO to discuss what he’s been doing during the Coronavirus, going down memory lane officiating for a hot dog and a soda, to umpiring college kids before he was in college, and his mission of teaching people in the high school classroom, as well as the officiating classroom through MAGBO. Along with my special co-host Kerry Donahue, our conversation with Jim, now.
Under the Trump administration, the United States has pushed aggressively to deport Southeast Asian Americans with criminal records. Hurt that members of the Vietnamese community would support this action, guest producer Thanh Tan (creator of the podcast “Second Wave”) seeks out the people at risk of deportation — and the organizers fighting to keep them in the only home they’ve known. Along the way, she learns to embrace a new direction for Vietnamese Americans confronting the deeply rooted narrative of “the good refugee.” We need your help! Please take this 1-minute survey, so we can have better conversations with partners and sponsors and keep this show growing. It’s fast, easy, and anonymous. Resources and Recommended Reading Suicide Prevention Lifeline: 1-800-273-8255. The Lifeline provides 24/7, free and confidential support for people in distress and prevention and crisis resources for you or your loved ones. "Know Your Rights" resources to prepare for ICE raids written in Arabic, Bangla, Burmese, Chinese, Dar/Farsi, Gujarati, Hindi, Karen, Khemer, Korean, Nepali, Punjabi, Tagalog, Urdu, and Vietnamese, compiled by the Asian American Federation in NY. Primary sources: The Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996, which laid much groundwork for today’s deportations The 2008 Memorandum of Understanding between the U.S. and Vietnam President Trump’s Jan 25, 2017 Executive Order on Border Security and Immigration Enforcement President Trump’s Jan 25, 2017 Executive Order declaring that the presence of “removable aliens” from “foreign nations that refuse the repatriation of their nationals” is “contrary to the national interest” Text of President Trump’s Jan 27, 2017 Executive Order temporarily ceasing admission of refugees to the United States (a.k.a. “the travel ban”) Migration Policy Institute dataset on U.S. annual refugee resettlement ceilings and refugee admissions, starting from 1980 ICE datasets on deportations from FY 2011 through FY 2018 Reporting and analysis on the federal government’s role in detention and deportation of immigrants: “City of Fear” by New York Magazine and The Marshall Project “The Disastrous, Forgotten 1996 Law That Created Today’s Immigration Problem” by Dara Lind, for Vox “ICE and the Banality of Spin” by Eileen Guo, for Topic “U.S.: 20 Years of Immigrant Abuses,” a summary of reports by Human Rights Watch on harm caused by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 and the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act Reporting and analysis on the detention and deportation of Vietnamese Americans and Cambodian Americans: “As Cambodian Deportations Resume, Community Looks for Ways to Cope” by Agnes Constante, for NBC Asian America “Deported: A Grassroots Movement” (5-part docuseries) by Sahra V. Nguyen, for NBC Asian America “Fear Grips Immigrants Who Fled Here to Escape Genocide” by Matt Driscoll, for The News Tribune of Tacoma, Washington “A State of Captivity: Immigrants Detained Repeatedly for Old Crimes” by Anjali Enjeti, for Guernica Magazine “Trump Is Pushing Vietnam to Accept Deportees Who Have Lived in the US for Over 20 years” by Dara Lind, for Vox “Trump Moves to Deport Vietnam War Refugees” by Charles Dunst and Krishnadev Calamur, for The Atlantic “The U.S. Ambassador Who Crossed Trump on Immigration” by Mike Ives, for the New York Times Shout Outs John Woo and Kerry Donahue voiced the English translations of Thanh’s parents. Thanks to Julia Preston and Willoughby Mariano for their advice on reporting this story. Credits Produced by Thanh Tan and James Boo Edited by Julia Shu and Cheryl Devall Production support by Austin Jenkins, Jamala Henderson, Kevin Rinker, and Merk Nguyen Sound engineering by Timothy Lou Ly Theme music by Dorian Love Music by Blue Dot Sessions and Epidemic Sound Self Evident is a Studiotobe production. Season 1 is presented by the Center for Asian American Media (CAAM), the Ford Foundation, and our listener community. Our show was incubated at the Made in New York Media Center by IFP. About CAAM: CAAM (Center for Asian American Media) is a nonprofit organization dedicated to presenting stories that convey the richness and diversity of Asian American experiences to the broadest audience possible. CAAM does this by funding, producing, distributing, and exhibiting works in film, television, and digital media. For more information on CAAM, please visit www.caamedia.org. With support from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, CAAM provides production funding to independent producers who make engaging Asian American works for public media.
Os Estados Unidos vivem uma nova era de ouro do rádio. Os podcasts atraem milhões de ouvintes, inovam no formato, criam uma nova linguagem de conteúdo de áudio. Falamos com dois professores da Universidade de Columbia, Joe Richman e Kerry Donahue, sobre o fenômeno e conversamos com a jornalista Paula Scarpin, da revista Piauí. Um podcast sobre podcasts. MÚSICAS "Sugah Daddy" D'Angelo "Skyscrapers" Eumir Deodato
Last December 95 prisoners had their sentences shortened by President Obama. This was part of an ongoing effort to use clemency to free non-violent drug offenders who were given harsh sentences for their crimes. For 53 year old Ramona Brant this meant she would not spend the rest of her life in prison. Brant was a first time offender convicted in 1995 on charges of conspiracy to possess and distribute cocaine. This summer Life of the Law is presenting some of the best and the brightest new voices in investigative reporting and audio production. This week's episode is from Shandukani Mulaudzi of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. Reporter Shandukani Mulaudzi met Brant on February 2, as she was released from the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn. Mulaudzi later traveled to Charlotte, North Carolina, where Brant -- as part of the clemency agreement -- is living in a halfway house until mid-April. PRODUCTION NOTES Clemency was reported by Shandukani Mulaudzi and edited by Ann Cooper with production support from Jonathan Hirsch, Nancy Mullane, and Kirsten Jusewicz-Haidle. Special thanks to Kerry Donahue, coordinator of the audio program at Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, Amy Povah of Can-Do Clemency for her support, and Romana Brant for sharing her story. Music in this episode is from Ketsa. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Hundreds of people in cities throughout the US have been arrested for participating in Black Lives Matter protests. In Chicago, a judge set one protestor's bail at $350,000. To "make bail" he will have to present the court with the money or property as s promise, a sort of collateral, that he will return for his hearing in exchange for his freedom while he awaits trial. When he appears for his trial, he will get his money back."There really are two systems of justice. There’s one for people who can make bail, and one for people who can’t." - Josh Saunders, Public Defender Possibly this protestor and others like him will have help raising the funds to post his bail. But what if a person who has been accused of a crime has been arrested and doesn't have enough money, or access to property, to make bail? Each year some 45,000 people in New York City alone are arrested and sent to jail who can't make bail. That means they either stay in jail until their trial takes place, which can be months down the road, or they plead guilty without a trial. This summer Life of the Law presents the best and the brightest new voices in investigative reporting and audio production. This story is from Ariel Ritchin of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. Ariel has taken a hard look at what it takes to make bail. PRODUCTION NOTES Bail or Bust was reported by Ariel Ritchin and edited by Kerry Donahue and Nancy Mullane, with production support from Jonathan Hirsch and Kirsten Jusewicz-Haidle. Ceil Muller of KQED Radio in San Francisco was our engineer. Special thanks to WNYC and New York 1. Music in this episode is from Blue Dot Sessions and K2. This episode of Life of the Law was funded in part by grants from the Open Society Foundations, the Law and Society Association, the Proteus Fund, the Ford Foundation, and the National Science Foundation. Bail or Bust was sponsored by The Great Courses Plus.com/law. © Copyright 2016 Life of the Law. All rights reserved. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Show #128 | Guest: Samuel G. Freedman is an award-winning author, columnist, and professor. A columnist for The New York Times and a professor at Columbia University, he is the author of seven acclaimed books. Kerry Donahue is Adjunct Faculty and Director, Radio Program at the Columbia Journalism School. She’s also an independent producer who specializes in program and host development with clients including PRX, PRI, and Tricycle Magazine. Her work has been heard on NPR, WNYC, “Marketplace” and WBGO. | Show Summary: Angie sits down with Samuel Freedman and Kerry Donahue whose incredible audio documentary and accompanying book Dying Words: The AIDS Reporting of Jeff Schmalz tells Schmalz's story on how he reported about AIDS while dying of the disease, and his impact and legacy on journalism. Jeff Schmalz was a journalistic prodigy. He was hired by The New York Times while still a college student, and he was essentially running its metropolitan coverage by his mid-20s. From his crisply pressed trousers and shirts to his unerring sense of how to structure a feature story, he was a consummate Timesman. People in the newsroom speculated that someday he could be “on the masthead” – the list of the top editors on the world’s most important newspaper. All the while, though, Jeff was struggling with his identity as a gay man.
One of the things we assign to science is that there are true, absolute facts. But scientists are human and, it turns out, as prone to blind spots in their thinking as the rest of us, especially when cultural assumptions and biases get in the way. Emily Martin & Richard Cone In this episode, biologist Christina Agapakis explores ways these blind spots, especially around gender and sexism, have affected research and women’s careers in science. She talks with one of her heroes, anthropologist Emily Martin, and her husband, biophysicist Richard Cone, about Emily’s 1991 article “The Egg & The Sperm.” Reading that article about the ways cultural romantic assumptions limited scientists’ understanding of human reproduction was a turning point for Christina as a young scientist who considered her feminism as something separate from science. Kate Clancy She also talks with anthropologist Kate Clancy who has spent a lot of time thinking and writing about the ways women’s careers in science are different from men’s. Kate offers some thoughts on what science needs to consider to truly bring in more underrepresented voices and perspectives. New perspectives and voices in science may be key to science seeing blind spots for the first time. Episode Extras — Your Transistor producers have picked out some further reading on this topic and how it affects both men and women: The Egg & the Sperm by Emily Martin The Woman in the Body: A Cultural Analysis of Reproduction by Emily Martin Subverting Sperm & Germs by Michael Purdy (April 2002) Survey of Academic Field Experiences (SAFE): Trainees Report Harassment and Assault by Kathryn B. H. Clancy, Robin G. Nelson, Julienne N. Rutherford, Katie Hinde, PLoS ONE, July 16, 2014 Kate Clancy’s Context and Variation blog This episode was produced by Kerry Donahue and Sruthi Pinnamaneni, and mixed by David Herman. Music Credits: Hauschka: “Cube” from Salon des amateurs Anna Meredith: “Bubble Gun” from Jet Black Raider Four Tet: “As Serious As Your Life” from Rounds Not Waving: “Two-Way Mirror” from Intercepts Laurie Spiegel: “Patchwork” from The Expanding Universe
Art by Noa Kaplan. Photo by Jed Kim Your skin is your largest organ and is also is a thriving ecosystem, covered in bacteria. While many of us consider regular showers key to keeping our skin healthy, a group of scientists — and artists — are starting to ask: Could the future of skin care not be soap, but bacteria? Inside the Episode Biologist Christina Agapakis visits AOBiome in Cambridge, Mass. to talk with the team there that has developed a bacterial mist you spritz on your skin several times a day instead of showering. Then, it’s off to rethink one of the most common skin problems, pimples. We meet Noa Kaplan, who makes sculptures based from ultra-magnified shots of her pores. ©Noa Kaplan ©Noa Kaplan We also explore how fabric could support our skin’s ecosystem. Fashion futurist Suzanne Lee talks about the not-too-distant future when our clothes may do more than just cover us – they may be made from living bacteria and designed to interact with our skin. Check out this article about Suzanne’s process, and her TED Talk. This episode was produced by Kerry Donahue and Sruthi Pinnamaneni, and mixed by David Herman. Music credits: Hauschka: “Cube” from Salon des amateurs Four Tet: “As Serious As Your Life” from Rounds Anna Meredith: “Bubble Gun” from Jet Black Raider Pye Corner Audio: “Palais Spectres” from Sleep Games Laurie Spiegel: “Patchwork” from The Expanding Universe
A freezer full of donated poop at OpenBiome For one disease, poop — yes, human poop — is nothing short a miracle cure. Microbiologist Christina Agapakis takes a look at Fecal Microbiota Transplants or FMT and what happens when you take the really complex gut microbiome from a healthy person and transplant it into the gut of a really sick person. For patients suffering from a one of the most common and deadly hospital acquired infections, Clostridium Difficile, or C Diff, one poop transplant can cure them, sometimes within hours. But, why? Inside the Episode: Mark Smith shows host Christina Agapakis and producer Kerry Donahue the container donors, uh…”donate” in. Sign on the door at OpenBiome, reminding us of the importance of poop! Christina visits Mark Smith at OpenBiome in Medford, Massachusetts. OpenBiome is a poop bank where donors are paid $40 bucks a po(o)p and where scientists like Mark produce highly screened, liquefied poop samples to be sent to doctors and hospitals all over the country. Christina talks with Ed Yong, blogger at Not Exactly Rocket Science and author of a forthcoming book about microbes called I Contain Multitudes, about what we might be failing to ask in all of the excitement surrounding FMT. Christina also talks with Tami Lieberman, a systems biologist at Harvard who decided to put some new home sampling kits for sequencing your gut microbiome to the test. It’s a wild and wooly world out there when it comes to the medical power of poop. Who knew? Stay tuned. This episode was produced by Kerry Donahue and Sruthi Pinnamaneni, and mixed by David Herman. Photos by Genevieve Sponsler. Music credits: Mort Garson: “Good Morning Starshine” from Electronic Hair Pieces Anna Meredith: “Bubble Gun” from Jet Black Raider Piero Piccioni: “Mexican Borders” from Piero Piccioni Soundtracks Four Tet: “As Serious As Your Life” from Rounds Hauschka: “Cube” from Salon des amateurs Laurie Spiegel: “Patchwork” from The Expanding Universe
Your host Christina in a tempeh kitchen, for science! In her episodes of Transistor, biologist Christina Agapakis is exploring the microbiome: the trillions of bacteria, fungi, and viruses that live in and on our body. The microbiome is hot right now and in these episodes Christina will explore what we do know in the face of so much hope and hype. She starts with food. Bacteria-rich foods such as tempeh, cheese, pickles and yogurt have long been praised for their probiotic effect. But can you really add enough good bacteria to your digestive system to outnumber the bad? Inside the Episode: Barry’s business partner Gordon Bennett mixing the Rhizopus culture into the soybeans. Christina pays a visit to an industrial kitchen in Long Island City, Queens, where Barry Schwartz and a small team meet up every other week to make Barry’s Tempeh, the only fresh tempeh sold in New York State. Wanting to better understand tempeh – aka “blue cheese of tofu” – Christina then calls her friend Colin Cahill in Indonesia where tempeh originated. He explains how it’s more than just soybeans and fungus that give tempeh in Indonesia its regional flavor. Then, if a single bacteria food like tempeh is good, studying a more complex ecosystem like the bacteria on cheese rind might tell us more about bacteria interact with each other and in our digestive systems – at least that’s Harvard biologist Rachel Dutton‘s goal. She’s studied more than a hundred different types of cheese from around the world, trying to better understand how cheese gets its flavor and why they are all so different. She’s now the go-to biologist for world-famous chefs like David Chang of Momufuko and Jim Lahey of Sullivan Street Bakery in New York, helping them explore ways to make foods taste new, different and better. Christina then shares her early love of fermentation with fermentation revivalist Sandor Katz. Sandor’s never met a fermented food he didn’t like, but he’s skeptical of anyone who says fermented foods can make us healthy on their own. This episode was produced by Kerry Donahue and Sruthi Pinnamaneni, and mixed by Tim Einenkel.