Podcast appearances and mentions of mia lobel

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Best podcasts about mia lobel

Latest podcast episodes about mia lobel

CANADALAND
Why Caitlin Clark Will Make Rogers Feel Stupid

CANADALAND

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2024 22:17


Rogers buys Bell share of Maple Leaf Sports Entertainment for 4.7 billion–but how Ed Rogers' power play whiffed on the Caitlin Clark era.Plus, the most 90s baby ever and the unlikely return of Vice Magazine.Host: Jesse BrownCredits: James Nicholson (Producer), Caleb Thompson (Audio Editor and Technical Producer), max collins (Production Manager), Jesse Brown (Editor)Guest: Rahim MohamedInterested in attending a CanadaLabs workshop? Registration is now open: The Promise of Audio, October 17th 2pm-6pm at Canadaland's Toronto office. Space is limited, RSVP to secure your spot: https://forms.gle/AMcYaHcwxanEMrcm8Podcast Development & Pitching Workshop with Mia Lobel, November 1 6pm–7:30pm. Learn more and RSVP: https://pandemicuniversity.com/product/podcast-pitchfest-workshop/Apply to Podcast PitchFest, offered in partnership with Pandemic University: https://pandemicuniversity.com/podcast-pitchfest/ Further reading on our website Sponsors: CAMH: CAMH is building better mental health care for everyone to ensure no one is left behind. This Mental Illness Awareness Week, your donation to CAMH will be matched. Visit camh.ca/canadaland to double your impact.Squarespace: Check out Squarespace.com/canadaland for a free trial, and when you're ready to launch use code canadaland to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain.PolicyMe: Head over to policyme.com and secure your Health and Dental coverage in just 5 minutes - no medical questions needed! Crow's Theatre: Enter the world of ROSMERSHOLM, on stage until October 11th ONLY. Buy your tickets today at crowstheatre.com If you value this podcast, Support us! You'll get premium access to all our shows ad free, including early releases and bonus content. You'll also get our exclusive newsletter, discounts on merch at our store, tickets to our live and virtual events, and more than anything, you'll be a part of the solution to Canada's journalism crisis, you'll be keeping our work free and accessible to everybody. You can listen ad-free on Amazon Music—included with Prime. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Life's a Wreck
Season Finale: Suicide Prevention and the Power of First Person Storytelling with Ailish Forfar, Mia Lobel and Piper Daken

Life's a Wreck

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2024 66:38


Please see below several mental health resources to help you through times of suicidal ideation.Stories have always been a part of my life. Whether it was the relief from my anxiety that would come from a bedtime story or starting a podcast to tell my own, stories have always been there for me. Storytelling has played a crucial role in how I've been able to navigate difficult times of suicidal ideation and so today's episode is an exploration into the true power of storytelling and its effects on suicidal ideation. In today's episode, I'm humbled to be joined by Sportsnet host Ailish Forfar, renowned podcast producer and storyteller Mia Lobel and psychology graduate Piper Daken.If you are experiencing a suicidal crisis moment and need immediate help you can dial 9-8-8 anywhere in Canada to receive 24/7 crisis support. Kids Help Phone: If you are struggling with suicidal ideation or any mental distress and are under the age of 30 please get in touch with Kids Help Phone using any of the following means: Text: 686868 Call: 1-800-668-6868 Online Chat (open from 7 pm - 11:15 pm ET): LinkFind a Helpline that suites your mental health needs using this directory: Find a HelplineLearn more about holistic mental health care by reading the First Nations Mental Wellness Continuum FrameworkExplore the Suicide Prevention Toolkits created by the Mental Health Commission of CanadaThe Canadian Mental Health Associate (CMHA) is one of Canada's oldest and most trusted mental health organizations. By finding your local CMHA chapter using this hyperlink, you can discover what suicide prevention and mental health resources are available to you in your community. If you are looking to be trained in Suicide Prevention First Aid I recommend checking out ASIST or any of the programs through Livingworks.If you are a student, please do not hesitate to explore the mental health resources available to you through your university's healthcare programs. Booking my first session with a counsellor at my university was a life-changing decision.Thank you all for an incredible season! To stay in touch until next season feel free to email me at lifesawreckpodcast@gmail.com or follow me on Instagram @moorzyyy or the podcast @lifesawreckpodcastFollow Ailish on Twitter and Instagram @ailishforfarJoin Mia's Newsletter for some incredible reads about the world of storytelling and follow her on LinkedIN Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

In & Around Podcasting
Is the CPM Model in Podcasting Really Sustainable?

In & Around Podcasting

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2024 49:52


In a recent article published by Mia Lobel, ex Head of Content at Pushkin Industries, she decries the CPM model in podcasting, and that "The CPM model of advertising does not — and will not ever — work to sustain podcasting."Join us as we dive deep into this topic with two podcasting pros.Plus, Stupid Stuff in Podcasting and The Flattering Ram!Co-hosts, ( ) and Gareth Davies(@garethsounds on Twitter) .Links to interesting things from this episodeKathy Doyle | LinkedInIndependent Podcast Awards 2024Quill Podcast Agency | High-Quality Corporate Podcast ProductionCoHost | Podcast Analytics and Audience InsightsPodcast Production Services | Lower StreetThe world's most influential branded podcasts - Pacific ContentAlex Lieberman on X: "Unless you're an A-list celeb, big media co, or plan to sell your audience a high $ product, it makes no sense for you to launch a podcast right now." / XPodcast Advertising Rates [2024] | Ad Results MediaAudioboom sees revenue growthWhy our system for valuing podcasts is broken - CurrentIn & Around Podcasting is a podcast industry podcast brought to you by Mark Asquith and Danny Brown.If you enjoy the show, we'd love for you to leave us a rating or review on your favourite podcast app!If you're an independent creator who would like to co-host with us, please let us know via Twitter and we'll get you booked!Please tell your friends that the show is available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and YouTube, plus wherever else they may listen to their podcasts.If you'd like your podcast trailer featuring in our "Wave File" segment, submit it via this quick contact form, please.The podcast is also available at In & Around Podcasting.Mentioned in this episode:A Breath of Fresh Air with Sandy KayeJoin Sandy Kaye on A Breath of Fresh Air, a podcast that brings you intimate fireside chats with music legends of the 60s, 70s, and 80s. Note from Mark: as a rock fan... I mean... you HAVE to check out this podcast!!A Breath of Fresh AirThe Podcast Show, London, 2024Get ready for over 150 hours of content from a lineup wall-to-wall with some of the most recognisable voices in audio and major players...

Degrees: Real talk about planet-saving careers
Katharine Hayhoe on how to start climate conversations

Degrees: Real talk about planet-saving careers

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2023 33:38


Dr. Katharine Hayhoe's research focuses on understanding what climate change means for people and the places where we live. She is the Horn Distinguished Professor of Public Policy and Public Law at Texas Tech University. Her book Saving Us: A Climate Scientist's Case for Hope and Healing in a Divided World, followed her 2018 TED Talk, “The most important thing you can do to fight climate change: talk about it.” The Guardian called her “a committed Christian who has gained a reputation for being able to reach across the most partisan of political divides.” ‘Resources from this episode:For climate communication and advocacy trainings, check out the Science Network Workshop Series from the Union of Concerned Scientists and read Work for Climate's tips for talking about climate change at work.Subscribe to Talking Climate, Dr. Hayhoe's weekly newsletter for good news, not so good news, and things you can do about climate change.Follow Dr. Hayoe on TikTok @dr.katharine and watch her PBS series Global Weirding for fact-based, practical, and hopeful lessons on climate change.If you want to push climate solutions from “the inside” of a workplace that is not doing anything, make sure you have a support network elsewhere. Try the Action Network's Our Climate Voices or find your local Net Impact chapter.To understand more about how people in the US feel about climate change, and how it influences their actions, read this study from the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication. It will help you think about your approach beyond a believer versus denier binary.Dr. Hayoe recommends finding common ground through the things you love to do or ways you identify. For instance, she started a group called Science Moms, and recommends a blog called Fossil Free Football.Related episodes:How a punk-rocking paralegal harnessed employee power to green MicrosoftHow Heather McTeer Toney is redefining climate action for the next generation of leadersYes, you can turn your climate anxiety into meaningful action***

Degrees: Real talk about planet-saving careers
How to land one of the millions of new clean energy jobs

Degrees: Real talk about planet-saving careers

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2023 21:21


Betony Jones is a nationally recognized expert in labor-climate issues, with a focus on the intersection between climate jobs, clean energy, and unions. As the director of the Office of Energy Jobs, she oversees workforce development strategies and engages with organized labor and other stakeholders to ensure that the Department of Energy's (DOE) policies and program implementation result in high-quality jobs and economic equity. Previously, Jones was a senior advisor on workforce for the DOE's Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy. She began her career working on climate science in the White House Office of Science and Technology policy in the Clinton Administration. From there, she spent 20 years researching the economic opportunities associated with climate action, including as associate director of the Green Economy program at the University of California Labor Center and as founder and CEO of Inclusive Economics, a national strategy firm working at the intersection of labor, workforce, and clean energy.Resources from this episode - how to learn more and where to apply: Through the Registered Apprenticeship Program, get paid to earn nationally recognized credentials and receive hands-on training and mentorship in industries like manufacturing, construction, energy, and transportation. Find information about opportunities and grants that fund clean energy and infrastructure projects—and the jobs that go with them— through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law launchpad.Read these GreenBiz articles on how to compete for the Department of Energy's $97 billion in funding and three grants specific to renewable energy.The American Climate Corps is set to get 20,000 citizens into climate jobs. One of their first available programs is Forest Corps. Apply here. Want to work with Betony Jones? Here's a fellowship at her department, the Office of Energy Jobs. How the Department of Energy supports retooling automotive factories for electric vehicle manufacturing. Clean energy fellowships, internships and other opportunities:Check out Sustainable Career Pathways' list of 18 sustainability fellowships for students and working professionals.Read everything you need to know about an EDF Climate Corps Fellowship and tips on the application process. If you're an undergraduate college student, consider the United Nations Academic Impact Millennium Fellowship, where you can make your campus more sustainable. For recent graduates, there's the International Council on Clean Transportation Fellowship, which supports research on transportation policy around the globe; and the Women of Renewable Industries and Sustainable Energy has fellowships in both wind and solar energy. If you are working full or part time, there's programs for you too! Check out fellowships with the Clean Energy Leadership Institute, Environmental Entrepreneurs (E2), and Climatebase. Must-reads on the impact of the legislation on climate jobs:Betony Jones' article Good Jobs with Good Pay and Benefits are Key to Building the Clean Energy Future.How the Inflation Reduction Act is impacting green job creation, according to the World Economic Forum. The fact sheet on how the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (BIL) will create, on average, 1.5 million jobs per year for ten years. Confused by the acronyms? Here's the differences between the Inflation Reduction Act and Bipartisan Infrastructure LawLearn how the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and Inflation Reduction Act are making historic levels of funding available for fossil fuel communities in transition to clean energy.  Related episodes:How to solve the EV problem and a jobs problem at the same timeThis climate champion will upend the way you think about city government jobsThe EDF Climate Corps alumna greening the golden arches How a psychology major is on the frontlines of decarbonizing a global industry***

Degrees: Real talk about planet-saving careers
How to green your faith communities with Rev Dr. Ambrose F. Carroll

Degrees: Real talk about planet-saving careers

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2023 26:16


Rev. Dr. Ambrose F. Carroll, Sr., is the founder and CEO of Green The Church, a catalyst for environmentalism and sustainability built for and by the Black Church. Pastor Carroll serves on the National Environmental Justice Action Committee for the United States Environmental Protection Agency. He's also been a fellow with the Atlantic Fellows for Racial Equity. He earned his B.A. in psychology from Florida Memorial University in Miami, FL, a Master of Divinity from Morehouse School of Religion in Atlanta, GA, a Master of Business Administration from Golden Gate University in San Francisco, CA, and a Doctor of Divinity from United Theological Seminary in Dayton, Ohio. Resources from this episode:Learn more about Green the Church.Read Rev. Dr. Ambrose F. Carroll's bio.Watch Pastor Carroll give a sermon about climate change.The Van Jones book that inspired Carroll so much, “The Green Collar Economy.”Learn more about the Catholic Climate Covenant and Dan Misleh.Read the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops 2001 plea for dialogue and action on climate change.Learn more about Colorado Jewish Climate Action and Moshe Kornfeld.Learn more about Green Ramadan and Kori Majeed.Read Prof. Atul K. Shah's bio.From Inside Climate News: “Religious Leaders May Be Key to Breaking Climate Action Gridlock, Poll Suggests”From The Tennessean: “Uneven Ground: Exceptional Black farmer and their fight to flourish in the South”Related episodes:Hollywood screenwriter and producer Scott Z. Burns on making climate change central to storytellingFrom mud cakes to high stakes with Youth Climate Collaborative's Pooja TilvawalaEco-anxiety is fueling a new green career: climate psychologyWhy environmental justice is crucial for today's climate careers***

Degrees: Real talk about planet-saving careers
The climate fight at the heart of the PR industry

Degrees: Real talk about planet-saving careers

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2023 20:48


Solitaire is a renowned sustainability expert who works with some of the world's most influential organizations. She is co-founder and Chief Solutionist at Futerra and trustee of the Solutions Union. In 2023 she was named ‘Agency Lead of the Year' at Adweek's Sustainability Awards. Her popular TED Talk, Forbes column and most recent book – The Solutionists: How Businesses Can Fix the Future – are available online.Resources from this episode:Learn about Futerra's projects, including climate campaigns, sustainability training for businesses, and products incubator. Watch Solitaire's 2021 TED Talk:  Are ad agencies, PR firms and lobbyists destroying the climate?Check out Futerra's web series, Solutions House. The series includes debates, presentations, and workshops — all with the motto of “Answers Only.”Read Solitaire's latest book, The Solutionists: How Businesses Can Fix the Future, and her previous book, The Happy Hero: How to Change Your Life by Changing the World.Follow Solitaire's column in Forbes. PR & Climate must reads:How PR companies hurt the climateFormer PR executive Christine Arena's 2023 congressional testimony ”Clean creatives” campaign pushing PR firms to fire their fossil fuel clientsFossil fuel companies are paying influencersThe House Natural Resource Committee's hearing about the role of public relations firms in preventing climate actionRelated episodes:Hollywood screenwriter and producer Scott Z. Burns on making climate change central to storytellingLake Street Dive on music, activism, and braveryHow to green any job with Project Drawdown's Jamie Beck Alexander***

Degrees: Real talk about planet-saving careers
Hotline Episode! Sustainability careers expert Shannon Houde answers your career questions

Degrees: Real talk about planet-saving careers

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2023 30:57


Shannon Houde is the multi-lingual International Coaching Federation (ICF)-certified coach and talent strategist behind Walk of Life Coaching, where she has mentored and trained 1000+ change leaders to maximize their personal brands to advance their impact careers. After working as a financial analyst, eco-tour guide, recruiter, and then ESG consultant for clients like Adobe, BlackRock, and World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), Shannon has learned all the ins and outs of the green job search. She's also the author of a step-by-step book called Good Work: How to Build a Career that Makes a Difference in the World.Resources from this episode:Book a trial coaching session with Shannon Houde of Walk of Life CoachingFollow Shannon's step-by-step guide, Good Work: How to Build a Career that Makes a Difference in the WorldVisit Walk of Life's “hot jobs” board listing openings in the impact careersRead Shannon's six tips to making your LinkedIn Profile stand outRelated episodes:Diversity, equity and inclusion in the climate job hunt with Kristy DrutmanYes, you can turn your climate anxiety into meaningful actionLand a Green Job 101 - Five key questions to turbocharge your job hunt***

Miseducation
Instagram, Cyberbullying and Free Speech at a Queens School

Miseducation

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2023 16:29


The threat came in an e-mailed letter from the principal to the entire student body: Stop following the anonymous Instagram accounts, or face suspension.When Principal David Marmor of Francis Lewis High School in Queens discovered two accounts — one which posted fight videos and the other which included vulgar content that in some cases targeted specific students — he didn't hesitate to act. In addition to threatening suspension, he promised to cancel all “celebratory events” like pep rallies and prom until the accounts were deleted or lost all their followers — a dramatic step that raised questions about the line between students' free speech online and punishable behavior. First reported by Chalkbeat New York, the case immediately caught our attention. Social media's impact on our lives as teens can't be overstated. Anonymous Instagram pages that share confessions, photos, and videos about school communities have become increasingly common. Sometimes the content is harmless. Other times, it feeds into vicious bullying. We called up Chalkbeat's Alex Zimmerman to break down what happened at Francis Lewis and discuss the broader implications of Marmor's actions. Should schools be allowed to regulate students' social media use? If so, did this principal go too far?Learn more about our work at https://bellvoices.org.—This episode was hosted by Shoaa Khan and Jose Santana. It was produced by Sabrina DuQuesnay, Mia Lobel, Mira Gordon, and Taylor McGraw, and made in collaboration with Amy Zimmer and Alex Zimmerman from Chalkbeat New York.Music from Blue Dot sessions.This episode was made possible in part by the Summerfield Foundation, the Pinkerton Foundation, FJC, and Hindenburg Systems.

Degrees: Real talk about planet-saving careers
Hollywood screenwriter and producer Scott Z. Burns on making climate change central to storytelling

Degrees: Real talk about planet-saving careers

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2023 18:43


Scott Z. Burns is a screenwriter, director, producer and playwright. His film writing credits include “The Bourne Ultimatum,” “The Informant!," "Contagion,” “Side Effects,” and “The Laundromat.” As a director, his work includes “Pu-239” and “The Report.” He also was a producer for the Academy Award-winning documentary “An Inconvenient Truth” and served as an executive producer of the film's sequel as well as “Sea of Shadows.” Most recently, he's the writer, director, executive producer and creator of the Apple TV+ series “Extrapolations,” which features eight interconnected stories exploring how climate change will affect all aspects of our lives.Resources from this episode:Read the media impact report from USC Norman Lear Center.Learn about Good Energies Stories, a nonprofit consulting firm focused on climate storytelling.Listen to Scott Z. Burns' interview on the Climate One podcast.Check out EDF's Green Jobs Hub.Related episodes:Transfer your skills to a green job with Work on Climate's Eugene KirpichovHow to green any job with Project Drawdown's Jamie Beck AlexanderThe future of climate-smart ag and the hot politics of your dinner plateLake Street Dive on music, activism, and bravery***

Degrees: Real talk about planet-saving careers
From mud cakes to high stakes with Youth Climate Collaborative's Pooja Tilvawala

Degrees: Real talk about planet-saving careers

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2023 20:14


Pooja Tilvawala is an Indian-American climate justice advocate, opportunity curator, and youth engagement expert with five years of experience in the global climate movement. Since 2020, she has served as the founder and executive director of Youth Climate Collaborative (YCC), which is creating a more just, inclusive, and intergenerational climate movement that sustains youth and their initiatives for meaningful climate action. She is a current recipient of the Walking Softer Award for young climate leaders, and an Advisor to Rivet, which intends to create the world's largest micro-grant fund for youth-led action.Resources from this episode:Learn about the work of Youth Climate Collaborative. Listen to another interview with Pooja about how to make climate justice work accessible.Network with Pooja by following her on LinkedIn.Check out this climate comedy recommendation: Climate Town with Rollie WilliamsRelated episodes:How to network for a green job with purpose-driven LinkedIn expert Nick@NoonLearn how to build your climate experience with Terra.do founder Anshuman Bapna***

Degrees: Real talk about planet-saving careers
Eco-anxiety is fueling a new green career: climate psychology

Degrees: Real talk about planet-saving careers

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2023 24:39


Rebecca Weston, LCSW and JD is a metro-New York psychotherapist and co-president of the Climate Psychology Alliance of North America. She supports climate-aware mental health practitioners and professionals on the front lines of climate work. She's also written multiple pieces and spoken on the mental health impacts of the climate crisis, and how other systems of inequity affect climate mental issues. Resources from this episode:What is climate psychology?Visit Rebecca Weston's website.Learn more about the work of Climate Psychology Alliance of North AmericaFind more information on Climate Cafes.Watch Renee Lertzman's TED Talk.Read more of Renee Lertzman's work. For those dealing with burnout, Weston recommends reading the work of Rebecca Solnit. Read the Newsweek piece that Weston co-authored on “climate silence.” Check out EDF's Green Jobs Hub.Related episodes:Yes, you can turn your climate anxiety into meaningful actionHow to green any job with Project Drawdown's Jamie Beck AlexanderHow a psychology major is on the frontlines of decarbonizing a global industry***

Degrees: Real talk about planet-saving careers
Creating zero waste in an unexpected place: the hair care industry

Degrees: Real talk about planet-saving careers

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2023 23:01


Ciara Imani May is the founder of Rebundle, the first U.S.-made, plant-based hair extensions brand on a mission to provide more comfort and less waste through eco-friendly and non-toxic hair extensions. The idea for Rebundle sparked in 2019 when Ciara suffered from one too many itchy scalps from wearing braids made from plastic synthetic hair. In researching alternatives, Ciara came to understand that banana fibers could provide a sustainable option. That breakthrough led to Rebundle's first product, braidbetter.Resources from this episode:Check out the Rebundle website to learn more about the ReGen Hair Fiber™ that May's company created.Follow Rebundle on social media: Instagram, TikTok and X (formerly Twitter)Learn about Rebundle's recycling partner Terracycle, a company helping Rebundle customer's recycle their old plastic-based hair extensions.Read this article for more about Ciara's venture capital funding journey.Learn about the USDA's BioPreferred program. Rebundle's braidBetter is the first hair extensions product to receive the certification.If you liked this episode, you'll love these:The woman greening the golden archesBuilding a Black community for green jobseekers***

Degrees: Real talk about planet-saving careers
How a punk-rocking paralegal harnessed employee power to green Microsoft

Degrees: Real talk about planet-saving careers

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2023 29:18


Drew Wilkinson is a climate activist and co-founder of Microsoft's 10,000-member employee sustainability community, which has pushed the company to protect natural resources and operate with more sustainable practices. Now, as founder of Climate Leadership Collective, he helps organizations on the people side of sustainability: employee engagement, culture and change management, community building, green skilling, and leadership development. His mission is to make sustainability part of everybody's job.Resources from this episode:Check out recent reports on sustainability job growth:The Deloitte Global 2023 Gen Z and Millennial SurveyClosing the Sustainability Skills Gap (microsoft.com)The Future of Jobs Report 2023 | World Economic Forum (weforum.org)Check out Drew's website to learn more about his consulting work with Climate Leadership Collective. Learn about his punk rock, sea pirate, and DIY background.Read Drew's blog on how to Make Sustainability Part of Everybody's Job. Learn more about Microsoft's Sustainability Connected Community:Read Drew's article on How to Build Your Own Employee Sustainability Community.Listen to Powered by the People, a Microsoft podcast that tells the community's origin story.Watch Climate at Work's panel about building grassroots sustainability movements within companies, featuring Sustainability Connected at Microsoft and Anthroprocene at Google. Check out how Drew used the Microsoft Hackathon to help clean up the ocean. Listen to the music of Drew's hardcore punk band, Run with the Hunted, and the song you heard in this episode, Destroy All Calendars.If you liked this episode, you'll love these related Degrees episodes:How to green any job with Project Drawdown's Jamie Beck AlexanderHow Heather McTeer Toney is redefining climate action for the next generation of leadersThe fastest electric vehicle fleet makeover in the west***

Solvable
Paul Rosolie, Protecting the Amazon Rainforest

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2022 27:11


Paul Rosolie is an Amazon Rainforest conservationist, author, and filmmaker. He is the co-founder of Tamandua Expeditions and Junglekeepers. Here are links to those organizations he mentions in this episode: Www.Junglekeepers.org  Www.Tamanduajungle.com  Www.PaulRosolie.com Save the Sunlight, Brooklyn Botanical Gardens Solvable is produced by Jocelyn Frank, research by David Zha, booking by Lisa Dunn, editorial support for Keishel Williams. The Managing Producer is Sachar Mathias and the Executive Producer is Mia Lobel. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

Solvable
Sterlin Harjo, Reservation Dogs

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2022 26:57


Sterlin Harjo strives to tell the stories of Native and Indigenous people by positioning beauty and triumphs alongside honest frailty and shortcomings. Harjo is an award-winning film maker and he's the creator and show runner of the TV show Reservations Dogs.  Here are some links to organizations and works he recommends in this episode: https://illuminatives.org/ Reservation Dogs Four Sheets to the Wind Barking Water Mekko This May Be the Last Time  Love and Fury Solvable is produced by Jocelyn Frank, research by David Zha, booking by Lisa Dunn, editorial support for Keishel Williams. The Managing Producer is Sachar Mathias and the Executive Producer is Mia Lobel. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

Solvable
Misogyny in Game Design is Solvable

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2022 27:44


Laila Shabir is the co-founder and CEO of Girls Make Games. Here are some links to learn more about her game design studio, summer camp and quest to welcome more girls and women into the world of game design. Girls Make Games https://www.girlsmakegames.com/ What They Don't Sea (2019) - Explore the underwater seas to collect special algae for an alternative energy project Shredded Secrets (2022) - A game about bullying, that follows the bullied kid and the struggling bully as well. Nintendo Switch Find Me (2021) - A beautiful and surreal 2D puzzle platformer about a lost shadow seeking to be reunited with her human girl, while searching for memories and avoiding the dangerous city lights. Steam, Playstation Blubblub (2016) - Jennifer is out on a hunt to extract cuteness from anything and everything in sight to create the world's finest line of make up. It just so happens, BlubBlub is the cutest blub there ever was... Rescue your friends and thwart Jennifer's scheme for building a cosmetics empire. Down with the syringes! Steam, X-box Interfectorem (2015) - A young sheriff-in-training who lives alone with her sister Sali in a small town next to the woods decides to go on a hike one day, but comes home to find her younger sister brutally murdered! Steam, Playstation The Hole Story (2014) - When an unsuspecting young girl finds herself transported to a mystical world, she must rely on her trusty shovel and quick wits to find her way home. Steam Solvable is produced by Jocelyn Frank, research by David Zha, booking by Lisa Dunn, and editing support from Keishel Williams. The Managing Producer is Sachar Mathias and Executive Producer is Mia Lobel. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

Solvable
Reality TV is Solvable

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2022 19:58


Lizzy Pace and Chad Kultgen are the hosts of the podcast, Game of Roses and they have ideas about how to solve The Bachelor and reality TV more generally. Solvable is produced by Jocelyn Frank, research by David Zha, booking by Lisa Dunn, editing help from Keishel Williams. The managing producer is Sachar Mathias and the executive producer is Mia Lobel.  Here are additional resources suggested by Lizzy and Chad, where you can learn more:   How To Win The Bachelor by Lizzy Pace and Chad Kultgen https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/How-to-Win-The-Bachelor/Chad-Kultgen/9781982172947 Bachelor Nation by Amy Kaufman https://www.indiebound.org/book/9781101985915 TV Show: Unreal https://www.hulu.com/series/unreal-dcd85133-0465-410f-8792-aeb94ebd5755 Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

tv game bachelor roses reality tv solvable chad kultgen jocelyn frank mia lobel sachar mathias
Solvable
Solutions for 2022

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2021 38:50


The staff of Solvable discuss the problems, big and small, that they'd like to see solved in 2022 and beyond. Special thanks to Maggie Taylor and Pushkin podcast hosts Sam Fragoso (Talk Easy with Sam Fragoso), Tim Harford (Cautionary Tales), Michael Lewis (Against the Rules), Laurie Santos (The Happiness Lab) and Justin Richmond (Broken Record). Solvable is produced by Jocelyn Frank, research by David Zha, booking by Lisa Dunn, Editing support from Keishel Williams. The managing producer is Sachar Mathias and executive producer is Mia Lobel. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

editing pushkin solvable sam fragoso jocelyn frank mia lobel sachar mathias
Solvable
Kidney Failure is Solvable

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2021 22:38


Dr. Carmen Peralta is the Chief Medical Officer at Cricket Health. She co-founded the Kidney Health Research Collaborative at University of California San Francisco and the San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center. She works to provide support to patients, doctors and all the steps in between to improve kidney health outcomes.  Dr. Peralta recommends these sites to learn more: CDC Chronic Kidney Disease Initiative https://www.cdc.gov/kidneydisease/index.html UCSF Kidney Health Research Collaborative https://khrc.ucsf.edu/ Solvable is produced by Jocelyn Frank, David Zha, Lisa Dunn and Keishel Wiliams. The managing producer is Sachar Mathias and our executive producer is Mia Lobel. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

Solvable
Mary Aiken: Cybercrime is Solvable

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2021 33:31


Mary Aiken is a Cyberpsychologist and Chair of the Department of Cyberpsychology Capitol Technology University in Laurel Maryland. She is a member of the Interpol Global Cybercrime Expert Group. Want to learn more? Here are links to additional resources Dr. Aiken recommends: The Cyber Blue Line (Aiken & Amann ) https://www.europol.europa.eu/europol-spotlight/europol-spotlight-cyber-blue-line  The Cyber Effect - how human behavior changes online (Aiken, 2016)  https://www.amazon.co.uk/Cyber-Effect-Pioneering-Cyberpsychologist-Explains/dp/0812997859  Manipulating Fast and Slow (Aiken, 2018 )  https://www.wilsoncenter.org/article/manipulating-fast-and-slow#:~:text=As%20a%20discipline%2C%20cyberpsychology%20focuses,emerging%20technologies%20on%20human%20behavior.&text=this%20article%2C%20Dr.-,Mary%20Aiken%20talks%20about%20how%20the%20discipline%20helps%20us%20better,the%20context%20of%20recent%20elections. 15 minutes of Shame, Documentary HBO Max https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dhJrnNdH-aw Master of Research (M.Res.) in Cyberpsychology https://www.captechu.edu/degrees-and-programs/masters-degrees/cyberpsychology-mres Doctorate in Cyberpsychology https://www.captechu.edu/degrees-and-programs/doctoral-degrees/cyberpsychology-phd Solvable is produced by Jocelyn Frank, research by David Zha, booking by Lisa Dunn. Sachar Mathias is the managing producer and Mia Lobel the executive producer. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

shame cybercrime res aiken amann solvable mary aiken jocelyn frank mia lobel sachar mathias
Solvable
Wayne Modest: Museum Repatriation

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2021 34:01


Wayne Modest is the Director of Content for the National Museum of Worldcultures and the Wereldmuseum, Rotterdam and head of the Research Center of Material Culture. He is also professor of Material Culture and Critical Heritage Studies at the Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam. Modest was previously, head of the curatorial department at the Tropenmuseum, Amsterdam; Keeper of Anthropology at the Horniman Museum in London, and Director of the Museums of History and Ethnography in Kingston, Jamaica. Additional resources that Dr. Modest recommends: Decolonize This Place https://decolonizethisplace.org/faxxx-1 Rhodes Must Fall https://harvardpolitics.com/rhodes-must-fall/ Report on the Restitution of African Cultural Heritage by Felwine Sarr and Bénédicte Savoy http://restitutionreport2018.com/sarr_savoy_en.pdf Potential History, Unlearning Imperialism by Ariella Aïsha Azoulay https://www.versobooks.com/books/3079-potential-history History, Fable and Myth in the Caribbean and Guianas by Wilson Harris and Selwyn Reginald Cudjoe  https://www.amazon.com/History-Fable-Myth-Caribbean-Guianas/dp/0911565205 Whiteness as Property by Cheryl Harris https://harvardlawreview.org/1993/06/whiteness-as-property/ Colonial Lives of Property: Law, Land, and Racial Regimes of Ownership (Global and Insurgent Legalities) By Brenna Bhandar https://www.indiebound.org/buy-local/9780822371465     Omens of Adversity: Tragedy, Time, Memory, Justice  By David Scott https://www.indiebound.org/search/book?keys=omens+of+adversity Dividing the Spoils: Perspectives on Military Collections and the British Empire by Henrietta Lidchi, Stuart Allan, Alan Lester    https://www.indiebound.org/search/book?keys=Henrietta+Lidchi+dividing+the+spoils+ Exceptional Violence: Embodied Citizenship in Transnational Jamaica by Deborah Thomas, https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0822350688/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_hsch_vapi_thcv_p1_i1 Spotify playlist featuring Peter Tosh, Equal Rights  Bob Marley, Babylon System Vybz Kartel: Reparations Burning Spear, Days of Slavery And more!  https://open.spotify.com/playlist/4wJXGFz7oHaXykSsESDVXM?si=251fe856f567481d Solvable is produced by Jocelyn Frank, research by David Zha, booking by Lisa Dunn. The Managing Producer is Sachar Mathias and the Executive Producer is Mia Lobel. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

Solvable
Jade Begay: Indigenous People Were The First Climate Scientists

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2021 22:52


Jade Begay is the NDN collective's Climate Justice Campaign Director. She is Diné and Tesuque Pueblo, has a Master of Arts degree in Environmental Leadership and is part of President Biden's White House Environmental Justice Advisory Council.   Here are some resources that Jade Begay mentions in this episode: NDN Collective https://ndncollective.org/ Chasing Ice, Documentary https://chasingice.com/ Sal Y Cielo, Documentary https://www.taylorfreesolorees.com/project/sal-y-cielo The New Zealand river that became a legal person, BBC March 2020 https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20200319-the-new-zealand-river-that-became-a-legal-person Will Northwest Seaweed Farming Finally Take Off? https://www.nativeconservancy.org/2020/12/16/will-northwest-seaweed-farming-finally-take-off/ Solvable is produced by Jocelyn Frank, research by David Zha, booking by Lisa Dunn, our managing producer is Sachar Mathias and our Executive Producer is Mia Lobel.  Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

Solvable
The Ozone Hole Was Solvable, And So Is Climate Change

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2021 31:10


Dr. Susan Solomon's research in the 1980's confirmed that the presence of chlorofluorocarbons was largely responsible for the hole in the ozone and that led consumers, chemical companies and manufacturers to a path for fixing it. For her work, Solomon was awarded the National Medal of Science, the prestigious Blue Planet Prize, shared a Nobel Peace Prize in 2007 with Al Gore and was inducted into the Women's Hall of Fame in 2009. Solomon Glacier in Antarctica was named for her. Solvable is produced by Jocelyn Frank, research by David Zha, booking by Lisa Dunn. Our managing producer is Sachar Mathias is the managing producer and Mia Lobel is the executive producer. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

Solvable
Malcolm Gladwell on Near Misses

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2021 31:57


Ronald Young Jr. talks with Malcolm Gladwell (author of David and Goliath and the co-founder of Pushkin Industries) about what we can learn about surviving our current challenges by studying human behavior during past eras of stress and national threat. Solvable is produced by Jocelyn Frank, research by David Zha, booking by Lisa Dunn. Our managing producer is Sachar Mathias is the managing producer and Mia Lobel is the executive producer. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

Solvable
Native Erasure and Invisibility is Solvable

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2021 39:16


Dr. Adrienne Keene is a citizen of the Cherokee Nation. She's an Assistant Professor of American Studies and Ethnic Studies at Brown University, co-hosts a podcast called “All My Relations” and she's the author of the new book: Notable Native People. Here are links to some resources that Dr. Keene mentions in this episode: Notable Native People: 50 Indigenous Leaders, Dreamers, and Changemakers from Past and Present by Adrienne Keene. Illustrations by Ciara Sana Sarah Winnemucca Devoted Her Life to Protecting Native Americans in the Face of an Expanding United States, Smithsonian Magazine, 2016 Landback.org NDN Collective Why Native Hawaiians are fighting to protect Mauna Kea from a telescope Vox.com, 2019 Indigenous Opposition to Line Three Reuters, 2021 Solvable is produced by Jocelyn Frank, research by David Zha, booking by Lisa Dunn. The show's managing producer is Sachar Mathias and the executive producer is Mia Lobel. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

Solvable
Government Policy is Solvable (with behavioral science)

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2021 19:23


Dr. Maya Shankar is the founder of the White House's Behavioral Science Team. She served as a senior advisor during the Obama administration and in 2016, Shankar was the first behavioral science advisor to the United Nations. She is the host of the podcast, A Slight Change of Plans. Here are some resources that Dr. Shankar mentions in this episode:  Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness, by Richard H. Thaler and Cass R. Sunstein “A Slight Change of Plans” with Adam Grant “A Slight Change of Plans” with Dr. Katy Milkman Solvable is produced by Jocelyn Frank, research by David Zha, booking by Lisa Dunn, The managing producer is Sachar Mathias and the executive producer is Mia Lobel. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

Solvable
Psychedelics May Help Solve Addiction

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2021 24:21


Matthew Johnson is a Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Johns Hopkins University where research is underway to explore the therapeutic potential of psychedelic drugs to break through the crushing impact of addiction and other mental health disorders. Here are some of the resources Johnson mentions in this episode: Johns Hopkins University's Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research https://hopkinspsychedelic.org/ National Institutes of Health Clinical Trials  https://clinicaltrials.gov/ Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS)  https://maps.org/ Solvable is produced by Jocelyn Frank, research by David Zha, booking by Lisa Dunn, managing producer is Sachar Mathias and the executive producer is Mia Lobel. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

Solvable
Consumerism and Celebrity Culture in Faith Organizations are Solvable Problems

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2021 24:38


Ben Kirby is the founder of PreachersNSneakers, an Instagram account and book, that both ask, “how much is too much” to spend when it comes to presenting a compelling image of the church and it's leaders? Kirby's got some answers and some solutions. Solvable is produced by David Zha, Jocelyn Frank, Sachar Mathias and Mia Lobel. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

Solvable
Addiction to Fossil Fuels is Solvable

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2021 32:23


Host Ronald Young Jr. speaks with Bill McKibben about how to break our destructive climate habits and about why we need a course correction urgently. Bill McKibben is an author, educator, environmentalist and the founder of 350.org. Check out the links below for his suggestions about how to quickly and efficiently build a movement to slow down climate change before its too late. 350.org Sunrise Movement The Green New Deal Fridays for the Future Extinction Rebellion Stanford engineers develop state-by-state plan to convert U.S. to 100% clean, renewable energy by 2050 Stanford News, 2015 Biden’s “all of government” plan for climate, explained, Vox Jan 2021 Strengthening the Financial System to Meet the Challenge of Climate Change, by Governor Lael Brainard, Board of Governors of the United States Federal Reserve System, December 2020 Solvable is produced by Jocelyn Frank, David Zha, Lisa Dunn, Sachar Mathias and Mia Lobel. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

Solvable
Solvable: The Depression and Anxiety We Can All Expect During This Pandemic

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2020 24:23


Astronaut Scott Kelly is no stranger to the impacts of social isolation after spending 520 days in space. He talks with Jacob Weisberg about how to confront the depression and anxiety that we can all expect during this pandemic. Here are some additional resources that Scott Kelly recommends: https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org/ https://connect2affect.org/ Endurance by Alfred Lansing Endurance: A Year in Space, a Lifetime of Discovery, by Scott Kelly How Volunteering Can Help your Mental Health, Greater Good The Happiness Lab (podcast) Knowable, Go For Launch, course with Scott Kelly Solvable is produced by Camille Baptista. Senior producer: Jocelyn Frank. Managing producer: Catherine Girardeau. Executive producer: Mia Lobel. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Solvable
Political Demonization is Solvable (again)

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2020 24:31


Flavia Kleiner is the co-founder of Operation Libero. The organization works to combat populism in Switzerland. Operation Libero has launched and won a variety of proactive campaigns to promote a more diverse and inclusive Switzerland. (This conversation was originally published in 2019) Here are a few additional resources related to this episode: Change the narrative: how a Swiss group is beating rightwing populists, The Guardian April 2019 Swiss voters appear to reject limiting jobs for EU citizens, Associated Press, Sept 2020 Solvable is produced by Camille Baptista, Jocelyn Frank, Catherine Girardeau and Mia Lobel. Special thanks to Heather Fain, Eric Sandler, Kobe Guilford, Carly Migliori and Khadijah Holland. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Solvable
Solvable: Stereotypical Refugee Narratives

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2020 19:53


Ahmed Badr is an Iraqi-American writer, social entrepreneur, former refugee and the founder of Narratio. Narratio is a creative platform and set of initiatives that carve out spaces for displaced young people to transcend the tragedies that may have initially caused their displacement. Here are a few additional resources related to this episode: Narratio.org While the Earth Sleeps We Travel: Stories, Poetry, and Art from Young Refugees Around the World  Solvable is produced by Camille Baptista, Jocelyn Frank, Catherine Girardeau and Mia Lobel. Special thanks to Heather Fain, Eric Sandler, Carly Migliori and Khadijah Holland. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Solvable
The Slow Regrowth of Vulnerable Coral Reefs is Solvable

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2020 17:13


Saving coral reefs will take a lot of teamwork and collaboration across scientists, industries and individuals. One important tool is micro-fragmentation and re-skinning. Sarah Hamlyn is a scientist at the Mote Marine Labs’ Elizabeth Moore International Center for Coral Reefs Research and Restoration. She helps maintain 21 species of stony and branching coral and works to regrow damaged coral reefs off the Florida coast 40 to 50 times faster than they can regrow in the wild. Here are a few additional resources related to this episode: FishWatch.gov Slow Release Fertilizers  Mote’s Elizabeth Moore International Center for Coral Reef Research and Restoration Solvable is produced by Camille Baptista, Jocelyn Frank, Catherine Girardeau and Mia Lobel. Special thanks to Heather Fain, Eric Sandler, Carly Migliori and Khadijah Holland. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Solvable
Wildfire Ignition is Solvable

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2020 16:21


Eric Appel is a Professor of Materials Science & Engineering at Stanford University. His lab has designed an improved delivery system for fire retardant to keep fires from starting across hotspots and known ignition areas. Here are a few additional resources related to this episode: Wildfire prevention through prophylactic treatment of high-risk landscapes using viscoelastic retardant fluids, PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America) Stanford researchers have developed a gel-like fluid to prevent wildfires, Stanford News Phos-Chek fire retardant Developing Community Wildfire Protection Plans, US Forest Service Mitigate Wildfire Risk, US Forest Service Solvable is produced by Camille Baptista, Jocelyn Frank, Catherine Girardeau and Mia Lobel. Special thanks to Heather Fain, Eric Sandler, Carly Migliori and Khadijah Holland. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Solvable
COVID-19 Transmission is Solvable

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2020 20:53


Michael Mina is an epidemiologist and immunologist at the Harvard School of Public Health and a physician at Brigham and Women's Hospital.  Here are a few of the resources related to this episode: Additional articles on rapid tests Trump to Announce $750 million deal with Abbott, CNBC August 27, 2020 @michaelmina_lab Sample letter about rapid tests to send to your representatives www.RapidTests.org Solvable is produced by Camille Baptista, Jocelyn Frank, Catherine Girardeau and Mia Lobel. Special thanks to Heather Fain, Eric Sandler, Carly Migliori and Khadijah Holland. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Solvable
Cancel Culture is Solvable

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2020 18:02


John McWhorter is a linguistics professor at Columbia University, contributing writer at The Atlantic and hosts the podcast Lexicon Valley. He believes that “cancel culture” is solvable. Here are a few of the resources related to this episode: After Ann Coulter Backs Out Of Visit, UC Berkeley Braces For Free Speech Rallies The Fine Line Between A Bad Date And Sexual Assault: 2 Views On Aziz Ansari A Letter on Justice and Open Debate Academics Are Really, Really Worried About Their Freedom Critical Race Theory Solvable is produced by Camille Baptista, Jocelyn Frank, Catherine Girardeau and Mia Lobel. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Solvable
The Decline of Local News is Solvable

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2020 22:20


Margaret Sullivan is the media columnist for The Washington Post and formerly the public editor with the New York Times. Her new book is called Ghosting the News: Local Journalism and the Crisis of American Democracy. She believes that the decline of local news is solvable. Here are a few resources related to this episode: Ghosting the News: Local Journalism and the Crisis of American Democracy by Margaret Sullivan Texas Tribune MinnPost Voice of San Diego Buffalo News Chicago Tribune  Chicago Sun Times Saint Francis de Sales Solvable is produced by Camille Baptista, Jocelyn Frank, Catherine Girardeau and Mia Lobel. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Solvable
Election Security is (mostly) Solvable

Solvable

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2020 22:06


Bruce Schneier is an internationally renowned security technologist. He teaches cyber security at the Harvard Kennedy School. Schneier believes that election security risks are solvable. Here are a few resources related to this episode: VerifiedVoting.Org The Brennan Center for Justice National Electorial Defense Coalition National Mail Voter Registration Form (multilingual) Voter Registration and Election Dates (by state) Solvable is produced by Camille Baptista, Jocelyn Frank is the senior producer, Catherine Girardeau is the managing producer and Mia Lobel is the executive producer. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Best Advice Show
Stepping Away with Mia Lobel

The Best Advice Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2020 1:37


Mia Lobel is the Executive Producer at Pushkin Industries. So much of this show is going to originate with your hard-earned advice. To contribute please call me (Zak) at 844-935-BEST. Leave your name and your advice, followed by your email address in case I have any follow-up questions. Regarding your advice. I’m not particularly interested in platitudes and truisms. I’m after specific, odd, uplifting, effective, real tips from you about how you make it through your days.

Line Edit
David Kaiser on writing about quantum entanglement

Line Edit

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2020 116:28


David Kaiser is Germeshausen Professor of the History of Science in MIT's Program in Science, Technology, and Society, Professor of Physics in MIT's Department of Physics, and also Associate Dean for Social and Ethical Responsibilities of Computing (SERC) in MIT's Schwarzman College of Computing. Kaiser's historical research focuses on the development of physics in the United States during the Cold War, looking at how the discipline has evolved at the intersection of politics, culture, and the changing shape of higher education. His physics research focuses on early-universe cosmology, working at the interface of particle physics and gravitation. He has also helped to design and conduct novel experiments to test the foundations of quantum theory.He is presently Chair of the Editorial Board of MIT Press, and also serves on the advisory boards for Nautilus and Undark magazines. Kaiser's work has been featured in such venues as Nature, Science, and Scientific American; the New York Times, the New Yorker, the Huffington Post, and the London Review of Books; and on National Public Radio, BBC Radio, and NOVA television programs. On this episode, he sits down with James Ryerson to discuss his career, the nature of quantum entanglement, and the life and afterlife of a New York Times piece he wrote about the history and science of physics in November 2014.Supported by the John Templeton FoundationHosting and production by James RyersonEditing and executive production by Joseph FridmanTheme composition by Stephen LaRosa of Wonder Boy AudioLogo design by Jacob Feldman and Joseph FridmanSpecial thanks to Lisa Feldman Barrett, Yvonne Malcolm and the Department of Psychology at Northeastern University, the New York Times audio team (specifically, Annie Brown, Brad Fisher, Daniel Powell, and Lisa Tobin), Mia Lobel at Pushkin Industries, and Jennifer Dale and her team at CUNY Newmark School of Journalism.

Line Edit
Matthew Liao on writing about whether we have a moral duty to leave Facebook

Line Edit

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2020 97:06


S. Matthew Liao is Director of Center for Bioethics at New York University, where he is Arthur Zitrin Professor of Bioethics. He has also given a TED talk in New York and been featured in the New York Times, The Atlantic, The Guardian, and other numerous media outlets. The author and editor of four books, Dr. Liao provides the academic community with a collection of human rights essays. In this episode of Line Edit, he speaks with New York Times opinion editor James Ryerson about a piece titled “Do You Have a Moral Duty to Leave Facebook?”, the experience of being commissioned to write a piece in 48 hours, advice for academics appearing on TV, and his work as a moral philosopher in the analytic tradition.Supported by the John Templeton FoundationHosting and production by James RyersonEditing, production, and executive production by Joseph FridmanTheme composition by Stephen LaRosa of Wonder Boy AudioLogo design by Jacob Feldman and Joseph FridmanSpecial thanks to Lisa Feldman Barrett, Yvonne Malcolm and the Department of Psychology at Northeastern University, the New York Times audio team (specifically, Annie Brown, Brad Fisher, Daniel Powell, and Lisa Tobin), Mia Lobel at Pushkin Industries, and Jennifer Dale and her team at CUNY Newmark School of Journalism.

Line Edit
Dave DeSteno on writing about what science can learn from religion

Line Edit

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2020 50:36


David DeSteno is a professor of psychology at Northeastern University, where he directs the Social Emotions Group. David is a fellow of the Association for Psychological Science and the American Psychological Association, for which he served as editor-in-chief of the journal Emotion. His work has been repeatedly funded by the National Science Foundation and has been regularly featured in the media, including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, CBS Sunday Morning, NPR's Radiolab and On Point, and USA Today. In this episode of Line Edit, he speaks with New York Times opinion editor James Ryerson about a piece titled "What Science Can Learn from Religion", the process of interviewing other scholars for his writing, and his advice for scholars looking to balance research with popular writing.Supported by the John Templeton FoundationHosting and production by James RyersonEditing and executive production by Joseph FridmanTheme composition by Stephen LaRosa of Wonder Boy AudioLogo design by Jacob Feldman and Joseph FridmanSpecial thanks to Lisa Feldman Barrett, Yvonne Malcolm and the Department of Psychology at Northeastern University, the New York Times audio team (specifically, Annie Brown, Brad Fisher, Daniel Powell, and Lisa Tobin), Mia Lobel at Pushkin Industries, and Jennifer Dale and her team at CUNY Newmark School of Journalism.

Line Edit
Lisa Feldman Barrett on writing about what emotions are (and aren't)

Line Edit

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2020 66:39


Dr. Lisa Feldman Barrett is a University Distinguished Professor of Psychology at Northeastern University, with appointments at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital. She's published over 200 peer-reviewed journal articles and has contributed almost a dozen op-eds to The New York Times. In this premiere episode of Line Edit, she speaks with New York Times opinion editor James Ryerson about one of the first pieces she wrote for him, What Emotions Are (And Aren't), the process of writing her first book, How Emotions are Made, and the nuances of writing popular science for the public. Supported by the John Templeton FoundationHosting and production by James RyersonEditing and executive production by Joseph FridmanTheme composition by Stephen LaRosa of Wonder Boy AudioLogo design by Jacob Feldman and Joseph FridmanSpecial thanks to Dave DeSteno, Yvonne Malcolm and the Department of Psychology at Northeastern University, the New York Times audio team (specifically, Annie Brown, Brad Fisher, Daniel Powell, and Lisa Tobin), Mia Lobel at Pushkin Industries, and Jennifer Dale and her team at CUNY Newmark School of Journalism.

Re:sound
Re:sound #240 The Aftermath Show

Re:sound

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2017 62:00


This hour two stories about what remains after the fighting stops. Guilty Landscape By Anik See for Earth Beat from Radio Netherlands Worldwide (2012) World War I started nearly one hundred years ago. As far as wars go, it was epic – ten million soldiers died in just four years. Over two million of them alone died on the Western Front near Ypres, and the landscape of Flanders was completely devastated. Not a living tree or blade of grass survived. But are the marks of war still visible? What’s it like there now? To find out, Anik went there with her young son. Saigon, 1965 By Malcolm Gladwell, Mia Lobel, Roxanne Scott and Jacob Smith Revisionist History (2016) In the early 1960s the Pentagon set up a top-secret research project in an old villa in downtown Saigon. The task? To interview captured North Vietnamese soldiers and guerrillas in order to measure the effect of relentless U.S. bombing on their morale. Yet despite a wealth of great data, even the leaders of the study couldn’t agree on what it... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Distillations | Science History Institute

On today's show we look at questionable appearance enhancers. First The Beauty Historian shares some shocking beauty rituals of yore. Then a look at how Brazilian Blowouts are making salon workers sick. SHOW CLOCK 00:00 Opening Credits 00:38 Introduction 01:10 Interview: The Beauty Historian 06:22 Brazilian Blowouts 14:48 Closing Credits CREDITS Special thanks to Stephanie Coleman, Audrey Quinn, Mia Lobel, and Jennifer Dionisio for researching this show. Additional credits available at chemheritage.org/distillations.

beauty stephanie coleman audrey quinn mia lobel
Distillations | Science History Institute
Episode 171: Underground Worlds

Distillations | Science History Institute

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2013 16:36


On today's show we investigate the science beneath our streets. First how a team of amateur speleologists is keeping Howe Caverns safe for future generations. Then a look at Philadelphia's historic sewer system. SHOW CLOCK 00:00 Opening Credits 00:39 Introduction 01:24 Howe Caverns' Annual Cleanup 09:30 Interview: Adam Levine 16:02 Closing Credits CREDITS Special thanks to Amy Kraft,Adam Levine, Mia Lobel, and Jennifer Dionisio for researching this show. Additional credits available at chemheritage.org/distillations.

Distillations | Science History Institute
Episode 163: A Day in the Life - Night

Distillations | Science History Institute

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2012 15:43


We wrap up the three-part series A Day in the Life, spotlighting the common chemistry of morning, noon, and night. Today, how popular insomnia treatments work and the science behind our body's unique sleep cycles. SHOW CLOCK 00:00 Opening Credits 00:35 Fight Club 01:01 Interview: Sleep Aids 05:33 The Midnight Sun 14:31 Closing Credits CREDITS Special thanks to Louisa Jonas, Mia Lobel, Jennifer Dionisio, and Joe Rucker for researching this show. Additional credits available at chemheritage.org/distillations.

Distillations | Science History Institute
Episode 162: A Day in the Life - Noon

Distillations | Science History Institute

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2012 15:39


We continue the three-part series A Day in the Life, spotlighting the common chemistry of morning, noon, and night. Today, a look at the mysterious ingredients in many kitchen staples and the reason why even so-called healthy sweeteners can be toxic. SHOW CLOCK 00:00 Opening Credits 00:36 The Breakfast Club 01:18 Interview: Kitchen Staples 07:41 The Trouble With Fructose 14:27 Closing Credits CREDITS Special thanks to Gretchen Kuda Croen, Mia Lobel, Jennifer Dionisio, and Joe Rucker for researching this show. Additional credits available at chemheritage.org/distillations.

Distillations | Science History Institute
Episode 161: A Day in the Life - Morning

Distillations | Science History Institute

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2012 14:21


Today we begin the three-part series A Day in the Life, spotlighting the common chemistry of morning, noon, and night. First, a look at what's lurking in our bathroom products and what experts say about the controversy over fluoridated water. SHOW CLOCK 00:00 Opening Credits 00:36 Pee-wee's Big Adventure 01:06 Interview: Bathroom Products 04:06 The Fluoridation Debate 13:05 Closing Credits CREDITS Special thanks to Mia Lobel, Joe Rucker, and Jennifer Dionisio for researching this show. Additional credits available at chemheritage.org/distillations.

Distillations | Science History Institute
Episode 144: Mystery of Mass (Spec)

Distillations | Science History Institute

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2012


On today's episode we look at the diverse history of mass spectrometry, starting with a single question: exactly what is it? Then we dip into our oral history collection to show the breadth of mass spec's reach, including the Manhattan Project. SHOW CLOCK 00:00 Opening Credits 00:33 Introduction 01:12 What is Mass Spec? 04:22 Oral History: Alfred Nier 12:18 Closing Credits CREDITS Special thanks to Sarah Hunter-Lascoskie and Mia Lobel for researching this show. Additional credits available at chemheritage.org/distillations.

Distillations | Science History Institute
Episode 139: The Brain on Sports

Distillations | Science History Institute

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2012


On today's episode of Distillations we're gearing up for this weekend's playoff games with a look at the science of sports. First, we learn how athletes go the distance. Then we look into the brain of a fan. SHOW CLOCK 00:00 Opening Credits 00:30 Introduction 01:00 An Athlete's Chemistry 07:31 The Science of Watching Sports 10:57 Closing Credits CREDITS Special thanks to Lindsay Patterson, Mia Lobel, and Ryan Carty for researching this show. Additional credits available at chemheritage.org/distillations.

Distillations | Science History Institute

On today's episode of Distillations we investigate if there's science behind the sweet sounds of a Stradivari violin and learn how chemistry influences the work of sound artist Susan Alexjander. SHOW CLOCK 00:00 Opening Credits 00:33 Introduction 01:18 Strad Secrets? 08:13 Interview with Susan Alexjander 16:41 Closing Credits CREDITS Special thanks to Anne Fredrickson and Mia Lobel for researching this show. Additional credits available at chemheritage.org/distillations.

Distillations | Science History Institute
Episode 133: Halloween Candy

Distillations | Science History Institute

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2011 13:17


Trick or treat! On today's episode of Distillations we give you a taste of both. First, try to choke back our explanation of a Dutch candy that features ammonium chloride and carbon black. Then follow producer Mia Lobel on a tour of the Culinary Institute of America's candy kitchen. SHOW CLOCK 00:00 Opening Credits 00:34 Introduction 01:39 Salt Licorice 05:29 Making Candy Corn at the CIA 12:46 Closing Credits CREDITS Special thanks to Mia Lobel and Ryan Carty for researching this show. Additional credits available at chemheritage.org/distillations.

Distillations | Science History Institute

Today's show explores two very different ways people hope to protect future harvests. First, follow us to the Doomsday Vault, which protects 700,000 seed families. Next, join farmer Miguel Santistevan as he revives his ancestors' agricultural practices. SHOW CLOCK 00:00 Opening Credits 00:32 Introduction 01:18 Doomsday Vault 05:12 Desert Harvest 11:37 Closing Credits CREDITS Special thanks to Sabiha Kahn, Bob kenworthy, and Mia Lobel for researching this show. Additional credits available at chemheritage.org/distillations.

Distillations | Science History Institute
Episode 105: Periodic Table Contents

Distillations | Science History Institute

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2010 14:04


In this week’s episode we pay tribute to the periodic table. We talk to Sam Kean, author of the best-selling book The Disappearing Spoon and hear an excerpt from Primo Levi’s book The Periodic Table. SHOW CLOCK 00:00 Opening Credits 00:31 Introduction 01:21 Interview with Sam Kean 09:28 "Carbon," from The Periodic Table by Primo Levi 12:57 Competition - Elemental Memoir 13:31 Closing Credits CREDITS Special thanks to Michal Meyer and Mia Lobel for researching this show. Additional credits available at chemheritage.org/distillations.

Distillations | Science History Institute
Episode 94: Scientific Visions

Distillations | Science History Institute

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2010 12:17


The future is now. Distillations, therefore, is pausing to compare what people once predicted the modern world would look like to the actual reality on the ground—and in the air. SHOW CLOCK 00:00 Opening Credits 00:32 Introduction 01:16 Chemical Agent: Magic Bullet 03:02 Feature: Fembots 08:37 Space Colonization 11:44 Closing Credits CREDITS Special thanks to Aries Keck, Jennifer Dionisio, Hilary Domush, and Mia Lobel for researching this show. Additional credits available at chemheritage.org/distillations.

Distillations | Science History Institute
Episode 93: Kids’ Science

Distillations | Science History Institute

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2010 13:06


In honor of National Lab Day in May this episode focuses on the scientist in every kid. SHOW CLOCK 00:00 Opening Credits 00:31 Introduction 00:54 Chemical Agent: Bangsite 02:32 Feature: Kids Doing Science 06:51 Boy Rocketeer 12:15 Closing Credits CREDITS Special thanks to Mia Lobel and James Voelkel for researching this show. Additional credits available at chemheritage.org/distillations.

kids science mia lobel
Annual Reviews Conversations
An Interview with Sandra Faber

Annual Reviews Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2009 26:50


Dr. Sandra Faber, Editor of the Annual Review of Astronomy and Astrophysics, talks with Mia Lobel about her scientific career, from being a child who loved to scan the heavens with a pair of her dad's binoculars, to work-life balance as a female scientist and working on the Hubble telescope.

Distillations | Science History Institute
Episode 76: Working Class Chemistry

Distillations | Science History Institute

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2009 11:27


In honor of Labor Day this episode of Distillations looks at how chemistry has affected the work of a variety of professionals—for better or worse. SHOW CLOCK 00:00 Opening Credits 00:31 Introduction 00:59 Chemical Agent: Polybenzimidazole 02:58 History Lesson: Origins of Occupational Health 06:01 Feature: The Chemistry of Welding 10:40 Closing Credits CREDITS Special thanks to Mia Lobel, Andy Mangravite and Jody Roberts for researching this show. Additional credits available at chemheritage.org/distillations.

Distillations | Science History Institute
Episode 18: Beyond the Chip

Distillations | Science History Institute

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2008 11:59


Semiconductors are at the heart of countless electronic devices. Although we often think of Silicon Valley as being built on computer chips, the companies that make the chips often depend upon materials and equipment manufacturers who build the component parts. On today’s show we explore some of the unheralded companies that have made the Digital Revolution possible. SHOW CLOCK 00:00 Opening Credits 00:32 Introduction 01:20 Element of the Week: Silicon 02:46 Conversation with Griff Resor 06:26 Virtual Tour of the Computer History Museum 10:52 Quote: N. Bruce Hannay 11:05 Closing Credits CREDITS Special thanks to Hyungsub Choi and Mia Lobel for researching this show. Additional credits available at chemheritage.org/distillations.