Podcasts about prelinger archive

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Best podcasts about prelinger archive

Latest podcast episodes about prelinger archive

Seriously…
Fed with Chris van Tulleken

Seriously…

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2023 28:24


Dr Chris van Tulleken is on a mission to find out what we're eating, why, and who or what might be influencing our decisions. And he's starting his quest to uncover food truths with the most eaten meat in the world, and one of the most numerous animals on our planet: chicken He's recently been forced to confront a serious gap in his food knowledge - what happens before it gets to our plates - and has decided this, the world's most popular meat, is an ideal starting point. Chris' initial investigations reveal the vast scale of modern chicken consumption; and how a once revered jungle fowl was manipulated to become a modern food success story, a fast-growing heavy-breasted beast to feed the masses. Now, he's torn: is this a triumph of human ingenuity – or the creation of a monster? Produced by Lucy Taylor and Emily Knight. Archive audio: 'Chicken of Tomorrow' (1948) from the Prelinger Archive. 'Fanny Cradock Cooks for Christmas' (1975) from the BBC.

Fed with Chris van Tulleken
1. The Invention Of Chicken

Fed with Chris van Tulleken

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2023 28:42


Dr Chris van Tulleken is on a mission to find out what we're eating, why, and who or what might be influencing our decisions. And he's starting his quest to uncover food truths with the most eaten meat in the world, and one of the most numerous animals on our planet: chicken He's recently been forced to confront a serious gap in his food knowledge - what happens before it gets to our plates - and has decided this, the world's most popular meat, is an ideal starting point. Chris' initial investigations reveal the vast scale of modern chicken consumption; and how a once revered jungle fowl was manipulated to become a modern food success story, a fast-growing heavy-breasted beast to feed the masses. Now, he's torn: is this a triumph of human ingenuity – or the creation of a monster? Produced by Lucy Taylor and Emily Knight. Archive audio: 'Chicken of Tomorrow' (1948) from the Prelinger Archive. 'Fanny Cradock Cooks for Christmas' (1975) from the BBC.

ELP Television
Science and Superstition

ELP Television

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2022 8:15


Coronet Films...wait, where did the title slate go? This instructional film starts a bit abruptly but talks about how to handle the intersection of science and superstition. This is a digitization of a print from the Prelinger Archive. Show notes available in the post at https://coyote.works/2022/Superstition.html.

Cosmic Bos Improv-revisation
Thinking Solutions - Cosmic Bos Improvisation 4 The COVID 1920's, video presentation

Cosmic Bos Improv-revisation

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2021 4:30


Thinking Solutions - Cosmic Bos Taken from the album Cosmic Bos Improvisation 4: The COVID 1920's, available now and forever on the inter web. you can also find it here in the podcast feed in all it's audio glory. Percussion - Joe Philogene Electric Guitar - Nick Jackson Acoustic Guitar and Vocals - Andy Jackson Using footage taken from the Prelinger Archive (an amazing resource of copyright free video material), Andy and Nick put together another video.  Please like, share and subscribe We love you

Cybercrimeology
Red Flags: Supporting Seniors and a Nation victimized by Fraud

Cybercrimeology

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2021 42:58


About our GuestThe Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre collects information on fraud and identity theft.https://www.antifraudcentre-centreantifraude.ca/index-eng.htmThe CAFC involves the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, the Competition Bureau Canada, and the Ontario Provincial Police  and recently come together with the Canadian Centre for Cyber Security  to fight fraud and cybercrime. Report FraudCall the CAFC Toll free: 1-888-495-8501 Monday to Friday, from 9 am to 4:45 pm (Eastern time) and close on holidays.Online with the RCMP Mentioned in this episode:(KYC) Know Your Customer or Know Your ClientOrganizations that deal with large amounts of money are required to follow regulations related to the control of the proceeds of crime and terrorist financing. In Canada this is FINTRAC and you can find out more here.https://www.fintrac-canafe.gc.ca/guidance-directives/client-clientele/1-engYou can find out more about the KYC requirements of other countries here:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Know_your_customer Other:The introduction for this episode was from the film " How to Use the Dial Phone" By AT&T in 1927 and preserve by the Prelinger Archive at archive.org. https://archive.org/details/HowtoUse1927This was our 2 year anniversary. Yay Us.   

It’s Just A Show
100. A Cult Favourite. [MST3K 424. Manos: The Hands of Fate.]

It’s Just A Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2021 140:26


In our very special one-hundredth episode, Manos: The Hands of Fate keeps our heroes talking for a long, long time about notorious movies, controversial jazz, weird zeitgeists, stale comics, and exactly what MST3K does that makes us love it so.Features the short, Hired, part 2!(If this is your first episode of It's Just A Show, welcome! This one is a little different.)Show Notes.Manos: The Hands of Fate: IMDB. MST3K Wiki. Watch it on ShoutFactoryTV!Hired!: IMDB. UnMSTed. [Part 1 was covered in our episode on Bride of the Monster.]Our episode on Squirm.Our TV Tropes page.Halloween II action figures.The Pumaman action figures, as discussed on our episode on The Pumaman.[A binky is, of course, a pacifier.]Jackey Neyman Jones's memoir, Growing Up Manos, is an terrific must-read for any fans of the movie or the episode. (She played Debbie, the little girl, in the movie.)Our look at the Coleman Francis trilogy: Skydivers; The Beast of Yucca Flats; Red Zone Cuba.Proposition Deep 13: Our guide to thirteen episodes from the thirteen seasons of MST3K (so far)!Our episodes on The Wild Wild World of Batwoman and Pod People.The restoration of Manos.Harold P. Warren: Computerized Salesmanship: The New Last Frontier.A review of the stage adaptation of Manos that Chris saw.The video game adaptation of Manos on Steam.Manos: The Hands of Felt.Manos Returns and Manos: The Rise of Torgo.Our episode on Monster A Go-Go.Nathan Rabin at the AV Club.Hired! in the Prelinger Archive.The (SFW) Playboy interview, scanned.Our episodes on Village of the Giants and Master Ninja II.Lysistrata.Calvin and Hobbes (and terrible captions) on Twitter.Nancy on Twitter.The first Garfield comic.Garfield and the pipe.On Cathy. [Includes the pie comic.]Charles Schulz: The Complete Peanuts starts here.Non-binary Krazy Kat and Popeye.We talked more about Archie comics in our episode on Eegah!That Far Side comic.Others have played that car game.Bonus.Support It's Just A Show on Patreon for bonus bits and more. (Thanks!)

Cybercrimeology
VIVA las villains: Exploring Cybercrime against Businesses

Cybercrimeology

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2021 48:28


About our Guest:https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/david.builgil.htmlPapers Mentioned in this Episode. Buil-Gil, D., Lord, N., & Barrett, E. (2021). The Dynamics of Business, Cybersecurity and Cyber-Victimization: Foregrounding the Internal Guardian in Prevention. Victims & Offenders, 16(3), 286-315. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/15564886.2020.1814468Leukfeldt, E. R., & Yar, M. (2016). Applying routine activity theory to cybercrime: A theoretical and empirical analysis. Deviant Behavior , 37(3), 263–280.https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/01639625.2015.1012409Miró Llinares, F., & Johnson, S. D. (2017). Cybercrime and place: Applying environmental criminology to crimes in cyberspace. In G. J. N.Bruinsma & S. D.Johnson (Eds.), The Oxford handbook of environmental criminology (pp. 883–906). Oxford University Press.https://www.oxfordhandbooks.com/view/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190279707.001.0001/oxfordhb-9780190279707-e-39Yar, M. (2005). The novelty of ‘cybercrime': An assessment in light of routine activity theory. European Journal of Criminology , 2(4), 407–427.https://doi.org/10.1177/147737080556056Cyber Security Breaches Survey:https://beta.ukdataservice.ac.uk/datacatalogue/studies/study?id=8638 (2020)https://beta.ukdataservice.ac.uk/datacatalogue/studies/study?id=8480 (2019)https://beta.ukdataservice.ac.uk/datacatalogue/studies/study?id=8406 (2018) Other:The except at the start is from a 1960s film on Safety by general Motors that is part of the Prelinger Archive, a most valuable resource and can be found here:https://archive.org/details/0257_Safest_Township_Anywhere_The_M04696_11_00_44_00The track segment at the end of the episode was made with a little Korg NTS-1.  What a wonderful time to be alive, when such things are obtainable and can make being stuck inside for fear of infection so much more bearable.   

Cybercrimeology
Social Cybersecurity: How to BEND a universe

Cybercrimeology

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2021 26:35


About our Guest:https://www.cmu.edu/epp/people/faculty/kathleen-m-carley.htmlPapers mentioned in this episode:Carley, K. M. (2020). Social cybersecurity: an emerging science. Computational and Mathematical Organization Theory, 26(4), 365-381https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10588-020-09322-9The Advertisement at the end was from the mid 1990s (1995) and was used to advertise the America Online (AOL) web service.  Even in Australia everyone ended up with dozens of AOL CDs that were supposed to help us get online somehow.  The Audio from the start of the episode is from the Prelinger Archive.  A Movie from 1968 explaining the US perspective on the use of Psychological Operations (PsyOps) in another country to influence the feelings of the populace. https://archive.org/details/Psycholo1968_2

Object Obscura
EP 05 - Lanterns • Light • Local

Object Obscura

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2020 40:58


In this episode I shine light on a mystery about a Dietz highway barricade light owned by a Tucson war vet. This time I step away from behind the computer screen and hunt for clues in person - and I find some shocking answers from the soldier's daughter. This was the last episode of season 1 for Object Obscura. All non-public domain sound credits are “Jackhammer construction” and “scissors” by InspectorJ on freesound.org. All music credits of the episode are (in order of appearance): Intro song is Gears by Thatcher Warrick Hess, Held By You by Zaskia Villa, Mystery by ispeakwaves, Bottle Of Something by TrackTribe, Cartoon Music by Mattia Cupelli, Alone by Emmit Fenn, Empire Seasons by Dan Henig, Wood by Dan Henig, Under Cover by Wayne Jones, Global by Emmit Fenn, State Drive by VYEN, Tupelo Train by Chris Haugen, Color Guard Ceremony Instructional Video by U.S. Coast Guard Marching Band, Abracadabra by Silent Partner. All archival credits are: “American Engineers (Part IV)” by Jam Handy Organization for Chevrolet ca. 1956 from Prelinger Archive, “Highway Challenge” by the United States Government ca. 1957 from YouTube. Other thanks to Epidemic Sound and Rev Call Recorder. Photos of the Visi-Flash print advertisements are from Robert Searing at the Onondaga Historical Association. Photos of Jack Medford and Marjorie Medford were provided by Bob and Margaret Smith. Check these pictures out on Instagram: @object.obscura Listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google podcasts and many more. Here is the website with all links to listen → object-obscura.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thatcher2/message

Team Human
Ep. 128 Brewster Kahle "The Library of Everything"

Team Human

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2019 65:59


Playing for Team Human today, founder of the Internet Archive, Brewster Kahle. Kahle is keeping the dream of building a decentralized, open, mind-expanding internet alive. In this Team Human conversation, Brewster and Douglas discuss the faulty dot-com business models and incentives that derailed the net. They look at the mountains of Twentieth Century culture in danger of being lost from the archive. In a historical moment when we feel exploited and distrustful of so much media, Internet Archive presents a refuge for deeper searches, research, and exploration. The Internet Archive’s associated projects including the Wayback Machine, tv.archive.org, the Great 78 Project and openlibrary.org all play a significant role in making sure the internet remains a home for culture and sharing. But don’t take our word for it. Jump in! Dig though the stacks at archive.org. Borrow a book at OpenLibrary. Upload your band’s demo or search your original website on the Wayback Machine. This episode ends with clips from the Prelinger Archive, including video produced for the World’s Fair by Westinghouse and a Civil Defense film teaching students to “duck and cover” in the age of atomic weapons. Douglas opens today’s show with an exploration of Operation Mindfuck. Was Operation Mindfuck too successful? Has consensus reality disappeared all too completely so that we are left with nothing real, no true grounding at all? Check out Douglas’s regular column on Medium, featuring expanded versions of the monologues you hear each week opening the show. Team Human happens each week thanks to the generous support of our listeners on Patreon. Your support makes the hours of labor that go into each show possible. You can also help by reviewing the show on iTunes.On this episode you heard Fugazi’s “Foreman’s Dog” in the intro thanks to the kindness of the band and Dischord Records. Mid-show you heard R.U. Sirius’s President Mussolini Makes the Planes Run On Time as well as transition music thanks to Herkimer Diamonds.Order Team Human the book and manifesto, now available everywhere! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Heart Burn
To Tinder or not to Tinder?

Heart Burn

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2019 23:45


Hannah Jones, a Communication sophomore and Humanities Center student fellow, talks to Brennan Griffin, a Cinema major. They discuss dating as late millennials, alternative uses of Tinder, and women making the first move in online dating. Thanks to the Prelinger Archive for access to archival audio: https://archive.org/details/prelinger

Bye Bye Celluloid
04 THE VERY LONG SHOT

Bye Bye Celluloid

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2018 16:05


AUDIO COLLAGE: You’ve heard it before — “Know the rules before you break them.” But isn’t that a rule? And once you know it, is it okay to break it? Listen as a dizzying array of authoritative-sounding voices guides you through the rules of cinematic storytelling, then tells you to abandon those rules, then describes some alternatives, then discourages those alternatives because they’re too confusing to audiences. I guess you’re on your own!  Dialogue excerpts derived from the Prelinger Archive and archive.org Music: “On Matters of Consequence (Act I)” by Lloyd Rogers, performed by the Cartesian Reunion Memorial Orchestra. Creative Commons License: Public Domain Mark 1.0. freemusicarchive.org "Bye Bye Celluloid" opening theme by Brad Glanden All original content: Copyright 2018 Brad Glanden. All rights reserved

dialogue copyright long shot lloyd rogers prelinger archive
The Kitchen Sisters Present
36 – Tupperware

The Kitchen Sisters Present

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2015 18:34


“Somewhere in the world there’s a Tupperware Party starting every 10 seconds.” And we’re going to one with The Kitchen Sisters. Parties. Rallies. Sales sessions. More than a way of storing leftovers in covered plastic bowls, for many it’s a way of life. Earl Tupper took the plastics he developed for WWII into post-war American kitchens. The Tupperware Party is one of the ways women have come together to swap recipes and kitchen wisdom, get out of the house and support each other’s entrepreneurial efforts. This story, which is used by instructors teaching audio classes around the country, was produced by The Kitchen Sisters in 1980, one of the first stories they created together. In this podcast the Sisters deconstruct the making of the piece and talk about the experiments and accidents  that led to the development of their production style. We also hear from Tupperware historian Dr. Allison Clarke, Professor of Design Theory & History, University of Applied Arts, Vienna, and Tupperware consultant Lynn Burkhardt, and we hear vintage Tupperware ads from the Prelinger Archive—in a piece produced by Brandi Howell.

Landsploitation
Sam Amidon: "Saro"

Landsploitation

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2008


This episode comes courtesy of Jeremy Blatter, a member of the Landscape Posse, former intern at the Prelinger Archive, and graduate student in the History of Science department at Harvard. Landsploitation is proud to present "Saro," a vernacular film tribute to westward migration, set to music by Sam Amidon. In "Saro," love for the woman left behind in the old world blends with nostalgia for a remembered landscape from home, both starkly contrasted against the changing, harsh reality of the American West.

San Francisco History Podcast – Sparkletack
“mr. summers’ 1941 vacation” — prelinger archive

San Francisco History Podcast – Sparkletack

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2007


I’m addicted to the “moving images” section of the Internet Archive — particularly the Prelinger Archives, recently absorbed into the Library of Congress. This massive collection of “ephemeral films”, a term which covers just about anything not made for commercial entertainment (advertising, educational, industrial, and amateur) is a fantastic source for unexpected historical treasures. I’ve […]

Deconstructing Dinner
The End of Food - The Evolution of Nutrition and Human Health

Deconstructing Dinner

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2007


Finding the adequate nutritional balance within our food is often of paramount importance. When looking at the history of the current food system serving Canadians, it becomes apparent that only for a short time have we been experimenting with such a modern approach to eating. Processed foods and industrial farming are seen as convenient innovations, but how has such a model affected the nutritional composition of our food? Two speakers addressed this concern at the 2007 Growing Up Organic Conference held in Toronto on February 17th. The conference was organized by the Canadian Organic Growers. This broadcast will examine how, since the innovations coming out of World War II, the nutritional content of the Canadian food supply has plummeted. Through the assistance of CKLN in Toronto and Heather Douglas, Deconstructing Dinner was on hand to record the conference. This broadcast features the final session of the conference where panelists were posed the question, "Is Organic Worth the Price?". Speakers Thomas Pawlick, Author, The End of Food: How the Food Industry is Destroying Our Food Supply - And What We Can Do About It (Kingston, Ontario) - Pawlick's lecture was titled "Our Children's Food, Our Children's Survival". A veteran newspaper and magazine journalist with more than 30 years experience in Canada and abroad, Thomas has taught at both Canadian and foreign universities and colleges. The End of Food exposes the cause of the food crisis--an industrial system of food production geared not toward producing nourishing food, but maximum profit for corporations. Thomas is currently on leave from his position as Associate Professor in the School of Journalism at the University of Regina. Following the book achieving best-seller status, the University cut his salary, cut his research funding, removed him from email lists, and removed all copies of his book from the shelves of the campus book store. Thomas Pawlick is currently restoring a small scale organic farm north of Kingston, Ontario with his son. Ellen Desjardins, Public Health Nutritionist - Region of Waterloo Public Health (Kitchener, ON) - Ellen's presentation is titled "Eat up! It's good for you! - what the scientific literature says about the health benefits of organics". Ellen has worked in various programs throughout the province and at the federal level for the past 20 years. Ellen has co-authored numerous articles in the area of food security. She has also chaired work-groups and prepared position papers for the Ontario Public Health Association on food systems, public health concerns about food biotechnology, and mercury in fish. In 2005, Ellen was a founding member of the new national organization Food Secure Canada. Audio Clip "Food for Fighters" - Produced in 1943 by the United States Office of War Information, this short provides a glimpse into the origins of our current food system. The film was designed to promote the innovations that provided soldiers overseas with nutritionally adequate food. The audio version featured on this broadcast is available in its visual format from the Prelinger Archive at www.archive.org.