Podcasts about uatx

  • 47PODCASTS
  • 70EPISODES
  • 1hAVG DURATION
  • 1EPISODE EVERY OTHER WEEK
  • May 30, 2025LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about uatx

Latest podcast episodes about uatx

re:verb
E102: Escape from the University of the Cancelled

re:verb

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2025 74:36


In this episode, Alex and Calvin return to a favorite hobby horse: the University of Austin (UATX). First discussed back in episode 62, this ultra-conservative "university concept" is still not accredited and has no undergraduate degrees planned until at least 2028-2031. In that previous episode, we described UATX variously as right-wing academia's answer to the Fyre Festival and a pitch deck/PowerPoint scam masquerading as an education; this time, we call it a fast-casual university concept (Chipotle for higher ed). We catch up with the myriad ways that UATX continues to struggle under the weight of its own internal contradictions, while occasionally benefitting from being confused for UT Austin (home of some of our favorite previous guests, like Scott Graham and Karma Chávez).After taking stock of US free speech generally in the age of seemingly intractable US-led conflicts in the Middle East and the criminalization of student peace activism, we examine a Quillette article from Ellie Avishai asking if UATX is betraying its founding principles. As Avishai explains, her UATX research center was terminated in response to her posting a rather benign (and ideologically nuanced) LinkedIn post about DEI. We discuss how UATX's claims of championing academic freedom and viewpoint diversity necessarily conflict with its increasingly extreme anti-woke conservative agenda. Given that it is bankrolled by dark money funders and figures connected to corporate interests and political power like Harlan Crow and Joe Lonsdale, the institution appears more dedicated to fortifying right-wing ideas and providing a filter bubble than fostering genuine free inquiry. This makes it particularly ironic that its corporate doublespeak response to Avishai's termination was to use language like "wind up Mill" and "restructure." In these ways, UATX seems to combine the worst of mainstream academia (neoliberal austerity measures justified through corporate doublespeak) with new heights of conservative radicalism. Drawing on Noah Rawlings' piece in The New Inquiry, we peek into the "Forbidden Courses" summer program held at Harlan Crow's Old Parkland office complex in Dallas, where figures like Peter Boghossian and Katie Roiphe hold court. What does it mean for a university to exist primarily as a "safe space" isolating students from opposition, or worse, a "money and influence laundering operation for some of the most abhorrent ideas" (as Alex calls it)? We conclude that despite the real structural flaws in mainstream academia, the pursuit of knowledge and evidence-based argumentation is still vital in higher ed, but it's something that UATX seems fundamentally opposed to.Articles Analyzed in this Episode“Is the University Of Austin Betraying Its Founding Principles?” by Ellie Avishai (in Quillette)“An American Education: Notes from UATX” - Noah Rawlings (in The New Inquiry)Previous Episodes ReferencedE62: re:joinder - The University of the CancelledWorks and Concepts CitedVan Dijk, T. A. (1993). Principles of critical discourse analysis. Discourse & society, 4(2), 249-283.

The Regents Podcast
#198: The University of Austin (UATX)

The Regents Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2025 27:16


Regents alumni Kyle Choy and Lucy Taylor talk with Kirk Avery about their experiences as students in the innagural class at the University of Austin (UATX), a new university with a focus on inquiry, curiosity, and intellectual freedom.

Anchored by the Classic Learning Test
Merit-First Admissions at the University of Austin | Loren Rotner and David Puelz

Anchored by the Classic Learning Test

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2025 25:58 Transcription Available


On this episode of Anchored, Jeremy is joined by Loren Rotner, Associate Provost, and David Puelz, Assistant Professor of Statistics and Data Science at the University of Austin. They discuss what makes UATX distinct, including its heterodox faculty, emphasis on tech education, and full tuition scholarships for all admitted students. They talk about the decision to grant automatic admission to any student who scores a 105 or higher on the CLT, with encouragement and guidance for all looking to apply.

The New Thinkery
Brian Chau on the Straussian Generation, Part III

The New Thinkery

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2025 43:58


Alex sits down with Brian Chau of From the New World for an extended discussion on a range of topics, from building up UATX, to the Online Right, to Strauss on reactionary thought and esoteric writing. The pair tackle it all. In this closing episode, Brian and Alex focus on interpretations of Bronze Age Pervert, including critique of the man himself, while also crediting him where academics have failed. Plus: Socrates' remarkable feat of remaining relevant for millennia across radically different cultures.

Honestly with Bari Weiss
Alex Karp's Fight for the West

Honestly with Bari Weiss

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2025 82:30


Alex Karp is many things: a cross-country skier, a long-range shooter, a tai chi expert who might be the only man who knows how to wield a sword but doesn't know how to drive. He's also a collector of extremely prestigious degrees. His PhD thesis was called “Aggression in the Life-World: The Extension of Parsons' Concept of Aggression by Describing the Connection Between Jargon, Aggression, and Culture.”  Since 2003, he has also been the CEO of Palantir, a software and data analytics company that does defense and intelligence work. Simply put, it's a company that stops terror attacks—while also helping make sports cars go faster and pharmaceutical companies build better drugs. Bari sat down with Alex Karp at UATX to discuss his new book, The Technological Republic, which offers a vision of how Silicon Valley lost its way and how the future of America and the West hinges on it finding its way back—fast. It just debuted on The New York Times Best Seller list. They also discuss Barnard students occupying a campus building, the religious nature of woke culture, and DOGE.  Header 6: The Free Press earns a commission from any purchases made through all book links in this article. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The New Thinkery
Brian Chau on the Straussian Generation, Part II

The New Thinkery

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2025 59:07


Alex sits down with Brian Chau of From the New World for an extended discussion on a range of topics, from building up UATX, to the Online Right, to Strauss on reactionary thought and esoteric writing. The pair tackle it all. This week, the focus shifts to a look at Hobbesian philosophy and Machiavellianism. 

The New Thinkery
Brian Chau on the Straussian Generation, Part I

The New Thinkery

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2025 59:15


This week, Alex sits down with Brian Chau of From the New World for an extended discussion on a range of topics, from building up UATX, to the Online Right, to Strauss on reactionary thought and esoteric writing. The pair tackle it all. Plus, is Gen Z the most esoteric generation to date?

Counterweight
Developing Democratic Citizens with Ellie Avishai | Liberal Approaches to Diversity & Inclusion Podcast Series

Counterweight

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2025 54:28


In 2022 Counterweight, the organization that Helen Pluckrose founded and that was absorbed into the Institute for Liberal Values had a virtual conference on Alternatives to Diversity and Inclusion. Starting in 2025, we will be rolling out one talk a month that was presented at the conference. We sit down with the original presenters throughout 2025 to see what has changed since 2022. With Diversity, Equity and Inclusion initiatives seemingly on the chopping block, we are curious to hear what our original participants are witnessing and experiencing on the ground. Is DEI really dead or just in remission? Are there healthy alternatives to DEI that we should consider, or do we throw the baby out with the bathwater and wipe our hands clean? What do you think? Share your thoughts in the comments.This month Jennifer Richmond interviews Ellie Avishai. In her update to her original talk on Liberal Approaches to Diversity and Inclusion, Ellie reminds us that is always our job to be truth seekers despite which way the winds shift. And our conversation shifts from its original emphasis on DEI in the workplace to DEI in schools. In her original talk she underlines the importance of having clarity for workplace values, here we talk about clarity of purpose in our schools. So, just what is the purpose of schools? Well, the answer is complicated and varied, but if Ellie could boil it down to one thing, it would be the development of democratic citizens. The ultimate aim of education is to develop the intellectual capacity and curiosity to engage people different from oneself, and that is exactly the work she does as the Director of the Mill Center at UATX. You can find her original conference presentation here: https://youtu.be/kGE6TsZ00mMPodcast Notes:Public Goods, Private Goods: The American Struggle over Educational Goals, David Labaree, American Educational Research Journal, Vol 34, No 1 (Spring 1997) pp. 39 - 81.The Mill Institute: https://www.uaustin.org/mill

The Highlighter Article Club
#481: Reading As A Scavenger Hunt?

The Highlighter Article Club

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2025 25:30


Dear Loyal Readers,You and me, I'd venture to say, we like to read. This is why I put together this newsletter week after week. And this is why you generously subscribe to it. After all, this is Article Club, right? We're here to read.But we also know (though I don't like to admit it): Reading isn't for everyone. This month's article of the month, “Is This the End of Reading?” follows the downward trend of reading, especially among Gen Z college students. In her piece, writer Beth McMurtrie looks at the problem straight on: listening to professors, considering causes, and most importantly, thinking of ways to respond.There's still room to join our discussion on Feb. 23, 2:00 - 3:30 pm PT. For more information and to sign up, click the button below.Leading this week's issue is a conversation I had last week with Ms. McMurtrie. Especially if you're an educator or a parent, I highly recommend that you listen. In the interview, Ms. McMurtrie shares the feelings of professors dealing with the abrupt shifts they're witnessing in the classroom. Reading stamina has significantly declined, and so have critical reading skills. Gone are the days when students could read a book or an article on their own. Now, according to one professor, reading has become a “scavenger hunt,” in which students search for discrete answers to discrete questions, dipping in and out of short excerpts, rather than taking in a whole text.If that interview does not catch your interest, never fear. I urge you to read one of the other three articles in this week's issue. They are about:* how we shouldn't blame phones and the pandemic on the decline of reading* how a woman visiting an abortion clinic finds Christianity confusing* how a college in Texas espouses free speech, unless they don't like itIf you like what we're doing here at Article Club, and want to support this venture with a paid subscription, I would be very grateful. It's $5 a month or $36 a year.An interview with Beth McMurtrie, author of “Is This the End of Reading?”I had the distinct pleasure of interviewing Beth McMurtrie this week. Senior writer at The Chronicle of Higher Education, Ms. McMurtrie knows what she's talking about when it comes to the status of reading among college students. It was a delight to talk to her. I encourage you to listen to our entire conversation. Here's an excerpt:If you think of teaching as a vocation, a calling, which a lot of academics do, [the decline of reading] is really an existential crisis because you're seeing harm come to your students. I didn't find many professors who were angry at their students; they were sad for their students. They were certainly frustrated and sometimes wanted to beat their head against the walls, but they were sad for their students because they could see the anxiety that the students felt when they couldn't do the work.[The professors] would often say to me, These students have no idea how much less I'm asking of them than I asked of students 10 or 15 years ago. It changes what you can do in the classroom and how you can teach. You can't get through as much material, which means students just simply aren't as learning as much content. If you can't get through as much content, you may end up having to teach the skills that you thought students had learned in high school. So then your teaching becomes a different kind of teaching.And if you don't do those things, then you kind of have a dead classroom, or you might have a discussion that goes off the rails because the students are not interpreting kind of what they're learning in a useful way.2️⃣ The Loss Of Things I Took For GrantedI included this fair, well-written piece last year when it was published, but I'm sharing it again, especially since Ms. McMurtrie highlighted it in our interview. Focusing on the decline of reading among college students, it's a great companion piece to hers.Prof. Adam Kotsko writes: “For most of my career, I assigned around 30 pages of reading per class meeting as a baseline expectation — sometimes scaling up for purely expository readings or pulling back for more difficult texts. (No human being can read 30 pages of Hegel in one sitting, for example.) Now students are intimidated by anything over 10 pages and seem to walk away from readings of as little as 20 pages with no real understanding. Even smart and motivated students struggle to do more with written texts than extract decontextualized take-aways. Considerable class time is taken up simply establishing what happened in a story or the basic steps of an argument — skills I used to be able to take for granted.”By Adam Kotsko • Slate • 7 min • Gift Link3️⃣ Two Days Before Abortion Stopped In KentuckySavannah Sipple: “I grew up in a conservative, religious part of eastern Kentucky where fundamental Christianity rules. For most of my upbringing, I recognized the pastors, choir leaders, and Sunday school teachers as the folks who lived the kindness they preached. When someone's family member died they cooked food, cleaned house, and prayed with the grieving. They regularly took up offerings and gave food to those struggling.“What I didn't recognize at the time were the microaggressions. They'd say slight comments about Catholicism, which confused me as a kid because part of my family was Catholic. They'd make jokes about gays. Preachers pronounced lesbians the scourge of the nation because they dared to live without men. I was closeted, but I was both the butt of the joke and then the monster. Still, I was devout. This kind of confusing Christianity where hate is enmeshed with love was the only kind of sacred available to me. Even when my personal beliefs stood in contrast to what I was taught, I remained silent. I heard church folks disparage women who sought abortions. I heard their judgments, the way words like abomination, backslider, and sin always carried a tone of disgust and dismissal. And I stood by.”By Savannah Sipple • The Arkansas International • 8 min • gift link unavailable4️⃣ An American EducationNoah Rawlings: “A revolution in education! A resuscitation of the university mission! To happen in, of all places, not the pompous old northeast or the debauched West Coast, not New York or California but the country's southern reaches — in the Texas Hill Country, in the city of Austin, where already technologists and venture capitalists had swarmed, drawn by the absence of income tax and the looseness of labor regulations, pulled by the mild zoning laws and the natural beauty and the food trucks and the good vibes. Austin, because it was a ‘hub for builders, mavericks, and creators.' Here a new university: the University of Austin, or UATX.“UATX is a ‘genuinely safe space,' in the sense that it isolates students from the inconvenient opposition of other peers and professors. It is a monoculture of free-market faith which provides, in the end, a venue for young people seeking success in tech and finance to network and to fortify the rightwing ideas that brought them here in the first place.”➡️ Big thanks to loyal reader Tim for recommending this article. Want to nominate an article to appear in the newsletter? Click here.By Noah Rawlings • The New Inquiry • 26 min • Gift Link✅ It's time for a quick poll. I'd love to hear from you.Last week, we confirmed that most of you read Article Club via email. That's what I suspected. (But no problem if you use the app!)This week, let's solve a mystery.Thank you for reading this week's issue. Hope you liked it.

The Saad Truth with Dr. Saad
UATX Lecture - Evolutionary Psychology, The Parasitic Mind, & Suicidal Empathy (The Saad Truth with Dr. Saad_790)

The Saad Truth with Dr. Saad

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2025 95:49


This event was held on January 29, 2025 at the University of Austin. _______________________________________ If you appreciate my work and would like to support it: https://subscribestar.com/the-saad-truth https://patreon.com/GadSaad https://paypal.me/GadSaad To subscribe to my exclusive content on Twitter, please visit my bio at https://twitter.com/GadSaad _______________________________________ This clip was posted on February 3, 2025 on my YouTube channel as THE SAAD TRUTH_1806: https://youtu.be/RT9O7ghC_tU _______________________________________ Please visit my website gadsaad.com, and sign up for alerts. If you appreciate my content, click on the "Support My Work" button. I count on my fans to support my efforts. You can donate via Patreon, PayPal, and/or SubscribeStar. _______________________________________ Dr. Gad Saad is a professor, evolutionary behavioral scientist, and author who pioneered the use of evolutionary psychology in marketing and consumer behavior. In addition to his scientific work, Dr. Saad is a leading public intellectual who often writes and speaks about idea pathogens that are destroying logic, science, reason, and common sense.  _______________________________________

The New Thinkery
Christopher Nadon On Classical Education and Why Kids Can't Read Good No More

The New Thinkery

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2025 58:40


This week, Alex and Greg meet up at UATX and are joined by Dr. Christopher Nadon, Associate Professor of Government at Claremont McKenna College and teacher of Western Civilization and humanities at Emet Classical Academy in New York. The group touch on Allan Bloom's The Closing of the American Mind before delving into Dr. Nadon's experience with just how far American students have fallen academically in recent decades. But not all hope is lost, as the group also discuss potential solutions to the rot infesting the American education system. Recommended reading: The Classical Cure for the Ivies

Austin Next
Science in the Commercial Space Age: Live from UATX's SOMA Inaugural Summit

Austin Next

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2025 38:48


This past November, the University of Austin hosted their Inaugural SOMA Summit to explore the amazing transformation in space right now, especially how the commercial space era is decentralizing access. I had the privilege to moderate a fascinating panel titled "Science in the Commercial Space Age" featuring Chris Sembroski from Blue Origin, along with University of Florida space biologists Dr. Rob Ferl and Dr. Anna-Lisa Paul.As space becomes more accessible, it's evolving beyond merely a frontier to explore into its own innovation platform and ecosystem. This opens up a whole galaxy of possibilities. Episode HighlightsMission ExperiencesSpace PeppersUnderstanding Human AdaptationSpace as an Innovation Frontier Manufacturing in MicrogravityPlants' Role in Future ExplorationEthical ConsiderationsWhat's next for science in the commercial space age?Rob Ferl: “More scientists flying to do their experiments in space.”Anna-Lisa Paul: “More research in how we effectively take our biology off the planet to have long-term existence elsewhere”Chris Sembroski: “Recognizing that it's not going to end with us, that we have to keep inspiring that next generation”Chris Sembroski: X/Twitter, LinkedInRob Ferl: UF Faculty PageAnna-Lisa Paul: UF Faculty Page -------------------Austin Next Links: Website, X/Twitter, YouTube, LinkedInEcosystem Metacognition Substack

Austin Next
From DNA to Deep Space with Eliah Overbey, Professor at University of Austin

Austin Next

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2024 71:06


Space is becoming our next great innovation frontier as we move from 700 astronauts spending days or months to tens of thousands spending years. What does that do to the human body? What does it mean for our species? Eliah Overbey, Assistant Professor of Bioastronautics at the University of Austin, joins the podcast to explore topics in the increasingly blurred line between science fiction and science fact. Episode HighlightsWhat is Bioastronautics? Space's Impact on Human Biology Current Space Medicine and Healthcare Challenges The Commercialization of Space and NASA's Evolving Role UATX's Unique Approach The SOMA Summit and Space Research Community Genetic Modification for Mars Human Evolution with Space ColonizationWhat's Next Austin?"I'm working on building at UATX is I'm getting a bioastronautics lab started up...More and more people go to space, we're going to have more and more people that we want to sequence to...answer these questions in a more scientifically rigorous way, get our end value higher than before in a single experiment."Eliah Overbey: LinkedIn, X/TwitterUniversity of Austin: Website, LinkedIn, X/TwitterBioAstra: Website, LinkedIn, X/Twitter -------------------Austin Next Links: Website, X/Twitter, YouTube, LinkedIn

Chicago's Morning Answer with Dan Proft & Amy Jacobson

  0:00 - Tucson, AZ, Mayor Regina Romero...will defy Trump/ICE   15:13 - Colorado Springs Mayor Yemi Mobolade's Jussie Smollett redux   26:13 -  Axios' CEO Jim Vandehei: you are not the media   50:32 - Ivana Greco, homemaker and homeschooling mom of four from Connecticut who writes on the issues impacting stay-at-home moms and dads, shares her Research Project on Stay-At-Home Parents. For more from Ivana, visit her substack “The Home Front” – thehomefront.substack.com   01:03:24 - In-depth History with Frank from Arlington Heights    01:06:58 - Writer and photographer currently taking a walk around the world, Chris Arnade, has seen it for himself -  The World Is in Love with America. Follow Chris as he walks the globe on X @Chris_arnade and his substack Chris Arnade Walks the World   01:25:51 - President at Wirepoints, Ted Dabrowski, breaks down the “crushing” tax increases in south suburban Cook County. Get Ted's latest at Wirepoints.org   01:40:34 - UATX on 60 Minutes  02:01:48 - Joseph Moreno, former federal prosecutor with the Department of Justice in the National Security Division, a former staff member with the FBI's 9/11 Review Commission and a US Army combat veteran, on Jack Smith's dismissal of charges and  How the lawfare campaign against Trump backfired. Follow Joe on X @JosephMoreno  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Tales from the Crypt
#558: Educating A Free Society with Chad Thevenot

Tales from the Crypt

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2024 72:37


Marty sits down with Chad from UATX to discuss bringing the values of the Age of Enlightenment back to education. Chad on Twitter: https://x.com/chadthevenot UATX: https://www.uaustin.org/ 0:00 - Intro 1:28 - 6th and Congress is the center of the universe 4:09 - The story of UATX 10:26 - Unchained & Coinkite 12:20 - Problems with current education 21:15 - Curriculum for a free society 28:37 - Regulation and Trump regime 32:33 - Zaprite & SOTE 34:06 - Enlightenment values and free discussion 47:37 - Destroy institutions or reform them? 53:14 - Bitcoin endowment 57:25 - Austin's strength 1:01:52 - Decentralized power 1:08:35 - We're gonna win Shoutout to our sponsors: Unchained https://unchained.com/concierge/ Coinkite https://coinkite.com/ Zaprite https://zaprite.com/tftc Salt of the Earth https://drinksote.com/tftc Join the TFTC Movement: Main YT Channel https://www.youtube.com/c/TFTC21/videos Clips YT Channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUQcW3jxfQfEUS8kqR5pJtQ Website https://tftc.io/ Twitter https://twitter.com/tftc21 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/tftc.io/ Nostr https://primal.net/tftc Follow Marty Bent: Twitter https://twitter.com/martybent Nostr https://primal.net/martybent Newsletter https://tftc.io/martys-bent/ Podcast https://www.tftc.io/tag/podcasts/

The New Thinkery
Patrick Deneen on Strauss' Three Waves of Modernity

The New Thinkery

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2024 64:36


This week, Alex and Greg temporarily replace David with friend of the show Professor Patrick Deneen, who teaches at the University of Notre Dame. The group dive right into Strauss' Three Waves of Modernity, dissecting its arguments and unpacking relevant backstory. Plus, if you can't get enough of Strauss, apply for UATX's upcoming Symposium on Leo Strauss and/or register for a virtual Leo Strauss on Plato's Symposium!

Conversations with Peter Boghossian
The Power of Literature w/Kirsten Hall Herlin, Assistant Professor at UATX

Conversations with Peter Boghossian

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2024 51:02


I had the pleasure of conversing with Kirsten Hall Herlin, an Assistant Professor at UATX, a distinguished scholar of literature, and the managing editor of the Genealogies of Modernity Journal. We discussed the intricacies of writing and the role of literature in shaping our lives and understanding the world.Kirsten and I explored the impact of AI and Critical Social Justice on the humanities. Could AI ever win a Pulitzer Prize? Does human consciousness play a crucial role in the writing process? Are the nuances of personal experience, emotional understanding, and subjective thought beyond AI's reach? Or can those be faked? We also considered how societal division has affected the humanities and whether great literature can help unite us.Watch this episode on YouTube.Cozen O'Connor Public Strategies - The Beltway BriefingListen for of-the-moment insider insights, framed by the rapidly changing social and...Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

Keen On Democracy
Episode 2179: Jacob Howland on what should be taught at a 21st century liberal university

Keen On Democracy

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2024 48:28


Controversial things are happening on the campus of the University of Austin (UATX), the brand new anti-woke university designed to “dare” its students to “think”. Last week, we interviewed UATX's founding president, Pano Kanelos, who explained how he was trying to build what he called a 21st century “liberal university”. Today, in this KEEN ON America interview, we talk to Jacob Howland, UATX's founding Provost, on what should be taught at this university. For some, of course, Howland's focus on a 21st century anti-woke university education represents a new humanism; for others, it's the last gasps of a reactionary 20th century intellectual elite. In either case, UATX is a provocative pedagogical experiment which we, at KEEN ON America, will be following as the new university opens its doors to students this month.JACOB HOWLAND is Provost, Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs, and Dean of Intellectual Foundations at the University of Austin. Previously he was McFarlin Professor of Philosophy Emeritus at the University of Tulsa, where he taught from 1988 to 2020. He has published five books and roughly sixty scholarly articles and review essays on the thought of Plato, Aristotle, Xenophon, Kierkegaard, the Talmud, the Holocaust, ideological tyranny, and other subjects  A past winner of the University of Tulsa Outstanding Teacher Award and the College of Arts and Sciences Excellence in Teaching Award, Howland has received grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, The Littauer Foundation, the Earhart Foundation, and the Koch Foundation, and has lectured in Israel, France, England, Romania, Brazil, Denmark, Norway, and at universities around the United States.  His most recent book is Glaucon's Fate: History, Myth, and Character in Plato's Republic, Paul Dry Books, 2018. In addition, his articles have appeared in The New Criterion, Commentary, Newsweek, the Claremont Review of Books, the Jewish Review of Books, City Journal, Mosaic, Tablet, the New York Post, Unherd, Quillette, Forbes, and The Nation, among other venues. He has appeared in numerous podcasts including The Symbolic World, The Art of Manliness, and the podcast of City Journal and First Things.Named as one of the "100 most connected men" by GQ magazine, Andrew Keen is amongst the world's best known broadcasters and commentators. In addition to presenting KEEN ON, he is the host of the long-running How To Fix Democracy show. He is also the author of four prescient books about digital technology: CULT OF THE AMATEUR, DIGITAL VERTIGO, THE INTERNET IS NOT THE ANSWER and HOW TO FIX THE FUTURE. Andrew lives in San Francisco, is married to Cassandra Knight, Google's VP of Litigation & Discovery, and has two grown children.Keen On is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keenon.substack.com/subscribe

Keen On Democracy
Episode 2173: Pano Kanelos on How to Build a Liberal 21st Century University

Keen On Democracy

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2024 40:38


Something interesting is happening in downtown Austin. Next month, The University of Austin (UATX), a new undergraduate college claiming to “be dedicated to the fearless pursuit of truth”, opens its well financed doors. Launched as a supposedly “anti-woke” university, UATX has some heavy hitting advisors including Richard Dawkins, Niall Ferguson, Larry Summers, Andrew Young, Jonathan Haidt and Bari Weiss. It's founding president is the Shakespeare scholar, Pano Kanelos, who is described as “an outspoken advocate for liberal education”. And so, when I sat down with Kanelos on the UATX campus, we talked about the idea of a “liberal education” and why there's a need in contemporary America for one more liberal arts college. Pano Kanelos is the founding president of the University of Austin. From 2017 to 2021, Dr. Kanelos served as the 24th President of St. John's College, Annapolis. After earning degrees from Northwestern University (B.A.), Boston University (M.A.), and the University of Chicago (Ph.D.), he taught at Stanford University, the University of San Diego, and Loyola University Chicago. An outspoken advocate for liberal education, he oversaw the Lilly Fellows Program in Humanities and the Arts, comprising a network of more than 100 colleges and universities. Among the earliest participants in the Teach for America program, President Kanelos is as passionate about teaching as he is about writing and scholarship. He founded the Cropper Center for Creative Writing at the University of San Diego and is a noted Shakespeare scholar, having served as the resident Shakespearean in the Old Globe MFA Program and the founding director of the Interdisciplinary Shakespeare Studies Program at Loyola University Chicago.Named as one of the "100 most connected men" by GQ magazine, Andrew Keen is amongst the world's best known broadcasters and commentators. In addition to presenting KEEN ON, he is the host of the long-running How To Fix Democracy show. He is also the author of four prescient books about digital technology: CULT OF THE AMATEUR, DIGITAL VERTIGO, THE INTERNET IS NOT THE ANSWER and HOW TO FIX THE FUTURE. Andrew lives in San Francisco, is married to Cassandra Knight, Google's VP of Litigation & Discovery, and has two grown children.Keen On is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keenon.substack.com/subscribe

Chicago's Morning Answer with Dan Proft & Amy Jacobson

0:00 - Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, Darling of the Progressive Left, Is Harris' Running Mate 9:18 - Kamala Harris calls Tim Walz to offer him the job 23:05 - Third command sergeant major corroborates story of Walz dodging deployment   41:21 - John Hinderaker is the President of Center of the American Experiment and contributor to Powerline. He joined Dan and Amy with reaction to the pick of Minnesota Governor Tim Walz as the runningmate for Vice President Kamala Harris   58:19 - Kamala Harris talked about the power prosecutors have   01:16:01 - Stephen Moore is a Noted Economist and author of Govzilla: How the Relentless Growth of Government Is Devouring Our Economy—And Our Freedom. He joined Dan and Amy with reaction to the pick of Minnesota Governor Tim Walz as the runningmate for Vice President Kamala Harris and what a Harris administration would mean for the economy   01:31:13 - Doug Emhoff Calls Tim Walz's Wife Gwen Walz To Welcome Her To Harris 2024 Campaign   01:32:37 - Morgan Marietta is the Dean of Economics, Politics & History at University of Austin, UATX. He joined Dan and Amy to talk about media coverage of the 2024 Presidential election and the "duty to pretend."   01:53:10 - New York Times Anupreeta Das on her new book "Billionaire, Nerd, Savior, King"See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Progress, Potential, and Possibilities
Dr. Eliah Overbey, Ph.D. - Assistant Professor, Bioastronautics, University Of Austin; CSO, BioAstra - Making Humanity A Multi-Planetary Species

Progress, Potential, and Possibilities

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2024 41:25


Send us a Text Message.Dr. Eliah Overbey, Ph.D. is Assistant Professor of Bioastronautics at The University of Austin ( UATX - https://www.uaustin.org/people/eliah-overbey ) where she is involved in pioneering research in the field of astronaut health, specializing in spaceflight-induced genomic changes. Her work focuses on mapping changes in the human body during spaceflight and developing Earth-independent laboratories to make humans a multi-planetary species ( https://www.eliahoverbey.com/ ). Dr. Overbey comes to UATX from her previous position as a Research Associate at Weill Cornell Medicine. Dr. Overbey's most recent projects have analyzed genomic changes in astronauts from the SpaceX Inspiration4 mission, and she is currently working on data analysis and sample collection for the Axiom-2 and Polaris Dawn missions. Dr. Overbey's work launched the Space Omics and Medical Atlas ( SOMA - https://soma.weill.cornell.edu/#main ), an online portal with the largest compendium of molecular measurements from astronauts. She also serves as Vice Chair of the Cornell Aerospace Medicine Biobank ( CAMbank - https://cambank.weill.cornell.edu/#main ), which is the first biorepository of samples from commercial astronauts. Dr. Overbey is also Chief Scientific Officer at BioAstra ( https://www.bioastra.org/ ), a non-profit developing healthcare systems for astronauts. Dr. Overbey received a B.S. in Computer Science from UC San Diego, a Ph.D. in Genome Sciences from the University of Washington, and was a Postdoctoral Associate in Computational Biomedicine in the laboratory of Dr. Christopher Mason. Support the Show.

The Right Idea
Forging New Ground in Education with Jacob Howland

The Right Idea

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2024 47:53


Brian and Derek have the pleasure of sitting down with Jacob Howland, the Provost and Dean of Intellectual Foundations at University of Austin, to discuss the need for an entirely new type of university in response to young Americans turning away from higher education… and for good reasons.3:55 Jacob Howland's victory lap for UATX6:40 The Left's argument against higher learning like University of Austin8:00 What sets UATX's curriculum apart from most other universities?13:40 What kind of faculty and students is UATX looking for, and how do they find them?19:35 The problem with faculty and administrators at most American universities25:14 UATX is the only university in the U.S. with a Constitution32:50 How can UATX escape wokeness but maintain funding?35:55 UATX location - navigating East 6th & West 6th38:28 How will UATX face Austin's predictable onslaught of protests?39:55 How is the Left likely to respond to conservative universities?42:15 Will other places of higher learning be positively influenced by UATX?43:45 How does UATX respond to the public's primary concerns: Cost, Quality of Education and Ideology of the University?

Very Bad Wizards
Episode 281: Choose Your Fighter

Very Bad Wizards

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2024 82:42


We dig into the biggest rivalry in Tamler's profession, analytic vs. continental philosophy. Are analytic philosophers truly the rigorous, precise, clear thinkers they take themselves to be? And is continental philosophy really just a bunch pretentious charlatans spouting French and German gibberish and writing obscure prose to mask the incoherence of their ideas? We look at a nice paper by Neil Levy that goes beyond the stereotypes and tries to describe and explain the differences between the two schools. Plus, The University of Austin (sic) is back in the news and we have a report from someone who attended one of their Forbidden Courses. This should be so easy but the article has us deeply conflicted about what to make fun of. [Important update: Trixie is on a 5 day streak of no accidents and is a perfect little sweet girl.] Links: An American Education: Notes from UATX by Noah Rawlings Levy, N. (2003). Analytic and continental philosophy: Explaining the differences. Metaphilosophy, 34(3), 284-304.

Scientific Sense ®
Prof. Ilana Redstone of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign on the Certainty Trap.

Scientific Sense ®

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2024 56:54


Scientific Sense ® by Gill Eapen: Prof. Ilana Redstone is an Associate Professor of sociology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She is also co-director of the Mill Institute at UATX. She is the creator of the “Beyond Bigots and Snowflakes” video series and the author of the Certainty Trap (coming out in summer 2024) Please subscribe to this channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/ScientificSense?sub_confirmation=1 --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/scientificsense/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/scientificsense/support

Honestly with Bari Weiss
Economist Roland Fryer on Adversity, Race, and Refusing to Conform

Honestly with Bari Weiss

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2024 77:44


A little over two years ago, in the pages of The Free Press, Pano Kanelos announced that he was starting a new university in Austin dedicated to the fearless pursuit of truth. The headline was stark: “We Can't Wait For Universities to Fix Themselves. So We're Starting a New One.” I was one of the founding trustees. The announcement generated a lot of headlines. As expected, a lot of people dunked on it. They said, “why in a country with thousands of colleges and universities do we need a new one?” They said it was fake; they said we didn't have real students. They said it was a “cancel culture grift.”  Two years later, not only is UATX a very real university but in 2024, the school will accept 100 students in the inaugural class—students who won't just be consumers but founders. To get a sense of what this school—and this cohort—is all about, there is no better thing to do than to listen to today's episode: a conversation with Harvard economist Roland Fryer, recorded live last weekend in front of these prospective students. Roland Fryer is one of the most celebrated economists in the world. He is the author of more than 50 papers—on topics ranging from “the economic consequences of distinctively black names” to “racial differences in police shootings.” At 30, he became the youngest black tenured professor in Harvard's history. At 34, he won a MacArthur Genius Fellowship, followed by a John Bates Clark Medal, which is given to an economist in America under 40 who is judged to have made the most significant contribution to economic thought and knowledge. But before coming to Harvard, Fryer worked at McDonalds—drive-through, not corporate.  Fryer's life story of rapid ascent to academic celebrity status despite abandonment by his parents at a young age, and growing up in what he calls a “drug family” is incredibly inspiring in its own right. Because based on every statistic and stereotype about race and poverty in America, he should not have become the things he became. And yet he did.  He also continues to beat the odds in a world in which much of academia has become conformist. Time and time again, Fryer refuses to conform. He has one north star, and that is the pursuit of truth, come what may. The pursuit of truth no matter how unpopular the conclusion or inconvenience to his own political biases. He's also rare in that he isn't afraid to admit when he's wrong, or to admit his mistakes and learn from them. This conversation was inspiring, courageous, and long overdue. We hope you enjoy it as much as we did. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

ManTalks Podcast
Rob Henderson - Building Resiliency From A Troubled Childhood

ManTalks Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2024 72:24


Talking points: childhood, trauma, foster care, relationships We all know that poverty can have a massive impact on a child's future well-being, sense of self, attachment style, and more. Foster children face equally (if not more) significant challenges. Rob Henderson, author of the incredibly powerful book, "Troubled", explains some of what happens. Team, I strongly recommend this one if you're interested at all in childhood trauma, how attachment develops, the apparent demonization of young men, absent fathers, and of course, Rob's book. Seriously could NOT stop reading it. (00:00:00) - Intro (00:06:54)- How Rob approached writing such a profound book—and why (00:14:27) - What's the foster-care system like in America? (00:23:01) - How does the foster-care system shape a child's perspective on relationships? (00:36:01) - How Rob found a sense of belonging (00:39:23) - How did Rob repair or build relationships with men? (00:46:06) - Rob's take on how absent fathers impact children (00:51:33) - On “Young Male Syndrome” and the limits of attachment (01:03:40) - How do dating apps impact attachment, and how Rob worked on healing his own attachment style Rob Henderson grew up in foster homes across California, and is a writer on human nature, psychology, social class, TV shows, movies, political and social divisions, and more. He's perhaps most known for pioneering the concept of "luxury beliefs," a term he coined to describe a new way of understanding the American status system. After working as a busboy, a dishwasher, and supermarket bagger, he joined the Air Force at the age of 17, stationed mostly in Europe and deployed in the Middle East. Once described as “self-made” by the New York Times, Henderson obtained a B.S. in Psychology from Yale (thanks to the G.I. Bill) and a Ph.D. in Psychology from the University of Cambridge (St. Catharine's College), where I studied as a Gates Cambridge Scholar. He is a founding faculty fellow at UATX and a columnist at The Free Press, and have written for the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and the Boston Globe, among other outlets. Connect with Rob -Substack: https://www.robkhenderson.com/ -Twitter: https://twitter.com/robkhenderson -Book: Troubled: A Memoir of Foster Care, Family, and Social Class: https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Troubled/Rob-Henderson/9781982168537 *** Build brotherhood in person. Join a Men's Weekend Pick up my book, Men's Work: A Practical Guide To Face Your Darkness, End Self-Sabotage, And Find Freedom: https://mantalks.com/mens-work-book/ Check out some free resources: How To Quit Porn | Anger Meditation | How To Lead In Your Relationship Build brotherhood with a powerful group of like-minded men from around the world. Check out The Alliance.  Enjoy the podcast? If so, please leave a review on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, or Podchaser. It helps us get into the ears of new listeners, expand the ManTalks Community, and help others find the tools and training they're looking for. And don't forget to subscribe on Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Spotify For more episodes, visit us at ManTalks.com | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | and yes, even TikTok

The New Thinkery
Roundtable Discussion of Leo Strauss' Natural Right and History

The New Thinkery

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2024 60:58


This week, Greg and Alex are joined roundtable-style at UATX by Mark Blitz, Fletcher Jones Professor of Political Philosophy at Claremont McKenna University; Devin Stauffer, Professor and Associate Chair at UT Austin; and Christopher T. Lynch, Head of the Political Science and Philosophy Department at Missouri State University. Together, the group discuss Natural Right & History as well as a few other Strauss writings that assist in imparting a better understanding of Strauss' seminal work. 

Heterodox Out Loud
Building a University with Pano Kanelos - Ep. 03

Heterodox Out Loud

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2023 61:36


In this episode of Heterodox Out Loud, John Tomasi speaks with Pano Kanelos, President of the University of Austin, Texas (UATX). Kanelos is a leading advocate for free speech and open inquiry in higher education. He believes that UATX can offer a better alternative to the current system, which is often characterized by censorship and groupthink. Heterodox Out Loud  Heterodox Out Loud with John Tomasi is a biweekly podcast featuring conversations with people across the academy and beyond. Listen to insightful, thought-provoking episodes from the HxA community by adding our podcast to your lineup Follow UATX on: Twitter: https://twitter.com/uaustinorg Website: https://www.uaustin.org/ Follow Heterodox Academy on: Twitter: https://bit.ly/3Fax5Dy Facebook: https://bit.ly/3PMYxfw LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/48IYeuJ Instagram: https://bit.ly/46HKfUg Substack: https://bit.ly/48IhjNF Listen to the podcast on: Apple - https://apple.co/3PZzplD Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3S51uee Amazon: https://amzn.to/3ZXQnFL Google: https://bit.ly/46oaT4A i-Heart - https://bit.ly/3M69qYA Tune-In - https://bit.ly/3S5oBVR Pandora - https://bit.ly/46AaLze Linktree link: https://linktr.ee/heterodoxoutloud

Heterodox Out Loud
Building a University with Pano Kanelos - Ep. 03

Heterodox Out Loud

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2023 61:36


In this episode of Heterodox Out Loud, John Tomasi speaks with Pano Kanelos, President of the University of Austin, Texas (UATX). Kanelos is a leading advocate for free speech and open inquiry in higher education. He believes that UATX can offer a better alternative to the current system, which is often characterized by censorship and groupthink.Heterodox Out Loud Heterodox Out Loud with John Tomasi is a biweekly podcast featuring conversations with people across the academy and beyond. Listen to insightful, thought-provoking episodes from the HxA community by adding our podcast to your lineup Follow UATX on: Twitter: https://twitter.com/uaustinorgWebsite: https://www.uaustin.org/ Follow Heterodox Academy on: Twitter: https://bit.ly/3Fax5DyFacebook: https://bit.ly/3PMYxfwLinkedIn: https://bit.ly/48IYeuJInstagram: https://bit.ly/46HKfUgSubstack: https://bit.ly/48IhjNF Listen to the podcast on: Apple - https://apple.co/3PZzplDSpotify: https://spoti.fi/3S51ueeAmazon: https://amzn.to/3ZXQnFLGoogle: https://bit.ly/46oaT4Ai-Heart - https://bit.ly/3M69qYATune-In - https://bit.ly/3S5oBVRPandora - https://bit.ly/46AaLzeLinktree link: https://linktr.ee/heterodoxoutloud

Austin Next
From the Archive: Austin's Next Innovation Hub - The Vision Behind the University of Austin with Pano Kanelos

Austin Next

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2023 41:42


An update since our original episode aired on May 9, 2023: The University of Austin is now accepting applications for their first undergraduate class starting fall 2024.  To mark this milestone, we are resharing our interview with founding president Panos Kanelos. The University of Austin is a new and promising institution set to open its doors to full time students in just over a year. The university is the brainchild of a few individuals who believe that an institution based on a new model is necessary. The school is committed to freedom of inquiry, a core tenet of any great university, that allows for the pursuit of truth. Today's guest is the founding president, Pano Kanelos, a distinguished academic that had a successful tenure at St. John's College. We discuss the university's mission, building new institutions, and how they fit within Austin's education and innovation ecosystems.Episode HighlightsThe University of Austin aims to become a new center for innovation and academic freedom in the city.UATX aspires to become the "Stanford to Berkeley" for Austin, complementing the University of Texas.By working closely with industry leaders, the university seeks to co-develop programs, offer internships, and provide support for student-led projects.The Polaris Project emphasizes real-world application and impact on pressing global problems, while fostering interdisciplinary collaboration among students.They want to inspire new institutions around the world by proving that it's possible to build a new university todayWhat's next Austin? “A dozen years from now, there is a thriving campus in the Austin area that is attracting scholars, practitioners, and young people from across the country and across the world who are building things that we haven't yet dreamed of.”University of Austin: Website, Undergraduate Application, X/Twitter, LinkedIn Austin Next Links: Website, X/Twitter, YouTube, LinkedIn

The New Thinkery
Hannah Arendt's "Ideology and Terror" ft. Damian Jungerman

The New Thinkery

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2023 60:43


Join the guys, with returning guest and Damian Jungerman, an expert on Hannah Arendt, as they unpack Arendt's profound essay, "Ideology and Terror," which sheds light on how totalitarian ideologies can give rise to mass violence and offers new perspectives on the consequences of rigid belief systems. Plus: an opportunity to meet the cast and learn more about Leo Strauss at an upcoming UATX event!

The Symbolic World
309 - Jacob Howland - Technological Cannibalism

The Symbolic World

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2023 73:40


I had an amazing discussion with Jacob Howland about the fundamental question of technology. We investigate from both the Biblical and ancient Greek perspectives what technology is and its effects on the human spirit. We discuss the notion of memory and recollection, Plato's Phaedrus, the Biblical notion of garments of skin, ChatGPT and AI, work and leisure, technology's effects on human capabilities, paganism and idolatry, intelligence, and “the matrix”, the internet, intuition, and much more. Jacob Howland is the Provost and Director of the Intellectual Foundations Program at UATX, commonly known as the University of Austin. His latest book is Glaucon's Fate: History, Myth, and Character in Plato's Republic (Paul Dry Books, 2018): https://www.amazon.com/Glaucons-Fate-History-Character-Republic/dp/1589881346 Jacob Howland's website: https://www.jacobhowland.com/ His articles on Unherd: https://unherd.com/author/jacob-howlandunherd-com/ Original YouTube version: https://youtu.be/o468OtytbVQ Timestamps: 00:00 - Coming up 01:02 - Intro music 01:28 - Introduction 01:59 - Different narratives about technology 04:09 - Technology from the Greek perspective 05:01 - Plato's Phaedra - and fixing words 08:16 - Egypt 09:29 - Suppressing recollection 11:13 - The garments of skin 15:02 - Work - sorting chaos 18:17 - Human capabilities diminishing 19:53 - ChatGPT cannibalizes itself 22:06 - A pagan god that feeds on humans 23:52 - Human batteries 26:03 - Intuition - direct access to reality 28:49 - What do we mean by intelligence? 30:47 - Understand AI as idolatry 32:19 - The gold of the golden calf 34:53 - The tabernacle 35:33 - A body of power 37:39 - card: Beasts in Revelation 39:16 - Work and leisure 47:45 - Monastic life and leisure 49:18 - Not anti-technology 50:54 - The Henry Adams curve 56:56 - The Beast kills the whore 1:00:17 - Plato's cave 1:01:19 - There is no "solution" 1:03:24 - Prometheus' cycle of desire 1:05:58 - The flip side of all of this 1:10:15 - Paradise Lost 1:11:09 - The need for transcendence 1:12:26 - Re-engage at the human scale

EconTalk
Jacob Howland on the Hidden Human Costs of AI

EconTalk

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2023 81:53


In the early 1900s, the philosopher Henry Adams expressed concern about the rapid rate of social change ushered in by new technologies, from the railways to the telegraph and ultimately airplanes. If we transpose Adams's concerns onto the power of artificial intelligence--a power whose rate of acceleration would have exceeded his wildest dreams--you might feel a bit uneasy. Listen as philosopher Jacob Howland of UATX speaks with EconTalk's Russ Roberts about why too much leisure is at best a mixed blessing, and how technology can lead to intellectual atrophy. They also speak about the role of AI in education and its implications for that most human of traits: curiosity. Finally, they discuss Howland's biggest concern when it comes to outsourcing our tasks, and our thinking, to machines: that we'll ultimately end up surrendering our own liberty.

Smoke 'Em If You Got 'Em Podcast
77. The Love Robots Are Coming

Smoke 'Em If You Got 'Em Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2023 28:27


This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit smokeempodcast.substack.comNancy reports from storm-strewn Tulsa while Sarah reports from the future, where they discuss:* The worst storm in Tulsa since 2007, not that the news is covering it* Sarah has a new boyfriend, and he is exactly one day old* The predictive genius of the movie Her* Is it cheating if you're fooling around with an AI?* Do we have to tell our partners everything?* The future where Siri becomes personalized, and we all get AI assistants* The difference between “falling in love” and “being in love”* A new season of The Bear is coming* Is Nancy's Native American accent offensive?* Sherman Alexie's The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian* Black Mirror is back, baby!* UATX event with Nancy, Sarah, and Meghan Daum

Smoke 'Em If You Got 'Em Podcast
Pie Talk #18: Zucchini Bread (with a side of Portland)

Smoke 'Em If You Got 'Em Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2023 14:44


Good morning from the Delta Lounge at LaGuardia airport. Got here from the pad in Chinatown and through security (thanks, Clear!) in 25 minutes, a record. En route to Oklahoma, where this happened yesterday. Also in Texas, where I'll be headed Monday or Tuesday, and eventually on Thursday to Dallas, for an on-stage event with the University of Austin (yes in Dallas, though apparently there are more local digs in the works) with Hepola and Meghan Daum. The event is for students-only but UATX is growing - check them out.I interrupt the usual Pie Talk by reading an essay as, alas, I have not been making much pie or anything else, the only thing in my refrigerator are condiments and Diet Coke and maybe a half-bottle of wine. At least Cameron Diaz's has some salad…So I mention in the episode a short book/manual/pdf thingie written by two genre authors about 15 years ago, about the ways and whys of self-publishing. I thought it was called “Be the Monkey,” and maybe it is, but alas, I cannot find it. What I can find are oodles of other books about self-publishing as it's gone so mainstream and become for many so lucrative. I mean, hello Colleen Hoover, who knows the trick to success (and practices it better than any of us) is to write write write; there lies the radiance.I did yesterday, over on Make More Pie, and the response has been gratifying. It's the piece I read for you here. Go ahead and subscribe over there if you have not already, and thank you.Onto the deliciousness! Do try this one, which is just in time for zucchini season, which lasts at least a week (though it won't) and, I am told, freezes beautifully.Must-Try, Super-Moist Zucchini Bread from Alexandra's Kitchen* Scant 2 cups (227 g) flour * ¾ teaspoon baking powder* ¾ teaspoon baking soda* 1 teaspoon cinnamon, optional* 1 teaspoon kosher salt* 1 cup light (213 g) brown sugar* ½ cup (100 g) granulated sugar* ¾ cup vegetable oil* 1 teaspoon vanilla extract, optional* 2 eggs, lightly beaten* 2½ cups grated zucchini (12–16 oz.)* Preheat the oven to 350˚F. Grease a 8.5 x 4.5-inch loaf pan or a 10 x 5-inch loaf pan if using as much as a pound of zucchini (see notes above). For easy removal, line the pan with a sheet of parchment paper that hangs over the edges. * Whisk together first five ingredients. In a separate bowl, whisk remaining ingredients except zucchini. Add zucchini to the flour mixture and toss to coat. Add dry to wet and stir till until combined. Pour into pan. Bake until toothpick comes out clean, about 45 minutes to 1 hour. If you have an instant read thermometer, it should register 205ºF or above. (Note: Every oven is different, and different pans conduct heat differently —  be patient with the cooking. It may take 20-30 minutes more. With the longer cooking time, the bread shouldn't burn, but if you are noticing the bread getting too brown, cover it with foil.)* Let bread cool for 15 minutes in pan, then transfer to a cooling rack to cool completely before slicing. She also offers a step-by step video! This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit smokeempodcast.substack.com/subscribe

Texas Rising
21: Encouraging Free Speech on Campus (feat. Ilana Redstone)

Texas Rising

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2023 46:44


Stories abound of increased university student reluctance to explore unconventional views on campus. At the University of Illinois, Ilana Redstone has sought to create an environment in her classroom that promotes an exploration of many viewpoints and ideas. Her approach led her to found "Diverse Perspectives Consulting," an effort that helps organizations have hard conversations while building instutional resilience. Her work also attracted the attention of UATX. She is now the Director of the Mill Istitute at UATX and helps with faculty hiring efforts. Listen is as we discuss the challenges on campus and solutions that allow for free speech to flourish.

The Wisdom and Wealth Podcast
Episode 65: College planning and the liberal arts

The Wisdom and Wealth Podcast

Play Episode Play 60 sec Highlight Listen Later May 17, 2023 23:14 Transcription Available


Welcome to this week's episode of Wisdom and Wealth where  our calling is to enable you to fulfill your own! In today's episode I interview Chad Thevenot from UATX. During our conversation we explore why we believe why we are passionate about liberal arts education and how UATX is different from the traditional university model of college education. Feel free to pass on your thoughts and also subscribe to my Wisdom and Wealth Newsletter.As always we are wishing you continued Truth, Beauty and Goodness on the road ahead. Please feel free to like, and share this episode as well as subscribe to our channel!  JOSH KLOOZ, CFP®, MBASENIOR WEALTH PLANNERPhone 281.719.0036Text 281.699.8691Fax 281.719.0156jklooz@carsonwealth.com1780 Hughes Landing | Suite 570The Woodlands, TX 77380Music by bensound.comPlease check out and subscribe to my Youtube Channel and Newsletter! JOSH KLOOZ, CFP®, MBA SENIOR WEALTH PLANNER Phone 281.719.0036 Text 281.699.8691 Fax 281.719.0156 jklooz@carsonwealth.com 1780 Hughes Landing | Suite 570 The Woodlands, TX 77380 Music by bensound.com

The Wisdom and Wealth Podcast
Episode 65: College planning and the liberal arts

The Wisdom and Wealth Podcast

Play Episode Play 60 sec Highlight Listen Later May 17, 2023 23:14 Transcription Available


Welcome to this week's episode of Wisdom and Wealth where  our calling is to enable you to fulfill your own! In today's episode I interview Chad Thevenot from UATX. During our conversation we explore why we believe why we are passionate about liberal arts education and how UATX is different from the traditional university model of college education. Feel free to pass on your thoughts and also subscribe to my Wisdom and Wealth Newsletter.As always we are wishing you continued Truth, Beauty and Goodness on the road ahead. Please feel free to like, and share this episode as well as subscribe to our channel!  JOSH KLOOZ, CFP®, MBASENIOR WEALTH PLANNERPhone 281.719.0036Text 281.699.8691Fax 281.719.0156jklooz@carsonwealth.com1780 Hughes Landing | Suite 570The Woodlands, TX 77380Music by bensound.comPlease check out and subscribe to my Youtube Channel and Newsletter! JOSH KLOOZ, CFP®, MBA SENIOR WEALTH PLANNER Phone 281.719.0036 Text 281.699.8691 Fax 281.719.0156 jklooz@carsonwealth.com 1780 Hughes Landing | Suite 570 The Woodlands, TX 77380 Music by bensound.com

Austin Next
Austin's Next Innovation Hub: The Vision Behind the University of Austin with Pano Kanelos

Austin Next

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2023 41:42


The University of Austin is a new and promising institution set to open its doors to full time students in just over a year. The university is the brainchild of a few individuals who believe that an institution based on a new model is necessary. The school is committed to freedom of inquiry, a core tenet of any great university, that allows for the pursuit of truth. Today's guest is the founding president, Pano Kanelos, a distinguished academic that had a successful tenure at St. John's College. We discuss the university's mission, building new institutions, and how they fit within Austin's education and innovation ecosystems.Episode HighlightsThe University of Austin aims to become a new center for innovation and academic freedom in the city.UATX aspires to become the "Stanford to Berkeley" for Austin, complementing the University of Texas.By working closely with industry leaders, the university seeks to co-develop programs, offer internships, and provide support for student-led projects.The Polaris Project emphasizes real-world application and impact on pressing global problems, while fostering interdisciplinary collaboration among students.They want to inspire new institutions around the world by proving that it's possible to build a new university todayWhat's next Austin? “A dozen years from now, there is a thriving campus in the Austin area that is attracting scholars, practitioners, and young people from across the country and across the world who are building things that we haven't yet dreamed of.”Episode linksUniversity of Austin: Website, Twitter, LinkedIn Austin Next Links: Website, X/Twitter, YouTube, LinkedIn

The Ed Morrissey Show
The Fight Against the Academia Establishment Begins in ... Austin?

The Ed Morrissey Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2023 42:07


Can Academia be restored to its original purpose? Jacob Howland plans to try. Howland, the director of intellectual foundations at the University of Austin, discusses the goals and the accomplishments thus far from this new start-up in higher education. We discuss how UATX plans to restore full and free debate and discussion, how classical education will guide the curricula, and UATX's ambitious plans to open as a full-scale four-year-plus university by the fall of 2024.

Radio BUAP
Informativo BUAP. Ep. 14 de febrero.

Radio BUAP

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2023 30:59


El espacio de difusión de las noticias más importantes de la Máxima Casa de Estudios de Puebla lo encuentras de lunes a viernes a las 20:00 horas en Informativo BUAP. La Rectora María Lilia Cedillo Ramírez imparte la conferencia: ¿Por qué me enamoré de la Microbiología?, en la UATx. Universitarias participan en el Global Womens Breakfast GWB 2023. Se oferta el curso gratuito de preparación para la Admisión 2023 a través de la plataforma: Khan Academy. Conoce la ciencia de los abrazos. El 14 de febrero se festejó con ENAMORarte del CCU, Descubre la química del amor. Convocatoria para el XXVIII Verano de la investigación científica y tecnológica del Pacífico 2023. El Dr. Luis Ochoa Bilbao, director de la Facultad de Ciencias Políticas y Sociales, habla de la crisis socio-política tras el terremoto ocurrido en Turquía y Siria. Babasónicos se presenta en el CCU. Cultura: se reconoce a Raymundo Pérez Mendoza, artesano, como tesoro humano vivo por su producción de sellos de chocolate y la preservación de la cultura de Huaquechula. Deportes: se presenta la medalla conmemorativa del Duatlón Puebla - BUAP 2023. Te acompaña en la transmisión Coco Guerra.

From the New World
Rob Henderson: Social Problems Need Social Solutions

From the New World

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2023 161:16


Rob Henderson is a writer of an excellent Substack, a founding faculty of UATX, and a recent recipient of a psychology PhD. We discuss the evolution of media, the “policy left”, noblesse oblige, the Tripartite War, the meaning crisis, Eric Berne, and transactional analysis.Timestamps:0:00 Media12:00 Tiktok22:00 “Policy left”33:00 Elites and Status Competition52:00 Noblesse Oblige58:00 Parallel Status Hierarchies1:07:00 Tripartite War1:42:00 Meaning vs. Pleasure1:55:00 Eric Berne and Transactional Analysis2:39:00 Chaos and OrderRob on Substack:Twitter:https://twitter.com/robkhendersonPieces Mentioned: Get full access to From the New World at cactus.substack.com/subscribe

MICROCOLLEGE:  The Thoreau College Podcast
Episode #21: Dr. Ilana Redstone - Thinking Beyond Bigots and Snowflakes, The Mill Institute at UATX

MICROCOLLEGE: The Thoreau College Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2022 59:16


Ilana Redstone outlines her work and approach towards tackling polarization on college campuses and beyond.Ilana Redstone is an Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, a Founding Faculty Fellow at UATX, and the Faculty Director of The Mill Center at UATX. She is the co-author of “Unassailable Ideas: How Unwritten Rules and Social Media Shape Discourse in American Higher Education” and the creator of the “Beyond Bigots and Snowflakes'' video series. She is the founder of Diverse Perspectives Consulting and has a joint Ph.D. in demography and sociology from the University of Pennsylvania.The University of Austin, Texas (UATX): https://www.uaustin.org/The Mill Institute at UATX: https://www.uaustin.org/millDiverse Perspectives Consulting: ​​https://diverseperspectivesconsulting.com/Beyond Bigots and Snowflakes: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLDBD1QdLvr8CiEL7-vyWdyB7s9lc7NsrlLearn more about Thoreau College and the microcollege movement at: https://thoreaucollege.org/Driftless Folk School:https://www.driftlessfolkschool.org/

The Unspeakable Podcast
Gain Confidence By Losing Certainty. Ilana Redstone on Breaking Free from the Certainty Trap

The Unspeakable Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2022 59:11


Ilana Redstone is an Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She is also the faculty director and a co-founder of the Mill Institute, an organization aimed at helping educators learn how to foster productive, respectful discussions that make room for a variety of viewpoints in the classroom. In this conversation, Ilana talks about her work around a concept she's coined “the certainty trap.” The idea is that being "absolutely sure" about a particular position or opinion may actually be a sign of underlying doubt. Unsurprisingly, this  kind of unconscious cognitive dissonance may in fact have a lot to do with our current troubles as a society when it comes to public discourse. In this conversation, Ilana talks with Meghan about how the word “truth” can often throw people off course and explains how she works with her students to challenge their assumptions and biases. In the second part of the interview, Ilana walks Meghan through a couple of positions about which Meghan feels “certain.” In so doing, she floats a potentially mind-blowing concept: if you replace feeling “certain” with feeling “confident,” your entire worldview can shift in a more productive direction. And you might even be better able to change the minds of others.    Guest Bio: Ilana Redstone is an Associate Professor of sociology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the Faculty Director of The Mill Institute at UATX. In May of 2022 she published her seminal essay, The Certainty Trap, in Tablet. She is also the co-author of Unassailable Ideas: How Unwritten Rules and Social Media Shape Discourse in American Higher Education, the creator of the Beyond Bigots and Snowflakes video series and the founder of Diverse Perspectives Consulting.

Keep Talking
Episode 66: Pano Kanelos - The University of Austin

Keep Talking

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2022 83:09


Pano Kanelos is an educator, a Shakespeare scholar, and is the founding President of the University of Austin. During our conversation, Pano talks about the problems within modern universities, the principles that have and will guide the creation of the University of Austin, why Austin, Texas was chosen as the location of this new university, the timeline for the rollout of the school, and what success would look like for UATX.UATX received 3,500 inquiries in its first week of existence from professors at other universities about career opportunities. From prior conversations on this podcast, I'm persuaded that censorship, self-censorship, monoculture, a lack of tolerance for minority opinions, a lack of academic diversity, and a lack of courage are real problems at modern universities.Pano has called universities the "beating heart of a free society," and I think he's right about that. If we are a society that aims to remain democratic, tolerant, and pluralistic, that's committed to civil discourse and resists dogma, that's fearless in its aim to seek the truth, we should applaud the lofty ambitions of the University of Austin, and hope that it influences and improves our broader culture and our exceptional institutions of higher learning.------------Support on SubstackSupport via VenmoSupport via PayPalSupport on Patreon------------Show notesRate on SpotifyRate on Apple PodcastsSocial media and all episodes------------(00:00) Introduction

Counterweight
Episode 7: Teaching Leaders to Innovate | Ellie Avishai

Counterweight

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2022 57:10


Welcome to the Counterweight podcast, where we talk about how we can strive for a world in which freedom and reason are at the forefront of all human society. In this week's podcast, we speak with Ellie Avishai, Director of Strategy and Programmes for The Mill Institute. We discuss how we can teach leaders to innovate around complex socio-economic challenges. The Mill Institute at UATX: https://www.uaustin.org/mill Read our new mission: https://counterweightsupport.com/counterweight-manifesto/ Join us on Patreon for the latest Counterweight news & content: https://www.patreon.com/Counterweight Website: https://counterweightsupport.com Follow: https://twitter.com/Counter_Weight_ https://www.facebook.com/Counterweightsupport

Texas Rising
9: A New University for the 21st Century (Feat. Pano Kanelos)

Texas Rising

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2022 82:07


University of Austin President Pano Kanelos joins us to discuss what it takes to build a new university from the ground up, what a university education is for, and the post-secondary problems UATX is solving through new approaches.

The Freedom Feature Podcast - First Freedoms Foundation

Sign-up for our Newsletter https://firstfreedoms.ca/call_to_action_pages/stay_informed/ Jennifer Kabbany is editor of the College Fix, a daily news website focused on higher education. In this Freedom Feature interview, Jennifer and Barry discuss the left-leaning bias in academia, and the importance of proactive parenting to enable our young people to discern the truth. When news headlines are more outrageous than satire, do we have reason to be optimistic about the future? Ms. Kabbany offer three suggestions to restore critical thinking and objectivity in higher education: promoting the Socratic method, to allow ideas to be openly and freely debated; protecting the STEM fields from critical race theory by focusing on the quality of scientific research rather than racial quotas; and finally, studying the great literary and philosophical works of the past, regardless of the author's skin colour. Visit www.collegefix.com to see the latest coverage on current events. To learn more about the alternative education offered by UATX, including a “Forbidden Courses Summer Program,” check out https://www.uaustin.org. Please note the views expressed by the individual(s) in this video are their own, and do not necessarily reflect the views or principles of the First Freedoms Foundation.

The Soul of Enterprise: Business in the Knowledge Economy
Interview with Pano Kanelos - Founding Trustee UATX

The Soul of Enterprise: Business in the Knowledge Economy

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2022 56:05


Ron and Ed welcome Pano Kanelos, a founding trustee of UATX, a nonprofit dedicated to founding a university. It is currently in the process of applying for accreditation of the institution and its programs. The University will be devoted to the unfettered pursuit of truth are the cornerstone of a free and ?ourishing democratic society. For full show notes visit - http://thesoulofenterprise.com/405

The Soul of Enterprise: Business in the Knowledge Economy
Interview with Pano Kanelos - Founding Trustee UATX

The Soul of Enterprise: Business in the Knowledge Economy

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2022 60:00


Ron and Ed welcome Pano Kanelos, a founding trustee of UATX, a nonprofit dedicated to founding a university. It is currently in the process of applying for accreditation of the institution and its programs. The University will be devoted to the unfettered pursuit of truth are the cornerstone of a free and ?ourishing democratic society. For full show notes visit - http://thesoulofenterprise.com/405

The Soul of Enterprise: Business in the Knowledge Economy
Interview with Pano Kanelos - Founding Trustee UATX

The Soul of Enterprise: Business in the Knowledge Economy

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2022 56:05


Ron and Ed welcome Pano Kanelos, a founding trustee of UATX, a nonprofit dedicated to founding a university. It is currently in the process of applying for accreditation of the institution and its programs. The University will be devoted to the unfettered pursuit of truth are the cornerstone of a free and ?ourishing democratic society. For full show notes visit - http://thesoulofenterprise.com/405

Podcast Notes Playlist: Latest Episodes

Honestly with Bari Weiss ✓ Claim Podcast Notes Key Takeaways “The battle for the survival of the United States of America is upon us. It has not come in the form of traditional civil war. There are no uniformed armies, competing flags, or alternate constitutions. The great showdown is not being fought within the physical limits of a battlefield. It is instead happening all around us and directly to us. It defines our culture, sustains our media, and gives new shape to our public and private institutions—it is remaking the nation before our very eyes.”– Bari Weiss quoting Abe GreenwaldThe forces of justice and progress are in a war against backwardness and tyrannyCancel culture is the justice system of the Un-American Revolution: “step out of line, and you could be next”Tools of oppression that the Un-American ideology uses to deplatform, disinvite, and discredit: Facts replaced by feelings. Excellence is replaced by equity. Rule of law was replaced with the rule of the mob. Continue reading for more examples.“The Coalition of the Sane” – an allegiance where disagreement doesn't result in cancellationPreview of the 10 points of advice Bari Weiss gives to the Future Founders of America:Defend freedom of speech – The tool that guides us in the search for truth. Be public and vocal in rejecting claims you know to be false. Cowardice is contagious, but so is courage.Use your own eyes and ears – Narratives work because they are easy and digestible. Facts are just too stubborn to neatly fit into narratives. This is why you must seek out your own truth, and do your own research. You don't need to be an expert to form your own opinion.Refuse to submit your friendships and relationships to political litmus tests – The beauty of America is that there are so many realms of life (love, art, friendship) located outside of politics. Don't submit to totalitarianism. Don't forget what it means to be human. Not everything is political.SEE THE 7 OTHER CALLS TO ACTION BELOWRead the full notes @ podcastnotes.orgThere are nearly 4000 universities in the U.S.. Many of them have billions of dollars in endowments and histories that go back to well before the country's founding. So you'd be forgiven for thinking that it would be a bit ridiculous to try and compete with those Goliaths.  But that's exactly what the new University of Austin or UATX is doing. The premise, of course, is simple, and it goes like this. While the brand name schools have the money, they no longer have the mission. They have fundamentally abandoned the point of the university, which is the pursuit of truth. The good people at UATX, where I'm proud to be on the board, are not waiting for the broken status quo to change. They're not sitting around criticizing or whining. They are doing.  Just a few weeks ago, UTAX opened its doors to its first students at its inaugural summer school. I was blown away by the students that I met there, and I was honored to lecture alongside teachers like Neil Ferguson, Kathleen Stock, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Rob Henderson and Thomas Chatterton Williams. And today I wanted to share with all of you the talk that I gave at the old parkland in Dallas to that first class of students. It's about the broken moment that we're in as a culture and a country, but more it's about what I think is required of us to meet this moment. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Podcast Notes Playlist: Startup
The Next Founders

Podcast Notes Playlist: Startup

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2022 45:24


Honestly with Bari Weiss ✓ Claim Podcast Notes Key Takeaways “The battle for the survival of the United States of America is upon us. It has not come in the form of traditional civil war. There are no uniformed armies, competing flags, or alternate constitutions. The great showdown is not being fought within the physical limits of a battlefield. It is instead happening all around us and directly to us. It defines our culture, sustains our media, and gives new shape to our public and private institutions—it is remaking the nation before our very eyes.”– Bari Weiss quoting Abe GreenwaldThe forces of justice and progress are in a war against backwardness and tyrannyCancel culture is the justice system of the Un-American Revolution: “step out of line, and you could be next”Tools of oppression that the Un-American ideology uses to deplatform, disinvite, and discredit: Facts replaced by feelings. Excellence is replaced by equity. Rule of law was replaced with the rule of the mob. Continue reading for more examples.“The Coalition of the Sane” – an allegiance where disagreement doesn't result in cancellationPreview of the 10 points of advice Bari Weiss gives to the Future Founders of America:Defend freedom of speech – The tool that guides us in the search for truth. Be public and vocal in rejecting claims you know to be false. Cowardice is contagious, but so is courage.Use your own eyes and ears – Narratives work because they are easy and digestible. Facts are just too stubborn to neatly fit into narratives. This is why you must seek out your own truth, and do your own research. You don't need to be an expert to form your own opinion.Refuse to submit your friendships and relationships to political litmus tests – The beauty of America is that there are so many realms of life (love, art, friendship) located outside of politics. Don't submit to totalitarianism. Don't forget what it means to be human. Not everything is political.SEE THE 7 OTHER CALLS TO ACTION BELOWRead the full notes @ podcastnotes.orgThere are nearly 4000 universities in the U.S.. Many of them have billions of dollars in endowments and histories that go back to well before the country's founding. So you'd be forgiven for thinking that it would be a bit ridiculous to try and compete with those Goliaths.  But that's exactly what the new University of Austin or UATX is doing. The premise, of course, is simple, and it goes like this. While the brand name schools have the money, they no longer have the mission. They have fundamentally abandoned the point of the university, which is the pursuit of truth. The good people at UATX, where I'm proud to be on the board, are not waiting for the broken status quo to change. They're not sitting around criticizing or whining. They are doing.  Just a few weeks ago, UTAX opened its doors to its first students at its inaugural summer school. I was blown away by the students that I met there, and I was honored to lecture alongside teachers like Neil Ferguson, Kathleen Stock, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Rob Henderson and Thomas Chatterton Williams. And today I wanted to share with all of you the talk that I gave at the old parkland in Dallas to that first class of students. It's about the broken moment that we're in as a culture and a country, but more it's about what I think is required of us to meet this moment. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Smoke 'Em If You Got 'Em Podcast
25. Free Speech, Free Love

Smoke 'Em If You Got 'Em Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2022 85:45


Does college need to be reimagined? A new experimental university committed to free speech called the University of Austin drew mockery on Twitter when it was first announced, but the place is no joke: The college got 3,500 inquiries from professors in its first week, and has since raised $100 million dollars. Nancy and Sarah can't help feeling invigorated by this kind of innovation (even if Sarah is confused by the name, since it's pretty close to her alma mater, the University of Texas at Austin). We share our admiration for a recent speech given by founding trustee and journalist Bari Weiss at the university's inaugural event, where she diagnoses our current malaise and dares to be optimistic — even patriotic — about what comes next. How do we conserve the best of American values while creating new things? Speaking of innovations, we discuss a recent New Yorker essay about a “hook-up app for the emotionally mature,” which caters to alternative sexualities, ethical non-monogamy, and kink. Nancy is reminded of Sarah's observation that each generation tries to hack sex; Sarah is fascinated by the popularity of the app's “Fantasy Bunker,” exclusively for virtual sexting and folks who prefer the safe sex of the cloud to IRL action. As technology gives us more choices for expressing our desires, we wonder: Can pleasure really be engineered? And whatever happened to making out?The summer heat is unbearable, but things get cooler when you consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Episode Notes:“Dr. Jill's Taco Gaffe, and Narrative vs. Truth, with Kmele Foster, Michael Moynihan, and Matt Welch,” The Megyn Kelly Show“The Evil of Banality,” by Jake Siegel (Tablet)“‘Are You Are Becoming A Republican Or Something?' Sarah Hepola On Letting Down The Left Without Ever Leaving It,” The Unspeakable Podcast with Meghan Daum“Why Republicans Shouldn't Want Donald Trump to Run Again,” by Ben Dreyfuss (Substack)…… and one more from Ben, who's on a roll this week: “If you think Jon Stewart should run for president, you should go to a mental asylum.”All you might ever want to know about Peter Boghossian, except maybe that the first time he and Nancy met they ate barbecue and the conversation was so intense, the meat was flying! Peter later asked Nancy to make videos about her experience covering antifa in Portland summer 2020. There are ten (!). Here's one and the link to the series.“The New Founders America Needs,” Bari Weiss speech to incoming class at UATX, audio (Honestly podcast) “The New Founders America Needs,” written version (Common Sense)“A Generation of American Men Give Up on College: ‘I Just Feel Lost'” by Douglas Belkin (Wall Street Journal; may be paywalled)Blackout: Remembering the Things I Drank to Forget, by Sarah HepolaSt. John's College curriculum “focused on the most important books and ideas of Western civilization”Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who has one of the most devastating and interesting histories of any living person, including having to go into hiding after Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh, who'd worked with Hirsi Ali on a short film (“Submission”), was assassinated by an Islamic extremist.1883 official trailer“The Nuclear Family Was a Mistake,” by David Brooks (The Atlantic)Gratuitous but super-cool interactive graphic showing the evanescence of internet superiority“The Hookup App For the Emotionally Mature,” by Emily Witt (The New Yorker)Outro Song: “Light and Day,” The Polyphonic SpreeOK, people, you won't find this anywhere else: Nancy's cookies might be your reward when you become a paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit smokeempodcast.substack.com/subscribe

From the New World
Bohan Lou: Secular Order, Religious Revival

From the New World

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2022 58:51


Bohan Lou is a colleague in the UATX summer program, a graduate of Yale University, and a product manager at Lyft. He has interests in religious studies and philosophy.Follow Bohan on twitter: https://twitter.com/loubohan This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit cactus.substack.com

Honestly with Bari Weiss
The New Founders America Needs

Honestly with Bari Weiss

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2022 45:24


There are nearly 4000 universities in the U.S.. Many of them have billions of dollars in endowments and histories that go back to well before the country's founding. So you'd be forgiven for thinking that it would be a bit ridiculous to try and compete with those Goliaths.  But that's exactly what the new University of Austin or UATX is doing. The premise, of course, is simple, and it goes like this. While the brand name schools have the money, they no longer have the mission. They have fundamentally abandoned the point of the university, which is the pursuit of truth. The good people at UATX, where I'm proud to be on the board, are not waiting for the broken status quo to change. They're not sitting around criticizing or whining. They are doing.  Just a few weeks ago, UTAX opened its doors to its first students at its inaugural summer school. I was blown away by the students that I met there, and I was honored to lecture alongside teachers like Neil Ferguson, Kathleen Stock, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Rob Henderson and Thomas Chatterton Williams. And today I wanted to share with all of you the talk that I gave at the old parkland in Dallas to that first class of students. It's about the broken moment that we're in as a culture and a country, but more it's about what I think is required of us to meet this moment. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

EconTalk
Pano Kanelos on Education and UATX

EconTalk

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2022 74:50


What is real education? What can colleges provide their students? Pano Kanelos, president of the new college-to-be in Austin, UATX, talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the nature of education, what the Great Books can teach us, and how we should rethink college education in today's world.

Philosophy of Education
Truth, the Good Life, the University of Austin: A conversation with Pano Kanelos

Philosophy of Education

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2022 49:54


Join us for a conversation with Pano Kanelos, founder of the new University of Austin, about his philosophy of higher education. What is the job of the university? How do most universities go wrong? How will UATX fix it? Dr. Pano Kanelos is the Founding President of the University of Austin. Before embarking on this exciting project, Dr. Kanelos served as the 24th President of St. John's College, Annapolis. After earning degrees from Northwestern University (B.A.), Boston University (M.A.), and the University of Chicago (Ph.D.), Dr. Kalenos taught at Stanford University, the University of San Diego, and Loyola University Chicago. You can learn more about the University of Austin here: https://www.uaustin.org/

The Munk Debates Podcast
Be it resolved: Modern universities are a threat to democratic freedoms

The Munk Debates Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2022 47:40


By now we've all heard of ‘cancellations' across North American campuses – professors who face reputational and professional damage due to deviating opinions – or students who are forced to recant for behaviour deemed problematic by contemporary culture. A new institution of higher learning is hoping to change all that. The newly created University of Austin aims to prioritize and protect freedom of expression and intellectual diversity. Its supporters argue that universities are fundamentally broken. They currently operate like authoritarian regimes more interested in promoting left-wing intellectual orthodoxy as opposed to teaching students how to think for themselves and consider contrary viewpoints. They maintain that protecting young adults from ideas which offend them impedes their development and their understanding of basic democratic principles. Others argue that today's hysteria about what is being taught in universities is overblown. A few examples of intolerance – amplified by the media and shared on social media – do not represent how these institutions actually operate, nor what takes place in the average university classroom. Furthermore, those railing against universities, including the founders of UATX, are part of a privileged class who are threatened by emerging voices that have traditionally been excluded from public institutions, universities included. Welcoming new voices into the universities has made these institutions more diverse, more democratic, and more free than ever before.   Arguing for the  motion is Heather Heying and evolutionary biologist and founding trustee of the University of Austin Texas Arguing against the motion is Aaron Hanlon an associate professor of English at Colby College QUOTES: HEATHER HEYING “A democracy requires that people don't be censored, and that they don't be self-censored. If higher education isn't the place to explore wild disagreements, then I'm not sure what we have left.” AARON HANLON “If college is so stifling of speech, why are people coming out of it with greater appreciation for free expression than those who haven't had that opportunity?” Sources:  CNN, Fox News, GB News, MSNBC  The host of the Munk Debates is Rudyard Griffiths - @rudyardg.   Tweet your comments about this episode to @munkdebate or comment on our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/munkdebates/ To sign up for a weekly email reminder for this podcast, send an email to podcast@munkdebates.com.   To support civil and substantive debate on the big questions of the day, consider becoming a Munk Member at https://munkdebates.com/membership Members receive access to our 10+ year library of great debates in HD video, a free Munk Debates book, newsletter and ticketing privileges at our live events. This podcast is a project of the Munk Debates, a Canadian charitable organization dedicated to fostering civil and substantive public dialogue - https://munkdebates.com/ Senior Producer: Ricki Gurwitz Editor: Reza Dahya

Joe Lonsdale: American Optimist
Building a New World-Class University with University of Austin President Pano Kanelos

Joe Lonsdale: American Optimist

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2022 35:07


Pano Kanelos is the President of the University of Austin (UATX), the most ambitious new university venture in America in decades. Recognizing the plight of America's higher education system, Pano stepped down as the President of St. John's College to build a new institution rooted in the pursuit of truth, open inquiry, and educating the next generation of American leaders. In this episode, Joe (a founding trustee of UATX) and Pano discuss the failures of modern academia and why it's time to take on the bold task of building a new world-class university.

Acton Line
Pano Kanelos on the University of Austin

Acton Line

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2022 30:14


Since its announcement in November, media buzz has surrounded the University of Austin in Texas (UATX), newly founded to push back against a growing illiberal tide of “wokeness” and “cancel culture” in higher education. According to its website, UATX is “dedicated to the fearless pursuit of truth” and seeks to promote freedom of inquiry and ideological independence. Today on Acton Line, Dylan Pahman interviews Dr. Pano Kanelos, president of UATX, to dig deeper than the social media hot takes to discover the truth of what UATX is really all about. Subscribe to our podcasts Business Matters 2022 — 50% off registration with promo code PODCASTBM22 The University of Austin About Dr. Pano KanelosThe University of Austin is scaring all the right people See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

The Ricochet Audio Network Superfeed
Acton Line: Pano Kanelos on the University of Austin

The Ricochet Audio Network Superfeed

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2022


Since its announcement in November, media buzz has surrounded the University of Austin in Texas (UATX), newly founded to push back against a growing illiberal tide of “wokeness” and “cancel culture” in higher education. According to its website, UATX is “dedicated to the fearless pursuit of truth” and seeks to promote freedom of inquiry and […]

re:verb
E62: re:joinder - The University of the Cancelled

re:verb

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2021 109:54


Last month, former New York Times columnist and current Substacker Bari Weiss took to Twitter to announce “a new university dedicated to the fearless pursuit of truth”: the University of Austin (UATX). Not to be confused with the University of Texas at Austin, UATX is thus far only a university concept–a pitch for a “new” kind of higher education institution–but the details are murky, it is not accredited, and by its own website's admission, there are no concrete plans for undergraduate degrees until 2024 at the earliest. More than anything, this “University” appears to be an ideological project of social media and op-ed columns, in which its conservative culture warrior backers rail vaguely and haphazardly at existing universities for various tangled, often contradictory sins. Even more oddly, they are proposing a fairly standard liberal arts education, with few obvious “fixes” to traditional models beyond a vague insinuation that their discourses will be “freer” and their students will not be “coddled.”On today's show, Alex and Calvin are joined for the first time by co-producer Mike Laudenbach. Together we unpack two key texts from the University of Austin's public announcement: “We Can't Wait for Universities to Fix Themselves. So We're Starting a New One.” by Pano Kanelos (a UATX founding trustee) and “I'm Helping to Start a New College Because Higher Ed Is Broken” by Niall Ferguson (another trustee and a legendary cheerleader for the British and American empires). As is typical of our re:joinder episodes, we have lots of laughs taking apart these articles' unsupported, illogical, and downright bizarre claims about the industry we all know so well: academia. But we also do our best to earnestly and fairly engage with key questions that these writers raise (but don't really address), such as:To what extent is higher ed broken, how is it broken, and–perhaps most importantly–who or what broke it? Are there social and intellectual taboos within universities, and if so, which ones bear most significantly on academics' lives and livelihoods? What is the current state of free speech on campuses, and how does it fit into a historical context dating back to the red scares of the Cold War, student protest movements that began in the 1960s and ‘70s, and political correctness debates of the ‘80s-90's? Along the way, we draw on our experiences and knowledge as students, researchers, and faculty, and we propose an innovative institution of our own: re:verb University (RVU). GO VERBIES! Stay tuned, as applications for our august academy will open soon–once we succeed in getting cancelled for truth.Texts Analyzed in this EpisodeFerguson, N. (2021, Nov. 8). I'm Helping to Start a New College Because Higher Ed Is Broken. Bloomberg.Kanelos, P. (2021, Nov. 8). We Can't Wait for Universities to Fix Themselves. So We're Starting a New One. Common Sense (Bari Weiss's Substack).Works and Concepts CitedMishra, P. (2011, Nov. 3). Watch this man. London Review of Books. [Article critiquing Niall Ferguson's apologetic writing about imperialism. Below the article, its author Pankaj Mishra and its subject Niall Ferguson exchange a series of letters debating Ferguson's scholarship.]Nichols, A. (2018, Apr. 2). So-called ‘intellectuals' can't let go of “The Bell Curve.” The Outline. [Article explaining how Andrew Sullivan and other conservative intellectuals continue to circulate modern race science ideas originally espoused in Charles Murray's 1994 The Bell Curve.]Sohege, D. (2021, Apr. 25). In fairness @epkaufm's resistance to academic institutions maintaining their right of academic freedom to call out poor work, and his views on "political minorities", are understandable when placed In the context of his own apparent lack of academic rigor. Twitter. [Tweet highlighting shoddy scholarship in the CSPI study “Academic Freedom in Crisis: Punishment, Political Discrimination, and Self-Censorship.”]

The Sauce with Maya Gurantz and Rebecca Cohen
UATX and Academic Free Speech

The Sauce with Maya Gurantz and Rebecca Cohen

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2021 63:04


Welcome to Anti-Woke University! Rebecca and Maya break down The University of Austin Texas, a new school founded by a cadre of the Self-Identified Cancelled, & their attendant bullshit rhetorical moves around ideas of academic freedom and open discourse.

Tangle
The new 'anti-woke' university.

Tangle

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2021 26:39


Last week, a group of donors, scholars, writers and political activists announced the launch of a new college: The University of Austin. The people behind the school say that fundamentally, it will be dedicated to free speech, citing concerns about “the illiberalism and censoriousness prevalent in America's most prestigious universities.” The school will go by UATX for short, and is launching a noncredit program called "Forbidden Courses" as a kind of soft launch, which the creators say will encourage “spirited discussion about the most provocative questions that often lead to censorship or self-censorship in many universities," according to The New York Times. Our newsletter is written by Isaac Saul, edited by Bailey Saul, Sean Brady, Ari Weitzman, and produced in conjunction with Tangle's social media manager Magdalena Bokowa, who also created our logo. The podcast is edited by Trevor Eichhorn, and music for the podcast was produced by Diet 75. You can support our podcast by clicking here --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tanglenews/support

I Don't Speak German
98: The University of Austin, with Kristin Rawls and Jeff Eaton

I Don't Speak German

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2021 115:50


So UATX happened. Dear God I wish stuff would stop happening. Thankfully we got Kristin Rawls and Jeff Eaton from Christian Rightcast to come back to help us talk about it.  * Content Warnings. Podcast Notes: Please consider donating to help us make the show and stay independent.  Patrons get exclusive access to one full extra episode a month. Daniel's Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/danielharper Jack's Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=4196618 IDSG Twitter: https://twitter.com/idsgpod Daniel's Twitter: @danieleharper Jack's Twitter: @_Jack_Graham_ IDSG on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/i-dont-speak-german/id1449848509?ls=1 Christian Rightcast https://rightcast.substack.com/ CHristian Rightcast on Twitter https://twitter.com/crightcast?lang=en Kristin's Twitter https://twitter.com/kristinrawls Jeff's Twitter https://twitter.com/eaton   Show Notes: Pano Kanelos at Bari Weiss's Substack We Can't Wait For Universities to Fix Themselves. So We're Starting a New One The numbers tell the story as well as any anecdote you've read in the headlines or heard within your own circles. Nearly a quarter of American academics in the social sciences or humanities endorse ousting a colleague for having a wrong opinion about hot-button issues such as immigration or gender differences. Over a third of conservative academics and PhD students say they had been threatened with disciplinary action for their views. Four out of five American PhD students are willing to discriminate against right-leaning scholars, according to a report by the Center for the Study of Partisanship and Ideology. The picture among undergraduates is even bleaker. In Heterodox Academy's 2020 Campus Expression Survey, 62% of sampled college students agreed that the climate on their campus prevented students from saying things they believe. Nearly 70% of students favor reporting professors if the professor says something students find offensive, according to a Challey Institute for Global Innovation survey. The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education reports at least 491 disinvitation campaigns since 2000. Roughly half were successful. University of Austin Wikipedia The University of Austin website Under "Our principles" Universities devoted to the unfettered pursuit of truth are the cornerstone of a free and flourishing democratic society. For universities to serve their purpose, they must be fully committed to freedom of inquiry, freedom of conscience, and civil discourse. In order to maintain these principles, UATX will be fiercely independent—financially, intellectually, and politically. Under "What Makes UATX Different" A COMMITMENT TO FREEDOM OF INQUIRY We're reclaiming a place in higher education for freedom of inquiry and civil discourse. Our students and faculty will confront the most vexing questions of human life and civil society. We will create a community of conversation grounded in intellectual humility that respects the dignity of each individual and cultivates a passion for truth. A NEW FINANCIAL MODEL We're completely rethinking how a university operates by developing a novel financial model. We will lower tuition by avoiding costly administrative excess and overreach. We will focus our resources intensively on academics, rather than amenities. We will align institutional incentives with student outcomes. AN INNOVATIVE CURRICULUM Our curriculum is being designed in partnership not only with the world's great thinkers but also with its great doers—visionaries who have founded bold ventures, artists and writers of the highest order, pioneers in tech, and the leading lights in engineering and the natural sciences. Students will apply their foundational skills to practical problems in fields such as entrepreneurship, public policy, education, and engineering. Under "Programs" Beginning Summer 2022 The Forbidden Courses Our Forbidden Courses summer program invites top students from other universities to join us for a spirited discussion about the most provocative questions that often lead to censorship or self-censorship in many universities. Students will become proficient and comfortable with productive disagreement. Instructors will range from top professors to accomplished business leaders, journalists, and artists. Beginning Fall 2022 ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND LEADERSHIP MA PROGRAM The primary purpose of most conventional business programs is to credential large cohorts of passive learners with a lowest-common-denominator curriculum comprised of the most abstract principles of accounting, finance, management, and organizational leadership. In this 12-month program, UATX will recruit elite students from top schools, teach them the classical principles of leadership and market foundations, and then embed them into a network of successful technologists, entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, and public-policy reformers. Students will then actively apply their learning to the most urgent and seemingly intractable problems facing our society, both in the private and public sectors. Under "Frequently Asked Questions" Do you have a physical location? Our headquarters are located in central Austin: 2112 Rio Grande Street, Austin, TX 78705 RashChapman, Attorneys at Law Texas Tribune, The new University of Austin hopes to counter what its founders say is a culture of censorship at most colleges They also haven't officially received nonprofit status from the federal government. They are using Cicero Research, which is run by Austin-based tech investor and advisory board member Joe Lonsdale, as a temporary nonprofit sponsor. According to the 2020 tax filing for Cicero Research, its mission is to “create and distribute non-partisan documents recommending free-market based solutions to public policy issues,” and “produce and distribute non-partisan educational materials about the importance of preserving Texan policies, values and history.” Lonsdale tweet about Pete Buttigieg's parternity leave Great for fathers to spend time w their kids and support moms, but any man in an important position who takes 6 months of leave for a newborn is a loser. In the old days men had babies and worked harder to provide for their future - that's the correct masculine response. US tech investor Joe Lonsdale refuses to apologise for ‘loser' paternity tweet Why Palantir co-founder Joe Lonsdale is leaving Silicon Valley Lonsdale said that 10 to 15 of his firm's 45 employees are likely to join him in the Austin area. He's also moving his policy organization, Cicero Institute, to the city. Among 8VC's better-known investments to date are Palmer Luckey's start-up, Anduril, which is building a virtual border wall, and Dustin Moskovitz's software company, Asana, which went public in September. He's also putting a lot of money in health-care companies like insurance provider Oscar Health and men's health company Hims.  

Bret Weinstein | DarkHorse Podcast
#104: Locusts of Control (Bret Weinstein & Heather Heying DarkHorse Livestream)

Bret Weinstein | DarkHorse Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2021 89:15


In this 104th in a series of live discussions with Bret Weinstein and Heather Heying (both PhDs in Biology), we discuss the state of the world through an evolutionary lens.How can higher education be saved? The University of Austin launched this week, to much enthusiasm, some ridicule, and cautious optimism. We discuss what higher ed in general, and UATX in particular, needs to consider, including that faculty need to know something real, be able to communicate it, and have a fundamental belief in the humanity of their students. We discuss religion in the context of Chesterton's fence, and apologies. What is an apology, why are apologies not just valuable but necessary, and how is modernity rendering them less useful? Finally: an update on the zoo giraffes who died, which we discussed last week: they had not been vaccinated, according to a Newsweek fact check. And a short discussion of quail.Get your Goliath shirts right here: store.darkhorsepodcast.orgHeather's newsletter, Natural Selections (subscribe to get free weekly essays in your inbox); last post: why we should not allow medical transition for children; next post: higher ed:  https://naturalselections.substack.comSupport the sponsors of the show:Moink: Grass-fed and grass-finished beef and lamb, pastured pork and chicken, and wild caught Alaskan salmon. Visit www.moinkbox.com/darkhorse to get a year's worth of ground beef free when you sign up. Allform: Get 20% off any order (of a beautiful sofa) from Allform at https://allform.com/darkhorseVivo Barefoot: Shoes for healthy feet—comfortable and regenerative, enhances stability and tactile feedback. Go to www.vivobarefoot.com/us/darkhorse to get 20% off, and a 100-day free trial.*****Our book, A Hunter-Gatherer's Guide to the 21st Century, is now available for at amazon. https://www.amazon.com/dp/0593086880/ref=cm_sw_r_tw_dp_5BDTABYFKRJKZBT5GSQAHeather's newsletter, Natural Selections (subscribe to get free weekly essays in your inbox): https://naturalselections.substack.comFind more from us on Bret's website (https://bretweinstein.net) or Heather's website (http://heatherheying.com).Become a member of the DarkHorse LiveStreams, and get access to an additional Q&A livestream every month. Join at Heather's Patreon.Get your Goliath shirts right here: http://store.darkhorsepodcast.orgLike this content? Subscribe to the channel, like this video, follow us on twitter (@BretWeinstein, @HeatherEHeying), and consider helping us out by contributing to either of our Patreons or Bret's Paypal.Looking for clips from #DarkHorseLivestreams? Check out our other channel:  @DarkHorse Podcast Clips  Theme Music: Thank you to Martin Molin of Wintergatan for providing us the rights to use their excellent music.Q&A Link: https://youtu.be/NIOycjlVc5kMentioned in this episode:University of Austin: https://www.uaustin.orgFact Check: Did Dallas Zoo Giraffes Die After COVID Vaccine? https://www.newsweek.com/dallas-zoo-giraffe-covid-vaccine-death-sick-1647415Fact Checkers Aren't Scientists (Heather's first Substack post, from July 2021): https://naturalselections.substack.com/p/coming-soonSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/bretweinstein)

Philosophy After Hours
Ep. 64 - A Better University?

Philosophy After Hours

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2021 79:05


In this episode we discuss the recent formation of the University of Austin, dedicated to "open debate" and "free inquiry". Will this return the university to the pursuit of truth and push against the tide of illiberalism? Are the founders of UATX responding to a serious problem in our cancel culture age? If you like what you hear, find us on Patreon at patreon.com/therilkeanzoo for more content. Text: D.A. Carson, The Gagging of God (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1996), 168-169.

Legal Fiction
Legal Fiction #16 - JFK, Aaron Rodgers is The Only True Critical Thinker (read: Dumb Person), We're Joing UATX to teach film, Chris Pratt Wil Not Rest Until He Ruins Your Childhood

Legal Fiction

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2021 85:00


We have merch! teespring.com/legalfictionII Follow us on Twitter: @podlegalfiction, @kafka_esquire, @ohnotsouter IIJoin our Discord: https://discord.gg/N295hu5qkt IIEmail us at: legalfictionpod@gmail.com II00:00:30 - Maybe Masks are good?00:02:16 - Aaron Rodgers made sure that we all checked off our anti-vaxxer Bingo sheet00:04:02 - Don't Call Aaron Rodgers short00:07:34 - Let's Go Brandon (The Loser Mantra)00:09:34 - University of Austin is here for all free thinkers who want fake degrees baby00:15:28 - Eternals is good ok? And if you disagree you hate women or POC or something...00:17:03 - The Atlanta Braves won the title so they don't need to respect speed limits00:18:03 - Chris Pratt has made it his mission to destroy all childhood icons00:21:03 - JFK PLOT RUNDOWN01:01:51 - Legal Points (Do They Matter?)01:04:27 - Production Notes and Thoughts on JFK (the movie)01:06:20 - Does This Movie Pass The Bar? (Our Scores 0-100)01:12:30 - Actors Almost In This Movie01:19:40 - This Movie Spent A Lot Of Money Man01:21:00 - Garrison Lost His Re-election To An Interesting Attorney