podcast
details
.com
Print
Share
Look for any podcast host, guest or anyone
Search
Showing episodes and shows of
Alexandra Juhasz
Shows
Utcafront
Utcafront (2025. január 11., szombat 17:00)
Otto Frei nem csak a neve, hanem egész munkássága alapján szabad építésznek mondható. A Pritzker-díjas mesterre emlékeztünk Sylvester Ádámmal. Újabb NER-es trükk: ezúttal a Kilián-laktanya műemléki védettségét mellőzve építkezne valaki: Zsuppán András újságírótól tudtuk meg a részleteket. Baumhorn Lipót, a zsinagógaépítő mester Páva utcai épületének történetét hallottuk Kelecsényi Kristóftól. Még egy történet, ami a zebráról szól – most ne a Klubrádióra, hanem a gyalogátkelőhel...
2025-01-11
52 min
Miben segíthetek?-EnsoulCoach-Dr Juhász Tímea
35 - Komáromi Alexandra - kathak - és fúziós táncos, tűzartista
A „Miben segíthetek?” 35. részében Komáromi Alexandrával, Alival találkozhattok, aki fúziós táncos (többek között a kathak és tűztánc amiről beszélgetünk vele). Kiderül, hogy Ali, aki amúgy a Jászságból származik, már a kiságyban táncolt különböző reklámdalokra, és a nagy táncos filmeken felnőve a magyar néptánc hogyan adta meg neki a nagyon stabil alapokat.Beszélgetünk arról, hogy a Budapestre költözés és egy szabadtéri fesztivál hogyan nyitott...
2023-08-25
47 min
Partos
The Power of Storytelling: Asma Naimi in conversation with Alexandra Juhasz
A podcast from our CoP on inclusive communication Are you a changemaker and interested to learn more about the ethics and impact of storytelling? In this podcast episode, Asma Naimi interviews Alexandra Juhasz about the original storytelling approach of the Doing Things with Stories (DTwS) project, a global initiative by Oxfam Novib, ArtEZ University of the Arts, and Radboud University. Asma Naimi is a Writer and Social Entrepreneur. She wrote the upcoming Storytelling for Social Change Guidebook, a collaboration between Changemaker Studio and Shortway Productions. The guidebook shows how storytelling is essential t...
2023-06-08
50 min
Woman in Revolt
Queer Classics: 'The Watermelon Woman'
Cheryl Dunye’s 1996 film, “The Watermelon Woman” is a documentary/fiction hybrid about a young Black lesbian filmmaker named Cheryl, played by Dunye, who is on a quest to tell the story of a (fictionalized) forgotten Black actress named Faith Richardson (or Faye Richards in Hollywood). As Cheryl works on her project, some of her own relationships — platonic and romantic — are tested. This makes the film sound kind of dramatic, but it’s pretty lowkey in its storytelling approach, which is why I like it so much. Cheryl faces obstacles, but they’re never the sole focus. The film is more about...
2022-06-22
1h 07
University of Minnesota Press
Activist archiving in the age of AIDS.
What are we leaving behind, forgetting, and obscuring as we remember AIDS activist pasts? VIRAL CULTURES is the first book to critically examine the archives that have helped preserve and create the legacy of AIDS activism of the 1980s and 1990s. Marika Cifor charts the efforts activists, artists, and curators have made to document the work of AIDS activism in the US and the infrastructure developed to maintain it, with attention on large institutional archives such as the New York Public Library, and those developed by community-based organizations such as ACT UP and VISUAL AIDS. This book explores the...
2022-06-02
1h 05
The Bitchuation Room
Choo Choo Trains with Antonia Juhasz & Will Miles (EP 122)
Sexy M&Ms, Biden’s first year in office, and Bari Worst Take Weiss. Plus, why is no one talking about the $90 billion infusion into public transportation passed in the infrastructure bill? We thought Joe loved Amtrak?! Sell it, POTUS. Investigative journalist Antonia Juhasz joins to discuss how Gulf coast communities are taking energy matters into their own hands, and why democratizing the energy grid with renewables leads to better service AND a less CO2. Comedian and writer Will Miles joins to discuss Mitch McConnell showing his whole ass on how he views Black voters and which cartoon mascots will tr...
2022-01-24
1h 28
The Bitchuation Room
Choo Choo Trains with Antonia Juhasz & Will Miles (EP 122)
Sexy M&Ms, Biden’s first year in office, and Bari Worst Take Weiss. Plus, why is no one talking about the $90 billion infusion into public transportation passed in the infrastructure bill? We thought Joe loved Amtrak?! Sell it, POTUS. Investigative journalist Antonia Juhasz joins to discuss how Gulf coast communities are taking energy matters into their own hands, and why democratizing the energy grid with renewables leads to better service AND a less CO2. Comedian and writer Will Miles joins to discuss Mitch McConnell showing his whole ass on how he views Black voters and which cartoon mascots will tr...
2022-01-24
1h 28
Episode 01 - Egészségiskola
Episode 07 - Zsírok
Sziasztok! Ma újra Juhász Timitől tudhatunk meg több információt a zsírokról. Mi a szerepük a szervezetünkben? Vajon fontosak számunkra? Milyenek a jó és rossz zsírok? Mit kell tudni a raktározott és a zsigeri zsírokról? Ebben az epizódban megtudhatjátok. :)
2021-01-24
16 min
Episode 01 - Egészségiskola
Episode 01 - Egészségiskola
Sziasztok! Az első epizódban Juhász Tímea történetét hallgathatjátok meg, hogy hogyan is került az életmódváltáshoz, milyen problémákkal küszködött azelőtt, valamint hogyan sikerült átformálnia a mindennapi szokásait.
2021-01-24
14 min
Episode 01 - Egészségiskola
Episode 03 - Rostok
Sziasztok! A következő epizódban újra Juhász Tímeával beszélgetünk, a témánk pedig a rostok. Átvesszük miben mennyi rost található, mennyi a napi ajánlott rostbevitel, valamint hogyan juthatunk hozzá több mennyiséghez.
2020-12-17
25 min
Episode 01 - Egészségiskola
Episode 01 - Egészségiskola
Üdvözöllek az egészségiskola podcastjén! Az első epizódban Juhász Tímea történetét hallgathatjátok meg, hogyan is került az életmódváltáshoz, milyen problémákkal küszködött azelőtt és hogyan sikerült átformálni a mindennapi szokásait.
2020-12-08
15 min
We Need Gentle Truths for Now
The Beauty of Weirdos
Our final episode highlights two things: the beauty of weirdos & your human hope. Project organizer, Professor Alexandra Juhasz, penned these fragments, anonymously, at a Fake News Poetry Workshop held at the Toronto home of that workshop’s facilitator, Professor T.L. Cowan. Later, at another workshop held within an NYU Performative Writing class and led by Professor Barbara Browning, these words were transformed into a song—by Barbara—quite unaware of who had written them. Two fragments of poetry formed a crossroads between T.L., Barbara, Alex, and others. And, the gifts of time...
2020-09-04
06 min
We Need Gentle Truths for Now
Black Lives Matter - Speak and Spell, Teach and Tell, Count and Swell
This emergency episode was made quickly during a time of uprising following the killing of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, Tony McDade, and countless other African Americans by police.Poets, educators, and friends Chet’la Sebree and Margaret Rhee worked with me on two Fake News Poetry workshops on race and the media. The first was in May 2018, with poets of color in Brooklyn; the second, in November at the home of Claudia Rankine and John Lucas, where we translated some of the poems written in Brooklyn into video-poems.Now, in a ne...
2020-08-21
17 min
We Need Gentle Truths for Now
Resist How We Are Framed
In this episode, we rely on poetry to resist how we are framed. A HardTruth of the same name was written for my online primmer on digital media literacy by the writer Hugh Ryan. In 2017 he offered up words of our queer heritage as one response to the dishonorable and controlling vernaculars of the internet.Hugh believes that we are “hampered because we fight using language that is stacked against us.”So, he provides something else, the poetry and wisdom of our elders. Adrienne Rich, David Wojnarowicz, and Audre Lorde. Three young people in m...
2020-08-14
08 min
We Need Gentle Truths for Now
Black Lives Matter - Ghosts Can't Tell Stories
This emergency episode was made quickly during a time of uprising following the killing of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, Tony McDade, and countless other African Americans by police.We hear readings of “A Small Needful Fact” by Ross Gay. perhaps, in all likelihood,he put gently into the earthsome plants which, most likely,some of them, in all likelihood,continue to grow, continueto do what such plants doFellow-AIDS scholars, Drs. Jih-Fei Cheng and Nishant Shahani (co-edi...
2020-08-07
19 min
We Need Gentle Truths for Now
Practice Strategic Contemplation
This episode highlights methods to “practice strategic contemplation,” the 16th HardTruth for my online primer on digital media literacy. This is one of six “principles of feminist filmmaking” represented in Alexandra Hidalgo’s video book, Cámara Retórica: A Feminist Filmmaking Methodology for Rhetoric and Composition. Hidalgo is an award-winning Venezuelan filmmaker, theorist, and editor. These methods of attention to and care for others, the self, and the world inspired connections across the project, which will form the words and methods of this episode.The very first Fake News Poetry Workshop was held at the Ammerman Cen...
2020-07-31
14 min
We Need Gentle Truths for Now
Black Lives Matter - African American History is Real - Peace is the Most Powerful Deterrent of All
This emergency episode was made quickly during a time of uprising following the killing of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, Tony McDade, and countless other African Americans by police.We begin by hearing “Credo,” a prose poem first written by W.E.B. DuBois in 1904. The version we will hear was conceived and produced by Dr. John Michael Cooper. It is a compilation of 36 voices reading from DuBois' proclamation on his philosophy of racial equality. This is a digital method to embody and share the truth that Black Lives Matter now, that Black voices speak trut...
2020-07-24
12 min
We Need Gentle Truths for Now
Choose to be Digitally Productive Rather than Reactive
For this episode, In this episode, we focus on the founding illogics of online response and inaction, distancing and touching, by taking up the internet formats at the heart of what ails us. We will hear a reading of some of Alexandra Juhasz's more self-critical writing, “choose to be digitally productive rather than reactive,” a response to feeling dirty, grim, and culpable on the 55th day of creating her online primmer. Then, video artist Orr Menirom joins the conversation, reading and also explaining the process behind a poem written at a Fake News Poetry Workshop held at a Media Stud...
2020-07-17
08 min
We Need Gentle Truths for Now
Black Lives Matter - Explain Your Irrational Destruction before the Eyes of Humanity
This emergency episode was made quickly during a time of uprising following the killing of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, Tony McDade and countless other African Americans by police.We begin by hearing “Innocence Nevermore,” a short video made by Frances Negron-Muntaner featuring Nuyorican poetry legend “Tato” Livaiera performing his poem “Innocence (to 9/11)” with gifted musician Tato Torres. Locked in her archives for 16 years, this footage would be transformed into her contribution to the Visible Poetry Project in 2017. This video also became the 82nd HardTruth of my online primmer, pulling words and knowledge straight from Livaiera’s po...
2020-07-09
19 min
We Need Gentle Truths for Now
Silicon Valley’s Entrepreneurial Capitalism Leaves Rubble in its Wake
For this episode, we consider the relations between digital tools, their corporate overlords, and the power we retain in our own bodies. We will hear a beautiful uncoiling of ideas between Natalie Bookchin, a media artist based in New York, and Molly Astley, a British artist and writer. Together they will consider HardTruth Number 59: “silicon valley’s entrepreneurial capitalism leaves rubble in its wake.” It was written by Natalie in 2017 for my online primmer on digital media literacy. Molly is graduate of the University of Sussex in Brighton, England, where she studied creative and critical writing. She attended a Fake Ne...
2020-07-03
09 min
We Need Gentle Truths for Now
Black Lives Matter - Stay Open to Contradictions and Power #offline
This emergency episode was made quickly during a time of uprising following the killing of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, Tony McDade and countless other African Americans by police.We begin with Juanita and Henry Szczepanski reading their poems "Why?" and “Black Lives Matter.” Wife and husband, inter-racial couple, disabled older Americans stuck at home during COVID-19 -- they are ever more dependent on the digital, each other, and the art and conversation they can make together. Their poems are as different as those written by two partners can be. A conversation ensues. They agree; they...
2020-06-30
21 min
We Need Gentle Truths for Now
Tame and Disarm Dangerous Algorithms
For this episode, we consider hardtruth #53; “tame and disarm dangerous algorithms.” It was written by Geert Lovink, a media theorist from the Institute of Network Cultures in the Netherlands. He reads his writing for my online primer on digital media literacy where he refers to the work of mathematician Cathy O'Neill and a series of questions about the viability of media literacy and fake news being raised at that time. Then, we hear from Professor Jacqueline Wernimont, Distinguished Chair of Digital Humanities and Social Engagement & Associate Professor of Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Dartmouth College. At a Fake N...
2020-06-26
09 min
We Need Gentle Truths for Now
Black Lives Matter - A Cultural Change About How We Make Sense of Information Required
This emergency episode was made quickly during a time of uprising following the killing of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, Tony McDade and countless other African Americans by police. We begin with Gerard G reading his poem “Black Lives Matter.” He is a member of the group Poets of Course, a New York City-based collective of intellectually disabled adults who write poetry. The group began working with the Fake News Poetry project in 2018; we’ve made scores of poems, videos, and audio recordings about the relations between disability, social media, lies, oppression, and expression. As the project hopes, this c...
2020-06-19
12 min
We Need Gentle Truths for Now
Black Lives Matter - Make Manifest the Contingency of the Social
We engage in radical digital media literacy by enjoying a bite of education and a bit of poetry, creating humane responses to fake news and social media in the era of Covid-19.This episode was made quickly during a time of uprising following the killing of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, Tony McDade and countless other African Americans by police. It connects to two #100HardTruths: Black Lives Matter (#44), and Make Manifest the Contingency of the Social (#96).Writer and educator Stacie Evans reads her poem “because there will be no chance to say it...
2020-06-17
17 min
We Need Gentle Truths for Now
Call the Man of the Year a Liar
We engage in radical digital media literacy by enjoying a bite of education and a bit of poetry, creating humane responses to fake news and social media in the era of Covid-19.In this episode, we explore as the 81st hardtruth from the online primer of digital media literacy: “Call the Man of the Year a Liar.” It consists of just one intense, angry thing: Joan Baez singing a song, “Nasty Man.” Next, we hear a poem of the same name written by Mika Judge from a Fake News Poetry Workshop held in 2018 with a youth poets co...
2020-06-12
08 min
We Need Gentle Truths for Now
Black Lives Matter - Digital Participation is Reflexive
We engage in radical digital media literacy by enjoying a bite of education and a bit of poetry, creating humane responses to fake news and social media in the era of Covid-19.This episode was made quickly during a time of uprising following the killing of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, Tony McDade and countless other African Americans by police. It connects these serious concerns to two #100hardtruths: Black Lives Matter (#44) and Digital Participation is Reflexive (#97). For this episode, we chose to play the audio from “Situation 8,” one of a series of Situa...
2020-06-06
15 min
We Need Gentle Truths for Now
Black Lives Matter - Expose the Costs and Histories of Freedom
We engage in radical digital media literacy by enjoying a bite of education and a bit of poetry, creating humane responses to fake news and social media in the era of Covid-19.This episode was made quickly during a time of uprising following the killing of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, Tony McDade and countless other African Americans by police. It connects these serious concerns to two #100hardtruths: Black Lives Matter (#44) and Expose the Costs and Histories of Freedom (#77), written by Dr. Gabrielle Foreman (@profgabrielle), the Founding Director of the Colored Conventions Project and Co-Director...
2020-06-04
12 min
We Need Gentle Truths for Now
Look Deeper Into The Migrant Experience
We engage in radical digital media literacy by enjoying a bite of education and a bit of poetry, creating humane responses to fake news and social media in the era of Covid-19. In this episode, we focus on strategies to be truthful about the experiences of migrants from Central and South America during the cascading hostilities of the Trump administration. Lies and technologies—art and honesty—have material effects. We think about these relations by considering #100hardtruth Number 31, Look Deeper Into The Migrant Experience, created for the 2017 digital media literacy primer. It focuses on an art show State of Exce...
2020-05-29
06 min
We Need Gentle Truths for Now
The Real Internet Is a Fake
We engage in radical digital media literacy by enjoying a bite of education and a bit of poetry, creating humane responses to fake news and social media in the era of Covid-19. This episode assembles materials made over three related efforts. First, 100hardtruths #1: the real internet is a fake. Then two poems written at Fake News Poetry Workshops: encounters that addressed these complex concerns through art, intimacy, and technology. "My Phones Lies to Me," by James, Shamine, and Marcela, was first written as a poem and then later made into a video-poem at New Utrecht High, Brooklyn, NY, in...
2020-05-16
09 min
We Need Gentle Truths for Now
What if we aimed for gentle truths? For now
This episode introduces three related efforts in radical digital media literacy that form the content of this podcast. First, we glean ideas from an online primer in digital media literacy, #100hardtruths-#fakenews. The primer was compiled by media scholar and activist, Dr. Alexandra Juhasz, over 100 posts that highlight efforts by journalists, scholars, artists, activists and others who were thinking against the escalating crisis of fake news in 2017 during the first 100 days of the Trump administration. There you can find scores of resources about fake news. http://scalar.me/100hardtruths. In 2018 and 2019, Dr. Juhasz moved the project into local communities...
2020-05-15
07 min
margofeszt
Szabó Magda legújabb kötetei - kisprózák és interjúk
Közreműködik: Borbély Alexandra A közelmúltban megjelent Üzenet odaátra című kisprózakötet és Az élet újrakezdhető címet viselő interjúkötetről beszélget Juhász Anna irodalmár Jolsvai Júliával, a kötetek összeállítójával és a sorozat főszerkesztőjével. A Jaffa Kiadó programja. A beszélgetés a 2019-as nyári Margó Fesztiválon hangzott el.
2019-09-13
50 min
QueerWOC
Ep 55: Black Feminist Miracle [w/ Dr. Alexis Pauline Gumbs]
**Long episode with minor audio distortions during the topic segment** Nikeeta and Money fangirl out as they interview the High Priestess of QueerWOC, Alexis Pauline Gumbs! She joins us for our topic segment to talk archival research, love, and Black feminist miracles. Nikeeta gives us Black lesbian filmmaker history. Money wants us to channel Audre Lorde in order to heal. Community Contributors is poppin again!! Thanks yall! Finally, Money gets some numbers!!! Contribute to QueerWOC: https://www.paypal.me/QueerWOC Become a Patron: https://www.patreon.com/queerwocpod Use the hashtag #QueerWOC to talk all things the podcast Send us...
2018-11-22
2h 08
AnthroPod
38. The Anthropology of Media in a Post-Truth Era
Anthropologists of media and journalism reflect on the current post-truth era in the United States means for research and teaching. This episode features a panel from the the 2017 Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association with Naomi Schiller, Robert Samet, Natalia Roudakova, Alexandra Juhasz, Amahl Bishara, and Faye Ginsburg. Music: “Bit Rio” and “Caravan” by Podington Bear
2017-12-21
47 min
Team Human
Ep. 50 Alexandra Juhasz "The Tiny Magic of CyberFeminism"
Playing for Team Human today is Alexandra Juhasz. Juhasz brings her extensive and diverse work as a filmmaker, media critic, and feminist activist to the Team Human round table.On today's show, Douglas and Alexandra explore the dangers of a media landscape that amplifies the grotesque and sensational. They also look at how human agency and autonomy are threatened on our hypercommercialized media platforms.Drawing on her commitment to feminist values, Alex encourages an embrace of the "situatedness of our humanity" and the vitality of difference. Such is the "tiny magic" necessary to build real...
2017-08-16
50 min