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Anurag Papolu And Christina Li

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Thorns Have RosesThorns Have RosesHistory of colors + feuds about foods + Street Dance of ChinaIn this week’s episode, Anurag discusses the history of colors, such as indigo and carmine, and how they can help us understand what the world was like in the past. Christina talks about a few incidents of white people in the West starting businesses related to Asian cuisine and the Twitter feuds that followed. We also discuss the Chinese reality TV show Street Dance of China and why it’s so much fun to watch.Links:The Secret Lives of Color by Kassia St. Clair, a book which provides brief histories of m...2021-08-3046 minThorns Have RosesThorns Have RosesWhat’s missing in the fight to mitigate climate changeIn this episode, Anurag and Christina talk to Dr. Samantha Chisholm Hatfield about Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK). How do indigenous people develop and use TEK to thrive along with nature, rather than exploiting it? We also discuss things like how time is perceived differently in indigenous communities and how the global fight against climate change can greatly benefit by utilizing and learning from TEK.Dr. Samantha Chisholm Hatfield is an enrolled member of the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians and is also Cherokee. She has a Doctorate from Oregon State University in Environmental Sciences...2021-08-1646 minThorns Have RosesThorns Have RosesHow will people adapt to extreme heat and rising temperatures?Christina and Anurag talk to Dr. Teevrat Garg about how people are being affected by rising temperatures, and how they might adapt as temperatures around the world rise in the coming decades. Dr. Garg talks to us about various research studies from around the world that document how more days of extreme heat result in effects ranging from lower productivity to increasing levels of violence. We also discuss how social policy plays an important role in helping populations cope with climate change  while technological innovations help reduce the amount of carbon in the atmosphere.Dr. Teevrat Garg i...2021-08-0136 minThorns Have RosesThorns Have RosesThe future of data-driven shopping + real life superheroesThis week, Christina and Anurag discuss how influencer and data-driven shopping apps have supercharged e-commerce around the world. Christina takes the example of fast fashion to illustrate how new technologies and parasocial relationships with influencers have been accelerating trends and consumption. They also discuss other ways influencers create desire in consumers, which Chinese apps like Shein, TikTok, Taobao Live and Xiaohongshu have mastered.Anurag talks about real life superheroes, people who don a costume and solve problems in society. He focuses on Mexican and other Latin American superheroes and the kinds of problems they...2021-07-1841 minThorns Have RosesThorns Have RosesCoffee: the world in your cupIn this episode, we talk about the modern history of coffee, its relationship with the environment and the people who grow it, and how all this affects the coffee we drink. We speak to Dr. Stuart McCook, professor of world history at the University of Guelph in Canada.  He is also the author of "Coffee Is Not Forever: A Global History of the Coffee Leaf Rust,” which is about the global coffee industry and how it was affected by a serious disease called coffee leaf rust.What is the impact of globalization and climate change on c...2021-06-2736 minThorns Have RosesThorns Have RosesNews during a pandemicIn this episode, we speak to Kyle Moody, an associate professor of communications media at Fitchburg State University, about the role that local news played during the pandemic. We also discuss the decline of local news and closures of news outlets in the US over the course of the pandemic, as well as the past decade(s), and the lasting effects that has on local communities, the spread of misinformation, and political participation. What are potential solutions for reviving local news going forward?2021-06-2049 minThorns Have RosesThorns Have RosesA tale of two teas: boba and chai in US consumer cultureChristina and Anurag discuss how boba, or bubble tea, made its way from Taiwan to the US, and how chai has done the same from India. How has boba tea remained a drink mostly sold by and for Asians, while chai, like yoga and golden milk (turmeric milk), has become a symbol of gentrification and an elite lifestyle?2021-06-1339 minThorns Have RosesThorns Have RosesTea, colonialism and labourThis week we're joined by anthropologist Dr. Sarah Besky of Cornell University to discuss the colonial history of tea and the people who produce it. Her research uses ethnographic and historical methods to study the intersection of inequality, nature, and capitalism.Her work on tea plantation and labour is focused on the Darjeeling and surrounding areas in NE India, and in the Himalayan region more broadly.This is part one of a two-part series on tea. In our next episode, we will focus on the role that tea plays...2021-06-0642 minThorns Have RosesThorns Have RosesWhat the memestock and crypto surges say about speculating in the 21st centuryWhy is everyone suddenly interested in GameStop stock, bitcoin, and NFTs? Why are people gathering in the millions to coordinate their investments? New apps like Robinhood have made investing simple for almost anyone. What does this tell us about 21st century capitalism? We speak to Gayle Rogers at the University of Pittsburgh, a scholar and author of a new book on the history and culture of speculation, about how and why people have made bets forever, and why it might be so popular now.2021-05-3039 minThorns Have RosesThorns Have RosesThe power of fan cultures around the worldIn this episode, we talk about three different fan cultures. We discuss how K-pop and C-pop fans organize online to support their idols. Then, we talk about Tollywood fans (that is, fans of the Telugu film industry in India) who are much smaller in number but equally fanatical in their support, and finally the tension between the local and global support of football (soccer) teams.Here are some videos of the fans we talk about in action:K-pop fans at airports to catch a glimpse of their idols.Tollywood fans celebrating their ‘he...2021-05-161h 05Thorns Have RosesThorns Have RosesFrontline workers on India’s deadly COVID crisisWe speak to Dr. Nidhi Gonnakuti and Rohith Vedira, a civil contractor building COVID-19 facilities, about their experiences as frontline workers during the deadly second wave in India. We also talk about the vaccine shortage, super-spreader events, and how government negligence led to where we are now.2021-05-091h 03Thorns Have RosesThorns Have RosesPandemic feelings & language, dumplings, and food travel showsIn this episode, Christina and Anurag discuss the inadequacies of new terms in American English to describe life during the pandemic. If you’re also sick of ‘pandemic wall,’ Christina gives examples of words in other languages that better capture complex, emotional responses to world events.Anurag takes you on a 15 minute world tour of dumplings. We discuss the origin of dumplings and talk about some lesser known dumplings from around the world.Lastly, Christina talks about the most recent slate of food travel shows by American hosts trying to understand a “nation of immigrants” through it...2021-05-0250 minThorns Have RosesThorns Have RosesClimate fiction & reimagining the futureThis week, we're in conversation with Dr. Michael Svoboda, a professor of writing at George Washington University, to discuss how the climate crisis is depicted in movies and books. We talk about why movies aren’t exactly inspiring us to change the world through climate change stories, and how we can improve that. Dr. Svoboda regularly reviews most forms of climate related media, and he shares with us some of his favorite cli-fi films.2021-04-2541 minThorns Have RosesThorns Have RosesBonus: 'We're just data'In this week's episode, we revisit surveillance systems with Karen Li Xan Wong and look at how governments and corporations use our data to track us. She explains how these systems are all around us and all around the world.There have been reports this week that the EU is planning to regulate the use of AI for mass surveillance and social credit systems.This episode is a good introduction to this topic, which we investigated thoroughly in our previous episode "One of many: China's social credit system."  2021-04-1826 minThorns Have RosesThorns Have RosesPsychiatry in the time of coronaIn this episode, we chat with psychiatrist Sharat Vallurupalli about his time treating patients during COVID-19 and how we should be rethinking what 'health' means. Is the rise of people seeking therapy because there is more awareness about mental health, or is there something about modern society that is making us ill?Warning: there is some discussion of physician suicide.2021-04-1140 minThorns Have RosesThorns Have RosesOne of many: China's 'social credit system'The ‘social credit system’ in China has people worried about the dystopian future that is unfolding. But what actually is the system in China, and what does Western media get wrong about it? Are there similar types of systems all around us that we don’t even notice? We talk about all of this and more with Xin Dai, a law professor at Peking University who has studied the ‘social credit system’ extensively.Link to Xin Dai's paper about the reputation systems and China's system from 2018: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=31935772021-04-0438 minThorns Have RosesThorns Have RosesAnti-Asian violence, teen depression, and ghost forestsThis episode, Christina talks about anti-Asian violence as a Chinese American, the lack of cohesion in the Asian American community, and why she doesn’t think anti-Asian hate will end anytime soon. Anurag talks about how he thinks his years growing up in India were very different to kids who grow up in the US in one big way.Finally Anurag also talks about ghost forests, a climate change phenomenon leading to stretches of dead coastal forests.2021-03-2944 minThorns Have RosesThorns Have RosesIntro: What can you expect from Thorns Have Roses?We introduce ourselves, talk about why we're making this podcast, and go over some of the topics we'll be covering.2021-03-1502 min