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Showing episodes and shows of
Elisabeth Hernandez
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Reyno Paranormal Podcast
El Monstruo de Amstetten: La Macabra Historia de Josef Fritzl
El caso de Josef Fritzl es una de las historias más perturbadoras de la criminología moderna. Durante 24 años, mantuvo encerrada a su propia hija, Elisabeth, en un sótano secreto debajo de su casa en Amstetten, Austria. En este video, exploramos los detalles escalofriantes de su crimen: ¿Cómo logró ocultar su doble vida por tanto tiempo? ¿Qué sucedió con las víctimas después de su liberación? Y lo más impactante… ¿Cómo fue posible que nadie sospechara? #JosefFritzl #CrímenesReales #CasosImpactantes #Misterios #DocumentalCriminalAcompáñanos mientras desentrañamos este caso que conmocionó al mundo y reveló los horr...
2025-03-10
06 min
Red de Bibliotecas en la Radio
Luciérnaga y La central en la radio
En el espacio dedicado a la Red de Bibliotecas de Lorca "Nunca digas, nunca jamás" de Cadena Azul nuestra compañera Elena Hernández nos recomienda la novela de "Luciérnaga" de Natalia Litvinova y "La central" de Élisabeth Filhol La música que abre es música de terror esta es la música para terminar la primera parte Desire - Under Your Spell. Seguimos con Making Water” Harry Gregson y finalizamos con Noir Désir - Le Vent Nous Portera
2025-02-05
36 min
Noticiero de Nacho Lozano en Chilango
Reportaje “Zurcir una ciudad: memoria de las costureras del 85”. AMLO envía a diputados iniciativa sobre portación y control de armas. Rafael Tovar, nuevo Rector del Claustro de Sor Juana.
Iniciamos la conversación con Carlos Acuña –cronista, parte del colectivo Fábrica de Periodismo y colaborador de +Chilango– nos habla del reportaje “Zurcir una ciudad: memoria de las costureras del 85” a 39 años del gran terremoto, +Chilango presenta los testimonios de las trabajadoras de la costura, sindicalistas y sobrevivientes, que recuerdan los días en que ayudaron a resarcir la ciudad desde San Antonio Abad y a las mil 600 costureras que perdieron la vida en el terremoto de 1985. Víctor Hernández –maestro en Inteligencia y Seguridad Internacional del King’s College London– comenta sobre el presidente Andrés Ma...
2024-09-19
54 min
Unlock Your Infinite Power and Reclaim Control of Your Life
Ep 12 Part 3: GETTING AND KEEPING REAL LOVE Release Need & Be Worthy of Love
Do you wonder why you can’t bring real and unconditional love into your life? Do you wish you had healthier relationships? Do you worry you will never be able to keep love once you get it? Today’s show is all about how to tap into unconditional love in a way that you never have to worry about love leaving ever again. And how to attract that same love towards you. References: 1. Podcast: The Importance of Positive Thought by Elisabeth Carson with Special Guest Mysteek Yo...
2024-09-12
1h 08
Lo Desconocido: Filosofía y Espiritualidad
REDENCIÓN - Capítulo 1 - FICCIÓN SONORA
Una lucha entre el Bien y el Mal en el interior de Daniel Hernández, que empieza a incrementarse tras conocer a Elsa, su nueva vecina, y con quien empezarán a surgir sentimientos. La psique, hoy más que nunca, está en peligro; es entonces cuando se instala el terror en el hogar. Un relato de romance y misterio. Narrador - Álex López (@LexanOnline) Daniel Hernández - Kilian Molina (@UniversalMiddel) Elsa Castro - Marta Baonza Jerez (@Martabjz) Judith - Esther Recio (@litteraest) Fran - Xerach García (@EnigmasAlDescu) Diana - tequierobailando (@tequierobailando) Liz - Elisabeth P. Montero (@T_Nekare...
2024-08-07
30 min
Lo Desconocido
REDENCIÓN - Capítulo 1 - FICCIÓN SONORA
Una lucha entre el Bien y el Mal en el interior de Daniel Hernández, que empieza a incrementarse tras conocer a Elsa, su nueva vecina, y con quien empezarán a surgir sentimientos. La psique, hoy más que nunca, está en peligro; es entonces cuando se instala el terror en el hogar. Un relato de romance y misterio. Narrador - Álex López (@LexanOnline) Daniel Hernández - Kilian Molina (@UniversalMiddel) Elsa Castro - Marta Baonza Jerez (@Martabjz) Judith - Esther Recio (@litteraest) Fran - Xerach García (@EnigmasAlDescu) Diana - tequierobailando (@tequierobailando) Liz - Elisabeth P. Montero (@T_Nekare...
2024-08-07
30 min
En la sabana
Isabel García y los puntos violeta: cronología de un escándalo que salpica a Igualdad
El Gobierno ha cesado a la directora del Instituto de las Mujeres, Isabel García, tras un trabajo de investigación de EL ESPAÑOL. Jorge Calabrés y Sara Sánchez Bas han publicado que García habría recibido al menos 64 contratos públicos de consistorios gobernados por el PSOE para gestionar los llamados puntos violeta y otras actividades con los que habría facturado alrededor de 250.000 euros con las empresas compartidas con su pareja Elisabeth García, exasesora del PSOE del Senado. En el capítulo de hoy, abordamos los detalles de este trabajo periodístico, una exc...
2024-07-24
20 min
Contemporánea
40. Cristóbal Halffter
Es uno de los compositores más importantes de la llamada Generación del 51, grupo al que él mismo pone nombre y que dota al panorama español de técnicas de vanguardia. Aporta la combinación de elementos tradicionales con atonalidad, dodecafonismo, serialismo, música concreta, electrónica y formas clásicas._____Has escuchadoCuarteto de cuerda n.º 11 (2019). Cuarteto Quiroga. Grabación sonora realizada en directo en la sala de conciertos de la Fundación Juan March, el 9 de diciembre de 2020Fantasía sobre una sonoridad de G. F. Haendel (1981). Diego Alonso, Olegu...
2024-05-22
17 min
Die Kulturfritzen
Berlin-Buchtipps von der Leipziger Buchmesse 2024
Empfehlungen aus zehn Verlagen Marc Lippuner war auf der Leipziger Buchmesse unterwegs und hat zehn Berlin-Buchtipps aus zehn Verlagen eingesammelt. Nora Pester von Hentrich & Hentrich empfiehlt "Magnus. Ein Jugendroman" von Oliver Bieber. Roman Pliske vom Mitteldeutschen Verlag stellt den Ausstellungskatalog "Gemeinsam sind wir unerträglich" vor, den Ulrike Rothe und Rebecca Hernandez Garcia herausgegeben haben. Aus dem Programm des Be.bra Verlags hat Elisabeth Silberbach "Es ist einmal. Ostdeutsche Großeltern und ihre Enkel im Gespräch" ausgewählt. Hanno Hochmuths topografische Zeitreise "Berlin. Das Rom der Zeitgeschichte" stellt Andreas Krauß von d...
2024-04-07
59 min
Humanos con Recursos
La evolución profesional en las compañías, con Elísabeth Hernández [R]
“El éxito de Damm se traduce a través del talento del equipo profesional que componemos”Regresamos a un episodio del podcast Humanos con Recursos en el que charlamos con Elísabeth Hernández, responsable de la gestión del desarrollo de personas en Damm. En este episodio, nuestra entrevistada nos comparte la filosofía centrada en las personas de Damm y su enfoque en la igualdad, diversidad e inclusión en la selección.Elísabeth nos cuenta que en Damm, una gran compañía con 18 plantas de producción y en...
2024-03-11
26 min
RATICOS DE CIENCIA. Conversaciones con científic@s
[14] INVERTIR EN CIENCIA (lo raro es que no lo entiendan). #CayetanoGonzález (I)
TEMAS: - El Parque Científico de Barcelona - La transición desde el EMBL (Alemania) al IRB y CRG de Barcelona - Políticos convencidos del valor de la ciencia (Andreu Mas Colell) - El programa ICREA - ¿Por qué no se entiende que ser centro del conocimiento lleva a ser centro del crecimiento? - La inversión en ciencia a corto plazo ya es rentable - Tumores en la mosca de la fruta (Drosophila melanogaster) - Genes supresores de tumores (P53, retinoblastoma) - El gen Lethal Giant Larvae (que al mutar forma larvas gigantes que mueren) fue el primer...
2023-07-01
33 min
Auto-terapéate
T3 E8. Mujeres ejemplo: Vida laboral con propósito. Entrevista a Sam Hernández
Samantha Hernández es mexicana, publicista y estratega de marcas. Chief Strategy Officer en GUT Mexico City. Honrada como primera representante de México en asumir la Presidencia de un Jurado en Cannes Lions 2023. Sam lleva más de 20 años defendiendo el impacto estratégico en la transformación de las marcas. Tuvimos una conversación hermosa sobre la vida laboral, personal, cómo tomar decisiones, cómo lidiar con el entorno manteniendo al esencia personal… y mucho más. El libro que recomendamos en el episodio es: “El síndrome de la impostora” de Elisabeth Cadoche
2023-04-22
59 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Correcting Race
Certain medical instruments have built-in methods of correcting for race. They’re based on the premise that Black bodies are inherently different from White bodies. The tool that measures kidney function, for example, underestimates how severe some Black patients’ kidney disease is, and prevents them from getting transplants. Medical students and doctors have been trying to do away with race correction tools once and for all. And they’re starting to see some success. About Innate: How Science Invented the Myth of Race “Correcting Race” is Episode 9 of Innate: How Science Invented the Myth of Race, a podcast and...
2023-04-11
48 min
Creative MKE
Art About My Community, For My Community w/ Jovanny Hernandez Caballero
In this episode of the podcast, Elisabeth speaks with Jovanny Hernandez Caballero, a photographer and photojournalist from the south side of Milwaukee. Hernandez Caballero is an Art and Design major with an emphasis in Photography and Imaging at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee, currently completing his BFA. As the son of immigrants from Oaxaca, Mexico, Jovanny’s work explores themes of his cultural heritage and identity. Through his art practice, he documents the rich and positive stories of life in his community on Milwaukee’s South Side, and conducts a kind of “reverse anthropology” to explore and document his own root...
2023-04-04
41 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
"That Rotten Spot"
When the plague broke out in San Francisco in 1900 the public health department poured all of their energy into stopping its spread in Chinatown, as if Chinatown were the problem. This episode reveals why they did it, what it has to do with race science, and what it tells us about the history of public health. Credits Host: Elisabeth Berry Drago Senior Producer: Mariel Carr Producer: Rigoberto Hernandez Associate Producer: Padmini Raghunath Audio Engineer: Jonathan Pfeffer “Innate Theme” composed by Jonathan Pfeffer. Additional music by Blue Dot Sessions.
2023-04-04
51 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Black Pills
In 2005 the FDA approved a pill to treat high blood preassure only in African Americans. This so-called miracle drug was named BiDil, and it became the first race-specific drug in the United States. It might sound like a good a good thing, but it had the unintended consequence of perpetuating the myth that race is a biological construct. Credits Hosts: Alexis Pedrick and Elisabeth Berry Drago Senior Producer: Mariel Carr Producer: Rigoberto Hernandez Associate Producer: Padmini Raghunath Audio Engineer: Jonathan Pfeffer “Innate Theme” composed by Jonathan Pfeffer. Additi...
2023-03-28
54 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Bad Blood, Bad Science
The word “Tuskegee” has come to symbolize the Black community’s mistrust of the medical establishment. It has become American lore. However, most people don’t know what actually happened in Macon County, Alabama, from 1932 to 1972. This episode unravels the myths of the U.S. Public Health Service (USPHS) Syphilis Study (the correct name of the study) through conversations with descendants and historians. Credits Hosts: Alexis Pedrick and Elisabeth Berry Drago Senior Producer: Mariel Carr Producer: Rigoberto Hernandez Associate Producer: Padmini Raghunath Audio Engineer: Jonathan Pfeffer “Innate Theme” composed by Jonathan Pfeffer...
2023-03-21
59 min
El color de la tarde... audiolibros
01. EL SINDROME DE LA IMPOSTORA
Hola gente! Hoy, en el día de la mujer, además de saludarlas a todas, quiero hacer un experimento. Subir un libro que difiere completamente con el estilo de los libros que yo subo al podcast. Les cuento. Hace poco mas de un mes, escuché por primera vez en el ámbito laboral, el término “síndrome del impostor”, y durante las vacaciones, me llegó una lista de sugerencias de lecturas entre las que se encontraba el libro Síndrome de la impostora. Me resultó intrigante la coincidencia, por lo que incursioné en este libro, y me gu...
2023-03-10
53 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
The Vampire Project
In the 1990s a liberal population geneticist launched the Human Genome Diversity Project. The goal was to sequence the genomes of “isolated” and “disappearing” indigenous groups throughout the world. The project did not go as planned—indigenous groups protested it, and scientists and anthropologists criticized it. This episode examines what went wrong and asks the question: can anti-racist scientists create racist science? About Innate: How Science Invented the Myth of Race “The Vampire Project” is Episode 4 of Innate: How Science Invented the Myth of Race, a podcast and magazine project that explores the historical roots and persistent legacie...
2023-02-28
55 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Keepers of the Flame
In the 1970s Barry Mehler started tracking race scientists and he noticed something funny: they all had the same funding source. One wealthy man was using his incredible resources to prop up any scientist he could find who would validate his white supremacist ideology—and make it seem like it was backed by a legitimate scientific consensus. About Innate: How Science Invented the Myth of Race “Keepers of the Flame” is Episode 3 of Innate: How Science Invented the Myth of Race, a podcast and magazine project that explores the historical roots and persistent legacies of racism in...
2023-02-21
1h 03
Distillations | Science History Institute
Calamity in Philadelphia
In 1793 a yellow fever epidemic almost destroyed Philadelphia. The young city was saved by two Black preachers, Richard Allen and Absalom Jones, who organized the free Black community in providing essential services and nursing the sick and dying. Allen and Jones were assured of two things: that stepping up would help them gain full equality and citizenship, and that they were immune to the disease. Neither promise turned out to be true. About Innate: How Science Invented the Myth of Race “Calamity in Philadelphia” is Episode 2 of Innate: How Science Invented the Myth of Race, a podcast and magazine...
2023-02-14
40 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Origin Stories
It might seem as though the way we think about race now is how we’ve always thought about it—but it isn’t. Race was born out of the Enlightenment in Europe, along with the invention of modern western science. And it was tied to the politics of the age—imperialism and later slavery. This episode traces the origins of race science to the Enlightenment, examines how the Bible influenced racial theories, and considers how we still have a hard time letting go of the idea of race. About Innate: How Science Invented the Myth of Race “Origin S...
2023-02-07
33 min
POESÍA 2000
Elisabeth Mulder - Mujeres del 27 - E8
ELISABETH MULDER nació en Barcelona el 9 de febrero de 1904, en una familia de la alta burguesía. Pasó la primer infancia en Puerto Rico, en el trópico, donde la familia explotaba una hacienda dedicada al cultivo del café. Tuvo una educación exquisita, ya que a su casa acudían preceptores particulares y disponía de una nutrida biblioteca familiar. Sus viajes por Europa se convirtieron en una forma de aprendizaje. Llegó a dominar cuatro idiomas. En 1927 publica su primera obra poética "Embrujamiento". En 1929 publica dos nuevos poemarios. En 1931 publica su cuarto libro "La hora emocionada" y en 1932, refugiada...
2022-12-18
01 min
Humanos con Recursos
La evolución profesional en las compañías, con Elísabeth Hernández
En este capítulo nos acompaña Elísabeth Hernández, responsable de gestión de personas en DAMM. Con ella descubrimos todo el proceso de crecimiento profesional al que tienen acceso los trabajadores de esta histórica compañía, así como todas las herramientas creadas para fomentarlo.
2022-11-14
26 min
Nada como un libro, con Juan Carlos Saavedra y Daniel Martín
Elisa Rodríguez Court, la penúltima lectora
Horacio Quiroga, Hemingway, Kafka, Jorge Luis Borges, Julio Cortázar, Saramago… son algunos ejemplos de grandes cuentistas. El cuento es una narración breve, de ficción, una secuencia narrativa donde todo pasa en un corto espacio de tiempo. Pero también es pasión, claridad, sutileza y tranquilidad. Ya lo escuchamos en la metamorfosis: «el razonamiento tranquilo, incluso el extremadamente tranquilo, es mucho mejor que las decisiones desesperadas». Escribamos pues, un nuevo cuento, el número diecisiete, y que ustedes puedan escucharlo sosegadamente.En este programa entrevistamos a la autora Elisa Rodríguez Court para hablar con ella de su...
2022-08-02
48 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Mechanochemistry
What comes to mind when you think of a chemistry lab? Maybe it’s smoke billowing out of glassware, or colorful test tubes, or vats of toxic substances. Chemistry and hazardous solvents just seem to go hand in hand. But chemists like James Mack think there’s a greener way: It’s called mechanochemistry, a kind of chemistry that uses physical force to grind materials instead of solvents. And it’s getting the attention of such huge corporations as Exxon Mobil. Still, some chemists are not ready to give up their traditional techniques. “I thought they were married to the molecules...
2022-07-13
16 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Mechanochemistry
"I thought they were married to the molecules, little did I know they were actually married to the flask." Host: Elisabeth Berry Drago Reporter, Producer, and Audio Engineer: Jonathan Pfeffer Senior Producer: Mariel Carr Producer: Rigoberto Hernandez Associate Producer: Padmini Raghunath
2022-07-06
16 min
Fotciencia18
M1 Ser o no ser
Isabel María Sánchez Almazo COAUTORÍA Dolores Molina Fernández, Concepción Hernández Castillo y Elisabeth Escamilla Roa Fotografía seleccionada en la modalidad «Micro» Desde Centroamérica llegó una flor que asombró al viejo mundo por su belleza y que se ha convertido en el símbolo de México. Acocoxóchitl es su nombre original, aunque es más conocida como dalia. Son flores de colores muy llamativos. Pero no todo es lo que parece. Esta foto corresponde a una estructura crecida en laboratorio y de manera totalmente inorgánica mediante un proceso biomimético. La imagen es muy simil...
2022-03-28
01 min
Radio Faycán
El STEC-IC acude a la Diputación del Común e Instituto de Igualdad en defensa de las docentes embarazadas
🎧 𝐏𝐎𝐃𝐂𝐀𝐒𝐓| Elisabeth Hernández, miembro del Secretariado Nacional del Sindicato de Trabajadores de la Enseñanza Canarias – Intersindical Canaria, en Las Mañanas de Faycán explicó los motivos por los que han presentado una queja y denuncia formal ante la Diputación del Común y el Instituto Canario de Igualdad en relación a la deficiente gestión por parte de la Consejería de Educación del permiso de Riesgos Laborales para las docentes embarazada 👉 ¡𝗡𝗼 𝘁𝗲 𝗽𝗶𝗲𝗿𝗱𝗮𝘀 𝗲𝗹 𝗽𝗼𝗱𝗰𝗮𝘀𝘁! Escucha la entrevista en nuestra página web o apps oficiales: • 𝗪𝗲𝗯: www.radiofaycan.com • 𝗔𝗽𝗽: Radio Faycán • 𝗦𝗽𝗼𝘁𝗶𝗳𝘆: Radio Faycán
2022-03-10
15 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Lost Tales of Love, War, and Genius as Written by Our Genetic Code
The Disappearing Spoon, a podcast collaboration between the Science History Institute and New York Times best-selling author Sam Kean, returns for its third season on March 8, 2022. To celebrate, our producer, Padmini Parthasarathy, sat down with Kean to talk about his book The Violinist's Thumb: And Other Lost Tales of Love, War, and Genius, as Written by Our Genetic Code. This interview is a great companion piece for the new season of The Disappearing Spoon, which tackles all sorts of strange and interesting stories about the geniuses we know well—from Einstein and his great scientific blunder that tur...
2022-03-01
23 min
Widow We Do Now?
Episode 99 | The Widow Michele Neff Hernandez: Our CNN Hero
Anita and Mel interview founder of Soaring Spirits International, CNN Hero of the Year candidate, and founder of Camp Widow: Michele Neff Hernandez. In this episode, learn how Michele turned her grief into an international organization to help widows everywhere. To vote by Dec 7, 2021, click:https://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/cnn.heroes/vote/10/Help us keep the podcast going!http://www.patreon.com/wwdnWant to buy us some tacos?https://www.buymeacoffee.com/widowwedonowSponsored by: BarkBox: Get one month free with subscription http://www...
2021-12-06
1h 12
Heilman & Haver - The Stage & Screen Experience
Heilman & Haver - Episode 54 (Guest Richard Barrios - Part 1)
Welcome to Heilman & Haver - Episode 54. We hope you enjoy the show! Please join the conversation - email us with thoughts and ideas and connect with the show on Facebook and Twitter and Instagram. ANNOUNCEMENTS “A Classic Christmas" with Jeremy Arnold Saturday, December 18th, Jeremy Arnold will join us at the Roxy for a one-of-a-kind roundtable discussion before a “It’s a Wonderful Life” hits the Roxy big screen. Plan to come early for a matinee showing of “White Christmas” and stay for the holiday bites and wine before we hit the stage with...
2021-12-03
29 min
Si Yo Fuera una Canción (If I Were a Song)
Community Songs (Part 1, English)
David Castañeda, SYF’s Music Researcher, takes the lead in this alt-format episode exploring the many forms that supposedly well-known songs can take. He gets help from 6 members -- 3 in English, 3 en español -- of our Production Team. A treat! Link to Full Spotify Playlisthttps://open.spotify.com/playlist/6PNMe0G2CH96FiIBD6kHpB?si=4786da8725674456La PalomaHistoria de "La Paloma" | Álvaro González de Langarika | TEDxVitoriaGasteiz | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QMmwwzohxlE “SEBASTIÁN DE IRADIER (1809-1865), ORGANISTA Y «SACRISTÁN MA...
2021-11-05
1h 08
Si Yo Fuera una Canción (If I Were a Song)
Canciones de Comunidad (Parte 1, Español)
David Castañeda, Investigador de Música para SYF, toma las riendas en este episodio de formato alternativo, que explora las muchas formas que puede asumir una canción supuestamente bien conocida. Le ayudan no menos que 6 miembrxs -- 3 en español, 3 in English -- de nuestro Equipo de producción. ¡Una sorpresa!Canciones de Comunidad Spotify Playlisthttps://open.spotify.com/playlist/6PNMe0G2CH96FiIBD6kHpB?si=4786da8725674456La PalomaHistoria de "La Paloma" | Álvaro González de Langarika | TEDxVitoriaGasteiz | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QMmwwzohxlE
2021-11-05
58 min
High Tales of History
The History of Halloween; The New England Vampire Scare
Welcome Back! This week, we celebrate KT's birthday around the smoke circle as she tells us about the history of Halloween and its traditions. After that, Laurel takes us to 19th century America and recounts the long-standing vampire panic that pervaded the rural areas of New England for about 100 years! Grab your cocktail, your bud, or a nice cozy cup of tea or hot chocolate and cozy up! *~*~*~*~*~*~ The Socials! Email -- hightailinghistorypod@gmail.com Instagram -- @hightailinghistory Facebook -- Hightailing Through History or with use...
2021-10-15
58 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Murder, Fraud, Sabotage, Piracy, and Other Dastardly Deeds Perpetrated in the Name of Science
The Disappearing Spoon, a podcast collaboration between the Science History Institute and New York Times best-selling author Sam Kean, returns for its second season on October 5, 2021. To celebrate, our producer, Rigoberto Hernandez, sat down with Kean to talk about his new book The Icepick Surgeon: Murder, Fraud, Sabotage Piracy, and Other Dastardly Deeds Perpetrated in the Name of Science. This interview is a great companion piece for The Disappearing Spoon series since some of the stories in the book relate directly to some of the stories in the upcoming season. In this interview Kean talks about...
2021-09-28
58 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
What Causes Alzheimer's?
The human brain is mysterious and complicated. So much so, one might be tempted to argue that it only makes sense that we still don’t have a cure for Alzheimer’s disease, despite decades of research. But this isn’t the whole story. We’ve partnered with Vox’s Unexplainable science podcast to talk about how Alzheimer’s researchers have been stubbornly pursuing a single theory for decades. The Amyloid Hypothesis is the reigning champ amongst pharmaceutical companies and scientific scholars and it has pushed all other theories to the wayside. Over the years scientists have developed many drugs based on...
2021-09-21
29 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
What the All Souls Trilogy Teaches Us about Alchemy, Family, and Knowledge Hierarchy
Ever since the book A Discovery of Witches debuted in 2011, the All Souls franchise has taken on a life of its own with devoted fans all over the world. The TV show and annual All Souls Con—which the Science History Institute occasionally hosts—is based on the trilogy of books about witches, vampires, and demons by author Deborah Harkness. Distillations sat down with Jen Daine and Cait Parnell, the hosts of the All Souls podcast, Chamomile and Clove; art historian Stephenie McGucken; and medievalist actor, journalist, and author Sarah Durn to talk about the series’ alchemical roots...
2021-08-24
1h 29
Distillations | Science History Institute
Chasing Immortality
Since humans have been living we’ve also been dying—best case scenario: after eight or nine decades and plenty of good times. But we’re not wholly content with that. Never have been, probably never will be. In fact, working on how not to die is one of the most human things about us. It’s occupied the minds of everyone from ancient Chinese emperors and medieval European alchemists to now, Silicon Valley entrepreneurs. They think it’s within sight and completely different from how this quest was approached in the past. Or is it? Credits...
2021-08-17
40 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Interview with Jeremiah McCall
Jeremiah McCall is a history teacher at Cincinnati Country Day School and the author of Gaming the Past: Using Video Games to Teach Secondary School. He talked to Distillations about what it's like to use video games in his history classes, the criteria he uses in choosing games, and why he likes his students to question the media they are consuming. Credits Hosts: Alexis Pedrick and Elisabeth Berry Drago Senior Producer: Mariel Carr Producer: Rigoberto Hernandez Audio Engineer: Jonathan Pfeffer
2021-08-10
43 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Learning History with Video Games
The pandemic made gamers out of many Americans, including our producer, Rigoberto Hernandez. He played a lot of historical video games and it got him thinking: can you learn history from video games even though they are obviously fiction? Throughout history there have been many moral panics about people consuming historical fiction and taking what they read and watch as fact, so how do video games stack up? It turns out that they can empower players in better ways than TV shows, films, and books. Credits Hosts: Alexis Pedrick and Elisabeth Berry Drago
2021-08-03
39 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Paradise Is Burning
For decades, the official fire policy of the Forest Service was to put out all fires as soon as they appeared. That might seem logical, but there is such a thing as a good fire, the kind that helps stabilize ecosystems and promotes biodiversity. Native American communities understood this and regularly practiced light burning. So why did the Forest Service ignore this in favor of unabated fire suppression? In 1910 a massive fire known as “the big blow up” or “the big burn” devastated northern Idaho and Western Montana. It left a huge mark on the then five-year-old Forest S...
2021-07-20
37 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Interview with Colin Dickey
Ghost hunters on television all seem to have a common goal: to prove that ghosts are real using sophisticated, yet inexact technology. Colin Dickey, the author of Ghostland: An American History in Haunted Places, says this is not an accident. The relationship between technology and ghosthunters is as old as the telegraph. But Dickey is not interested in proving they are real; he is fascinated with what the ghost stories we tell reveal about our society. Credits: Hosts: Alexis Pedrick and Elisabeth Berry Drago Senior Producer: Mariel Carr Producer: Rigoberto Hernandez Audio E...
2021-07-13
34 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Ghost Hunting in the 19th Century
The 19th century was a time of rapid technological leaps: the telegraph, the steam boat, the radio were invented during this century. But this era was also the peak of spiritualism: the belief that ghosts and spirits were real and could be communicated with after death. Seances were all the rage. People tried to talk to their dead loved ones using Ouija boards and automatic writing. Although it might seem contradictory, it's not a coincidence that this was all happening at the same time. There have always been questions about life after death, but in the 19th...
2021-07-06
39 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Vampire Panic
In the 19th century a mysterious illness afflicted rural New England. Often called the Great White Plague for how pale it made its victims, it was also called “consumption” because of the way it literally consumed people from the inside out, gradually making them weaker, paler, and more lifeless until they were gone. Today we know it as tuberculosis, an infectious bacterial disease that attacks the lungs and causes a hacking cough, a wasting fever, and night sweats. But back then the main suspect was vampires. Credits Hosts: Alexis Pedrick and Elisabeth Berry Drago Seni...
2021-06-29
46 min
Si Yo Fuera una Canción (If I Were a Song)
Graciela Hinojosa Holguín & Jorge Holguín
Bailarina y músico, esta pareja ha sido una parte de la historia de las músicas tradicionales mexicanas en la área de Los Ángeles ¡durante más de medio siglo! Los entrevistamos en un episodio doble.RESUMEN DE FUENTES DE INVESTIGACIÓN La gran mayoría de las fuentes sobre la historia de la música mexicana en el s.XX en Los Ángeles son anglófonas. Para no presentar dos bibliografías muy desiguales, las hemos combinado aquí en un solo documento.Mariachi & So...
2021-05-28
35 min
Si Yo Fuera una Canción (If I Were a Song)
Graciela Hinojosa Holguín & Jorge Holguín
A dancer and a musician, this couple has been a part of the history of Mexican traditional musics in the LA area for more than half a century! We interview them in a double episode.SUMMARY OF RESEARCH SOURCESThe great majority of sources about twentieth-century Mexican music in Los Angeles are in English. In order not to present two very different-sized bibliographies, we have combined them here into a single document.Mariachi & Son jarocho in LA & at UCLAAlexandro Hernández, “The Son Jarocho and Fandango Amidst Struggle and Social Mov...
2021-05-28
27 min
Si Yo Fuera una Canción (If I Were a Song)
Graciela Hinojosa Holguín & Jorge Holguín
A dancer and a musician, this couple has been a part of the history of Mexican traditional musics in the LA area for more than half a century! We interview them in a double episode.Mariachi & Son jarocho in LA & at UCLAAlexandro Hernández, “The Son Jarocho and Fandango Amidst Struggle and Social Movements:Migratory Transformation and Reinterpretation of the Son Jarocho in La Nueva España, México, and the United States. “ PhD Dissertation, UCLA. 2014Maureen Russell, “Highlights from the Ethnomusicology Archive: Music of Mexico Ensemble.” Nov. 2012 https://ethnomusicologyreview.ucla.edu/content/hig...
2021-05-21
35 min
Si Yo Fuera una Canción (If I Were a Song)
Graciela Hinojosa Holguín & Jorge Holguín
Bailarina y músico, esta pareja ha sido una parte de la historia de las músicas tradicionales mexicanas en la área de Los Ángeles ¡durante más de medio siglo! Los entrevistamos en un episodio doble.La gran mayoría de las fuentes sobre la historia de la música mexicana en el s. XX en Los Ángeles son anglófonas. Para no presentar dos bibliografías muy desiguales, las hemos combinado aquí en un solo documento.The great majority of sources about twentieth-century Mexican music in Los Angeles are in English. In order not to prese...
2021-05-21
47 min
Méta de Choc - la pensée critique appliquée à soi
Scepticisme et transmission des sciences — STREAM #4
En juin 2020, le journaliste scientifique Julien Hernandez m’a invitée avec deux autres vidéastes, à participer à un Live organisé par le magazine Futura Sciences.L'émission d’aujourd’hui montre une fois de plus que bien que se référant à une forme de pensée commune, les différents acteurs du milieu sceptique adoptent des approches qui peuvent varier, voire dans certains cas s’opposer. Car le doute méthodique ou l’esprit critique n’est pas un formatage qui mènerait à des réponses uniformes, mais un outil de réflexion qui nous permet d’évaluer le réel de manière...
2021-04-30
1h 23
Distillations | Science History Institute
Tales of Love and Madness from the Periodic Table
Did you know that Gandhi hated iodine? Or that Silicon Valley was almost called Germanium Valley? Our producer Rigoberto Hernandez talked about these stories and more with Sam Kean, author of The Disappearing Spoon, a book about the stories behind the periodic table. The New York Times best-selling author and regular Distillations magazine contributor described how Dmitri Mendeleev’s publisher accidentally shaped the periodic table, why gallium is a popular element for pranksters, and what inspired the title of his book. Kean, Sam. The Disappearing Spoon. New York: Little, Brown & Company, 2010. Credits Host: Eli...
2021-03-23
55 min
Utopías
Utopías - La necesidad de referentes LGTBIQ+ en la cultura - 21/03/21
¿Qué tan necesarios son los referentes que se salgan de la cis-heteronorma? ¿Hay suficientes o nos falta un gran camino por recorrer? Esta semana intentamos responder a estas preguntas y más asuntos, como la importancia del lenguaje inclusivo, el importante papel de las redes sociales a la hora de dar visibilidad al colectivo LGTBIQ+ o la reapropiación de términos peyorativos. En este Utopías conducido por Lola Lara debatimos acerca de esto con personas LGTBIQ+ del mundo de la cultura. -Elisabeth Duval: filósofa, y autora...
2021-03-21
58 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Predicting the Pandemic
Distillations is hard at work on our next season. It’s not quite ready, but we have a treat for you in the meantime. We interviewed Wendy Zukerman, the host and executive producer of one of our favorite podcasts, Science Vs. In normal times the show pits facts against fads—they talk about everything from detox diets to the supposed benefits of Cannabidiol, or CBD. Since early 2020, however, they’ve been reporting about the Coronavirus pandemic. But they actually started even earlier than that—in the fall of 2019 they coincidentally produced an episode all about global pandemics. We talked with Wend...
2021-03-16
27 min
Imperrfectas
S2E1: El cine de Josephine Decker
Para iniciar nuestra segunda temporada, conversamos con la cineasta Tania Hernández Velasco, creadora del multipremiado film mexicano "Titixe", sobre el cine de esta joven directora norteamericana a raíz de su reciente retrospectiva en la última edición de Los Cabos Film Festival. De seguro está por estrenarse su más reciente película --"Shirley"--, interpretada entre otros por Elisabeth Moss. La anterior "Madeline's Madeline", la pueden encontrar en MUBI. Todas sus sugerencias son bien recibidas en nuestro correo: imperrfectaspodcast@gmail.comEstamos en Twitter e Instagram como @imperrfectas. Si desean ver "Titixe"pueden escribir al corr...
2021-02-02
47 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
COVID's Hidden Toll on Nurses
As the pandemic began raging again this fall we talked with nurse Linda Ruggiero about what it's like to be on the front lines for a second wave. She talks about how treatment has changed, what we still don't know about the disease, and how every nurse she knows is suffering from PTSD. Host: Elisabeth Berry Drago Senior Producer: Mariel Carr Producer: Rigoberto Hernandez Music by Blue Dot Sessions. Photograph of Linda Ruggiero by Kyle Cassidy.
2020-12-18
24 min
Dragonz | Artes Marciales y Deportes de Contacto
921 | La que pegó al Youtuber de 240kg (y otras noticias MARCIALES)
"A menos que estes obligado a luchar para evitar una injusticia no lo hagas. Y cuando lo hagas debes tener la suficiente sabiduría de hacerlo con inteligencia. (F. Javier Hernández). ️" Y nuestro programa de hoy se lo dedico a todos los que participásteis este sábado pasado en el rodaje de "Balas y Katanas", una pedazo de secuencia SUPERDIFÍCIL, con mucho frío, y visita de la Guardia Civil incluida, sin dejar de mencionas a los Grandes Rober Dragos, Bianca Kovacs, Elisabeth Larena, Rodrigo Poisón y Juanchis Lee... un fin de semana duro... ¡PERO ALGUIEN TENE QUE H...
2020-12-07
37 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Between Us and Catastrophe
We've collaborated with Philadelphia photographer Kyle Cassidy to tell the stories of our city's essential workers. This fall his large-scale portraits of nurses, sanitation workers, Instacart shoppers, mask-makers, and delivery drivers will be on display on the exterior of the Science History Institute, in Old City Philadelphia. Find out more at sciencehistory.org/pandemic. Hosts: Alexis Pedrick and Elisabeth Berry Drago Senior Producer: Mariel Carr Producer: Rigoberto Hernandez Music by Blue Dot Sessions: "Arlan Vale," "Alum Drum," "Setting Pace," "Kalstead," "Drone Pine," and "Raskt Landsby."
2020-10-27
19 min
TALENTO 4D
E021 | La Rueda de la Vida
Es interesante cómo muchos hemos escuchado la frase "no pongas todos los huevos en la misma canasta", frecuentemente en referencia a las inversiones. Sin embargo también aplica al balance en nuestra vida. En este episodio abordamos este tema utilizando una excelente herramienta llamada "La Rueda de la Vida", misma que se desprende del libro del mismo nombre de la autora suiza Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, y de la que se desprenden de 8 a 12 áreas importantes en la vida de todo ser humano. Te invito a que hagas tu propia auto-evaluación.
2020-10-05
15 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Space Junk
Outer space is crowded. Satellites, pieces of rocket, and stuff that astronauts left behind, such as cameras and poop, are just floating around. This space junk can pose a threat to our communication systems. In this episode we talk with Lisa Ruth Rand, a fellow at the Science History Institute, about her upcoming book on space junk. She tells us how space weather—that’s right, there’s space weather—can have an effect on what falls on Earth. She also talks about how our views on space debris reveal our attitudes back on Earth and how space ju...
2020-09-08
58 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Who Owns Outer Space?
Outer space belongs to everyone and no one, at least that’s what the Outer Space Treaty of 1967 says. On its face, this seems like an uncontroversial statement. But in the 1970s a group of equatorial countries challenged this idea. Only the richest and most powerful countries can afford to reach outer space in the first place, they argued, so in principle these nations controlled it. The protesting countries were ignored at the time, but to some their warnings seem more urgent now that it isn’t just wealthy nations with space programs, but also individual billionaires. Host...
2020-09-01
35 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
The Alchemical Origins of Occupational Medicine
Worldwide nearly 3 million workers die on the job each year. U.S. workers experience roughly that same number of injuries and illnesses each year. Work is hard and dangerous, and we have the data to prove it. But who started collecting that data? The answer takes us back to Paracelsus, an early modern physician and alchemist who noticed that the miners he lived among often became very ill or died. His inquiries laid the foundation for occupational health and the workplace safety standards we have today. Hosts: Alexis Pedrick and Elisabeth Berry Drago Senior Producer: Mariel Carr...
2020-08-25
38 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Bonus Episode: Doing science with an invisible disability
Earning a PhD can be grueling for the healthiest student. But what is it like for a student with widespread pain and fatigue? Is it even possible? Marine geologist and geophysicist Gabriela Serrato Marks tells us that academia was not set up for people like her, and she wants to change that. Hosts: Alexis Pedrick and Elisabeth Berry Drago Senior Producer: Mariel Carr Producer: Rigoberto Hernandez Audio Engineer: Jonathan Pfeffer Original Music by Zach Young
2020-08-21
24 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Science and Disability: What is intelligence?
There’s a common assumption that to be a scientist you must also be a genius, someone who excelled at school and learns easily and quickly. But are these really the qualities necessary to produce new scientific knowledge? Collin Diedrich is a research scientist with a doctorate in molecular virology and microbiology. On paper he might seem to be the archetypal smart scientist, but the reality is more complicated. Collin has multiple learning disabilities, and he has struggled to overcome the stigma that comes with them for his entire life. In this episode we explore how our na...
2020-08-18
41 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Science and Disability: Is Seeing Believing?
Everyone knows that observation is a key part of the scientific method, but what does that mean for scientists who can’t see? Judith Summers-Gates is a successful, visually impaired chemist who uses a telescope to read street signs. If the thought of a blind scientist gives you pause, you’re not alone. But stop and ask yourself why. What assumptions do we make about how knowledge is produced? And who gets to produce it? And who gets to participate in science? In this episode we go deep into the history of how vision came to dominate scie...
2020-08-11
40 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Collecting Monstrosity
We’ve long been fascinated by the mysteries of reproduction. But that curiosity is piqued most intensely when something unexpected happens. The study of such “monstrous births,” as scientists once called them, propelled forward our understanding of how embryos and fetuses develop. And the key to unlocking this knowledge was found gathering dust in the basement of the Russian Academy of Sciences, in a macabre collection assembled by Czar Peter the Great. The story behind this collection reveals a little-known corner of the history of the life sciences and raises some big questions, like how do bodies we see as abn...
2020-08-04
37 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
BONUS EPISODE: Pandemic Perspectives with Katrine Bosley
Over the next several weeks Distillations will be talking to people who have special insight into the coronavirus crisis—biomedical researchers, physicians, public health experts, and historians. In this episode our producer Rigberto Hernandez talks with Katrine Bosley, who has worked in the biotech industry for more than 30 years. Until recently she was the CEO of Editas Medicine, a company that focuses on a gene-editing technology known as CRISPR. She’s now on the board of the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Hospital and is advising the facility on its quest to create a COVID-19 vaccine. She tells us how...
2020-06-04
32 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
BONUS EPISODE: Pandemic Perspectives with William Haseltine
We talk to William Haseltine, a scientist, entrepreneur, and author who has lived through three epidemics (polio, HIV/AIDS, and now COVID-19). He tells us how his lab in the 1980s was better prepared to deal with HIV/AIDS than we are now for COVID-19 and what he thinks lies ahead for us with this pandemic. Over the next several weeks Distillations will be talking to people who have special insight into the coronavirus crisis—biomedical researchers, physicians, public health experts, and historians. Credits Hosts: Elisabeth Berry Drago, Alexis Pedrick Senior Producer: Mariel...
2020-05-28
28 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
BONUS EPISODE: Pandemic Perspectives with Susan Weiss
Over the next several weeks Distillations will be talking to people who have special insight into the coronavirus crisis—biomedical researchers, physicians, public health experts, and historians. In this episode we speak with Susan Weiss, a microbiology professor at the University of Pennsylvania and the director for the Penn Center for Research on Coronavirus and Emerging Pathogens. She’ll talk about her 40-years of experience researching coronaviruses, how her field reacted to the 2002 SARS and 2012 MERS outbreaks, and the importance of studying diseases that transfer from animals to humans. Credits Hosts: Elisabeth Berry Drago...
2020-05-21
37 min
z26
Table ronde Pourquoi personne n’est content de son LMS ? Que faire ?
Modérée par Myriam Schlegel, Dirigeante, Alterforme Avec Nicolas Hernandez, CEO, 360Learning Elodie Primo Amado, CEO, MOS Mind0nSite Geoffroy de Lestrange, Sr. EMEA Product Marketing Manager, Cornerstone OnDemand, Jerôme Bruet, Vice-Président, Talentsoft Olivier Metzker, Directeur des Opérations France, CrossKnowledge, Élisabeth Desriac, Directrice du Développement, Futurskill
2020-05-17
54 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
BONUS EPISODE: Pandemic Perspectives with Sue Desmond-Hellmann
Over the next several weeks Distillations will be talking to people who have special insight into the coronavirus crisis—biomedical researchers, physicians, public health experts, and historians. In this episode we speak with Sue Desmond-Hellmann, an oncologist who worked with HIV patients in San Francisco in the 1980s during the HIV/AIDS epidemic. She was also the CEO of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation up until December 2019. Desmond-Hellmann tells us about her experiences working as a doctor during the HIV/AIDS epidemic and as a CEO of the Gates Foundation during the Ebola pandemic. She also discu...
2020-05-14
17 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
BONUS EPISODE: Pandemic Perspectives with John C. Martin
Over the next several weeks Distillations will be talking to people with special insight into the coronavirus crisis—biomedical researchers, physicians, public health experts, and historians. In this episode we speak with John C. Martin, a biomedical researcher and former CEO of Gilead Sciences. Gilead is a pharmaceutical giant best known for its antiviral therapies for HIV/AIDS and hepatitis, but it’s also the company behind remdesivir, an antiviral drug that has recently made headlines as a possible treatment for COVID-19. Martin talked to senior producer Mariel Carr about remdesivir, antiviral treatments for HIV and...
2020-05-05
15 min
The Laydown Podcast
Bibliophiles Unite (Remotely)!
Ryan, Kelso, Elisabeth, Jo, Rachael, Abby, and Paula connect remotely over Zoom to party like introverts: stay at home and talk about books! Gibson's Bookstore Website https://www.gibsonsbookstore.com/gifts/gibsons-gift-certificate Gibson's Instagram The Laydown Instagram Facebook Twitter Libro.fm (Our Audiobook Platform) Use the code “LAYDOWN” for 3 audiobooks for the price of 1! Email us at thelaydownpodcast@gmail.com Click the link in order to purchase the book from our store, or click the "Libro.fm" link to get the Audiobook on Libro.fm. Thanks for shopping local! Books Mentioned During This...
2020-04-29
1h 13
Through the Lens
Griefsources | Ep. 41
One of the things that has been the most encouraging to us in our grief has been connecting with others who "get it". People who can link their arms around us, cry with us, pray with us, point us to the truth, all while nodding their heads along with us and saying “me too”. Our grieving experiences have been greatly impacted by so many books, blogs, songs and organizations and we want to share some of our favorites with you! In today’s episode, we're sharing some of our favorite grief-related resources...or “Griefsources” as we’re calling it. We’...
2020-03-24
53 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
How Philadelphia's Water Pollution Problems Shaped the City
Philadelphia just had the wettest decade on record, and all that precipitation has wreaked havoc on the city’s waterways. Like most old cities, Philadelphia has a combined sewer system—that is, one pipe is used to carry both sewage and stormwater. When it rains a lot, the system gets overwhelmed, forcing the water department to send raw sewage into rivers and creeks. City officials and engineers knew this was going to be a problem when they built the sewer system in the 1800s. The reason why they used a combined system anyway can be best explained by two forces...
2020-01-07
47 min
SFRADIO
El Magazine. Lunes, 18 de noviembre de 2019.
El lunes es el día de nuestro Magazine y nuestro equipo, fiel a su cita semanal, se reúne en el estudio de SF Radio para relatarnos y contarnos lo contenidos propios de sus secciones. Si os gusta lo bueno, os quedaréis con nosotros durante estos dieciocho minutos de radio para escuchar a nuestro presentador Alejandro, que conduce el programa, y a todos los colaboradores que hacen lo hacen posible. Lucía y María, nos hablan hoy del deportista Luka Doncic, jugador de la NBA. Escucharemos después la sección que cada semana nos traen Pablo Martín...
2019-11-18
18 min
Through the Lens
Enneagrief Pt. 2 | Ep. 34
In today’s episode, Holly sits down with certified enneagram coach Elisabeth Bennett of @enneagram.life to discuss grief and the enneagram! Elisabeth breaks down each of the nine types and shares how each type may process grief differently. We chat about the three stances (compliant, aggressive and withdrawn), which types fall into which category and how someone’s stance may influence the way in which they walk through grief. Elisabeth also addresses how Christians should view the enneagram, the importance of finding our identity in Christ and scripture truth for all types. We were thrilled to have Elisabeth on T...
2019-09-24
00 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Rare Earths: The Hidden Cost to Their Magic, Part 2
The 17 rare earth elements are often called the spices or vitamins of industry. While we don’t need much of them, they’re sprinkled in small amounts through our most powerful, futuristic, and dare we say it, magical tools. They power our iPhones and computers; they’re in wind turbines and hybrid cars. They’re in dental implants, X-ray machines, and life-saving cancer drugs. They have unusual magnetic and electrical properties that make our gadgets faster, stronger, and lighter. And we've all been coasting along enjoying their magic for a while now. In fact, we've come to expect magic. But magi...
2019-06-25
31 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Rare Earths: The Hidden Cost to Their Magic, Part 1
The 17 rare earth elements are often called the spices or vitamins of industry. While we don’t need much of them, they’re sprinkled in small amounts through our most powerful, futuristic, and dare we say it, magical tools. They power our iPhones and computers; they’re in wind turbines and hybrid cars. They’re in dental implants, X-ray machines, and life-saving cancer drugs. They have unusual magnetic and electrical properties that make our gadgets faster, stronger, and lighter. And we've all been coasting along enjoying their magic for a while now. In fact, we've come to expect magic. But magi...
2019-06-25
25 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
The Myth of the Cuyahoga River Fire
In the summer of 1969 the Cuyahoga River in Cleveland, Ohio, defied the laws of nature and caught fire. Time covered the event and cemented the fire’s place in national lore. The story that followed says this fire captured the country’s attention and brought to light the environmental hazards not only in Cleveland but in the country as a whole. And it went on to spark the modern environmental movement. This all sounds like such a nice, tidy story. But in reality things were much more complicated and involved politics, the space race, and just plain timing. Credi...
2019-05-28
32 min
Radio atelier
No. 44 — 27 mai 2019
Vous pouvez télécharger l’épisode ici! Entrevue Benjamin J. Allard s’entretenait avec la chorégraphe et interprète Dana Michel. Elle présentera sa pièce Cutlass Spring du 31 mai au 3 juin au Théâtre Prospero dans le cadre du FTA, Festival TransAmerique. Le FTA, festival de théâtre et de danse se tient cette année du 22 mai au 4 juin. Pour en savoir plus, vous pouvez vous rendre sur le site du festival.Vous pouvez en apprendre davantage sur la pratique de Dana Michel en consutant son site Internet. Chroniqu...
2019-05-28
00 min
Balance ton post
#22 – Balance ton fil
Le samedi 11 mai 2019, une émission co-animée par Florence Fanelli, Coline, Alizée Durkheim, Bastien Drouot, Victoria, Gaëtan Hulin et Quentin Hernandez. A la préparation et à la technique : Quentin Hernandez. Thématiques : Environnement, climat : Le textile : 2e plus gros pollueur au monde. Comment combattre le fast fashion ? L’UE aura consommé vendredi ses ressources pour l’année Un million d’espèces menacées : le combat est il perdu d’avance ? Linceul écolo de Luke Perry et retour a la terre Égalité femmes/hommes : Pascale Praud et Élisabeth Levy Thématique combats su...
2019-05-11
00 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
High Steaks at the Border
When we think about the U.S.-Mexico border, it’s hard not to think about the current immigration conflict and the contentious idea to build a wall. But the concept of a border wall isn’t new: proposals for walls have been made for more than 100 years. Our story starts in 1947, when a group of Texas ranchers demanded a fence along their state’s border with Mexico. Their motivation, though, was to stop an outbreak of a disease that struck farm animals. The response to the crisis was complicated and often messy. But in the end two countries came t...
2019-04-23
40 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Making the Deserts Bloom
In the late 1950s a Texas town on the Gulf of Mexico was suffering from a devastating, decade-long drought. But while the wells ran dry, the ocean lapped at the town’s shore, taunting the thirsty residents with its endless supply of undrinkable water. Undrinkable, that is, until President John F. Kennedy stepped in to save the day with the promise of science. The evolving technology of desalination wouldn’t just end droughts: it would give us as much water as we wanted. It would allow us to inhabit otherwise uninhabitable places. It would let us make the deserts bloo...
2019-03-19
36 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Love, Hate, and Sex from the History of Science
This Valentine’s Day we could have just brought you some sappy love stories from science’s past. But instead we offer you three tales of lust, loneliness, betrayal, pettiness, and not one, but two beheadings. Credits Hosts: Alexis Pedrick and Elisabeth Berry Drago Senior Producer: Mariel Carr Producer: Rigoberto Hernandez Reporters: Alexis Pedrick and Elisabeth Berry Drago Audio Engineer: James Morrison Photo illustration by Jay Muhlin Additional audio production by Dan Drago Music Music courtesy of the Audio Network Research Notes Martha Drinna...
2019-02-12
38 min
Balance ton post
#11 – Balance ton fil
Une émission animée par Florence et co-animée par Alizée Durkheim, Bastien Drouot, Victoria, Anissa, Marius, Quentin Hernandez. A la prépa et à la technique: Quentin Hernandez. Sujets : Dossier : le nouveau visage du Brésil un mois après la prise de poste de Jair Bolsonaro Recrudescence des mariages homosexuels, par crainte ou comme signe de protestation L’exil forcé de Jean Wyllys, député ouvertement gay L’arrivée au pouvoir des Évangélistes Des ministres qui font parler d’eux Les premières mesures inquiétantes de Bolsonaro Monde : Des anthropologues...
2019-02-02
00 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Sex(ism), Drugs, and Migraines
Egyptian scriptures from 1200 BCE describe painful, migraine-like headaches, so we know the disorder has afflicted people for at least three thousand years. Still, the condition continues to mystify us today. Anne Hoffman is a reporter, a professor, and a chronic migraine sufferer. She spent the past year tracing the history of migraines, hoping to discover clues about a treatment that actually works for her. The journey took her in some interesting directions. One common theme she found? A whole lot of stigma. Credits Hosts: Alexis Pedrick and Elisabeth Berry Drago Senior Producer: Mariel Carr Producer: R...
2019-01-15
42 min
Heraldos De Galactus
Heraldos de Galactus 2x11 - De arqueros y cazadores (Final de Temporada)
Programa final de la segunda temporada, para el cual contamos con interesantes debates sobre la llegada de TKO Studios, mucha grapUSA, arqueología del cómic indie, novedades en las editoriales de los superhéroes, tebeos españoles y la serie limitada de Green Arrow "El cazador acecha" (por Mike Grell) como nuestro 'Cómic Del Mes'... ¡Felices fiestas y nos escuchamos en 2019! Contenido de diciembre de 2018 ----------------------------------------------- INTRO: Sintonía (Los Vegetales) 0) Presentaciones 1) Qué estamos leyendo (Mini-Reseñas) 1.1) Rocket Girl (Ediciones Dimensionales/Image Comics) 1.2) Atraco a Mano Alzada (Lundi & Javier Ara, Ed. Drakul) 1.3) The Hunter (Joe Sparrow) 1.4) Sordo (D. Muñoz & R...
2018-12-19
2h 30
Distillations | Science History Institute
The Mouse That Changed Science: A Tiny Animal With a Big Story
In April 1988 Harvard University was awarded a patent that was the first of its kind. U.S. Patent Number 4,736,866 was small, white, and furry, with red beady eyes. His name was OncoMouse. The mouse, genetically engineered to have a predisposition for cancer, allowed researchers to study the disease in an intact living organism. It promised to transform cancer research, but not everyone was happy. Most critics were wary of patenting life forms at all. But academic scientists were also worried about the collision of commercial and academic science. It forced them to face difficult questions: Who should...
2018-11-19
41 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Treating America's Opioid Addiction Part 3: Searching for Meaning in Kensington
“We should never, ever forget that addiction treatment is a search for meaning in a place other than using drugs.” —Nancy Campbell, historian of drug addiction (This is the third and final chapter of a three-part series. See Part 1 and Part 2.) In the final chapter of this series we travel to the heart of our modern opioid crisis. In what is now a notorious Philadelphia neighborhood called Kensington, we meet two victims of the epidemic and follow them on two distinct paths toward recovery. Our current devastating opioid crisis is unprecedented in its...
2018-10-16
55 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Treating America’s Opioid Addiction Part 2: Synanon and the Tunnel Back to the Human Race.
Our current devastating opioid crisis is unprecedented in its reach and deadliness, but it’s not the first such epidemic the United States has experienced or tried to treat. In fact, it’s the third. Treating America’s Opioid Addiction is a three-part series that investigates how we’ve understood and treated opioid addiction over more than a century. Through the years we’ve categorized opioid addiction as some combination of a moral failure, a mental illness, a biological disease, or a crime. And though we’ve desperately wanted the problem to be something science alone can solve, the mor...
2018-09-18
44 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Treating America’s Opioid Addiction Part 1: The Narcotic Farm and the Promise of Salvation
Our current devastating opioid crisis is unprecedented in its reach and deadliness, but it’s not the first such epidemic the United States has experienced or tried to treat. In fact, it’s the third. Treating America’s Opioid Addiction is a three-part series that investigates how we’ve understood and treated opioid addiction over more than a century. Through the years we’ve categorized opioid addiction as some combination of a moral failure, a mental illness, a biological disease, or a crime. And though we’ve desperately wanted the problem to be something science alone can solve, the mo...
2018-08-21
32 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Fighting Smog in Los Angeles
If you live in Los Angeles, or even if you’ve just visited, you know about smog. But what might surprise you is that a half-century ago the city’s air quality was more unbearable, even though the city had far fewer cars. In the final installment of our three-part series on environmental success stories, we tell you about Los Angeles’s caveat-filled triumph over smog. The battle started in the 1940s and continues today, but along the way crucial pieces of technology and legislation helped clear the air—and forced the whole country to follow. ...
2018-06-26
39 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Whatever Happened to Acid Rain?
Remember acid rain? If you were a kid in the 1980s like our hosts were, the threat of poison falling from the sky probably made some kind of impression on your consciousness. But thanks to the work of scientists, government, the media, and the pope—that’s right, the pope—the problem was fixed! Well, mostly fixed is probably more accurate. This complicated story spans 27 years, six U.S. presidents, and ecologist Gene Likens's entire career. Discover the insidious details in the second chapter of our three-part series on environmental success stories. Credits Hosts: Alexis Pedrick...
2018-05-22
32 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Whatever Happened to the Ozone Hole?
If you were around in the 1980s, you probably remember the lurking fear of an ominous hole in the sky. In the middle of the decade scientists discovered that a giant piece of the ozone layer was disappearing over Antarctica, and the situation threatened us all. The news media jumped on the story. The ozone layer is like the earth’s sunscreen: without it ultraviolet rays from the sun would cause alarming rates of skin cancer and could even damage marine food chains. And it turns out we were causing the problem. Today, more than three decades af...
2018-04-17
24 min
Distillations | Science History Institute
Butter vs. Margarine: one of America's most bizarre food battles
It’s one of the most bizarre episodes in American food history: when butter and margarine were at war. What you choose to spread on your toast might seem like a boring subject, but it turns out to be fascinating and sometimes hilarious. Margarine’s history began with French emperor Napoleon III, a French chemist, and some sheep’s stomachs, and went on to include heated courtroom debates, our first federal laws regulating food, and outlaws smuggling faux butter across state lines. The spreads have competed for more than a hundred years, and public preferences shift each time o...
2017-11-14
20 min
Especiales
San Antolín 2017 - ACUP Radio
Programa especial desde The Lemon Society (Paseo del Salón, Palencia). Grabado el día 2 de septiembre de 2017. Invitados: César García Marirrodriga, Eduardo Plaza, Aina Rotger, Ana María Salgado. Equipo ACUP Radio: Samuel García, José Antonio Aguado, Mari Carmen Diago, Elisabeth Wroskian, Marta Hernández, Sergio García, Andrea Estébanez, Víctor Martín 'MarQ'. Han intervenido también: Luis Javier Pinar, José Serrano, Paloma Aguado. Con la ayuda técnica y logística de Edgar de Benito y Manuel Fernández. Agradecimientos: Javier Sansegundo, The Lemon Society, Raúl González, Hache, ACUP.
2017-09-02
2h 11
How To Download Full Audiobook in Romance, Contemporary and Many More
Dunkle krlighedshistorier Audiobook by Elisabeth Lyneborg
Please open https://hotaudiobook.com ONLY on your standard browser Safari, Chrome, Microsoft or Firefox to download full audiobooks of your choice for free. Title: Dunkle krlighedshistorier Author: Elisabeth Lyneborg Narrator: Karen-Marie Larsen Format: Unabridged Length: 6 hrs and 21 mins Language: English Release date: 01-18-16 Publisher: Lindhardt og Ringhof Genres: Romance, Contemporary Publisher's Summary: "Dunkle kaerlighedshistorier" er en raekke historier, der foregr i forskellige miljer og i forskellige tidsperioder. Kaerligheden er et uopslideligt tema og det vigtigste i vort liv. Bde den kaerlighed vi fr, giver og ikke modtager. Til gengaeld er kaerligheden ikke altid lige gennemskuelig, noget vil altid...
2016-01-18
6h 21
Podcast de Yudith72
Los 55 del ICAP (2)
Ana Elisabeth Hernández Chang, especialista de Solidaridad del Instituto Cubano de Amistad con los Pueblos en Cienfuegos habla de su labor dentro de esta organización que arriba a su aniversario 55.
2015-12-16
02 min
Радио-шоу «Эклектика» | Eclectic Radio Show
«Эклектика» № 132
1. Alex Kenji - Screenset (Original Mix) 2. Cristoph - Right Now 3. David Devilla & Elisabeth Aivar - Cold Mind (Passion Victim Remix) 4. GusGus - Crossfade (Maceo Plex Mix) 5. Alexis Raphael - Exclusive 6. Luigi Rocca, IAMAlina - She (Original Mix) 7. Unknow Fruiter - Unknow 20 (Original Mix) Sinoptik mix: 8. Miusha – The Gift 9. Noe Spesielt – Wolf feat. Sanna 10. Kerri Chandler feat. Jerome Sydenham – Mama (La Fleur Remix) 11. Kele Okereke – Candy Flip 12. Felipe Godoi – Damn Stupid 13. Chaim - Blue Shadow 14. Animal Trainer, Jan Blomqvist - Keep Control (Niconé & Sascha Braemer Remix) 15. Miyagi - Don't Bother Me Master 16. Luigi Rocca - Synesthesia (Original Mix) 17. Smash TV - When I (Ori...
2014-04-19
2h 00
freie-radios.net (amnesty münchen)
ai-Menschenrechtspreis für Abel Barrera Hernandez
Menschenrechtler wie Abel Barrera Hernández, der sich für die Rechte indigener Völker in Mexiko einsetzt, riskieren oft ihr Leben. An ihn und das Menschenrechtszentrum „Tlachinollan“ vergab Amnesty International in Deutschland den diesjährigen Menschrechtspreis. Das Leben und den unermüdlichen Einsatz dieses Mannes für die Armen stellt Elisabeth Schlagberger vor, es spricht Sophia Heyland.
2011-09-29
03 min