The podcast-only thread

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The podcast-only thread

Postby monster » Sat Aug 18, 2007 12:03 am

I hope this thread is a good idea, I just got an mp3 player and I'm hunting for good educational/motivational material.

Obviously anything can go here but personally I'm looking for audio relating to nootropics/life-extension/transhumanism.

Interviews on the nature of consciousness (via Guardian):

[url=http://download.mondoglobo.net/neofiles/shows/neofiles-082.mp3]From Vioxx To Salvia - Everybody Takes Drugs
James Kent, co-editor of the fun drug blog DoseNation joins us on the show today to talk about mind-altering drugs in contemporary society and pop culture from Vioxx to Salvia; from The Simpsons to The Sopranos. [/url]

(More interesting podcasts, like the above link.)
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Postby judasdisney » Sat Aug 18, 2007 6:02 am

Some highly recommended podcasts:

(1) http://www.outthereradio.net

Recommended Episodes include: Guyana's Heart of Darkness (on Jim Jones), Apocalypse 2012 (better than it sounds), Anatomy of a Coup, Smuggling Cocaine for the CIA, and Buying Crack From the CIA (on Gary Webb). Other episodes include Bill Hicks, Nikola Tesla, MLK assassination, Waco, Oklahoma City, JFK assassination, COINTELPRO, and other Deep Politics/paranormal/weird.

(2) Loads of interesting mp3s for free, including Parenti on "Fascism, the false revolution"...Chomsky...wheat & chaff you'll have to sort through
http://disgruntledmass.v2.nl/media/

(3) Webster Tarpley on U.S. coup dress-rehearsal of 2006, at time-mark 1:07:20. Exceptionally recommended information.

(4) Other Tarpley podcasts:

[url=http://www.kpfa.org/archives/index.php?arch=21537]
Tarpley uncovers more drills on 9/11, up to 23 count
[/url]

more Tarpley

more Tarpley

more Tarpley

one of Mike Malloy's last shows for Air America before he was fired, 3 hour Tarpley interview

2-part Tarpley interview
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Postby monster » Sun Aug 19, 2007 5:58 pm

judasdisney wrote:Some highly recommended podcasts:

(1) http://www.outthereradio.net


I've been enjoying this station, thanks. Lots of material there.

Haven't gotten to the rest of the links yet.
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Here's some...

Postby Uncle $cam » Tue Aug 21, 2007 3:51 am

I hope more people reply to this topic...

Anyway,

For the past several years I've been actively auditing podcasts while in my car. I've tried all kinds of stuff -- one time talks, home-made riffs, occasional raves by brilliant geniuses, and regular fragments of broadcast material. I have two criteria: I want to be surprised, and I want to learn.

In the past 12 months I have settled my listening time on three regular podcasts, which I look forward to eagerly. I can heartily recommend all three. They share these characteristics: they are one-hour, weekly podcasts of non-fiction that begin as broadcasts on public radio. I know the whole point of podcasting is to let a million amateur voices bloom, but what can I say? Week after week, what I crave is well-crafted, compelling audible surprises that tell me something I didn't know. That is what you get with these free podcasts. One hour gives time to go deep, weekly gives room to experiment, but doesn't overwhelm the way daily does (I dropped Fresh Air because I couldn't keep up), and non-fiction keeps me learning.

Radio Lab


It's hard to describe the innovative audio sensibility in a Radio Lab show. Sounds and speech are layered, cut, remixed, and spot-lighted in a way that could be very annoying, but isn't. Instead these experiments add subtlety, animation, and depth to otherwise talking voices. Each session of Radio Lab takes a broad subject like Placebos, or Forgetting, and explores the idea in sound and words non-linearly, with great intelligence, originality, and daring. They ask hard questions, and keep circling it until they come close to an answer. It's a lot of fun. They also do a wonderful job integrating their website material (links, bibliography, further research) into the hour. You can download past programs as mp3. Start with the Musical Languages show.

http://www.wnyc.org/shows/radiolab/



Example:

Radio Lab: Season One 2005
brain
Who Am I?
http://www.wnyc.org/shows/radiolab/season1_2005.html
The "mind" and "self" were formerly the domain of philosophers and priests. Today, it's neurologists who, armed with giant magnets, are asking the big questions, like "How does the brain make me?" We stare into the mirror with Dr. Julian Keenan, reflect on the illusion of self-hood with British neurologist Paul Broks, contemplate the evolution of consciousness with Dr. V. S. Ramachandran. Also: the story of woman who one day woke up as a completely different person.

In Our Time
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/history/ino ... ndex.shtml

This weekly broadcast from the BBC in London is a testimony to the benefits of intellectuals and professors. Every week the mumbling host Melvyn Bragg invites three English professors (usually from Oxford or Cambridge) to discuss the most obscure subject of their expertise. They are only too happy to talk about that thing they know more about than anyone. By forcing the eggheads to be succinct, or demanding they restate a concept until clear, In Our Time delivers an incredibly fascinating glimpse into an unknown world in sufficient detail to make the conversation memorable. Imagine a whole hour each on: The Speed of Light; Indian Mathematics; The Siege of Constantinople; Gravitational Waves; The Trial of Madame Bovary; Anaesthetics; Joan of Arc; Ockham's Razor. Those are some of the topics I've heard in recent months. I've learned that the more obscure the subject, the more revelatory detail, and the more it becomes fascinating.

This American Life
http://www.thislife.org/Radio_Podcast.aspx
True stories about anything. Simply the best thing on radio. Possibly ever. Host Ira Glass has been pioneering the art of telling non-fiction stories for 10 years. He gives each voice time to stumble, pause, or lunge forward. But not a nanosecond is wasted. You hear what happened to people that makes their lives human. Every story on This American Life has an emotional narrative arc, and is often about transformation. Each story is told in an honest, original voice, and will make you cry or laugh. It is not uncommon for people to sit in their cars at their destination in order to hear the end of a story. That was the main drawback of This America Life: I wasn't usually in my car when it broadcast on the radio. Now with the podcast version I catch the three stories -- and their endings -- every week.
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Postby judasdisney » Tue Aug 21, 2007 4:59 am

Uncle $cam:

If you have iTunes (and you don't need an iPod to use iTunes, just a computer), check out the "Kasper Hauser Comedy Podcast" episodes 11 & 13, which are parodies of "This American Life." If you're a fan of that show, or simply familiar with it, you'll find the parodies spot-on.

On "Radio Lab":

My favorite episode (and highest recommendation) is the episode "Sleep" (May 25, 2007). Even if you have no interest in any other episode, this topic is universally amazing for anybody who listens. I had no idea about much of the facts about sleep in this episode.

Thanks to everybody for the links, and I hope this thread gets more input and continues.

Any parapolitical podcasts of note would be appreciated.
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Postby judasdisney » Tue Aug 21, 2007 5:21 am

For what it's worth:

Although Air America's Thom Hartmann has written a JFK assassination book which everybody should be aware blames RFK & the Mafia for the assassination but lets the CIA off the hook, his Air America radio show often broadcasts interesting interviews, and a little bit of truth slips through inadvertantly.

I don't recommend the archives of his full shows (at whiterosesociety.org, along with other progressive radio shows).

But archive clips of interesting segments can be found at http://www.thomhartmann.com/archive.htm

One example is this interesting mp3 interview with Paul Craig Roberts.

The archives are large and often useless, but some gems can be found, such as Barbara Honegger on the October Surprise Conspiracy & Iran/Contra.
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Postby theeKultleeder » Tue Aug 21, 2007 1:53 pm

I just found this, and it's well done:

http://www.occultofpersonality.com/
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Postby monster » Sun Sep 02, 2007 7:57 pm

Tons of good C2C-type stuff

Large Richard Hoagland audio archive (There are individual files, and also a 400 Mb zip file containing all of them)
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Postby judasdisney » Mon Sep 03, 2007 4:28 am

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Postby Sweejak » Sun Sep 16, 2007 3:47 pm

This week we feature a rarity--an argument. It's between Whitley Strieber and Daniel Pinchbeck about what the human future is likely to hold. It is the first time that an argument had broken out on Dreamland, but the suggestion that Whitley Strieber is in league with alien presences that don't have the best interests of the human species at heart lit Mr. Strieber's fuse, big time. For us, the result is an intense and revealing discussion as Pinchbeck accuses Strieber of encouraging disaster by having a 'negative' view of the future and Strieber accuses Pinchbeck of preferring a fantasy that seeks to ignore the laws of nature.


They talk right past each other, humorous in a way. Aside from the little flare up, there is Marrs talking about his forthcoming book about Remote Viewing.

iTunes URL
http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZSt ... d=73800982
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Postby judasdisney » Wed Sep 26, 2007 6:19 am

Dave Emory (of the 25-year long conspiracy radio broadcast "On The Record") lectures:

L-01 The Political Implications of the UFO Phenomenon and the “ET” Myth

L-02 The Future: Technology, Theocracy and the Thousand Year Reich

http://www.spitfirelist.com/mp3/Lectures/

AVAILABLE FOR A VERY LIMITED TIME:

UNTIL OCT 1 mp3 interview with Daniel Hopsicker:
http://podcast.wmfu.org/DX/dx070904.mp3

UNTIL OCT 6 mp3 on OK City John Doe #2:
http://podcast.wmfu.org/DX/dx070911.mp3
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mp3

Postby marmot » Wed Sep 26, 2007 10:22 am

Great idea for a thread!
I just got myself an mp3 player too. And I look forward to checking out the links.
I try to walk nearly two hours a day, now--with an mp3 player--my walks become all the more productive. Not only am I building up my body, I'm also building up my intellectual capital. Of late, I've been downloading lectures of whole seminary courses from Covenant Theological Seminary. I know Reformed Theology wont be everyone's bag, nevertheless, here's the link below; the courses are on the left hand side of the page. Also, if anyone else knows of any other free lecture courses, I'd appreciate knowing about them too. Thanks.

http://www.covenantseminary.edu/worldwide/default.asp
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Postby AlanStrangis » Wed Sep 26, 2007 10:39 am

Awesome thread idea! I love listening to podcasts whenever I'm on the move, and there seems to be some great suggestions here.

Most of the podcasts I listen to are related to my work, but there's one that some here might find interesting. Although it doesn't touch on subjects covered here at RI, for anybody interesting making their computer or network more secure and/or anonymous, I'd recommend http://www.grc.com/securitynow.htm. The site has multiple subscription methods, as well as an a la carte option.
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Postby Sweejak » Wed Sep 26, 2007 7:11 pm

Antiwar Radio has frequent updated podcasts on a variety of topics. Worth adding to your feed.
Homepage:
http://antiwar.com/blog/category/antiwar-radio

Feed:
http://www.antiwar.com/blog/feed/

Antiwar Radio Archives

Joseph Cirincione
Anthony Gregory
Michael Ledeen
Matt Taibbi
Andrew Patel
Greg Palast
Charles Goyette
Dr. Gordon Prather
Steve Clemons
Aneesh Raman
Gareth Porter
Carolyn Eisenberg
Andrew Tilghman
Michael Scheuer
Gareth Porter
Eric Boehlert
Andrew Bacevich
Andy Worthington
Will Grigg
Wayne White
Patrick Cockburn
Gareth Porter
Juan Cole
Dahr Jamail
Ray McGovern
Michael Isikoff
Scott Horton
Doug Bandow
Corbett Edge O’Meara
Roland Haas
Warren Richey
Jorge Hirsch
Lew Rockwell
Rep. Ron Paul
Scott Horton
Gareth Porter
James Bovard
Charlie Savage
Mikey Weinstein
Stu Bykofsky
Scott Kohlhaas
Anthony Weller
Molly Hennessy-Fiske
Ronald J. Hansen
Anthony Gregory
Gareth Porter
Bruce Fein
James Ridgeway
Sheldon Richman
Raymond Offenheiser
Robert Parry
Andy Worthington
Karen Kwiatkowski
William S. Lind
John Soltz
Max Blumenthal
Joshua Frank
Jacob Hornberger
Greg Palast
Justin Raimondo
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Postby Truth4Youth » Wed Sep 26, 2007 7:25 pm

Burn this one to CD and give it to religiously-driven Bush fanatics:

Liberal Minister Davidson Loehr- Living Under Fascism (Virato Live!)
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