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by Martin Fowler.
Original Post: Bliki: Podcasts
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A few weeks ago, a friend asked for recommended podcasts. It's
taken me a while to answer, but I thought this would be a good
opportunity to suggest what I like listening to.
This American Life is the one that would probably win
the joint vote for Cindy and I. It's a weekly one-hour show which
usually includes three or four short stories with a (very) loose
theme. The stories are mostly true, but occasionally fictional;
usually lingering on the quirkier aspects of everyday life in the
United States. The show does a really good job of the storytelling
aspect in this, which makes it such a pleasure to listen to. As
well as their usual fare, they also occasionally do some
outstanding investigative journalism. Their show The Giant Pool of
Money, is the best explanation I've heard for how the mortgage
bubble crashed the world economy.
The contender for our joint favorite would be Radio Lab, which
we first ran into when they did a guest spot on This American Life.
Radio Lab focuses on science stories, especially cognitive science,
doing a really good job of explaining the material. It's also
remarkable for a very innovative approach to their audio design,
which involves a lot audio tricks to help bring out the science.
Probably my favorite episode of theirs is Stochasticity, which helps
explain how people really don't understand randomness (another
episode makes you feel sorry for a cockroach).
Although they mostly do science, they've
done a couple of exceptional arts-oriented stories on Wagner's ring
cycle and how Welles's War of the
Worlds contributes to the decline of thoughtful media.
The Giant Pool of Money was such a hit for This American Life,
that the people involved span off their own podcast: Planet Money.
This is a bi-weekly podcast of around twenty minutes, focused on
explaining economics to interested non-specialists. They cover a
good range of economic material and I find it a good way of keeping
tabs on the broad economic news.
When I'm taking my afternoon walk, one of my favorite programs to
listen to is In Our Time. The show focuses on the history of ideas.
The format is simple, the host Melvyn Bragg (a well known UK
broadcaster on arts topics) invites three academics and leads them
through a discussion of the topic at hand. These topics vary widely,
I particularly enjoyed The Industrial
Revolution, Suffragism,
Pythagoras,
and The Enlightenment in Scotland.
A History of the World in a Hundred Objects is a joint effort between
the BBC and the British Museum. During Britain's imperial glory,
much of the world's antiquities were saved/plundered and brought to
the British Museum. Whatever you think of that, it does mean the
British Museum has a remarkable collection of objects in one place
showing human development through the ages. The podcast takes a
hundred of these and weaves them into a narrative of human
development, one that manages to avoid much of the Euro-centric
perspective of the history I grew up with.
Only a few readers of this will have the slightest interest in
Test Match Special, and I suspect those who do already know about
it, but I can't help but mention it. I fast forward as soon as they start
the content-free interviews with the players from each team, but
would never want to miss the interplay between Aggers and Geoffrey
Boycott.