Podcasts from international and public radio sources that I've found 
particularly interesting and edifying as I'm "plodding along" in my regular 
exercise regimen.  

In addition to via the websites referenced, these podcasts generally are made 
available through several other popular internet sources such as iTunes and 
TuneIn.

------------------------------

IN OUR TIME - BBC Radio 4
Mrs. Dalloway
Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss Virginia Woolf's novel "Mrs Dalloway". 
First published in 1925, it charts a single day in the life of Clarissa 
Dalloway, a prosperous member of London society, as she prepares to throw a 
party. Writing in her diary during the writing of the book, Woolf explained 
what she had set out to do: 'I want to give life and death, sanity and 
insanity. I want to criticize the social system, and to show it at work at its 
most intense.' Celebrated for its innovative narrative technique and 
distillation of many of the preoccupations of 1920s Britain, Mrs Dalloway is 
now seen as a landmark of twentieth-century fiction, and one of the finest 
products of literary modernism.  With: Professor Dame Hermione Lee, President 
of Wolfson College, Oxford; Jane Goldman, Reader in English Literature at the 
University of Glasgow; Kathryn Simpson,  Senior Lecturer in English Literature 
at Cardiff Metropolitan University. (43')
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b048033q

MEDIA REPORT - ABC Radio National
"The Australian" Newspaper Turns 50
One of the most influential media outlets in Australia was launched by Rupert 
Murdoch 50 years ago this month. "The Australian" newspaper has changed its 
political stripes over the years but seems to have settled into it's current 
right of centre, campaigning stance. [My note:  Given Murdoch's influence in 
the UK and US, as well as his efforts to acquire Time Warner in the US, this 
program gives some insight on Murdoch, his history and motivations.] (28')
http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/mediareport/the-australian-newspaper-turns-50/5567148

LATE NIGHT LIVE - ABC Radio National
The Koch Brothers/Obesity and the Powerful Food Industry
The Koch Brothers—with an estimated wealth of over 40 billion dollars each—have 
become more visible in recent years as the aloof forefathers of the Tea Party 
movement, and as intellectual figureheads of a vast array of think-tanks and 
PACs like Americans for Prosperity. But in his new book, Sons of Wichita, 
writer and journalist Daniel Schulman gives us a century-long portrait of a 
family legacy forged through far more than the accusations of bare 
self-interest can account for.  And... As we're constantly hearing in the 
media, weight levels in Western countries have soared within a single 
generation, and obesity is now classed as a disease. However, like the tobacco 
industry of old, the food industry is an enormously powerful and profitable 
entity. So is there anything we can do about it? In the series, The Men Who 
Made Us Fat, which aired recently on ABC television, journalist Jacques Peretti 
investigates why more people around the world are now overweight than 
under-nourished. (55')
http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/latenightlive/sons-of-wichita/5569224
http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/latenightlive/the-men-who-made-us-fat/5570148

-----------------------------

Thank you to those who've expressed appreciation for this effort and have 
suggested additional podcasts worthy of consideration.  With time, those will 
be reflected in these postings as I proceed  to sample them!  

John Figliozzi
The Worldwide Listening Guide - 6th edition now available
wwlgonline.com

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