Most radio listening takes place in the car or while doing other things that 
allow freedom for the ear, but not the eyes and hands.  Podcasts permit a shift 
of listening time from a set appointment to virtually any convenient occasion.  
I do it while “power walking” (most) every morning in what sometimes seems like 
a vain attempt to diminish the results of sitting behind a desk for 35 years.  
The act of putting one foot in front of the other can be pretty monotonous and 
by “podding along” while plodding along the mind also gets something useful to 
do.  So it is with the time spent commuting to work day after day.

Some of the best radio comes from the public networks of the UK, Australia, 
Ireland, Canada, New Zealand and the U.S.  Apart from the originating program’s 
web site, most programs are made available through any number of other 
amalgamation sources such as iTunes and TuneIn. 

Admittedly, these are thoroughly subjective recommendations, but my interests 
and tolerance for incompatible views are pretty wide-ranging. Here’s another in 
a continuing series of small samplings, offered in a 90 minute scope (more of 
less):

——

“A Clockwork Miracle”
RADIOLAB - WNYC New York Public Radio
As legend goes, in 1562, King Philip II needed a miracle. So he commissioned 
one from a highly-skilled clockmaker. In this short, a king's deal with God 
leads to an intricate mechanical creation, and Jad heads to the Smithsonian to 
investigate.  When the 17-year-old crown prince of Spain, Don Carlos, fell down 
a set of stairs in 1562, he threw his whole country into a state of uncertainty 
about the future. Especially his father, King Philip II, who despite being the 
most powerful man in the world, was helpless in the face of his heir's terrible 
head wound. When none of the leading remedies of the day--bleeding, blistering, 
purging, or drilling--helped, the king enlisted the help of a relic...the 
corpse of a local holy man who had died 100 years earlier. Then, Philip II 
promised that if God saved his son, he'd repay him with a miracle of his own.  
Elizabeth King, a professor at Virginia Commonwealth University, describes 
how--according to legend--Philip II held up his end of the bargain with the 
help of a renowned clockmaker and an intricate invention. Jad and Latif head to 
the Smithsonian to meet curator Carlene E. Stephens, who shows them the inner 
workings of a nearly 450-year-old monkbot.  (23”)
https://www.wnycstudios.org/story/radiolab-clockwork-miracle

“Antitrust 1: Standard Oil”
PLANET MONEY - NPR
For this first episode in the series, we're starting at the very beginning, in 
the nineteenth century, with the story of John D. Rockefeller and Standard Oil. 
We go to Titusville, Pennsylvania, and retrace the steps of muckraking 
journalist Ida Tarbell as she uncovers the back room deals struck by 
Rockefeller, then one of the world's richest men. Tarbell's investigative 
reporting in the early 1900s inspired a court case that helped change the 
design of the American economy.  (25”)
https://www.npr.org/sections/money/2019/02/15/695131832/antitrust-1-standard-oil

"Walter Benjamin: Multimedia Prototype?”
THE PHILOSOPHER’S ZONE - ABC RN
In September 1940, one of the greatest and most oddball intellectuals of the 
early 20thcentury died on the run from the Nazis. Walter Benjamin was a mind 
out of time, a brilliant misfit who roamed the intellectual landscape as if 
there were no boundaries, no fences. From philosophy to history, art criticism, 
urbanism and world events, Walter Benjamin was at once an academic and a 
journalist and a radio broadcaster; a radical innovator, always in search of an 
audience. Nobody understood him then—but today he seems to make perfect sense, 
as we now live in a world of change that demands agility and celebrates hybrid 
minds. His work seems strangely prescient of a cyber world and a chaotic media 
landscape that had yet to evolve. Was he the seminal multimedia journalist?  
(32”)
https://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/philosopherszone/walter-benjamin/10800302

“The Internet and Your Memory”
OCKHAM’S RAZOR - ABC RN
More and more, we rely on the internet for the quick recall of facts, figures, 
dates and events.  Is that inflating what we think we know?  (10”)
https://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/ockhamsrazor/the-internet-and-your-memory/10806338

__ __


A monthly (well, mostly monthly) compendium of these newsletters, plus on 
occasion additional pertinent material, is now published in The CIDX Messenger, 
the monthly e-newsletter of the Canadian International DX Club (CIDX).  For 
further information, go to www.cidx.ca

John Figliozzi
Editor, "The Worldwide Listening Guide”
192 page 8th edition available from Universal Radio [universal-radio.com] and 
Amazon [amazon.com]
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