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.

Podcasting has expanded almost exponentially so very quickly that it can justly 
be considered a medium all its own.  Therefore, the attempt here has to be to 
highlight only a small portion of it, just one corner where excellence reigns.

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 or 
less):

— —

“5th April 2020" 
SUNDAY MISCELLANY - RTE Radio One
Donkeys, mindfulness, penniless poets, wardrobe malfunctions...and finding 
serenity these anxious days. With Maurice Crowe, Barbara Scully, Chris 
McHallem, John F Deane, Mary Jane Boland, and Denise Blake, and music from 
Boris Hunka and Diane Daly, David Dundas, the Flying Lizards, Bach, Sean Ó 
Riada.  (36”)
https://www.rte.ie/radio1/sunday-miscellany/programmes/2020/0405/1128605-sunday-miscellany-sunday-5-april-2020/?clipid=103376477#103376477

“Christopher Ricks on why Bob Dylan is "the greatest living user of the English 
language"" 
WRITERS AND COMPANY - CBC Radio One 
On Oct. 13, 2016, Bob Dylan was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. He is 
the first singer-songwriter to receive the honour, and the announcement came as 
a surprise to many, but Dylan's lyrics have been celebrated by literary 
scholars for decades. In 2005, Eleanor Wachtel spoke with Christopher Ricks, a 
professor at Boston University and the author of Dylan's Vision of Sin. In the 
interview, Ricks explains why he regards Dylan as "the greatest living user of 
the English language," and compares him to such authors as Tennyson, Milton, 
Wordsworth, Eliot, and — as he puts it — "that Dylanesque writer, William 
Shakespeare.”  Christopher Ricks has written groundbreaking work on Milton, 
Keats, Seamus Heaney and Philip Larkin. He was described by W.H. Auden as "the 
kind of critic every poet dreams of finding." Ricks first wrote about Bob Dylan 
more than 40 years ago, in 1972. (53”)
https://www.cbc.ca/radio/writersandcompany/christopher-ricks-on-why-bob-dylan-is-the-greatest-living-user-of-the-english-language-1.3803292

__ __


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”
NEW! 184 page 9th EDITION available NOW from Universal Radio 
[universal-radio.com], Amazon [amazon.com], Ham Radio Outlet [hamradio.com]

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