Radiolab
Radiolab
  • Видео 309
  • Просмотров 7 558 228
Birdie in the Cage | Radiolab Podcast
Can you fit the identity of a whole nation into a dance? Of course not. But we tried anyway.
People have been doing the square dance since before the Declaration of Independence. But does that mean it should be THE American folk dance? That question took us on a journey from Appalachian front porches, to dance classes across our nation, to the halls of Congress, and finally a Kansas City convention center. And along the way, we uncovered a secret history of square dancing that made us see how much of our national identity we could stuff into that square, and what it means for a dance to be of the people, by the people, and for the people.
Special thanks to Jim Mayo, Claude Fowler, Paul Giff...
Просмотров: 736

Видео

Aphantasia | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 2,6 тыс.19 часов назад
What does it mean to see-and not see-in your mind? Close your eyes and imagine a red apple. What do you see? Turns out there’s a whole spectrum of answers to that question, and producer Sindhu Gnanasambandan is on one far end. In this episode, she explores what it means to see-and not see-in your mind. Special thanks to Kim Nederveen Pieterse, Nathan Peereboom, Lizzie Peabody, Kristin Lin, Jo E...
Argentine Invasion | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 3,3 тыс.21 день назад
From the Radiolab podcast: Think of that anthill in your backyard, now stretch it out over five continents. From a suburban sidewalk in southern California, in this episode from 2012, Jad and Robert witness the carnage of a gruesome turf war. Though the tiny warriors doing battle clock in at just a fraction of an inch, they have evolved a surprising, successful, and rather unsettling strategy o...
Mixtapes to the Moon | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.28 дней назад
From the Radiolab podcast: They promised to change you. They ended up changing all of us. On July 20, 1969, humanity watched as Neil Armstrong stepped foot on the moon. It was the dazzling culmination of a decade of teamwork, a collective global experience unlike anything before or since, a singular moment in which every human being was invited to feel part of something larger than themselves. ...
Mixtapes to the Moon | Mall Video | Podcast Extra
Просмотров 383Месяц назад
Here are the videos mentioned in the episode "Mixtapes to the Moon" - ruclips.net/video/2Q-mEqtGYrI/видео.html 🎧 Subscribe to Radiolab wherever you listen to podcasts: bit.ly/3trXDLe 🔎 Subscribe to Radiolab on RUclips: bit.ly/3I9KI53 🖋 Subscribe to Radiolab’s Newsletter: radiolab.org/newsletter 🌱 Check out Radiolab's Starter Kit Playlist: bit.ly/3sX8f4P 👍 Like this video ✏️ and leave us a comme...
Selected Shorts | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 3,7 тыс.Месяц назад
From the Radiolab podcast: A selection of short flights of fact and fancy performed live on stage. Usually we tell true stories on this show, but earlier this spring Radiolab co-hosts Lulu Miller and Latif Nasser were invited to guest host a live show called Selected Shorts, a New York City institution that presents short fiction performed on stage by great actors - you’ll often find Tony, Emmy...
Memory and Forgetting | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 7 тыс.Месяц назад
From the Radiolab podcast: Remembering is a tricky, unstable business. In this episode from 2007, we look behind the curtain of how memories are made and forgotten. The act of recalling in our minds something that happened in the past is an unstable and profoundly unreliable process - it’s easy come, easy go as we learn how true memories can be obliterated, and false ones added. Then, Oliver Sa...
Terrestrials is Coming Back for Season 2 in September
Просмотров 508Месяц назад
The Radiolab for Kids podcast feed is coming back and so is Terrestrials!!! Host Lulu Miller and the team will be back with Season 2 of Terrestrials in September. Until then, head to the Radiolab for Kids podcast feed where this summer we're dropping our favorite kid-friendly stories about plants and animals. 🎧 Subscribe to Radiolab For Kids Presents: Terrestrials wherever you listen to podcast...
Small Potatoes | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 6 тыс.2 месяца назад
From the Radiolab podcast: An ode to the small, the banal, the overlooked things that make up the fabric of our lives. Most of our stories are about the big stuff: Important or dramatic events, big ideas that transform the world around us or inspire conflict and struggle and change. But most of our lives, day by day or hour by hour, are made up of not that stuff. Most of our lives are what we s...
The Distance of the Moon | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 5 тыс.2 месяца назад
From the Radiolab podcast: How far is the moon, really? Could you get there with a ladder? In an episode we last featured on our Radiolab for Kids podcast feed back in 2020 - and in honor of its blocking out the sun for a bit of us for a bit last week - in this episode, we’re gonna talk more about the moon. According to one theory, (psst listen our episode "The Moon Itself" if you want to know ...
The Moon Itself | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 6 тыс.2 месяца назад
From the Radiolab podcast: As the total solar eclipse approached, we set out to ask: who is the moon, really? On Monday, April 8, 2024, for a large swath of North America, the sun disappeared in the middle of the day. Everywhere, people were talking about the total solar eclipse. What will it feel like when the sun goes away? What will the blocked-out sun look like? But all this talk of the sun...
Finding Emilie | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 4,7 тыс.3 месяца назад
From the Radiolab podcast: What does it mean to see? One artist finds new ways to navigate the world, and tell us what she sees, after sight. This is a segment we first aired back in 2011. In it, we hear a story of a very different kind of lost and found. Alan Lundgard, a college art student, fell in love with a fellow art student, Emilie Gossiaux. Nine months after Alan and Emilie made it offi...
Throughline: Dare to Dissent | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 4,4 тыс.3 месяца назад
From the Radiolab podcast: What happens when everyone around you is heading in one direction and you have no choice but to dissent? On today’s show, we’re excited to share an episode from our friends at the podcast @NPRThroughline. Sometimes, the most dangerous and powerful thing a person can do is to stand up not against their enemies, but against their friends. As the United States heads into...
Staph Retreat | Radiolab Podcasts
Просмотров 9 тыс.3 месяца назад
Staph Retreat | Radiolab Podcasts
Hold On | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 4,6 тыс.3 месяца назад
Hold On | Radiolab Podcast
The World's Smartest Animal | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 7 тыс.3 месяца назад
The World's Smartest Animal | Radiolab Podcast
Cheating Death | Radiolab Podcasts
Просмотров 7 тыс.4 месяца назад
Cheating Death | Radiolab Podcasts
Relative Genius | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 6 тыс.4 месяца назад
Relative Genius | Radiolab Podcast
Zoozve | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 6 тыс.4 месяца назад
Zoozve | Radiolab Podcast
The Living Room | Radiolab Podcasts
Просмотров 4,7 тыс.5 месяцев назад
The Living Room | Radiolab Podcasts
Our Little Stupid Bodies | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 8 тыс.5 месяцев назад
Our Little Stupid Bodies | Radiolab Podcast
Stochasticity | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 4,6 тыс.5 месяцев назад
Stochasticity | Radiolab Podcast
Zeroworld | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 6 тыс.5 месяцев назад
Zeroworld | Radiolab Podcast
Numbers | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 6 тыс.6 месяцев назад
Numbers | Radiolab Podcast
Death Interrupted | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 4,5 тыс.6 месяцев назад
Death Interrupted | Radiolab Podcast
A 4-Track Mind | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 4 тыс.6 месяцев назад
A 4-Track Mind | Radiolab Podcast
Boy Man | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 5 тыс.6 месяцев назад
Boy Man | Radiolab Podcast
Shrink | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 5 тыс.6 месяцев назад
Shrink | Radiolab Podcast
The Interstitium | Radiolab Podcast
Просмотров 14 тыс.7 месяцев назад
The Interstitium | Radiolab Podcast

Комментарии

  • @icecreamtruckog3667
    @icecreamtruckog3667 18 часов назад

    The only true Americans is Native Americans. Most others are refugees from Europe.

  • @RyanEllison-wz7jq
    @RyanEllison-wz7jq 22 часа назад

  • @mchyde4433
    @mchyde4433 День назад

    KOA campground on I believe Cape Hatteras sometime in the early 80s. We stayed for a week and I Square danced every night with a cute little girl when I was probably 10 years old

  • @amym1126
    @amym1126 День назад

  • @thewhiteobama5835
    @thewhiteobama5835 День назад

    Numero uno

  • @N0THANKY0U
    @N0THANKY0U 2 дня назад

    i am begging this guy to read deleuze

  • @xtr3im
    @xtr3im 2 дня назад

    Now I know I don't see the people in this podcast, it is just mild hyperfantasia 😂

  • @thechawnel241
    @thechawnel241 5 дней назад

    Pregnant person? Really? That show as gone woke, bring back Jadd ans Robert! Save the podcast!🎉

  • @thechawnel241
    @thechawnel241 5 дней назад

    Radiolab is now a teenagers diary...

  • @charliesinnott9840
    @charliesinnott9840 7 дней назад

    I will forever be in debt to this podcast for the CRISPr episode in 2015... It is the single reason I passed the greatest IQ test ever administered. Pretty sure they have and can get government funding and grants instead of asking for 7,000 people to donate... Earn this, don't ask for it....

  • @danielludlow8960
    @danielludlow8960 8 дней назад

    This is incredible!

  • @briseboy
    @briseboy 8 дней назад

    Crows are medium sized corvids, with different corvid species having different outstanding intelligence factors, from 1. Clark's Nutcracker, who live in the North American western mountains. They cache 1 to 15 or so pine nuts in each spot, during summer and fall, They see others when those others watch, and fake caching, and make sure they manage covert stashing of the seeds. They may put away up to near 100m000 seeda a season. What else is smart? They REMEMBBER most of their cache spots, so perfectly that they refind them under a foot od snow. There's more, but let's go on: 2. The common crows with whom you're familiar remember and solve food access rpobems, but these guys DO associate their dead and injured with likely predators. For example a pair of young naive crows,here, died because they landed on live power lines. I saw them late, and approached to attempt rescue. The elders, attacked me (just like MANY nesting birds attack those predators approaching their nests. NO other crows ever again sought to land on the deadly lines in the two years since. You heard recently about crows counting up past the limited mental amount common to us and them, without us using our numeracy. One summer, among a different group of crows, I spent an hour trading imitative calls with one. We went up and down the scale of 2 to 12, EXACTLY imitating one another. That made me think i was as smart as a crow. They have, like the ravens, next, clearly different calls related to intentional social things, outside of the pure contact calls used to advertise presence and ask for other text-backs from invisible tree perches. he flying calling is a variation on this contact-search call. I believe it probable that they identify individuals, just as to odontoceti and balaenopterae & others. So do wolves, who are WAY beyond us in attention identification, evaluation, assessment (i may not even write about them, thogh they ARE our betters. They do NOT like deception, and human intellignece is biased toward mistakes, deception and social dominance - but that's another subject. 3. RAVENS. I have watched ravens play upside down in the air less than 3 feet above ground in flight, as well as using upwinds on cliffs for exploring what aerobatics they can do to noe another. They possess at least the same repertoire of soothing to mobbing calls as do crows, and LEARN by observation: one group, of which someone observed godwits and other shorebirds poking deep in wave-washed sand for mole crabs, tried it. My story on this goes: "I watched the curious Wolf rush over to see what teh ravens were so focused on- (maybe the big or small fish that he so like to gobble up fresh or slightly seasoned). I followed the Wolf, curious as well, because ravens just don't poke in the wet water-washed tidal zone. Turned out that the Ravens, then the Wolf, then I, discovered the raven holes to be exactly to mole crabs 2-3" deep, who had believed they were safe. Everyone but me had crab. Two years after the Wolf died, another group of ravens (individuals live as much as 30 years, like bears, another brilliant species, who upon smelling you almost always disappear without your knowing it. I'm going to skip the amazing bear here, too, who has the most acute olfaction of ANY mammal, including the Wolf, which i tested for over a decade. The ravens recognized eeven though i had not come there since the Wolf's death, and they wildly greeted & dive-bombed me. The numerous other people on their beach that day did NOT arouse the persistent play, as close as my hair, or elicit sound in any way from that group of ravens. So, memory, social and individual identificaiton, along with the other raven group who passed on the mole crab skill, just like the Japanese Macaque female who began to wash her sweet potatoes, and NO adult imitated her, but the younger ones still wash the dirt off theirs, as she did, decades later. I have So much opn the Wolf, and on some dolphins (I grew up in tropical and colder oceans, surfing, and responding to dolphins, who used to just gang in with us kids surfing and even getting aerials and staying right in the breaking barrels of waves as did we so want to do. The wolves remember, learn from others, even ask questions with their body language, and I have a thousand stories on how they play intelligently, and are FAR more generous , honest, than we. They DO have a STRICT family feeding hierarchy, with the pups of the years always coming first. This is too long, but Wolves are smartest, trying to solve problems and trading or learnign ways from one another. Dogs look to humans to show them. Wolves like to solve things (but anything NOT living bores them soon). Even cows get all excited and jumpy with pleasure when they solve something!

  • @ruolbu
    @ruolbu 8 дней назад

    That last bit before the end credits was just perfect. The calmest voice, I thought he was a senior at first and then he whips out that growl. Love it.

  • @stuartreed37
    @stuartreed37 8 дней назад

    Love to hear this! Thank you. Idk how many times I tried to explain and people don't understand now I will link this episode 😂

  • @spambalam6822
    @spambalam6822 9 дней назад

    I don’t make many RUclips comments. But please some sort of update on Alan radiolab!

  • @ivoryas1696
    @ivoryas1696 10 дней назад

    Huh. First time in a podcast episodes comment section... Honestly, just figured if I was gonna listen to this, it might as well before the month's out! Fascinating stuff, to say the least.

  • @thechawnel241
    @thechawnel241 10 дней назад

    When RadioLab was good and not just a senseless show. Not a lot of science in the episodes...

  • @kc0jtl
    @kc0jtl 12 дней назад

    Stochasticity theme song was Electricity from SchoolHouse Rock.

  • @fionaspann2287
    @fionaspann2287 12 дней назад

    Omgggg I love this podcast so myxh

  • @JennaHasm
    @JennaHasm 16 дней назад

    I love you guys!

  • @benellison5668
    @benellison5668 17 дней назад

    Which quasimoon are we talking about 2023 FW13?

  • @FenixDown147
    @FenixDown147 17 дней назад

    I felt this way moving from the radio to listen to CD's and I felt alone and the radio felt like a concert. and I worry someday our media could, or maybe social media already does, target content to specific people to make them believe or change their mind on certain things

  • @wdikan
    @wdikan 19 дней назад

    A new ice age is coming?

  • @Vanillaabstract
    @Vanillaabstract 19 дней назад

    Cheese is good famously walk *farther?* Æææł

  • @cBodhi
    @cBodhi 19 дней назад

    You can't redefine already defined rules. And to say that emotional support doesn't give you a physical advantage is a luxury that only people who've never been truly lonely have. "

  • @allenjones4436
    @allenjones4436 20 дней назад

    I am running for office in San Francisco. I have a plan to honor Oliver Sipple in a great way.

  • @s1r3n1971
    @s1r3n1971 20 дней назад

    Math and reality falls apart when you divide by 0, which leads to an inexplicable infinite loop of dimensions aka infinity. Where everything is equal to zero. The operation violates all mathematical principles. Therefore dividing by zero is UNDEFINED.

  • @Vovvilina
    @Vovvilina 22 дня назад

    This was a profound podcast. I only listened bc it didn't start with "From the atchives comes this..." and then realized even that choice by me is reflective of the crisis we face as we isolate ourselves and don't listen to anything we don't choose. I hope you do more of these, especially as AI expands into everything we consume.

    • @costynvd
      @costynvd 7 дней назад

      Yea. Love getting some fresh content!

  • @switters3
    @switters3 22 дня назад

    Two things: Eat more garlic. Number two , rub Bounce sheets on you and your doorways. Plus, rosemary, thyme, lavender and peppermint.

  • @tjberens
    @tjberens 22 дня назад

    Roar shark lol 16:11

  • @Joe-sg9ll
    @Joe-sg9ll 22 дня назад

    we have a lot to learn from these little guys if we're going to make globalism work. Supercolony! "as numerous as the stars in the sky"

    • @thechawnel241
      @thechawnel241 10 дней назад

      Globalism ain't the way to go haha

  • @susanmcconnell9933
    @susanmcconnell9933 22 дня назад

    I have identical twins, now 27, one gay and one straight.

  • @DavidCarlson-sb5hl
    @DavidCarlson-sb5hl 23 дня назад

    Ok

  • @switters3
    @switters3 23 дня назад

    Does nobody see how neither party lived lives outside a vacuum?

  • @HydraEmpire1
    @HydraEmpire1 23 дня назад

    I love the show bye Jad ❤❤❤😢

  • @that_one_doggo8391
    @that_one_doggo8391 24 дня назад

    I listen to these while babysitting an infant so getting the age warning is always funny

  • @beeptone
    @beeptone 24 дня назад

    I thought yall were scientists. . . Only females have XX. Only males have XY. If one Feels differently thats fine, I'll call you whatever, but fact is fact.

  • @Dorie6947
    @Dorie6947 28 дней назад

    Totally enjoyable

  • @crysapril
    @crysapril 29 дней назад

    MEL BLANC IS THE GOAT.

  • @myyoutube887
    @myyoutube887 29 дней назад

    Who Are We Bees of BB KING

  • @myyoutube887
    @myyoutube887 29 дней назад

    Chi town usa

  • @myyoutube887
    @myyoutube887 29 дней назад

    Family of Chi of Chicago

  • @myyoutube887
    @myyoutube887 29 дней назад

    USA today ....common down Chi Town

  • @myyoutube887
    @myyoutube887 29 дней назад

    Who Am I BTW

  • @myyoutube887
    @myyoutube887 29 дней назад

    WHO Am I BTW

  • @user-xl8tg9fi4s
    @user-xl8tg9fi4s Месяц назад

    いつ見てもやっぱり美しい

  • @chimedemon
    @chimedemon Месяц назад

    So I uhh- I took this tetra-chromatic test online and I’m pretty sure I passed… basically most people should see around 20-32, but I was able to pick out around 40. Now- I’m gonna be doing more testing that doesn’t involve a phone, and to see the green and yellow areas took the most strain to make out but I can baaaarely tell they’re different. I also thought “wait- is this why I was always confused by why everyone kept saying ‘the dress is white and gold’??” Because I’ve always seen it as blue and black- HOWEVER I distinctly remember one morning waking up, having not seen that since I was a little kid, looking at it again and registering it as white and gold. It was the only time I could do so and I haven’t been able to ever since. Either way- take this with a grain of salt but if I am a tetrachromat, I’m gonna be so ABSOLUTELY PSYCHED!!! I’ll be trying to also do more tests to see if I can actually TRAIN it- if that’s even possible!

  • @crysapril
    @crysapril Месяц назад

    The only other time I cried like that was when my mom and grandmother died on the same day. This story is proof that we people need to be more of stewards of nature.

    • @redi6518
      @redi6518 Месяц назад

      I cried also. Ive always been especially sensitive to the demise of innocent animals. Specifically when caused by people's either selfishness or ignorance or both. We humans are disgustingly oblivious to our own blind ignorance. Unearned arrogance and false sense of superiority and entitlement. We hold a belief that we possess a higher intelligence. When in reality we destroy everything we touch. Leaving a path of chaos and irreversible destruction everywhere we go. We just make messes out of what was harmonious perfection before we touched it.

  • @ronroca4387
    @ronroca4387 Месяц назад

    In my opinion Wlilliam Hung has built up his outer shell to not be bothered by people laughing at him since the great audience his peers have been doing for the years since he was in grade school.

  • @tracys2cents
    @tracys2cents Месяц назад

    What a terrible interview with Mr. William Hung. This reminds me of the child-molestation trials where young children were repeatedly goaded until they gave the answers that the interviewer was hoping for. This interviewer was practically insisting that William Hung admit to being traumatized. Excellent job sticking to who you are and what you are, Mr. Hung. You did not let this woman's leading questions cause you to play her game. SHE should be more embarrassed about this interview than you ever were about your stint in front of the nation on American Idol.

    • @KidKomic-oq6mx
      @KidKomic-oq6mx Месяц назад

      Mr Hung stated, quite eloquently, be mindful, past, present, future