Good podcasts
-
@taniwharugby I listened to almost all that when it first came out but with 2 episodes to go just gave up. Don't know why. Might try and pick it up then.
Not a pod but for those who enjoyed Kevin Fong's series on Apollo's 11 & 13 I caught this yesterday. His latest effort
On 12 April 1961, cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became an explorer like none other before him, going faster and further than any human in history, into what had always been the impenetrable and infinite unknown. Raised in poverty during the World War Two, the one-time foundry worker and a citizen of the Soviet Union became the first human to fly above the Earth in the vastness of space. In doing so he became an instrument in The Cold War โ an ideological battle between the superpowers; East versus West, communism versus democracy. In the year of the 60th anniversary, Dr Kevin Fong tells the story of how 27-year-old Yuri Gagarin came to launch a new chapter in the history of exploration and follows the cosmonautโs one hour flight around the Earth. The Soviet Union's triumph in 1961 was the event that galvanised the United States to win the Space Race, to send the first people on the Moon by the end of the decade. Yuriโs own ambitions to voyage to the Moon were frustrated by his political masters, a faltering Soviet lunar space program and two tragic accidents.
-
@nepia said in Good podcasts:
@booboo said in Good podcasts:
@taniwharugby said in Good podcasts:
Another in the Cautionary Tales series - Number Fever; How Pepsi Nearly Went Pop
Which is basically when promos go wrong!
I mean accidentally producing 500,000 winning numbers for $1,000,000 (in Filipino currency) or offering up a Harrier Jump Jet for $700k in Pepsi Points...
Fascinating listen!
Been binge listening Cautionary Tales. Great stuff.
Listening in order from the beginning. Just done the Dunning Kruger Highjack.
Shipment was extremely disturbing.
Have you checked out the other podcasts he advertises? (The Last Archive etc?). Any good?
Might look them up next.
Have you listened to Revisionist History? It's Malcolm Gladwell's one. It's pretty good - and got me on to this one as he played a clip of The Rogue Dressed as a Captain.
Got through Series 1. Some good stuff even if I find his leftie posturing a bit much at times.
Did like his episode on the Sudden Acceleration Scandal. How Toyota copped to the fines given the evidence against their guilt was amazing.
-
Remember the name Yeonmi Park.
North Korean defector. She escaped nth korea as a 13 year old and was immediately sold into slavery in China, then an arduous life through south Korea and eventually Columbia University in the States.
Currently 27 years old.Her story is probably the most amazing thing you'll ever hear.
You will be astounded at life in North Korea since the Kim's took over. Spring is the highest death season because there is a scarcity of insects, therefore no food. Everyone must collect their own faeces because there is no fertiliser. Nobody knows the world map.
If everyone in the western world heard her story the world would be a better place and free-er from nonsense "1st world" assessments and problems.
I wish her life was taught and contemplated and examined like Nelson Mandela's was.
Yeonmi Park
If you search for her, any rendition, interview or podcast will be worth your time.
-
@siam said in Good podcasts:
Remember the name Yeonmi Park.
North Korean defector. She escaped nth korea as a 13 year old and was immediately sold into slavery in China, then an arduous life through south Korea and eventually Columbia University in the States.
Currently 27 years old.Her story is probably the most amazing thing you'll ever hear.
You will be astounded at life in North Korea since the Kim's took over. Spring is the highest death season because there is a scarcity of insects, therefore no food. Everyone must collect their own faeces because there is no fertiliser. Nobody knows the world map.
If everyone in the western world heard her story the world would be a better place and free-er from nonsense "1st world" assessments and problems.
I wish her life was taught and contemplated and examined like Nelson Mandela's was.
Yeonmi Park
If you search for her, any rendition, interview or podcast will be worth your time.
Ah, false news. I was in North Korea just under 2 years ago, and saw first-hand that they've got shitloads of food.
I shit you not - two of the "attractions" we got to visit were...- A mushroom factory - proving that they've got such high-tech solutions as "telephones" in their food-production systems
- An orchard. A FUCKING massive orchard... like... dozens of square kilometres. With every tree laden with apples. But... zero people picking them. The others in my group thought I was paranoid when I pointed this out... but there were literally hundreds of acres of apple trees - all with fruit falling off, but nobody working there. Except... out bus pulled over next to a pile of about a dozen crates - filled with apples... just like as if people had been picking them. And we were allowed to get off the bus, walk down the aisles of trees, and pluck/taste apples for ourselves. There was a single aisle, where about 10 metres of the trees had been harvested. To my eyes - obviously to fill those road-side crates. The next aisle over, on either side? Full of fruit- ripe to the point where it was falling off the trees. Absolutely fucked. It seemed to me, a fucking MASSIVE operation just to "save face" - show the westerner tourists that they could feed the people. While not actually doing so.
I could talk for hours about the shit you see, and hear, and the constant mind-fuck it is just being there, and double-guessing EVERYTHING you see... are these people actors for our sake? Do these people genuinely believe what they're saying? What is real, and what is not? Are they going to be able to trace my sneaky internet connection when at the top of Mount Paektu with a short period of access to South Korean mobile internet access, and lock me up before I leave?
-
@kruse please don't miss take my words over her experiences. If you think it false news I have no idea. I highly doubt she is being false but you know way more than I. Don't take my words to be an adequate representation of hers.
If half of her stories are authentic it's still a must hear tale of criminal government manipulation and how the building blocks involve identity persecution and rewriting history.
Your critique of her stories would be most valuable. Way cool that you went there๐
-
@siam said in Good podcasts:
@kruse please don't miss take my words over her experiences. If you think it false news I have no idea. I highly doubt she is being false but you know way more than I. Don't take my words to be an adequate representation of hers.
If half of her stories are authentic it's still a must hear tale of criminal government manipulation and how the building blocks involve identity persecution and rewriting history.
Your critique of her stories would be most valuable. Way cool that you went there๐
Nah bro - you got me wrong.
Re-read my post with strong "sarcasm tags" on the first sentence.
This is one of the very few times where I think your "youtube research" is probably spot-on.
DPRK is fuuuucked up. Fascinating, but fucked up.
Just hearing their versions of "truth" on nearly everything, leads you to realise that either we have ALL been suckered in by the most brilliant of propaganda, or they've been fully deluded by clumsy self-contradicting propaganda. -
@kruse said in Good podcasts:
@siam said in Good podcasts:
@kruse please don't miss take my words over her experiences. If you think it false news I have no idea. I highly doubt she is being false but you know way more than I. Don't take my words to be an adequate representation of hers.
If half of her stories are authentic it's still a must hear tale of criminal government manipulation and how the building blocks involve identity persecution and rewriting history.
Your critique of her stories would be most valuable. Way cool that you went there๐
Nah bro - you got me wrong.
Re-read my post with strong "sarcasm tags" on the first sentence.
This is one of the very few times where I think your "youtube research" is probably spot-on.
DPRK is fuuuucked up. Fascinating, but fucked up.
Just hearing their versions of "truth" on nearly everything, leads you to realise that either we have ALL been suckered in by the most brilliant of propaganda, or they've been fully deluded by clumsy self-contradicting propaganda.Didn't get your sarcasm bro, all good.
Might be one of the very few times where you've made any sober sense and actually addressed the content ๐ -
Caught a Radio NZ advert for Season 2 of Matangireia. It's a series of interviews with prominent (retired) Maori politicians.
So I subscribed and have listened to the first two of Series 1. Metiria Turei and Aunty Tariana Turia.
Really interesting, thought provoking and educational both of them. I never had much time for Turei's politics but man she comes across as passionate, principled and committed. They both do but it wasn't a surprise with Dame Tariana. The other characteristic they seem to share is happiness at being out of Parliament.
I've had my eyes opened a bit. Thoroughly recommend.
-
Tom Breihen, who does the Number Ones column for Stereogum, talks with Dan Boeckner (Wolf Parade, Operators) and friends about his run in with BTS fans on the internet, and other shit about modern pop music.
Fortune Kit is one of my favourite podcasts, as it uncovers weird, original, and often off-putting stuff in music, in an era where pop and rock are generic garbage or just recycled instant nostalgia. They also do a lot of ironic smart-assed shit too, like everyone else.
-
The Lazarus Heist (done by BBC World Service)
Starts off talking about North Korea and the Sony cyber attack following the movie, The Interview.
It does delve into a bit of NK history too, I'm 4 eps in and is pretty good.
-
@tim said in Good podcasts:
Tom Breihen, who does the Number Ones column for Stereogum, talks with Dan Boeckner (Wolf Parade, Operators) and friends about his run in with BTS fans on the internet, and other shit about modern pop music.
Fortune Kit is one of my favourite podcasts, as it uncovers weird, original, and often off-putting stuff in music, in an era where pop and rock are generic garbage or just recycled instant nostalgia. They also do a lot of ironic smart-assed shit too, like everyone else.
Hmm, how did I miss this post earlier? I don't know if I want to hear what Breihan sounds like as I prefer to read the no,1's column in the pompous music snob voice I've created for him in mind. I don't want that ruined with his actual voice.
-
Listening to 'Operator'
Which delves into the early days of the phone sex industry, and the technology developed at the time, that they reckon if any industry other than the sex industry would have been huge news.
Focuses mainly on one company that was the largest provider at the time.
Fascinating listen so far, ep 4 where I am upto is explicit where they recreate some actual calls and stories.
-
Onto another one, The Dropout: Elizabeth Holmes on trial
I vaguely recall the name, but dont recall much otherwise.
Interesting story so far (3 eps in)
-
@taniwharugby great book on it, also a documentary on TV somewhere
-
@mariner4life and another Podcast on The Great Fail
-
The latest episode of rugby direct is an absolute cracker with a brilliant guest...
I joined Elliot to talk Raeburn and Utrecht Shield which was cool.
14 minutes I suggest worthy of your ears ๐(and you can place my dulcet tones for using when reading my posts ๐)
-
@davesofthunder did listen to that this morning.
Worth a listen.
-
"The Coming Storm" from BBC Sounds.
About the motivation behind the Jan 6 "insurrection", and how it was spawned by the QAnon conspiracy, what QAnon was, how that arose from the Vince Foster suicide and the Clintons, through 4Chan, 8Chan and now (Am up to Ep 5) into the Russia collusion conspiracy.
Am enjoying.