165 lines
9.5 KiB
Plaintext
165 lines
9.5 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 4285
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Title: HPR4285: What is on My Podcast Player 2024, Part 5
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4285/hpr4285.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 22:27:42
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4285 for Friday the 3rd of January 2025.
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Today's show is entitled, what is on my podcast player 2,024, Part 5.
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It is hosted by Ahu Ka and is about 14 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, this is an update on the podcasts Ahu Ka listens to.
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You are listening to a show from the Reserve Q. We are airing it now because we had free
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slots that were not filled.
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This is a community project that needs listeners to contribute shows in order to survive.
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Please consider recording a show for Hacker Public Radio.
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Hello, this is Ahu Ka, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio in another exciting episode.
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This is one for the Reserve Q. If you are hearing this right now, that means that HPR needs
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shows and it's up to you to provide them.
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It's not hard.
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Let me explain how I'm doing this.
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This is a show about podcasts that I listen to.
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All I did was I went into G Potter, exported an OPML file that listed all of the podcasts
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I subscribe to, printed it out, and I'm sitting here with a printout in front of me and
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a microphone.
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This is not rocket science, it's easy enough to do.
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So I've done a number of these already and so we're just going to keep going here.
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This one I'm going to mention is something called the down ballot and this is a political
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podcast, kind of a left wing perspective that is, you know, I say left in parentheses.
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Not really socialist, it's more like democratic party, which would be centrist in Europe, but
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anyway.
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It's dedicated to the thousands of elections across America for offices other than the presidency,
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which, you know, everyone pays attention to presidential elections.
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They're saying there's a lot of others you ought to pay attention to.
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Next one I'm going to mention is the Journal of African History podcast and it highlights
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interviews with historians whose work has appeared in the Journal of African History,
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a leading source of peer-reviewed scholarship on Africa's past.
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So this is from my neck of the woods, Michigan State University does this and again, it's
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important.
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You know, Africa is going to be increasingly important as the years go by.
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And next one is called The Rest is History with Tom Holland and Dominic Sandbrook.
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This is a very nice podcast, the two historians, you know, having a discussion with each other
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about whatever is going on, like right, as I'm recording this, we're going through a series
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of four or five podcasts talking about the conflict between Rome and Carthage.
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But anything that happened in history is okay.
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Now, next thing I'm going to mention is a podcast called Escaping Casturborus, which
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sounds like an odd name.
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This is a Doctor Who podcast and it's mostly about reviewing various stories and it's a husband
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and wife team.
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Actually, when they started, they weren't married yet, but anyway.
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And the Casturborus is because the lore about Doctor Who is that Gallifrey is in the constellation
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of Casturborus.
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So this is a fun one if you're into Doctor Who.
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Next is another audio drama, science fiction audio drama called Sage and Savant.
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When a laboratory accident leads to electrocution and the accidental discovery of time travel,
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Dr. Petronella Sage alongside her faithful friend and companion, Erasmus Savant, ceases
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the opportunity to make her mark in the annals of history.
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So you know, it's a little fun bit of audio fiction.
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And another one called Girl in Space, nothing fancy here, just the simple audio diary of
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a girl in space.
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Also there's this weird and potentially ominous light in the distance it seems to be growing
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steadily closer.
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Listen for science, guns, trust, and I matter, truth, beauty, inner turmoil and delicious
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cheeses.
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It's all here in space.
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Now, next one is going to be the History of the World podcast.
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Incredible story of the human history of the world.
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All right, basically what it's about.
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Next one, the Josh Marshall podcast.
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Josh Marshall is the editor-in-chief of an online site called Talking Points Memo.
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It's basically a democratic party kind of view of politics.
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So if you're into that sort of thing, this is a good one.
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Talking Points Memo is considered one of the more reliable sources for this kind of thing.
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Then there's Science Friday.
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Science Friday is an NPR radio program.
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It's been going on for a number of years here in the United States.
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But then they decided to turn it into a podcast as well.
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Now what they're doing is they're taking it.
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It used to be they do two hours every Friday on the radio and then just send those two
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hours out as a pair of hour long podcasts.
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Then they decided, we can break it up into segments and one or two segments every day
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into your podcast feed.
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So it's all about science and it involves interviewing scientists basically about the
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work that they're doing.
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Then there's the Frommers travel show.
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There's a fellow named Arthur Frommer who long in the 1950s published a series of Europe
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on $5 a day.
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That started the Frommer guidebooks.
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His daughter, Pauline, has taken over the podcast and I think probably is largely involved
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in the management of the whole enterprise.
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And so she has guests on interviews them about topics and travel.
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And as I've said, that's something my wife and I like to do.
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Now I've got another language tutor one.
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I mentioned the Spanish one.
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Spanish was the first language I attempted.
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We are now planning a trip to France.
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So I've added French to it and so we've got the language tutor French here.
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Again, same kind of thing.
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It's based on a YouTube channel called the language tutor and they're taking that content
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and putting it into, you know, 15, 20 minute audio podcasts.
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Then who corner to corner, a doctor who podcast?
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So there's two pretty constant hosts but they bring on guests, they do interviews as well
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as reviewing shows.
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If you're into Dr. Who, it's one that I typically enjoy.
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I've got another doctor who won here called Reality Bond, a doctor who podcast.
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Now this name may sound a little bit strange if you're not a Huvian as we refer to it.
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But in the 2009 series of, was it 2008, specials that culminated in the end of the series,
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end of the season was the stolen earth.
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And the stolen earth is stolen by, it ends up being the Daleks.
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And they've got a plan that involves wiping out all of reality and they're doing it with
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something called the Reality Bond.
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So these folks took that, it's a good, it's a good podcast.
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They do something that no one else does that I know of.
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And that is, they do sketch comedy.
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So one of the ones I saw was sort of a fake police procedural drama called Spoiler
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Cops, go around arresting people for giving spoilers.
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So this is a fun one.
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Then there's one called Ukraine Russia War Talk.
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And that involves a couple of people, one of whom is a Ukrainian, I'm not sure if he's
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a military person or what, but he's from the Ukraine, the other is Philips O'Brien who's
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a professor of, I don't know exactly what, I read his book about World War II talking
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about how that war was won and was impressed by the book.
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And so when he did this, I said, oh, I'll subscribe to his podcast.
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Next there is one from Daily Coast, another sort of democratic party aligned organization
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and it's called The Brief.
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And it's a weekly podcast, you know, up to one hour, you know, on whatever is going on
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in politics in the progressive movement at that time.
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Then there's two minute time, Lord.
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This is another doctor who, but the thing is it's short, is it always exactly two minutes?
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No, but I haven't seen it, I've only seen one so far that went over five minutes.
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So they really are short and so it does what it says on the tin.
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And I'm going to finish with another doctor who podcast that I have come to really enjoy.
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And it's a very interesting title, Galafrey Public Radio.
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Oh, how about that?
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Name like that, I would have to at least take a look.
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So it looks at all of Dr. Who, now there's the classic doctor who, which is what started
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in 1963 and ran up till the late 80s before BBC decided to stop doing it.
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And then there's the new series that started in 2005 and is still ongoing.
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But they do all of it.
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So there's like 60 years worth of material that they can draw upon for this.
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And I like the way they do it.
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So I'm happy to be subscribed to that one as well.
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And that actually completes my look at everything that is in my podcast player at this point.
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So once again, it's not hard to do these shows.
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Don't make it harder than it needs to be.
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I've done stuff where I just clipped a MP3 player that with a built-in microphone and
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clipped it to my collar and gave a talk somewhere and suddenly it's a show on Hacker Public
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Radio.
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People do stuff recording while they're driving in their cars.
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So if you are hearing this coming out of the reserve queue, step up and do something.
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Because at some point, if we don't get shows, we're going to shut it down.
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And I don't think I want that to happen.
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And I'm hoping you don't want that to happen if you're listening to this.
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So this is a hookah for Hacker Public Radio signing off and is always encouraging you
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to support FreeSoftware.
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Bye-bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, you can click on our contribute link to find
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out how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an onsthost.com, the internet archive and
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our sings.net.
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On this otherwise status, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0
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International License.
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