Initial commit: HPR Knowledge Base MCP Server
- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
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Episode: 4478
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Title: HPR4478: YouTube Subscriptions 2025 #6
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4478/hpr4478.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-26 01:05:02
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio episode 4478 for Wednesday the 1st October 2025.
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Today's show is entitled, YouTube Subscriptions 2025-6.
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It is part of the series YouTube Subscriptions.
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It is hosted by Ahukah and is about 16 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is Ahukah shares part 6 of his list of Subscribed channels.
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You are listening to a show from the Reserve Q.
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We are airing it now because we had free 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 Ahukah for Hacker Public Radio.
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Welcome to another exciting episode.
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This one is coming to you out of the Reserve Q.
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And what that means is that there have not been enough shows submitted.
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And this is, you know, Hacker Public Radio is a community project.
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It requires that the community provide shows.
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And at some point, if we don't provide enough shows, the whole thing is going to shut down.
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I'm going to assume if you're listening to this, that would bother you.
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So, record a show.
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It's not hard.
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There's plenty of information.
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The plenty of shows have been done about how to record a show and how easy it is.
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So, with that, I'm going to continue with what I've been doing is going through
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my YouTube channel subscriptions and talking about them.
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So, the next one I want to talk about is called Galia Social.
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Now, Galia Social is a band.
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And there, oh, I guess you might call sort of the jazz fusion kind of thing.
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Maybe not sure how to describe them exactly.
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But I enjoy their music.
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And so, I have their channel in here.
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Haven't heard a lot from them lately.
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So, this may have been faded away a little.
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But, you know, as I said previously, I leave channels in my subscription thing,
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even if I haven't heard from them lately, because it doesn't do any harm.
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And they do put something out again.
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I like to know about it.
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Now, the next channel I want to talk about is called Gamer Gramps.
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And this is about fellow who's into gaming and talks about games and will sometimes give tips
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and tricks and discuss strategies and stuff like that.
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And, you know, obviously, as you can tell from my Civilization series,
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I'm kind of into all of that stuff.
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So, that's one of the channels I have.
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Then there's Geography by Jeff.
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And I like this.
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Jeff comes out with a weekly video.
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And, you know, one of the things that he does is he'll take some aspect of geography
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and shows how it explains something.
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So, for instance, why is it that the vast majority of U.S. population is in one side of the
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country and not the other?
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And he'll go through the geographical regions and discuss while all of that stuff happens.
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So, he'll just pick some spot in the world and say, okay,
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do you ever wonder about why it works out this way?
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And, geography has a lot to do with it.
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Now, back in my teaching days, it was some years back, but I taught a course in economic geography.
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So, this is something that is, in fact, interesting to me, at least.
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If you're not into geography, you probably wouldn't be interested, but it's up to you.
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Next one I want to mention is called Getaway Guru.
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And that's another one of the cruising channels that I subscribe to, because as I have explained,
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my wife and I in retirement are trying to devote ourselves to travel, because
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we've reached the point in our lives where we don't need more stuff, but we don't mind getting
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a few more experiences.
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The next channel, Harbo Holmes.
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And this is a doctor who, primarily, in fact, Holmes has spelled W-H-O-L-M-E-S.
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So, I don't know if you pronounce it Holmes or Holmes or what, but
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you know, his primary interest is in reviews and discussion about Doctor Who.
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It's obviously an interest of mine.
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Then, next one is Harry's Moving Media.
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It was originally called Harry's Moving Castle.
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Now, if you're into anime, you may know that there's a Miyazaki film called Howell's
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Moving Castle. And he was obviously basing it on that, and then at some point decided,
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you know, I might get a copyright takedown over this. It might be a little too close.
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So, he changed it to Harry's Moving Media.
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Now, he does a lot of Doctor Who stuff, and that's what I'm interested in, but he does other stuff.
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So, he will do reviews and analysis, basically anything in nerd culture, so to speak.
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That's kind of the way these things work.
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Now, the next channel I want to talk about is called Healthcare Triage.
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And this is from the same people who do Crash Course that we've talked about previously.
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And Healthcare Triage is hosted by a doctor who is a faculty member at the School of Medicine
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at Indiana University, also a columnist for the New York Times, and so reasonably well-known
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as someone who discusses health issues. And he will, in Healthcare Triage,
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what he'll do is he'll take a particular topic and do a show about it.
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Sometimes, he'll do three or four shows in a row because it's a big topic.
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So, it might be something like what is the evidence behind a particular sort of treatment,
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or is this disease something you should be worried about a lot, or is it something that you can
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relax about? How do policies affect healthcare and health outcomes, stuff like that?
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And that's something that I have an interest in. So, there we go.
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Then there is a channel called Herlock. Now, that's a take-off on Sherlock,
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but it's Sherlock as being played by a woman, and so it's kind of a female Sherlock.
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Haven't heard a whole lot from them lately, but again, that's okay.
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Then there's History Hip. This is a fun one, and it is a history-focused,
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obviously, with a name like that. But these tend to be somewhat longer than some of the other
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channels. They will frequently do shows that are 45 minutes to an hour in length.
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Some very interesting people involved in this. You'll see the same people repeat,
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not every single episode, but there's a sort of a cast of characters that they'd
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draw upon for this. Now, some people are into medieval history, some are into
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weapons history. What have you? They put out a lot of content. There's usually
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one every day, or at least three or four a week, and because they're long, I'm selective about it.
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If they're going to dig into the British Army's weapons from World War II,
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some people are going to be absolutely fascinated by that, and God love you for it, but
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it doesn't really do a whole lot for me. But on the medieval history, I tend to really enjoy those.
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They've got one particular PhD historian, Dr. Eleanor Yaniga, who I really love.
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Does medieval history stuff. I'll watch anything she's in. That is history hit.
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Then there's history matters. History matters is kind of a short program.
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They will do something that's like three minutes long, it's animated,
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and they'll take a topic and just be a question that they'll go through and answer.
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The last one, for instance, was why didn't the United States declare war on the Ottomans
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in World War I? Well, there's reasons for that, and so they discuss that, but it's a short
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enough thing. You can do it in about three minutes and explain that. Then there's a channel called
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History Respond. Now, Respond is a reference to what happens in computer games,
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is that often if your player has been killed, it will then respawn somewhere in the game,
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and you get to continue playing. This one talks about computer games,
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how well they replicate aspects of history. Civilization is frequently discussed.
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It's not the only game they discuss, but it's a frequent one, because obviously the nature
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of civilization is going to touch on aspects of history. It's almost unavoidable when you think
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about it. Then there is history time, and history time, I think is an interesting one.
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These, it's a mixture of shorter and longer videos here, and they do a lot of stuff on medieval
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history. Now, when I say medieval history, generally you're talking about anything between the fall
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of the Western Roman Empire, and that's conventionally dated to 476 AD, up to say the Renaissance,
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which is going to be 14th, 15th century. You're talking about roughly a thousand year period
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of history. People used to call that the dark ages. I don't think that's really accurate,
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and I don't think any historians would say that now. This channel focuses on that medieval
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history, particularly the northern Europe, but not exclusively. They did an interesting one on
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the invasion of the mod jars, and another one about a slave rebellion in Iraq.
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So there's a number of things. The length of the videos can vary. They did a long one on how England
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was made, the Vikings versus the Saxons. It was an hour and a half, and you know, covered about
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a hundred years of history, of the conflict between the two groups of people. And then other ones
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might be, you know, ten, fifteen minutes. So, excuse me, a good channel. Then there's how stuff
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works, which is an educational website. And it does short, mostly, videos.
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A number of them are what they call trivia questions, and those are usually about just under two
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minutes. Other ones, let's see, it's like China's legendary Great Flood, or one about ridiculous,
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Victorian, etiquette rules. So, you know, generally relatively short and stuff that I find interesting.
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Then there's Hubble Web ESA. ESA is the European Space Agency, sort of the counterpart to NASA
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in the United States. And obviously, there's a lot of cooperation. So this channel, you know,
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Hubble is a cooperative enterprise, and this ESA puts this channel out, and it's going to give you
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news and the latest videos that have information from the Hubble Space Telescope. So, I really like
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that. Then there is the Hungry Passport, and the Hungry Passport is a travel channel. So,
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again, as I said, where my wife and I are into travel and love doing it. So, this is a channel that
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gives us information about that. So, they did things about what are the coolest medieval towns in
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Europe, what are the 36 most beautiful places in Switzerland? Their videos tend to be longer,
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but, you know, they don't come out that frequently, so that's okay. And I think I'll mention one more
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before we wrap this up, and that would be inside crews, yet another crews-related slash travel-related
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channel. And so that gives us information on crews stuff. So, with that, this is Huka for
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Hacker Public Radio, signing off, and is always encouraging you to support FreeSoftware. Bye-bye!
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio, as Hacker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of
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recording podcasts, you can click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive, and our
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sims.net. On this advice status, today's show is released under a Creative Commons Attribution
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4.0 International License.
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