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164 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
164 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4269
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Title: HPR4269: What is on My Podcast Player 2024, Part 2
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4269/hpr4269.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 22:19:34
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4269 for Thursday the 12th of December 2024.
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Today's show is entitled, What is on My Podcast Player 2024 Part 2.
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It is part of the series podcast recommendations.
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It is hosted by Ahukah and is about 17 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 Ahukah 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 Ahukah, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio and another exciting episode.
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This is headed for the Reserve Q. That means that if you are listening to this, Hacker
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Public Radio needs shows and it means you should be recording a show.
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So please do so and I am going to show you how easy this is.
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All I did is I went to my G-Potter and exported an OPML file of all of my podcasts and printed
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it out and I am just sitting here going through them one at a time and that is how easy it
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can be.
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You know, it doesn't have to be a major production.
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So this is more of my current podcasts and this is as of 2004 as I am recording this
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because things change and you know, I have done these kinds of things before but it is
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a different list of podcasts every time because I get older, my interests change.
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So with that said, I am going to start running through these and it is in kind of a semi-random
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order because that is the way the OPML file came out and I just printed it.
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You know, I didn't do a whole lot of organization on this.
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So the first podcast I am going to mention, Dr. Who the Memory Cheats, now that may sound
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like kind of an odd title but it comes from one of the people behind Dr. Who was saying
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that you know, when people think back to older shows and remember them fondly that the
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memory tends to cheat and they remember things differently from how they were and sometimes
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make unfair judgments on that basis.
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So this is just, you know, Dr. Who podcasts are pretty similar, the difference is in how
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well they are done.
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This is a good one.
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Then another Dr. Who one, this is called the 20 megabyte podcast and it is not limited
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to 20 megabytes anymore, apparently when they started this podcast, Apple's iTunes would
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only allow a file to be 20 megabytes.
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That is the story I heard.
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I don't use iTunes for getting my podcast so it never occurred to me one way or the
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other but they wanted to be able, people to be able to download this through iTunes.
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So they limited it.
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Now apparently Apple has come into the 21st century and there is not that limitation anymore.
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This is one of the less professional ones.
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It might be amusing or not depending on the case, the fellow who is primarily behind this
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involves his daughters who are not adults.
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So it can be a variable kind of a thing.
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Next, the Fab4 free for all.
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Fab4 is of course a term used to talk about the Beatles and so this is a podcast.
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It's three guys in New York who are all Beatles fans and they periodically put out a podcast.
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It used to be a lot more regular but like many of us as life goes on sometimes it's
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harder to find time so I'd say they're more sporadic at this point than regular.
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But you know for some people sporadic is a good thing.
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You might not have time to listen to a whole lot of stuff from everyone every week.
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And there's another one called Something About the Beatles and that is hosted by a fellow
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named Robert Rodriguez who is a Beatles scholar, has written books, things like that.
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And typically the shows are interviews with writers who maybe have looked in some aspect
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of the Beatles and written a book about it.
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We'll get them on the show and say okay, tell me about this.
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Like recently Ken Wormack did a whole book about Mal Evans who is the sort of the associate
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of the Beatles.
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So he was on the show or there are people that specialize in the Beatles movies and talk
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about all the things that went into those.
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Now if you're not a Beatles fan it wouldn't be of the least bit of interest to you.
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But Rodriguez is pretty regular about his.
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So you can usually expect one every week or two out of him.
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Another Doctor Who one, the Doctor's Companion called Doctor Who the Long Way Round.
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There's only some as you can say about Doctor Who Podcast.
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I enjoy it but it doesn't really stand out I suppose.
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The next one I want to mention is called Welcome to Night Vale.
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This is a fairly interesting and different kind of ongoing audio drama.
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It's set in a fictitious town of Night Vale which is somewhere in the desert southwest.
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Arizona and Mexico I don't know.
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I don't recall that they've ever said specifically.
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But it's a very bizarre town.
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So this is definitely fantasy.
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Kind of hard to describe.
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The library is full of librarians who are bloodthirsty monsters.
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The town council is made up of creatures from another dimension and everyone worships
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a glow cloud and so on.
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It's very surreal but I like it and I know a lot of people who do.
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It's worth checking out.
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Of course I'm going to have links to all of these things in the show notes so if anything
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catches your attention you go to the show notes you can find out where to go.
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The next one I want to mention is something called No Guitar is Safe.
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This is a show where a fellow named Jude Gold who I believe was a staff writer for Guitar
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Player magazine.
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Maybe he still is.
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I'm never entirely clear about all of that.
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But what the series is is he goes around interviewing guitar players and you know they play things
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on the show.
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Maybe just a riff or two to illustrate a point or maybe they'll both pull out guitars
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into a short jam.
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So if you're into guitar really good show.
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Now the next one I want to mention is Healthcare Triage live show.
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Now Healthcare Triage is a series by Dr. Aaron Carroll who is a researcher.
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He's on the faculty at Indiana University columnist for the New York Times.
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So he's an interesting fellow and the idea of this show is they want to take a topic.
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It might be healthcare policy, something going on in medical research and or you know
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just things about questions people have about healthcare.
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And generally he is interviewing someone who is doing research.
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So some doctor is researching a specific aspect of cancer and it's cutting edge research
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and let's find out what's going on and so you know 20 minutes of interview.
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So if you want to keep up and if you've listened to some of the shows I've done on hacker
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public radio you know that healthcare and healthcare policy is an interest of mine and
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has been for some time.
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Now the next one Dr. Who the Broken C series.
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Now this one is it's not people talking about Dr. Who so much as it is kind of fan fiction
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okay audio drama that involves the doctor but it's a whole new set of adventures.
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And you know fresh writers and stuff like that.
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So it's got a fully dramatized audio series and it's based on the BBC television show.
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Now the next one I want to mention is called Revolutions and this is a podcast that was
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done by Mike Duncan.
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He's actually wrapped it up by now but I think it's still worth listening to so I want to
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include it here and I've left it in my podcast feed because I want because I want to know
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when he does something next.
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I first found Mike Duncan he did a podcast called The History of Rome and history podcasters
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you know consider that one of the top ones and when he finished with the history of
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Rome he started looking at various revolutions and he starts with basically the Civil War
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in England which he considers a revolution revolution by the Puritans against the monarchy
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and goes through the American revolution, the Haitian revolution, the French revolution,
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Mexican revolution you know and so on and finally he gets to the Russian revolution which
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takes more time than any of them and then he wrapped it up after that.
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Now I've heard that he's planning to come back with something new.
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I don't quite know what one of the last things I heard is that he was going to hook up
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with another historian and do a podcast where the two of them discussed current history
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books or something I'm not entirely clear I haven't heard anything but I leave it in
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my feed so that I get a notification but I thought it was really good stuff if you're
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into history.
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This one is Sherlock Holmes Trifles.
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Now this is the same couple of guys that do a hear of Sherlock everywhere which we had
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previously mentioned you know the I hear Sherlock everywhere as a long interview program
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twice a month so the first and the 15th basically.
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Holmes is a short podcast once a week and what it is is just looking at the odd minutia.
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How many times did Holmes mention railway timetables you know well they go through the stories
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all the time he did that you know how many times were were vegetables mentioned or some
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absurd thing so it's all trifles but there is a quote from Sherlock Holmes where he says
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there's nothing as important as trifles so that's where they get the name and all that
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from and then I want to mention something called Things We Said Today which is a Beatles podcast
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with featuring Alan Cosen Ken Michaels and Darren DeVivo.
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Things We Said Today is a title of a Beatles song so that's where they get that from.
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Now this is more or less weekly depending on how busy people are.
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Alan Cosen for instance this co-author of a book that I read
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called the McCartney Legacy that focused on Paul McCartney as a solo artist.
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Ken Michaels has a number of radio programs and podcasts and Darren DeVivo is a radio
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disc jockey so that's what that one is about and I'm going to wrap up with Dan Carlin again.
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This one is called Hardcore History Addendum. Now the Hardcore History is basically he takes a topic
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and he dives into it you know and it might be four or five episodes and the individual episodes
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like I say I've seen him do four hour episodes. Addendum is basically just little bits of
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things and you know it might be 45 minutes but it's nothing as major as Hardcore History is
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so if it didn't fit in the Hardcore History feed he puts it into addendum so interviews, musings,
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extra material, stuff like that. And so with that I think I'm going to conclude this particular
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episode and as always I'm going to encourage everyone to support free software. Bye bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work. Today's show
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was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording podcasts
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you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is. Hosting for HBR has been
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kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive and our syncs.net. On this
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otherwise stated today's show is released under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
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License.
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