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    rachel carson

    Explore " rachel carson" with insightful episodes like "Shine a Light: Women’s History Month", "Drama! Characters! Conflict! History podcasts have them all, with American History Tellers' Lindsay Graham", "Process Analysis – Ep. 5: Explanatory Process Analysis", "ASP 20, writer Kim Heacox" and "Biophilic Cities with Dr Timothy Beatley" from podcasts like ""The Nikki & Brie Show", "Sound Judgment", "Write Like You Mean It!", "Alaska Story Project" and "The Regenerative Real Estate Podcast"" and more!

    Episodes (16)

    Shine a Light: Women’s History Month

    Shine a Light: Women’s History Month

    Nikki’s been pulled in a lot of different directions lately, but a little insomnia motivated them to reconnect with her appreciation for the accomplishments of other women. Brie’s been thinking about how much society and culture have changed for women in the past century in big and small ways.

     

    They also shine a spotlight on some women from the past and present who have had huge impacts on their lives and the lives of many women around the world, including Mia Hamm, Susan B. Anthony, biologist Rachel Carson, Mother Teresa, and Environmentalist Marina Silva.

     

    Nikki & Brie also talk about their deep respect for Jennifer Lopez, her journey to the top, what she’s meant for other women, the confidence she gave them as teenagers, and the admiration they have for her, especially after self-funding and producing her new documentary and album that follows her journey to self-love, The Greatest Love Story Never Told,

     

    Brie’s also been having some hilarious, but frustrating mornings with Buddy during school drop off lately and Nikki’s having a far different experience with Matteo.

     

    To close out the episode Nikki & Brie each share their Inspiration & Affirmation that highlights self love, confidence, and independence.

    Call Nikki & Brie at 833-GARCIA2 and leave a voicemail!

     

    Follow Nikki & Brie on Instagram and send Nikki & Brie a message on Threads!

     

    To watch exclusive videos of this week’s episode, follow The Nikki & Brie Show on YouTube, Facebook, and TikTok! You can also catch The Nikki & Brie Show on SiriusXM Stars 109!

    Drama! Characters! Conflict! History podcasts have them all, with American History Tellers' Lindsay Graham

    Drama! Characters! Conflict! History podcasts have them all, with American History Tellers' Lindsay Graham

    Don’t miss today’s takeaways! Scroll down for lessons from this episode. 

    The episodes we discussed on today’s episode are History Daily: Silent Spring Sparks the Modern Environmental Movement and American History Tellers Season 61: Salem Witch Trials.

    Lindsay Graham

    Lindsay Graham (no, not that Lindsey Graham) is a podcast creator, producer and host known for compelling narratives and in-depth exploration of pivotal moments in American and world history. His chart-topping shows American Scandal, American History Tellers and History Daily reach millions every month, using immersive sound design, a rich original score, and meticulous research to bring moving, character-driven stories that demonstrate “history is human.” His newest podcast is American Criminal, a “true crime podcast that tells the stories of the most infamous criminals in the history of the United States, revealing the men and women who cheated, lied, and murdered in their own twisted pursuit of the American dream.” Graham is the CEO and founder of Airship, a podcast publishing company. He is a podcast producer, sound designer and composer who has worked on Dirty John, Dr. Death, Bad Batch and others, reaching hundreds of millions of listeners.

    If you liked this episode, you’ll love Sound Judgment Season 1, Episode 8, How Top Hosts Hook Their Listeners in 60 Seconds or Less. 

    Takeaways from my conversation with Lindsay: 

    1. In several of its shows, including American History Tellers, American Scandal, History Daily and Business Wars, Wondery employs a format that’s always been controversial. They call it “immersive storytelling.” It relies on a single narrator to voice all or most of the characters in an episode. It also employs fictionalized reenactments. As Lindsay says – some people hate this. “I can’t do anything about it,” he says, “cause that’s the show.” He also says, “I can’t help those people who want it to be different than it is.” And that’s the lesson: Choose what your show IS and lean into it. YOUR people will love it. If you do your job well, some people may, in fact, hate it. That’s OK. It’s not for them.
    2. When they conduct historical research, Lindsay and his writers aren’t just cataloging facts. They’re on a treasure hunt to learn how the characters felt and how people in their lives felt about them. Those emotions make the historical world feel real, increase the stakes, and keep listeners glued to their headphones. This isn’t your father’s history class.
    3. Here’s a tip for anyone leading a team: Create editorial guidelines and share them with everyone – writers, producers, sound designers, and engineers. Guidelines are great for onboarding newcomers. They also help make sure everyone is on the same page. Originally, Lindsay made a narrative podcast out of the American History Tellers guidelines; that’s a memorable way to get this information across. Whatever you do, remember that editorial guidelines are living documents – keep them up to date. 
    4. Lindsay calls himself a champion thinker, but an “apprentice do-er.” Self-doubt and perfectionism gets in his way, as they did with his long-delayed introduction of the subscription service Into History. Once he stopped overthinking and started taking one step after another, introducing this new product turned out to be easier than he thought. Taking action brings confidence, and confidence, as Lindsay says, breeds more confidence. 
       

    Visit Lindsay online:

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lindsayagraham/

    Twitter/X: @lindsayagraham

    Improve your storytelling Check out our popular workshops on interviewing, story editing, story structure, longform narrative, audience engagement, scriptwriting and more. 

    Hire Elaine to speak at your conference or company. Subjects include: Communicating for Leaders; Communicating about Change; Mastering the Art of the Interview; Storytelling Skills; How to Build Relationships through Storytelling, and more. 

    Discover our strategic communication services and coaching for thought leaders using storytelling tools to make the world a better place. Serving writers, podcasters, public speakers, and others in journalism & public media, climate change, health care, policy, and higher education. Visit us at www.podcastallies.com.

     

    Subscribe to Sound Judgment, the Newsletter, our twice-monthly newsletter about creative choices in audio storytelling. 

    Connect:

    Facebook | LinkedIn | Instagram

    ✉️ Email Elaine at allies@podcastallies.com

    💜 Leave a review on Apple Podcasts

    🟢 Leave a rating on Spotify 

    🗣️ Share the show by word of mouth and on your socials

    Help us find and celebrate today’s best hosts
    Who’s your Sound Judgment dream guest? Email me: allies@podcastallies.com. Because of you, that host may appear on Sound Judgment.

     

    Credits 

    Sound Judgment is a production of Podcast Allies, LLC. 

    Host: Elaine Appleton Grant

    Podcast Manager: Tina Bassir

    Production Manager: Andrew Parrella

    Audio Engineer: Kevin Kline

    Production Assistant: Audrey Nelson

    ASP 20, writer Kim Heacox

    ASP 20, writer Kim Heacox

    Award winning author of several books, including The Only Kayak and Jimmy Bluefeather, Kim Heacox is also an opinion piece writer for The Guardian US.  He’s published some 18 pieces—10 in the last year with The Guardian. 

    Kim:  “My Guardian pieces are framed within my credo of activist writing, that it’s not only my right but my responsibility to challenge power & the prevailing order, to speak out as best I can, using story, humor and a few numbers, maybe even a little parody.  Taped onto the upper right-hand corner of my laptop is a small piece of paper with this quote from Carl Sagan:”

    •  “Anything else you’re interested in is not going to happen if you can’t breathe the air and drink the water. Don’t sit this one out. Do something. You are by accident of fate alive at an absolutely critical moment in the history of the planet.” 

    In this podcast, Kim reads two of his Guardian pieces:

    • “Birds are remarkable and beautiful animals—and they’re disappearing from our world”.   In the past half century, North America has lost a fourth of its birds. Earth is now a coalmine, and every wild bird is a canary.”
    • “What we can learn from Rachel Carson as we fight for our planet.  With her brave book Silent Spring, Carson changed the course of US environmental history. We would do well to study her example.

    Host Dan Kowalski offers further context to Kim’s environmental writing by reading an excerpt from Kim’s book, John Muir and the Ice That Started a Fire

    In his prologue, Kim writes:  “The only thing that counts is that which can be counted” said Galileo 300 years before Muir.  Together with René Descartes, Isaac Newton, and others, Galileo gave us our modern scientific revolution, our Age of Reason, the triumph of the rational mind. And while he and his brilliant contemporaries carried us forward, they also crushed things  in our path, They separated us from nature, rather than making us participants in nature. They made us clever and powerful, but not wise.

    Muir was a revolutionary of another kind;  he said, there's much more to good science—and right livelihood—than connecting data and dissecting frogs. There's a deeper meaning than conventional analytical reason. Experiment is not enough. Good science also requires experience, a deep knowing and sense of wonder that comes from being out there. barefoot in the meadow, alone on the ice, naked in the storm. “When we try to pick out anything by itself,” Muir would write, “we find it hitched to everything else in the universe.”

    Thanks musician Christian Arthur for his original compositions

    Show notes:  www.alaskastoryproject.com/podcasts

    Biophilic Cities with Dr Timothy Beatley

    Biophilic Cities with Dr Timothy Beatley

    Biophilia was first introduced as a term in 1973 by Erich Fromm in The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness, which put forth that biophilia is “the passionate love of life and all this is alive.” The term was later used by legendary biologist E.O. Wilson in his 1984 work Biophilia, in which he proposed that humans tend to focus on and affiliate with nature and other life-forms because of a genetic basis.

    Since then biophilia has been gaining in popularity amongst architects, designers, and even urban planners and sustainable city researches like Dr. Timothy Beatley, who is a prominent advocate of biophilic cities, with a book published by the same title.

     

    What exactly is a biophilic city? It is a city that puts nature first in its design, planning, and management. It recognizes the essential need for daily human contact with nature as well as the many environmental and economic values provided by nature and natural systems.

     

    Biophilic cities and green urbanism, a term Dr. Beatley coined, can be found around the world as cities are looking for ways to create more sustainable and livable urban environments for humans and wildlife. Dr. Beatley is the Teresa Heinz Professor of Sustainable Communities, in the Department of Urban and Environmental Planning, School of Architecture at the University of Virginia, where he has taught for the last twenty-five years. 

     

    Much of Dr. Beatley’s work focuses on the subject of sustainable communities, and creative strategies by which cities and towns can fundamentally reduce their ecological footprints, while at the same time becoming more livable and equitable places. 

     

    Dr. Beatley believes that sustainable and resilient cities represent our best hope for addressing today’s environmental challenges. He is the author or co-author of more than fifteen books on these subjects, including Green Urbanism, Native to Nowhere, Blue Urbanism, and his latest, The Bird Friendly City. 

     

    To learn more about his work and to get inspired by the work cities are doing around the world to embrace biophilia and green urbanism, be sure to visit BiophilicCities.org. You can find films, articles, and other resources including a way in which your city can sign up to be a partner biophilic city.

    ---
    This podcast has been sponsored by Wise Matter, a materials consultation firm that works with homeowners, architects, designers, and developers to choose materials, furnishings, and finishes that are non-toxic and d


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    At Latitude, we're more than a real estate firm; we're your partner in the transformation of homes, communities, and habitats towards healthy, resilient, and thriving communities.

    By combining specialized real estate consulting services with a creative agency model, we work with property stewards and developers on capital and fundraising strategies, team formation, branding, marketing, and sales.

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    Are you a professional wanting to create transformational outcomes with your work? Join the Regenerative Real Estate Community to get access to workshops, regenerative real estate investment opportunities, and connect to other leaders and culture creators within the greater real estate industry to create the impact you seek in your work.

    If A Tree Falls In A Forest...

    If A Tree Falls In A Forest...

    What does fast developing technology mean for life in our food system? And how does what we observe change our understandings of nature? We caught up with Prof Mark Maslin - Agritech and Anthropocene expert at University College London and co-founder of Rezatec: Innovative Geospatial AI Ltd, Michelle Nijhuis - Science writer, Prof Derek Stewart - Dir. of The James Hutton Institute's Advanced Plant Growth Center and Dr Youri Martin - Biodiversity Engineer at the Luxembourg Institute of Science & Technology ~ to find out! Episode Show notes: https://linktr.ee/prophets_wizards_pod

    Der Pestizid-Frühling von 1962

    Der Pestizid-Frühling von 1962
    Braucht die Landwirtschaft Pestizide? Und welche Auswirkungen haben chemische Umwelt-Gifte auf Pflanzen, Tiere und Menschen? In der siebten Folge des Überall Geschichte! Podcasts widmen wir uns Rachel Carsons Buch Silent Spring, das 1962 wie eine Bombe einschlug. Es hat eine bis heute andauernde Diskussion um Nutzen und Nachteil von Pestiziden entfacht. Das Buch gilt nicht nur als einer der Grundpfeiler für die weltweite Ökologiebewegung. Die Umstände seiner Veröffentlichung veranschaulichen auch, wie Konzerne zu Lasten von Mensch und Umwelt ihre Profite sichern und dabei Hilfe von mächtigen politischen Akteuren bekommen. Der Kampf um die mediale Deutung von Carsons Buch war zugleich auch ein Abbild von Geschlechterrollen und ein Ringen um öffentliche Teilhabe von bisher kaum beachteten Stimmen von Umweltschützer*innen. 

    Etta James, Billie Holiday and the War on Jazz

    Etta James, Billie Holiday and the War on Jazz

    The Wiki Boys take a girls trip! We were accused of not covering enough women on the pod, so this week we're going from the pages of Rachel Carson’s influential environmental science book, Silent Spring, to the lovely shores of Malibu where we studied the Streisand Effect and Lana Del Ray. Then we took a trip to the Rock and Roll HOF to listen to the earthy voice of Etta James.

    Wikipedia Articles Covered:

    1. Silent Spring
    2. Disinformation
    3. Streisand Effect
    4. Malibu
    5. Lana del Ray
    6. Billie Holiday
    7. Harry J Anslinger
    8. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
    9. Etta James

    For more Wiki U content follow us on Instagram @wikiuniversity

    Music for the show was provided by Davey and the Chains

    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@wikiuniversity 

    YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmPDDjcbBJfR0s_xJfYCUvw

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wikiuniversity/

    Music provided by Davey and the Chains

    Your Boss Might Pay for College - Paul Freedman, President of the Learning Marketplace at Guild Education

    Your Boss Might Pay for College - Paul Freedman, President of the Learning Marketplace at Guild Education
    Colleges and universities were struggling well before COVID knocked them for a loop because of declining birth rates and soaring tuition costs, among other factors. Now the on-campus model is in question, at least in the near-term. Taking all of those headwinds into account, Paul Freedman of Guild Education believes the institutions that shift their focus to serving working adults will be in a much stronger position to thrive in the future. As he explains to host Shiv Gaglani, it's a good time to be a working adult learner because more and more companies are offering to pay tuition costs as a standard benefit. Tune in to find out why and how it may impact you.

    Lab Entry #2: Dr. Judy McDowell Part 1

    Lab Entry #2: Dr. Judy McDowell Part 1

    In this episode we interview Judy McDowell, a Biologist and Scientist Emeritus with Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, who furthered the studies of adaptations of marine animals in naturally fluctuating conditions and environmental disturbances. We talk about her experiences in Woods Hole at the Oceanographic Institution, her appreciation for Rachel Carson, and how she has studied and shaped Environmental Policies throughout her career










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    Apollo 8 and Earth Rise: Earth from the Moon, Seeing the Planet Whole

    Apollo 8 and Earth Rise: Earth from the Moon, Seeing the Planet Whole

    "Apollo 8 was the first spacecraft to send people out of Earth's orbit. The first to go to the moon. The first in lunar orbit. And leaving Earth's orbit was a momentous step. For the first time humans became true space travelers."
    -Tom Griffiths

    The moon has held a special place in cultures across the globe. An object of mystical wonder and focus of scientific inquiry, the moon is an enduring subject for artists, poets and writers. To land on the moon represented not only a remarkable technological achievement, but one that created in human history a shared moment of optimism. An achievement for human ambition and scientific discovery, born out of the geopolitical competition between nations.

    On Christmas Eve 1968, while Apollo 8 was in lunar orbit, three American astronauts looked out the tiny windows of their ‘tin can’ and saw something that moved them deeply. They gazed not at the Moon for which they had traveled so far, but at the Earth their home, the beautiful blue planet, alone, vulnerable and luminous in an infinity of darkness. Their photograph of ‘Earthrise’ became one of the most powerful images of our time, an unexpected and radical legacy of the Apollo program.

    In the third episode of this series, Tom explores the history of planetary thinking, especially in the half-century since we first saw the Earth from the Moon.

    Professor Tom Griffiths is an acclaimed environmental historian who was made an Officer of the Order of Australia in 2014 for distinguished service to social, cultural and environmental history and literature. His books and essays have received numerous awards including the Douglas Stewart Prize, Eureka Science Book Prize and Prime Minister’s Prize for Australian History.

    Discover and register for future events in the series at cass.anu.edu.au/wtstw

    Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, or Contact Us for more information.

    Nature Conservation: The Influence of American Philosophies on Modern China

    Nature Conservation: The Influence of American Philosophies on Modern China
    How have US American ideas about nature conservation influenced the conception of nature in China? Carson Fellow Hou Shen bases her research around the nature writings of three well-known American writers—Henry David Thoreau, Aldo Leopold, and Rachel Carson—in order to demonstrate how the idea of preserving nature for humans and for other species has been interpreted and transformed in Chinese culture. Hou Shen is currently an assistant professor at the history department of the Renmin University of China in Beijing. She explores the introduction, reception, and transformation of American ideas of nature conservation and its practices in China.

    Nature Conservation: The Influence of American Philosophies on Modern China

    Nature Conservation: The Influence of American Philosophies on Modern China
    How have US American ideas about nature conservation influenced the conception of nature in China? Carson Fellow Hou Shen bases her research around the nature writings of three well-known American writers—Henry David Thoreau, Aldo Leopold, and Rachel Carson—in order to demonstrate how the idea of preserving nature for humans and for other species has been interpreted and transformed in Chinese culture. Hou Shen is currently an assistant professor at the history department of the Renmin University of China in Beijing. She explores the introduction, reception, and transformation of American ideas of nature conservation and its practices in China.
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