Podcasts permit a shift of listening time from a set appointment to virtually 
any convenient occasion.  I do it while taking my daily (more or less) 3 mile 
walk, while I’m “plodding along”.

While there are thousands, perhaps tens of thousands, of great podcasts from 
other sources, the ones sponsored via public radio have been vetted through the 
worthy objectives of the medium. 

Here’s what I’ve been listening to recently.  I hope you might find these 
suggestions — in roughly 90 minute bites -- helpful in enhancing your own 
enjoyment of radio, our favorite medium.
__ __

“Singer-Songwriter Randy Newman”
FRESH AIR - WHYY Philadelphia and NPR
The witty, cynical and often tongue-in-cheek songwriter Randy Newman is the 
subject of a new biography. He also wrote a bunch of film scores, including the 
music for Toy Story, Ragtime, A Bug's Life, and Monsters, Inc. We're revisiting 
Newman's interview with Terry Gross from 1998 and Ken Tucker reviews the book, 
A Few Words in Defense of Our Country.
Justin Chang reviews the new Vatican thriller Conclave. (47”)
https://www.npr.org/2024/10/25/1211597500/randy-newman

“Should Revenge Have Any Place in our Politics?”
THE MINEFIELD - ABC RN (Radio National)
There is something undeniably satisfying about revenge. When we feel we have 
been aggrieved, harmed or humiliated, it is natural to want payback. In ancient 
Greece, to inflict such an injury was conceived of as incurring a debt — and 
the only way to make the perpetrator “whole” was to have the injury repaid in 
kind.  The paradox — as Socrates, Sophocles and Euripides all knew — is that 
revenge, though it is desired, is never satisfying, because it gives rise to a 
perpetual cycle of hit-and-retaliation. The future is thereby foreclosed by the 
need to repay the past. As Martin Luther King, Jr. put it: “Returning hate for 
hate multiplies hate, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of 
stars.”  In democratic politics and geopolitical conflict, the language and 
logic of revenge have begun to reassert themselves. What can be done to break 
out of its hold?
Guest: Talia Morag is a Senior Lecturer in Philosophy and Psychology at 
Australian Catholic University. She is the author of Emotion, Imagination, and 
the Limits of Reason. (54”)
https://www.abc.net.au/listen/programs/theminefield/should-revenge-have-any-place-in-our-politics-/104397750


— — 

A compendium of these suggestions, plus on occasion additional pertinent 
material, is published every other month in the CIDX Messenger, the monthly 
e-newsletter of the Canadian International DX Club (CIDX).  For further 
information and membership information, go to www.cidxclub.ca

John Figliozzi
Editor, "The Worldwide Listening Guide”
NEW!!!!  11th EDITION now available from universal-radio.com, amazon.com. 
amazon.co.uk, amazon.de, amazon.com.au 





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