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.

__ __


“What surprised us most about the election results.”
HOUSE PARTY - CBC Radio One
This is it: House Party has been building up to the Canadian federal election 
for weeks, and now it’s actually happened! On just an hour or two of sleep, 
Catherine Cullen, Jason Markusoff and Daniel Thibeault react to the news that 
it’ll be a Liberal minority government in the House, and share what they think 
are the biggest surprises of the day.  (31”)
https://www.cbc.ca/listen/live-radio/1-64-the-house/clip/16143102-house-party-what-surprised-election-results

“Science's Revelations”
IN OUR TIME - BBC Radio 4
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss whether the mass of scientific understanding 
and knowledge we have accumulated has destroyed our sense of poetic wonder at 
the world. Has our sense of awe at how the world works obscured our desire to 
know why it works the way it does? With Richard Dawkins evolutionary biologist, 
reader in Zoology and Fellow of New College, Oxford, Charles Simonyi Chair of 
Public Understanding of Science, Oxford University and author of ''Unweaving 
The Rainbow: Science, Delusion and The Appetite For Wonder'; Ian McEwan, 
novelist, and author of the Booker prize winning novel ‘Amsterdam'.  (30”)
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p005454c

“Science in the 20th Century”
IN OUR TIME - BBC Radio 4
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss how perceptions of science and the power of 
science have changed in the 20th century. Does scientific endeavour 
increasingly concern itself with doubt rather than certainty, and is it coming 
any closer to integrating with other disciplines - philosophy or the social 
sciences? How much does the scientific explanation of the world owe to a wish 
for coherent understanding we all have, rather than objective observation, and 
why are we alternately disapproving of, then obsessively over-enthusiastic 
about new scientific theories? How far has specialisation in the sciences 
obscured our view of the world in its entirety, and if scientists want to 
operate within a social framework, can they do so and still claim to be 
objective and value-free in their findings?With John Gribbin, Visiting Fellow 
in Astronomy, University of Sussex and consultant to New Scientist; Mary 
Midgley, moral philosopher and former Senior Lecturer in Philosophy, University 
of Newcastle.  (30”)
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p005457h

— — 

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”
11th EDITION, with comprehensive listings of radio programs on AM, FM, 
shortwave, satellite radio, internet-wifi radio and podcasts, available from 
universal-radio.com, amazon.com. amazon.co.uk, amazon.de, amazon.com.au 





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