Category Archives: Podcasts

The Pale Blue Dot & Beyond

Gestern habe ich eine Folge von Mensch Otto Bayern 3 gehört, in der Thorsten Otto die Astrophysikerin Lisa Kaltenegger interviewt:

Mensch Otto, Sendung vom 05.11.2015 mit Lisa Kaltenegger (MP3).

“Ihre Spezialität sind Exoplaneten, Exomonde und Supererden. Was dem einen völlig Spanisch vorkommt, ist für die österreichische Forscherin die große Leidenschaft. Für sie ist das Weltall ein einziges Geheimnis, das es zu entschlüsseln gilt. Und eine der spannendsten Fragen ist für sie, ob wir Menschen allein im Universum sind. „Jetzt, in diesen Jahren, ist die Technologie so weit, dass wir nach Planeten wie unserer Erde im All Ausschau halten können und Signale dieser Welten auffangen“, sagt Kaltenegger. Schon mit 27 Jahren forschte und unterrichtete die an der Harvard University, inzwischen arbeitet sie unter anderem für die NASA.”

Eingeladen wurde sie u. a. deshalb, weil wenige Tage zuvor ihr populärwissenschaftliches Buch Sind wir allein im Universum?: Meine Spurensuche im All erschienen ist.

Lisa Kaltenegger is Associate Professor of Astronomy, Director of the Carl Sagan Institute at Cornell University. The Carl Sagan Institute, aka Institute for Pale Blue Dots, …

“… was founded in 2015 at Cornell University to explore other worlds – how they form, evolve and if they could harbor life both inside and outside of our own Solar System. Directed by astronomer Lisa Kaltenegger, the Institute has built an entirely new research group, spanning 6 departments and including more than 20 faculty who focus on the search for life in the universe.”

Videos of the inauguration speeches by Lisa Kaltenegger, Ann Druyan, and others can be found here: (un)Discovered Worlds: Inauguration of the Carl Sagan Institute.

Kalteneggers talk A Thousand New Worlds is available on YouTube:

“Lisa Kaltenegger, director of the Carl Sagan Institute and associate professor of astronomy at Cornell, has been examining alien worlds for biosignatures–the pre-conditions and indications of life. Here she shares her research on potentially habitable planets beyond our solar system. Recorded July 8, 2015 as part of the School of Continuing Education and Summer Sessions summer lecture series.”

Undisclosed

In the past few days I got sucked into the Undisclosed podcast by Rabia Chaudry, Colin Miller and Susan Simpson, three lawyers. Chaudry is a friend of the Syed family.

“The Undisclosed Podcast is a listening experience that reframes, enhances or otherwise shifts everything you’ve come to know about the State of Maryland’s case against Adnan Syed, especially as you’ve come to know it through listening to Serial. […] Not only will we look at the evidence that was presented in Serial, but we will also provide new evidence that we’ve uncovered in our investigation. We have combed through police and court records that the Serial team did not possess during the podcast, and done much, much more to get to the truth. Accordingly, we aspire to present the best possible version of the events as we believe those events to be.”

I’ve finished the first seven episodes and addenda so far and am curious to hear what comes next.

Tonight I stumbled upon two videos of “The Docket” on MSNBC:

The Science Of ‘Serial’ Part I: Crime Scene, Part II: Autopsy. There is a prior episode as well, ‘Serial’ Podcast Breakdown: The Cellphone Mystery

For previous postings, see here.

Serial Podcast case is being reopened

Remember the Serial Podcast? I wrote about it here and here, and it has been discussed at length at MetaFilter:

The last episode aired on December 18, 2014, and the last post on the homepage of the podcast dates back to October 15, 2015: Waranowitz! He speaks!.

Another podcast about the case is Undisclosed, which has aired 14 episodes plus addendums since April of 2015. I haven’t listened to them yet, but will at least check it out in the next few days.

Now Adnan Syed’s case is being reopened: Judge grants motion to reopen ‘Serial’ case for Adnan Syed

The reopening of the case and more is being discussed in this MetaFilter thread: This American Death.

I always listen to podcasts on my commute

The Atlantic: Podcasts So Good You Want to Binge-Listen. By Conor Friedersdorf.

Serial could build on the success of This American Life and Radiolab to produce the most ambitious narrative nonfiction ever delivered via your ears.”

I subscribe to more podcasts than I can usually manage to listen on my commute regularly, and I sort of keep some extra episodes for longer drives. Mostly, it doesn’t matter to me if I’m two or three weeks behind Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me or Radiolab or even This American Life, I’ll catch up eventually. But I’ve followed Serial very closely, listening to each episode as soon as it came out. I’m hooked!