Thoughtcast

ThoughtCast is a podcast and public radio interview program with authors and academics. The interviews are conducted by Jenny Attiyeh,[1] a former public radio and TV reporter from Manhattan and elsewhere whose previous work focused on covering the arts and ideas. ThoughtCast aims to offer a "bridge between the publications and pursuits of the intellectual world and a curious, informed, mainstream audience."[2]

ThoughtCast
Presentation
Hosted byJenny Attiyeh
GenreTalk, Education
Publication
Websitewww.thoughtcast.org

Guests

ThoughtCast has a strong New England emphasis, with a majority of the interviewees being Harvard professors. Guests have included Lisa Randall,[3] a Harvard theoretical physicist; Nobel laureate Amartya Sen;[4] Alan Dershowitz;[5] Sam Huntington[6] of Clash of Civilizations; public radio program directors; biographers Megan Marshall[7] and Carol Bundy;[8] philosopher Simon Blackburn;[9] David Weinberger; and others.[10]

In summer 2008, ThoughtCast introduced video to its lineup.[11] The video includes interviews with Scottish historian Niall Ferguson on the "American Empire",[12] Internet gurus on neologisms gleaned from life online, and Joshua Micah Marshall,[13] the creator of Talking Points Memo.[14] A conversation on Steve Reich's Different Trains with the Borromeo String Quartet was also picked up by New Hampshire Public Radio.[15] The program examines how Reich, in this challenging composition, compares the train trips he took as a child to the very different train trips Jews were forced to take during the Holocaust.[16]

Distribution

ThoughtCast is released on its website and iTunes. The program is also available through the Public Radio Exchange.[17] WGBH, an arts and culture public radio station in Boston, has broadcast many ThoughtCast interviews, and has featured the program on its Forum Network.[18][19]

gollark: Hmm, so what if we reveal that umnikos is secretly gibson?
gollark: ÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆAAAAAAAÅAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
gollark: Probably.
gollark: Gibson, vote gibson and help.
gollark: Well, I mean, we're apparently going backward.

References

Further reading

PRX reviews
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.