Afleveringen
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Daniela Rusâs dream is to imbue the power of robotics with the wisdom of humanity. She runs MITâs Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. As part of his ongoing series on the promise and perils of AI, Globe Ideas Editor Brian Bergstein talks to Rus about her new book âThe Heart and the Chip.â She says robots wonât just do our chores and work in our factories; they can teach us how to hit tennis balls like Serena Williams and defy gravity like Iron Man. She says your car wonât just drive you around â it might also be a friend. Email us at [email protected].
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Author Amy Tan doesnât just watch birds, she âfeels the life within them.â Amyâs new book, âThe Backyard Bird Chroniclesâ takes us into her daily journal, drawing and musing on the lives of birds in her backyard in California. Shirley Leung talks to Amy about her breakthrough novel, âThe Joy Luck Club,â the agony of fiction writing, and whether she considers herself an Asian-American writer or just a writer. Throughout her career, Amy has written extensively about mother-daughter relationships, which partly stems from her own experience. Amy says her late mother is present in every one of her works, even this one. Email us at [email protected].
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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Climate change isnât just one thing, itâs a million things. Itâs âeverything everywhere all at once,â according to acclaimed author and New Yorker writer Elizabeth Kolbert. In her new book âH is for Hope,â Elizabeth goes through the letters of the alphabet explaining the complexities of climate change and musing on weather, power, hope, despair and everything in between. She joins Shirley this Earth Week to discuss her approach to climate journalism and her agnostic feelings about hope.
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Doris Kearns Goodwin is a historian who is best known for writing about America's presidents, from Abraham Lincoln to Lyndon B. Johnson. She has a new book out, and this time itâs personal. In "An Unfinished Love Story: A Personal History of the 1960s," Doris tells the story of her late husband Dick Goodwin, who was a speechwriter for Presidents Kennedy and Johnson. Dick was supposed to write the book, but when he passed away in 2018, Doris promised to finish it. This week on Say More, Doris talks to Shirley about the legacy of the 60s, her epic love story with Dick, and the unfinished story of America. Email us at [email protected].
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Khan Academy has taught millions of students the fundamentals of math and science, as well as topics ranging from economics to art history. As part of his ongoing series on the promise and perils of AI, Globe Ideas Editor Brian Bergstein talks to Khan Academy founder Sal Khan about the ways that artificial intelligence can (and will) revolutionize education. Sal introduces Brian to âKhanmigo,â an AI tutor that can personalize education for students and teachers. They discuss the benefits of AI in education and what guardrails need to be in place to keep kids safe. Email us at [email protected].
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If you liked our last episode with Frontline executive producer Raney Aronson-Rath, you might like this bonus episode. Itâs from a new podcast called âPulitzer on the Roadâ from our friends at the Pulitzer Prizes. The Boston Globeâs executive editor Nancy Barnes talks to Associated Press journalist Mstyslav Chernov about his Oscar-winning documentary â20 Days in Mariupol." The film is a stunning first hand account of the first days of war in Ukraine in the winter of 2022, produced by the AP and Frontline.
Click here for more episodes of âPulitzer on the Road.â
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Boston-based Frontline has been making documentaries for 40 years, and this year, they took home their first Academy Award for their documentary â20 Days in Mariupolâ. The documentary is a first-hand account of the first days of Russiaâs invasion of Ukraine in the winter of 2022. The documentary contains gripping and heartbreaking stories of war. It also is a work of journalism, documenting the facts of war. Shirley talks to Frontlineâs Executive Producer Raney Aronson-Rath about this film and what it takes to make documentaries that wake people up. Raney shares the game-changing media strategy sparked by her teenage son. Email us at [email protected].
Watch â20 Days in Mariupolâ on the PBS website or on YouTube.
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In courts across the country, a war is being waged on federal agencies that ensure clean air, safe drugs and fair banking. These agencies, such as the Environmental Protection Agency and the Food and Drug Administration, are sometimes referred to as the âadministrative state.â Conservative groups are increasingly using legal action to undermine the powers of these regulators. Today on Say More, guest host Kimberly Atkins Stohr, a Boston Globe senior opinion writer, discusses the trend with Emily Hammond, a law professor at George Washington University, and Devon Ombres, a legal expert with the Center for American Progress Action Fund. Email us at [email protected].
Read more about this topic in Kimberlyâs column on the topic, Why Democrats need to win Congress.
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Bob Rivers, the CEO and chair of Eastern Bank, sits down with Shira Center, the general manager for editorial revenue and strategy at Boston Globe Media, to talk about the bankâs history, its work on diversity and inclusion, and its approach to community investment. Globe Opinion was not involved in the creation or execution of this episode, which was produced by Studio/B, Boston Globe Mediaâs sponsored content studio.
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Everyoneâs afraid to fail, but todayâs guest says we shouldnât be. In fact, we should welcome it. Harvard Business School Professor Amy Edmondson says that âfailure isnât finalâ and that itâs often the first step toward great ideas and innovation. She tells Shirley that the most successful people fail more, not less, than the rest of us. Amy also shares the concept of âpsychological safety,:â an essential feature of successful teams â which is created by a culture of sharing and accepting failure. To practice failure herself, Shirley decides to take up basketball and she learns about a useful office supply that would never have been invented without failure. Email us at [email protected].
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Men and boys are less likely to excel in high school or go to college. They are more likely to get hooked on drugs or die of suicide. More broadly, boys and men are at a crossroads. While the #MeToo movement has provided a needed global reckoning for women and girls, it left boys with a long list of âdonâtsâ without enough âdos.â This week on Say More, author and scholar Richard Reeves talks to Shirley Leung about how this cultural vacuum leaves boys vulnerable to reactionary figures, such as Andrew Tate and other âmanfluencers.â He gives Shirley advice on how to prepare her sons for the world. Reeves is president of the American Institute for Boys and Men and author of the book âOf Boys and Men: Why the Modern Male Is Struggling, Why It Matters, and What to Do About It.â Email us at [email protected].
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Stovetop mac-and-cheese is a simple dish, but there are many ways to get there. Deb Perelman, founder of the Smitten Kitchen blog, and New York Times food columnist J. Kenji LĂłpez-Alt could spend hours discussing the art of perfecting a recipeâin fact they often do. They are the hosts of the new podcast The Recipe with Kenji and Deb. This week on Say More, they join Shirley to talk about what they would make for their favorite celebrities, cooking for picky kids, and the wisdom of online commenters. Email us at [email protected].
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Itâs not just you. Many Americans feel disempowered and unmotivated to participate in the political process. This weekâs guests, Sarah Stewart Holland and Beth Silvers of the âPantsuit Politicsâ podcast, have been called âAmericaâs political therapists.â They talk with Shirley about this yearâs âdeeply weirdâ presidential race, voter malaise, the trickiness of talking about a candidateâs age and how to have âgrace-filledââ conversations about politics. Email us at [email protected].
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Throughout the last half-century more of our stuff has been made somewhere else. Much of the manufacturing that formed the economic backbone of US regional economies has relocated to distant countries. Today on Say More, Shirley talks to Boston author and journalist Rachel Slade, who says itâs not only possible to bring manufacturing back to the US, but necessary. Her new book is called âMaking It in America: The Almost Impossible Quest to Manufacture in the U.S.A. (And How It Got That Way).â Email us at [email protected].
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Imagine itâs the eve of the 2024 presidential election, and you get a call that sounds like itâs coming from a family member or a friend â or even the president â telling you the polls will be closed and you should stay home. The call could sound real but be totally fake, generated by easily available AI technology. That type of ruse is hugely concerning to national security expert and author Miles Taylor. As part of his ongoing series on the promise and perils of AI, Globe Ideas Editor Brian Bergstein talks to Miles about his fears for the 2024 election and how we can protect democracy from this growing AI threat. Email us at [email protected].
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This week Shirley ventures outside the studio and visits local restaurant owner Irene Li to make dumplings together for Lunar New Year. Irene is co-founder of Mei Mei Dumplings in South Boston. Shirley and Irene share their memories of celebrating Lunar New Year as children and their relationship with Chinese-American culture. Irene talks about the state of the restaurant industry and how she wants to make it better. Email us as [email protected].
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Blaxploitation films are known for their Black stars, gritty material, and funk music. When they caught on in the early 1970s, these movies had a ton of style and iconic characters. At the time of their release, they were celebrated for their depictions of Black empowerment but also criticized for perpetuating stereotypes and caricatures of Black culture. The Boston Globeâs chief film critic, Odie Henderson, has a new book about the history of the genre called âBlack Caesars and Foxy Cleopatras: A History of Blaxploitation Cinema.â He talks to Shirley about revisiting these movies as an adult and the evolving representation of Blackness on screen. Email us at [email protected].
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The ideological battles on college campuses have reached a new pitch in recent months, leading to high-profile presidential resignations and calls for more. This weekâs guest on Say More says this is all part of a long-standing campaign to destabilize and overhaul higher education, funded by billionaires on the right. Nancy MacLean is a historian at Duke University. Nancy tells host Shirley Leung about the money behind these campaigns, the playbook, and what lies ahead in the battle over higher education. Email us at [email protected].
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The New Hampshire primaries will take place on January 23. The choices voters in the small state make could have a major impact on the presidential election. The Democratic primary in New Hampshire isn't competitive this year, but the Republican one could be interesting. On todayâs episode, Boston Globe politics reporter Emma Platoff introduces us to three New Hampshire GOP voters as they decide how to cast their ballots. Their views are nuanced, idiosyncratic, and molded by unique life experiences, but they also reveal a lot about where this yearâs primary could be heading. Email us at [email protected].
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