Episodes
Monday Aug 29, 2011
The story of the fall of the Cali Cartel
Monday Aug 29, 2011
Monday Aug 29, 2011
Friday Aug 26, 2011
The Fate of Civilians in America's Wars
Friday Aug 26, 2011
Friday Aug 26, 2011
While we sometimes enter wars with the best of intentions, (Libya as a case in point,) the reality is often quite different. In almost all wars the dead are not just enemy soldiers, but hundreds of thousand of innocent civilians whose death, at best, becomes a statistic. Its hard for us to grasp this reality. Perhaps it's our own myopia, our inability to see or relate to those that might be different than ourselves, or a need to look away for fear of feeling a kind of collective guilt. Whatever the individual reasons, the new reality of high tech warfare is arguably making this increase in civilian causalities all the more a reality. John Tirman, Executive Director of the Center for International Studies at MIT, explains in his new work The Deaths of Others: The Fate of Civilians in America's Wars. My conversation with John Tirman:
Thursday Aug 25, 2011
Media Overload
Thursday Aug 25, 2011
Thursday Aug 25, 2011
Tuesday Aug 23, 2011
Pinched
Tuesday Aug 23, 2011
Tuesday Aug 23, 2011
One of the most cliched expressions on Wall Street is, "this time it's different.” Usually, it’s not. The trouble is, some times it really is different. Arguably the current economic dislocation and deconstruction that we face will alter every aspect of our society. The question is, is the bursting of our economic bubble a direct result of economic fundamentals and of the normal business cycle OR is it the result of broader social, economic, technological and societal changes, that have been building up pressure for years, and the results of which will be with us for years, maybe decades to come. If so, are these the problems of a swift moving , modern, global, economy that we simply may not have tools to adjust? About a year ago Don Peck an editor at The Atlantic wrote a Cover Story for the Atlantic which kindled a national conversation. That story touched a nerve and has become the core of his new book Pinched: How the Great Recession Has Narrowed Our Futures and What We Can Do About It. My conversation with Don Peck:
Sunday Aug 21, 2011
Making Sense of People
Sunday Aug 21, 2011
Sunday Aug 21, 2011
We often ask the question, "what makes us human?" What we're really asking, is what makes up the complexity of the human personality. Historically the best we've been able to do is understand it through art and literature. Today the advances of modern science and psychiatry have added a whole new dimension to understanding who and how we are. At the forefront of this effort is Dr. Samuel Barondes, Director of the Center for Neurobiology and Psychiatry at USCSF. Trained in psychiatry and neuroscience at Columbia, Harvard and NIH, he is the author of Making Sense of People: Decoding the Mysteries of Personality. My conversation with Dr. Samuel Barondes:
Wednesday Aug 17, 2011
Retromania
Wednesday Aug 17, 2011
Wednesday Aug 17, 2011
How many times have you heard an old song that brought you back to a particular place and time. The music acted as a kind of transport device that allowed you to short circuit time and make yesterday's events today's reality. But what happens next, what's the impact on the music and pop culture in general? If the past is what make us comfortable, in music, art and fashion, where will we find the creativity to move us forward? What will inspire the creative destruction for our future art and popular culture, if we only hang out in the retro? Music critic Simon Reynolds asks these questions and looks at the state of popular music in Retromania: Pop Culture's Addiction to Its Own Past. My conversation with Simon Reynolds:
Tuesday Aug 16, 2011
Emperor of All Maladies
Tuesday Aug 16, 2011
Tuesday Aug 16, 2011
Over the years we've engaged in many "wars." The War on Poverty, the War on Drugs, the recent War on Terror and in the early 1970's, Richard Nixon launched a War on Cancer. It was a war that some said would be won by the turn of the last century. Obviously that war is not won and in some respects we are just at the starting gate. New treatments to take advantage of new genetic research is begging to take hold. The old paradigm of poisoning cancer to death, is finally running it course. Yet cancer today is growing exponentially. It's estimated that one in three will be directly touch by cancer. It's becoming the number one killer in America. But with all we know, we know very little about this history and origins. Like to many war, we are too often fighting against an enemy we do not know or understand. This was the starting point for Pulitzer Prize winner Siddhartha Mukherjee's brilliant The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer. My conversation with Siddhartha Mukherjee:
Wednesday Aug 10, 2011
China
Wednesday Aug 10, 2011
Wednesday Aug 10, 2011
Winston Churchill once referred to the former Soviet Union as a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma. He was looking for some key to understand that nation. Today, as China rises, we seem to looking for a similar key. A kind of unified filed theory of China that will enable us to better and more simply understand the nation and it’s people. The problem is, it is a nation and a people who thrive on contradiction. A yin and yang that for almost every analysis there seems to be an opposite. Like the story of the blind man and the elephant, where each part that you touch gives you a different picture of the whole, so to with China, its mammoth scale makes it hard to see the whole. The China we mostly see and talk about is the urban China; Beijing, Shanghai and dozens of other huge cities. These are critical in showing China to the world, as the Olympics did. But still there is also rural china. A place untouched by China’s progress, Almost another country of a billion people. Two recent conversations portray both sides of China. First Tom Scocca gives us the urban view in Beijing Welcomes You: Unveiling the Capital City of the Future, and Mike Levy takes us deep insight into rural China in Kosher Chinese: Living, Teaching, and Eating with China's Other Billion My conversation with Mike Levy.
Wednesday Aug 10, 2011
China
Wednesday Aug 10, 2011
Wednesday Aug 10, 2011
Winston Churchill once referred to the former Soviet Union as a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma. He was looking for some key to understand that nation. Today, as China rises, we seem to looking for a similar key. A kind of unified filed theory of China that will enable us to better and more simply understand the nation and it’s people. The problem is, it is a nation and a people who thrive on contradiction. A yin and yang that for almost every analysis there seems to be an opposite. Like the story of the blind man and the elephant, where each part that you touch gives you a different picture of the whole, so to with China, its mammoth scale makes it hard to see the whole. The China we mostly see and talk about is the urban China; Beijing, Shanghai and dozens of other huge cities. These are critical in showing China to the world, as the Olympics did. But still there is also rural china. A place untouched by China’s progress, Almost another country of a billion people. Two recent conversations portray both sides of China. First Tom Scocca gives us the urban view in Beijing Welcomes You: Unveiling the Capital City of the Future, and Mike Levy takes us deep insight into rural China in Kosher Chinese: Living, Teaching, and Eating with China's Other Billion My conversation with Tom Scocca:
Monday Aug 08, 2011
As We Speak
Monday Aug 08, 2011
Monday Aug 08, 2011
It has been accurately reported that one of the greatest fears people have is that of public speaking. This is particularly unfortunate given that the spoken word is how we best communicate our ideas, our passions and how we get others to understand and follow us. If we truly believe in what we have to say, what is it that we are afraid of? Is there a way to assure our success, to make sure that we understand the importance without letting the stakes impact the performance. This is the work of Peter Meyers detailed in his work and in his book As We Speak: How to Make Your Point and Have It Stick. My conversation with Peter Meyers:
Friday Aug 05, 2011
Hey, you want to buy a paining?
Friday Aug 05, 2011
Friday Aug 05, 2011
Art theft is one of the most profitable criminal enterprises in the world, exceeding $6 billion in losses to galleries and art collectors annually. Last May, five paintings worth over $125 million were stolen from the Paris Museum of Modern Art. They have not been recovered. Still unsolved in the $500 million robbery of Boston's Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. Who steals art, why and how do they get rid of it? All are part of the story told by Anthony Amore and Tom Mashberg in their book Stealing Rembrandts: The Untold Stories of Notorious Art Heists.b> My conversation with Anthony Amore and Tom Mashberg:
Tuesday Aug 02, 2011
How to predict the future...
Tuesday Aug 02, 2011
Tuesday Aug 02, 2011