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15 votes
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Birthrates are plummeting worldwide. Why?
47 votes -
When do you listen to podcasts?
I started listening to podcasts in June of 2017 after having heard about them being great for years but never getting around to listening to them. I preferred music at the time and would put on a...
I started listening to podcasts in June of 2017 after having heard about them being great for years but never getting around to listening to them. I preferred music at the time and would put on a playlist or an album if I had a long drive, walk, etc. Once I started listening to podcasts I was hooked. The amount of time I spent listening to music plummetted and since I started I've spent 4% of my time listening to podcasts, I've used the same app since I started which makes keeping track of that easy.
I mainly listen to mine whenever I have some tedious or when I don't need too hard about what I'm doing. Walking the dog, driving, all of the housework, and some video games when I have time to play one and just want to zone out a bit and do something. Its made me enjoy cleaning more which my wife has appreciated a lot.
I was curious when other people listen to podcasts, how you fit them into your schedule, and if you're keen on sharing what your favorites are. I have way too many podcasts bookmarked in my app to listen to but its fun to add more to the ever growing list.
25 votes -
Ezra Klein Show: "What relationships would you want if you believed they were possible?"
21 votes -
Daniel Tosh's new podcast - Episode 1 | Interviewing my wife's gynecologist
20 votes -
The Network State Conference 2023 livestream
5 votes -
The rich and famous are dominating podcasts and I don't like it one bit!
40 votes -
Is this the world's most inconvenient podcast?
2 votes -
Balaji on the Tribal Lens, America’s blunder, and his plan to save San Francisco
4 votes -
Thirteen factors that build a healthy relationship
10 votes -
Friedman Adventures Podcast Special - May 19th 1986 Rescue At Sea
1 vote -
The podcast The Butterfly Effect and Last Day of Autumn are free to listen to, do it
5 votes -
Reply All - #168 Happiness Calculator vs. Alex Goldman
6 votes -
The Knowledge Project Ep. #94: Chamath Palihapitiya: Understanding Yourself
4 votes -
Sam Harris - Can we pull back from the brink?
7 votes -
Journey into wokeness: A conversation between Sam Harris and Caitlin Flanagan
4 votes -
The unhappy millionaire
6 votes -
Inside the Ethics Committee
Inside the Ethics Committee is a BBC Radio 4 programme. They describe it like this: Joan Bakewell is joined by a panel of experts to wrestle with the ethics arising from a real-life medical case....
Inside the Ethics Committee is a BBC Radio 4 programme. They describe it like this:
Joan Bakewell is joined by a panel of experts to wrestle with the ethics arising from a real-life medical case.
Each episode is chaired by Bakewell, with a range of different experts (who all sit on hospital ethics committees), talking about the ethical difficulties faced by healthcare professionals (and the organisations they work for) in different real life cases.
Some of it hasn't aged very well - there's an episode about HIV testing an unconscious patient after a needle-stick injury. With advances in treatment and reductions in stigma I think would have made it a very different programme today.
But most of it is pretty good, and explains in detail how some decisions are made.
For example: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0643x61
Ashley is 14 years old when doctors discover a brain tumour. Tests reveal that it's highly treatable; there's a 95% chance of cure if he has a course of radiotherapy.
Ashley begins the treatment but he has to wear a mask which makes him very anxious and the radiotherapy itself makes him sick. He finds it increasingly difficult to bear and he starts to miss his sessions.
Despite patchy treatment Ashley's cancer goes into remission. He and his mother are thrilled but a routine follow-up scan a few months later shows that the cancer has returned.
Ashley is adamant that he will not have the chemotherapy that is recommended this time. He threatens that he will run away if treatment is forced on him. Although Ashley is only 15 he is 6'2" and restraining him would not be easy.
Should the medical team and his mother persuade him to have the chemotherapy? Or should they accept his decision, even though he is only 15?
5 votes -
Podcasts should stick to exonerating the innocent
8 votes -
Pizzagate: A slice of fake news
7 votes -
Alan Alda has a podcast about communication... and its excellent!
4 votes -
Frozen alive
8 votes -
Winners give more as America loses out
4 votes -
Hogan’s Alleys: Simulating crime, riots and terrorism in surrealistic fake cities
6 votes