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Let's talk about the mysterious, the supernatural, the hidden, the lost- but not forgotten. What draws us back, time and time again, to these places of tragedy an unknown? I'll do my best to find out, and to let you know what I learn. Find resources, artwork, merch, and more at: www.backawayslowlypodcast.com
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Say That Again Slowly is a series of student led podcasts that explore topics and research presented at the Cambridge Festival. The Festival delivers strong and distinct platforms for the sciences and the arts, humanities and social sciences. Topics cover the breadth of Cambridge research and will be presented across the Festival’s four themes: Society, Health, Environment and Discovery! To find out more about the Festival, please visit: https://www.festival.cam.ac.uk/
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Let's take a look at a curated selection of Jersey Devil sightings throughout the years (don't worry, there's PLENTY). This will include a fascinating series of incidents, where the Jersey Devil kept people from leaving their homes for an entire week in 1909. Hundreds of sightings, numerous towns, several states - all that and more, on this episode…
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It's a crazy time to be a school leader. If you feel overwhelmed, here's a tip: taking the time to build trust is a way to build broader capacity to shoulder the work. Enjoy our November podcast for a few things we've learned from working alongside clients. We are here to help. https://waterfalllearning.com…
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A horse? A donkey? A crane? A kangaroo? A dog? How about all of the above? The Pine Barrens are incredibly old, with an enormous variety of wildlife (I just didn't expect all of that variety to manifest as one creature)! Time to walk through the marshes, savannahs, and swamps of the Barrens, try to disentangle where this... thing came from, and loo…
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Take a seat to listen in on my discussion with Professor Brady DeSanti about the windigo, Indigenous history, his own research and more. Needless to say, a huge thanks goes out to Professor DeSanti for making the time to chat with me, as well as guiding my general path through such an intricate subject. IN ORDER OF APPEARANCE/DISCUSSION Brady DeSan…
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It's time to dig into what you're all familiar with, so we'll start exploring recent creations that involve the windigo. What media was the most accurate? Where did others fall short? What are the impacts of these choices? All that & more for the final part of my deep dive into the windigo. Dead Meat | Episode 36: Indian Burial Grounds Cracked | Af…
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It's week 2, and we're diving right back into the windigo. We'll be looking a little closer at how the indigenous communities interacted with settlers about windigo belief, both positively and negatively. We'll crack open some very old legal cases of windigos, spiritual belief and practice colliding with the beginnings of First Nation and American …
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The windigo has had a death-grip on pop culture for the past decade or so, but what is it really? For the first part of this deep dive, we'll find out what this creature is, the many appearances it has, some windigo stories from Indigenous tribes, cultural context for the windigo, and what options there were/are to treat a windigo within these comm…
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Artwork by Duong Nguyen. A look at how the ideas that we inherit very young can limit or expand the way that we relate to ourselves and our creativity. Hurry Slowly host Jocelyn K. Glei explores how ideas shape our attitude toward everything — how we think with and through the ideas we hold, and how that affects the way we see ourselves, the way we…
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A deep dive into how we create, relate to, and maintain our digital selves/personas/brands — and can we ever truly leave them behind? Or reinvent them? Or start anew? My conversation partner in this investigation is Cody Cook-Parrot, a dancer and a writer who was formerly known as Marlee Grace. Their work focuses on the self, devotion, ritual, crea…
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The myths that drive our creativity, how they create suffering, and how we can ignite our creative fire by embracing the power of the collective. Hurry Slowly host Jocelyn K. Glei explores the closely intertwined myths of individualism and the lone creative genius and how they encourage us to ignore a powerful source of creative inspiration and mom…
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This podcast, hosted by Gaia Dratwinska, looks at Nicholas Ong’s research into the life and music of Russian composer, Valentia Serova (1846-1925), the creator of the first opera by a woman to be performed at the Bolshoi theatre in Moscow. Produced by Claire Watt.Από τον Cambridge Festival
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In this episode, Iona Warne interviews Dr Jo, of Dr Jo Science, to investigate some surprising facts about the human body, as well as looking into how science can best be communicated to children. Facebook.com/DrJoScience Produced by Claire Watt.Από τον Cambridge Festival
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In this episode, Catalina Taylor chats with Dr Brian Ferguson, an immunologist and Associate Professor of Immunology at the University of Cambridge, about how vaccines work and why we need them. Produced by Claire Watt.Από τον Cambridge Festival
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This episode sees Joanne Yau get to grips with the basics of nuclear energy, as well as taking a good look at their green potential. Featuring PhD researchers from the Nuclear Energy Futures CDT (Hannah Tipping, Martin Gillet, Will Thomas, Jason Lee and Parth Kulkarni). Produced by Claire Watt.Από τον Cambridge Festival
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In this podcast, Claire Watt talks to Chris Wakefield, one of the archaeologists working on Must Farm, a Bronze Age settlement near Peterborough which has been described as ‘Britain’s Pompei’. Produced by Claire Watt.Από τον Cambridge Festival
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What does it mean to create spaciousness? Through our creative rhythms, through our travels, through the expression of our voices? I talk with writer and teacher Sebene Selassie, the author of You Belong and the excellent Substack newsletter Ancestors to Elements, about cultivating self-reliance through solo travel, the power of acknowledging what …
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Artwork by Guong Nguyn and Geelia Nguyn. Exploring the tension between “the urgency of productivity” and the rhythms of “creative necessity.” Jocelyn contemplates how we can navigate the tension between an external world that is deeply attached to urgency and the “values of technology” and our internal world, where we yearn to create, to play, to r…
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Artwork by Rita Quattrocchi. On the awkwardness of wintering while everyone else is awakening. Jocelyn reflects on being out of sync with the collective energy of reinvention at the beginning of each new year. She talks about being in the “awkward soup of transformation” and contemplates the discomfort of inflection points, the rhythms of creativit…
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What does it mean to be satisfiable? And how do you recognize when you have “enough”? These questions are central not just to our own well-being but to attaining a more just and equitable society. For this conversation, I sit down with writer, facilitator, and activist adrienne maree brown, who recently published the excellent book Pleasure Activis…
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Artwork by James Fenner. How to flip the script on healing and wellness culture by noticing how you already embody all that you yearn for. Jocelyn reflects on the intersection of capitalism, productivity culture, and the wellness industry and how they each try to lure us into focusing on what we lack, what we are not, what we have yet to accomplish…
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SURPRISE! Happy Holidays, everybody! I've got some extra stories, updates, and discoveries for you about the locations of Season 1. Thank you to story contributors (who wished to remain anonymous), Mammoth Cave National Park, Gatekeeper Paranormal (specifically guide Alex), Bobby Mackey's Music World, and Dacota Pennycuff. Support the show Support …
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A conversation about how to get our bodies (and our brains) onboard with manifesting a new reality. In this episode, I take a deep dive into the mechanics of healing with Dina Schapiro. Dina has been a therapist for over 20 years; she’s also a professor, and formerly the director of the graduate arts therapy program, at the Pratt Institute in Brook…
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A brief reflection on the voice and how our desire to avoid uncertainty — to know the outcome before we even begin the process — can block the free-flow of self-expression. Resources, Ideas & Links Jocelyn’s 4-week course “Finding Your Voice: A sacred practice space for honoring self-expression” is now open for registration. Register before Nov 9 a…
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What does the mob have to do with Bobby Mackey's? How did the supernatural forces begin to manifest in the building? What are people experiencing in the present day? And finally, let's have a chat with a ghost hunter! (Update: Due to family emergencies, moving, & funding, the video episodes are postponed. I'll be posting updates on socials, so be s…
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Before we dig into Bobby Mackey’s, we have to cover the haunting history of the Newport area itself. Then we explore the biggest true crime case in Newport-Covington history, argued to be the inciting incident that began Bobby Mackey’s legacy. What happened to Pearl Bryan? What does she have to do with Bobby Mackey’s? It’s time to find out. (Update…
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Was Floyd Collins rescued from Sand Cave? This week, we learn why simple rumors and gossip put a national rescue in danger. What happened to all of those involved with the event? And what insane roller coaster transpired after the crisis was over? Welcome to the final part of the Mammoth Cave National Park marathon: the conclusion of the Floyd Coll…
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Who is Floyd Collins? What happened to him? Why was this significant for Mammoth Cave National Park? This week will be spent in the backcountry of 1925 Kentucky. We'll review an explorer's route, down into the depths of the earth for the sake of discovery - but at what cost? (Update: Due to family emergencies, moving, & funding, the video episodes …
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It's episode 2 and we're already at our first national park! Mammoth Cave has had centuries of haunting history, though it seems to have gone fairly undiscussed in recent years. The cave served many other purposes before it became a national park, with countless stories and sightings. (Update: Due to family emergencies, moving, & funding, the video…
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We've seen the videos, we've heard the rumors... but what's actually going on in Lake Lanier, Georgia? I'll walk you through the history, wander through the lore and sightings, hear the testimony of a few professionals, and learn from a local what it's like to grow up near and on the lake. (Update: Due to family emergencies, moving, & funding, the …
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Why don’t naked mole-rats feel some kinds of pain and what does this mean for human medicine? Simone Eizagirre Barker talks to Ewan St John about his work studying pain and theextraordinary biology of naked mole-rats which is helping us learn about allsorts of human diseases and uncover potential cures or forms of symptommanagement. Find out more a…
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What is a herbarium and why is it important? Gregory Miller visits Dr Lauren Gardiner and Dr Edwin Rose at the Cambridge University Herbarium to learn more about this fascinating library of plants, who collected them, and why they are so crucial to the study of more than just the natural world. Event link here: https://www.festival.cam.ac.uk/events…
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How does nuclear energy work and is it the best way forward for powering out future? Beth King talks to Susannah Lea, Michael Salvini and Hugh Dorward, three members of theCDT PhD team behind the event ‘the Nuclear Energy Futures Fair: an Insight intothe Energy of Tomorrow.’ Event link here: https://www.festival.cam.ac.uk/events/nuclear-energy-futu…
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When we say that money is power, what exactly do we mean? Anna Mahtani talks to numismatist and former curator of coins at the British MuseumJoe Cribb about the past and future of money. From ancient Chinese coins tocryptocurrencies, what does the study of money tell us about our world and whohas power within it? Music by Coby O'Brien Produced by R…
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Who owns the past and does antiquity really ‘belong’ to anyone? Ella O’Loughlin speaks to Prof Tim Whitmarsh about an event at the Faculty of Classics which will discuss how the classical past is understood and who feels a sense of ownership over it. Find out more about the event here: https://www.festival.cam.ac.uk/events/past-tense-who-does-greek…
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Why did a female saint rise from her tomb and slap a bellringer across the face? Ella O’Loughlin speaks to Prof Rosalind Love about her recent Cambridge Festival event on female saints and hears some of the vivid stories told about their unique kind of power. Music by Coby O'Brien Produced by Rebekah King…
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Who was the Roman Emperor who rejected Christianity? Amelia Platt speaks to Dr Lea Niccolai from the Faculty of Classics about her talk on Julian the Apostate, an emperor who was raised Christian but rejected the faith and returned to the worship of the Roman gods. Find out more at the Cambridge Festival 2023 https://www.festival.cam.ac.uk/events/l…
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Nobel ödüllü bilim insanı Aziz Sancar'ı tanıyalım! Türkçe Dinle Podcast'ı, Türkçe öğrenmek isteyenler için hazırladık. Bölümleri basit bir dille yazdık, yavaş ve anlaşılır şekilde okuduk. Yazı: https://turkcedinleogren.wordpress.com/2023/03/04/4-aziz-sancar/ Video: https://youtu.be/V1HodG8n4wsΑπό τον Türkçe Dinle
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Türkçe müziğin en başarılı örneklerinden Tarkan'ı tanıyalım. Türkçe Dinle Podcast'ı, Türkçe öğrenmek isteyenler için hazırladık. Bölümleri basit bir dille yazdık, yavaş ve anlaşılır şekilde okuduk. Yazı: https://turkcedinleogren.wordpress.com/2023/03/04/tarkan/ Video: https://youtu.be/JOwEASKcPqcΑπό τον Türkçe Dinle
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Türk mutfağına özgü yemekler. Türkçe Dinle Podcast'ı, Türkçe öğrenmek isteyenler için hazırladık. Bölümleri basit bir dille yazdık, yavaş ve anlaşılır şekilde okuduk. Yazı: https://turkcedinleogren.wordpress.com/2023/02/28/2-yemekler/ Video: https://youtu.be/4dq0AZQiwskΑπό τον Türkçe Dinle
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Bu bölümde İstanbul hakkında konuşuyoruz. Türkçe Dinle Podcast'ı, Türkçe öğrenmek isteyenler için hazırladık. Bölümleri basit bir dille yazdık, yavaş ve anlaşılır şekilde okuduk. Yazı: https://turkcedinleogren.wordpress.com/2023/02/27/hello-world/ Video: https://youtu.be/x-ANcSr5biUΑπό τον Türkçe Dinle
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How can poetry explore and share academic research with the public? Rebekah King speaks with David Cain and researchers at the University of Cambridge about their participation in the Creative Encounters Words programme. Listen to researchers Dr Catherine Merrick (Senior Lecturer Pathology, Biological Sciences), accompanying music by Jonathan Winds…
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