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  • 5 Films at the Provincetown Film Festival
    2025/06/12

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    Director Kahane Corn Cooperman and producer Innbo Shim talk about their film, Creede USA, about the impact of a theater on a small conversative mountain town that saw its boom when it was established for mining in the late 1800s.

    Filmmaker Kim A. Snyder tells the story of book banning and witch hunt of librarians in Texas and Florida in the documentary, The Librarians.

    Co-director Elliott Kennerson talks about Love Birds, the study that discovered lesbian seagulls who became a mascot for a movement.

    Filmmaker Allison Argo talks about Forever Home which follows a couple who build a refuge for abused and orphaned farm animals with natural and sustainable

    Filmmaker Paulo Marinou-Blanco talks about his tragic comedy Dreaming of Lions which addresses terminal illness and euthanasia. It's about an intimate friendship that forms between a depressed mortician who asks his dead clients for advice and former professor who wants to be done with her pain.

    Tech Disclaimer: My computer died, so I cobbled this together quickly without my normal equipment and intro/outro, etc. Pardon the editing.

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    29 分
  • Theater and History Converge with Teacher Emerald Walker at Undesirable Elements
    2025/06/04

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    Emerald Trinket Walker discusses teaching history through music, movement and performance. Her program Undesirable Elements at Global Kids has performed at many locations including Columbia University, Council on Foreign Relations, Lincoln Center Institute, Apollo Theater, Sarah Lawrence College, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, United Nations Special Session on Children, New York University, Museum of Television & Radio.

    Their performance at the Global Kids Annual Conference addresses a new theme each year, and is based on Ping Chong’s award-winning piece, now in its 31st year of international production.

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    25 分
  • The Neuroscience of Fear, Empathy and Altruism with Dr. Abigail Marsh
    2025/05/14

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    This episode focuses on fear and empathy in humans and other animals. Dr. Abigail Marsh also talks about our biological predisposition toward empathy and care, how adolescent brains evolved to rebel and take risks, why teens are more anxious than in previous generations, and psychopathy as a spectrum. Find out why fearful expressions evolved to protect us and why we love cute animals so much.

    Dr. Marsh was rescued by the heroic act of stranger which led her to study altruism. In studying empathy, she began by studying the brains of those who are empathy deficient, or what we call psychopathic. She found that psychopathy is on a spectrum, which includes people who are anti-psychopathic. She also found it all connects with fear and the neurological function and structure of the amygdala. The amygdala is complicated and it has two main axonal pathways which connect it with other parts of the brain. Oxytocin modulates the amygdala in a way that it supports nurturing care, even in the case of danger or threat, related to protection of others at the expense of protection of self, as with caring for those in need and in the case of saving a stranger's life.

    People with altruistic behaviors have larger amygdalas and people with psychopathic behavior have significantly smaller amygdalas! But there are interventions that can change and influence the development of the brain in adolescence. Children can grow out of callous behaviors.

    Dr. Marsh is a Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience at Georgetown University where she directs the Laboratory on Social and Affective Neuroscience. She is the author of The Fear Factor: How One Emotion Connects Altruists, Psychopaths, and Everyone In-Between.


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    41 分
  • Cape Wellness Collaborative and Retired Rev. Jaime Faile on Her Gender Transition
    2025/05/07

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    We speak with Carol Bosco Baumann, chief executive officer of Cape Wellness Collaborative. She shares what brought her to the Cape, her personal connection with the mission of CWC, and what's happening this year at the annual Cape Cod Women’s Music Festival. We also speak with retired reverend Jamie Faile who served for 35 years as a Presbyterian pastor in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Michigan before moving to Cape Cod. As a transgender woman Jamie is a member of PFLAG Cape Cod, active in Pilgrim Congregational Church, and an Outreach Volunteer with the Center for Coastal Studies.

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    30 分
  • Get Out of Your Comfort Zone and Venture With Travel Guide Jenny Wood
    2025/05/01

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    Jenny Wood is a travel guide and retreat facilitator, taking groups on "authentic, immersive, transformational travel experiences to support personal and global healing and peacemaking". With a background in acupuncture and 5 elements coaching, Jenny Wood is a unique travel guide who customizes your oversees adventures. We talk about her recent retreats from adventures from from Costa Rica to Morocco, from Dublin to Oaxaca.

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    29 分
  • The Healing Power of Music with Professor Dr. Ed Pias
    2025/04/13

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    Multi-instrumentalist Ed Pias earned his degrees in music from the University of Washington in Seattle, Cal Arts, and Berklee, he studied the pakhawaj drum in Bangladesh and India, but it wasn't until he was asked to help a man transition from his hospice bed, that he discovered the healing power of music and connected with the healing power of music. From there he began exploring native American flute. Here we discuss bird song, connecting with loved ones through bird encounters, and connecting to animals through music.

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    30 分
  • Part II of History Professor Michael Schoeppner on Free Black Mariners in Antebellum South
    2025/04/10

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    Here history professor Michael Schoeppner talks laws that were made to hinder slave rebellions and resistance to slavery in the Antebellum South. He talks about laws meant to keep free people from moving between states and crossing state boarders and why the history of those laws is relevant today.

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    23 分
  • Free Black Mariners and Southern Antebellum Laws with Historian Dr. Michael Schoeppner
    2025/03/30

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    Historian professor Dr. Michael Schoeppner talks about his research on early immigration, state-to-state migration and his book Moral Contagion: Black Atlantic Sailors, Citizenship and Diplomacy in Antebellum South.

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    30 分