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Podcaster:KUOW's Weekday

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Weekday is a daily (Monday - Friday) call-in talk show that tracks the trends in society that will become tomorrow's headlines. Tune in to find out what host Steve Scher and guests will be discussing today. Weekday brings activists, idealists, politicians and practical thinkers into the talk studio to talk about politics, art, education, transportation, social issues, science and much more. Well before the story breaks into generic "sound bite" journalism, Weekday lays the groundwork for understanding all the issues.


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Seattle WA USA

Relevant Show for hurricane katrina
Greil Marcus on the Literary History of America
Updated
: 2009-10-30 17:05:00

Greil Marcus discussed Herman Melville almost as much as Elvis Presley in his landmark book of music criticism, "Mystery Train." "It is impossible to understand music," he wrote, "without thinking of literature." Marcus' latest book assembles a series of essays about important cultural and artistic landmarks in American literature. Vladimir Nabokov and Toni Morrison share space with hurricane katrina and Bob Dylan. What criteria did Marcus use when deciding what to include in the book? How do Chuck Berry and Alfred Hitchcock relate to American literature? Greil Marcus is our guest on the next "Weekday."


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Podcaster:Weekend (KUOW) type

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Relevant Show for hurricane katrina
Greil Marcus on the Literary History of America
Updated
: 2009-10-30 17:05:00

Greil Marcus discussed Herman Melville almost as much as Elvis Presley in his landmark book of music criticism, "Mystery Train." "It is impossible to understand music," he wrote, "without thinking of literature." Marcus' latest book assembles a series of essays about important cultural and artistic landmarks in American literature. Vladimir Nabokov and Toni Morrison share space with hurricane katrina and Bob Dylan. What criteria did Marcus use when deciding what to include in the book? How do Chuck Berry and Alfred Hitchcock relate to American literature? Greil Marcus is our guest on the next "Weekday."


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Podcaster:Texas A&M Engineering ~ Engineering Works

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A weekly look at the whimsical, unusual, or just little-known sides of engineering. Brought to you by Texas A&M Engineering at Texas A&M University.


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Relevant Show for hurricane katrina
Sucking up the storm
Updated
: 2009-10-27 21:31:39

  Photo: The hammering that hurricane katrina gave New Orleans isn’t news anymore. Engineers are building something they say will keep it that way. It’s a pump. A big pump. Today, on Engineering Works! People who live in New Orleans found out the hard way that the city can be a bad place to be when a [...]


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Podcaster:Vatican Radio - Clips-ENG

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Relevant Show for hurricane katrina
Ecumenical Symposium: Religion, Science and Environment
Updated
: 2009-10-26 17:34:39

(26 Oct 09 - RV) An ecumenical symposium titled  "Religion, Science and Environment", concluded yesterday in New Orleans, Louisiana, where in 2005 hurricane katrina devastated the city. The spiritual leader of the Orthodox Church, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, and other religious leaders in the United States listened to discourses by a range of scholars, and discussed a common approach to ecological crises. Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, Archbishop Emeritus of Washington, DC, told us more about the significance of the conference. 00:01:33:41


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Podcaster:Vatican Radio - Clips-ENG

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Relevant Show for hurricane katrina
Ecumenical Symposium Highlights the Environment
Updated
: 2009-10-22 17:55:23

(22 Oct 09 - RV) An ecumenical symposium titled  "Religion, Science and Environment", is taking place this week in New Orleans, Louisiana, where in 2005 hurricane katrina devastated the city. Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew and Church leaders in the United States are listening to a range of scholars, and discussing a common catholic approach to ecological crises and ways to meet the challenges that affect water systems worldwide. Attending the conference is Archbishop Gregory Aymond of New Orleans, Louisiana who spoke to us about the importance of protecting creation... 00:02:02:40


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Podcaster:Newshour with Jim Lehrer

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The latest news, analysis and reporting from the NewsHour with Jim Lehrer and its Web site, the feed is updated at least once a weekday and includes interviews, background reports and updates to put today's news in context.


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Washington DC USA

Relevant Show for hurricane katrina
In New Orleans, Hurdles Remain to Full Recovery From Katrina
Updated
: 2009-10-15 23:45:00

President Obama flew to New Orleans on Thursday to assess ongoing recovery efforts in the aftermath of 2005's hurricane katrina, telling residents, "Together we will rebuild this region."


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Podcaster:Stories of the Week | NewsHour with Jim Lehrer Podcast | PBS

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Highlights from the NewsHour with Jim Lehrer offers the most interesting interviews, reports and discussions from the past week. Updated each Friday.


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Relevant Show for hurricane katrina
Obama Visits New Orleans to Gauge Recovery
Updated
: 2009-10-15 22:03:00

President Obama flew to New Orleans on Thursday to assess the city's recovery efforts in the aftermath of hurricane katrina. Margaret Warner reports.


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Podcaster:A-Infos Radio Project Latest Programs

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Relevant Show for hurricane katrina
Can't Stop the Music - WRIR: Sunday, August 23, 2009, Segment 1
Updated
: 2009-10-08 23:09:31

Naughtiness really is all in the mind of the beholder. But mostly we're noting the anniversary of hurricane katrina.


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Podcaster:Mother of all podcast feeds

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Relevant Show for hurricane katrina
NFL holds hard line on blackout rule -
Updated
: 2009-10-03 17:04:45

NEW YORK - When hurricane katrina devastated New Orleans, the NFL waived its television blackout policy so Saints fans could watch even if games moved to Baton Rouge didn't sell out.


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Podcaster:Radio Ecoshock type

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Relevant Show for hurricane katrina
HOW COMMUNITIES SURVIVE DISASTER
Updated
: 2009-10-01 20:14:27

Everything in the techno-capitalist society forms us into separate atoms. We demand our own space, travel in personal metal boxes, and struggle as individuals.

When disaster strikes, hardly anyone remembers how to respond. How will your community react to a major threat? Will it fall apart, or grow stronger? Is there anything you can do to prepare?

This is Radio Ecoshock. I'm your host Alex Smith.

It's a real shock when those lonely atoms, conversing through electronic screens, realize their real community is endangered, or falling apart.

The cause may be economic. A major employer, or a whole industry like the auto sector, shuts down. Or maybe gas prices collapse real estate prices in a former commuter haven.

Communities can also be hammered by a climatic event: long-term drought, burned over by fire, drowned by super-floods and storm surges, or hit by a devastating storm. The disaster can even be environmental. A nuclear plant or a pesticide plant blows up, or a super-tanker spills it's oily guts.

Not to mention the possibility of a terrorist attack, like a dirty bomb or a biological release. Did I mention earthquakes?

In this program, I'll interview Riki Ott, THE Exxon Valdez spill expert. Her town of Cordova Alaska became an early case study in how a community reacts to disaster. Still fighting the big corporation who ruined their fishing industry, and split the townsfolk, Dr. Ott has developed a program to help damaged communities anywhere in the world. She gives us practical tips you should know BEFORE your community gets hit with the unexpected.

We'll follow up with a speech by Dr. John Helliwell. He's an economist called in to an audience that included mayors of towns experiencing near total loss of employment, after major forest mills shut down. I expected a pep talk about business plans and government rescues. Helliwell surprised us all, with a new way of looking at success - one not based on wealth and more production. Instead, John Helliwell is part of a growing consensus that our economic emphasis is all wrong. We should be aiming for Gross National Happiness. An economist who sees the community links becoming more valuable than business, a voice long overdue.

First, let's talk with Riki Ott.

[Ott interview]

I want to add to Riki's Ott's response about the role of women when communities hit a calamity, whether it's natural or human-made. Riki explained that women took up a leadership role in organizing not just meetings, but the networking and re-organization that helped partly heal the community. Women tend to be experienced in both communication and working co-operatively.

The darker side is this: when things go badly, women can also be further victimized by the despair and rage felt by men. I've lived in a town where the mine closed. I reported on the increased domestic disputes, growing alcohol and drug abuse, and outright beating of women by their spouses. If a factory or a mill closes, or natural events wipe out jobs - the community will have to increase services for women, at the very time when there are fewer municipal resources to go around. A women's shelter, or at least a network of safe-houses, may be needed quickly. Keep that in mind.

In an ideal world, both men and women would find some kind of counseling for the loss of value which accompanies unemployment. Without a job, many lose their sense of self definition and worth. We can't count on higher levels of government to provide this. People need to self-organize to talk to one another.

It's my observation that larger governments are beginning to fail. They spend themselves into bankruptcy, and over-build into huge bureaucracies that are unable to respond in any meaningful way. This is true in the most advanced countries, as the bungled response to hurricane katrina in New Orleans and Mississippi showed. If your community is struck, don't wait around for the government to save you. Organize and act locally.

There are also a few cases where the community fails, and nothing can really save it. There are plenty of ghost towns where a big mine closed, and the economy shut down with it. People just moved on.

I can foresee similar situations coming from the developing economic meltdown, coupled with climate disruption. Take the Ohio rust-belt, where heavy industries fled overseas. Former CIBC investment guru Jeff Rubin predicts they will rebuild, because soaring oil prices will make shipping from China too expensive. Others calculate that ocean shipping will remain far cheaper than trucking, so imports of Chinese products will continue.

I say the Ohio and Indiana area will not re-industrialize because they are 95 percent powered by coal. As climate change becomes too obnoxious to deny, and carbon pricing clicks in, new industry will only locate where renewable power is available. The Mid-Western states will either have to enter a crash program to find carbon-free power, or face a permanent loss of population.

Sometimes communities do survive to find new and safer economies. It's happened many times, in many places. In some cases, though, it's better to get out, no matter what your loss in real estate, hopes, or good memories.

Let's get into a different kind of optimism, built from a different kind of economic world view. This speech by Dr. John Helliwell was recorded by film maker Clancy Dennehy on September 17th, 2009 at the Forestry building, University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. While it contains some references to B.C. towns devastated by mill closures - this speech is really about a global movement to redefine what an economy is. Does it produce happiness?

The introduction is by Jack Saddler, Dean of the UBC Faculty of Forestry.

[Helliwell]

You have just heard the 2009 Forestry Lecture in Sustainability, presented by economist Dr. John Helliwell. The speech was organized by the University of British Columbia Faculty of Forestry on September 17th, 2009.

The lecture was followed by an eminent panel including two top government officials, Doug Konkin, Deputy Minister of Environment, and Dana Hayden, Deputy Minister of Forests and Range. Plus Don Roberts, Managing Director, CIBC World Markets, offering a business critique.

You can download a full one hour presentation, which includes the panel comments, from the Brownbagger radio show archive, located at ecoshock.org. That's a free mp3.

My thanks to Clancy Dennehy for his recording. Look for Clancy's upcoming art film simply titled "Vancouver".

So what have we learned?

If a major disaster strikes your community, at some point you have to decide whether it's time to pitch in and rebuild - or to leave. There's an old saying, which is only true half the time: "The strong give up and move on. The weak give up and stay." I'm just saying.

If you decide to fight on - don't wait for an outside savior. Big government can't create community. Lawsuits can take 20 years before they let you down.

Big corporations can leave or fail. Build a local economy.

Redefine who you are, and include everybody. Listen to each other. Organize. And if you can, ...do it before disaster strikes.

I'm Alex Smith for Radio Ecoshock. Write me any time. The address is simply radio at ecoshock.org.

Thank you for listening this week.


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Podcaster:Ecoshock News

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Relevant Show for hurricane katrina
HOW COMMUNITIES SURVIVE DISASTER
Updated
: 2009-10-01 20:14:27

Everything in the techno-capitalist society forms us into separate atoms. We demand our own space, travel in personal metal boxes, and struggle as individuals.

When disaster strikes, hardly anyone remembers how to respond. How will your community react to a major threat? Will it fall apart, or grow stronger? Is there anything you can do to prepare?

This is Radio Ecoshock. I'm your host Alex Smith.

It's a real shock when those lonely atoms, conversing through electronic screens, realize their real community is endangered, or falling apart.

The cause may be economic. A major employer, or a whole industry like the auto sector, shuts down. Or maybe gas prices collapse real estate prices in a former commuter haven.

Communities can also be hammered by a climatic event: long-term drought, burned over by fire, drowned by super-floods and storm surges, or hit by a devastating storm. The disaster can even be environmental. A nuclear plant or a pesticide plant blows up, or a super-tanker spills it's oily guts.

Not to mention the possibility of a terrorist attack, like a dirty bomb or a biological release. Did I mention earthquakes?

In this program, I'll interview Riki Ott, THE Exxon Valdez spill expert. Her town of Cordova Alaska became an early case study in how a community reacts to disaster. Still fighting the big corporation who ruined their fishing industry, and split the townsfolk, Dr. Ott has developed a program to help damaged communities anywhere in the world. She gives us practical tips you should know BEFORE your community gets hit with the unexpected.

We'll follow up with a speech by Dr. John Helliwell. He's an economist called in to an audience that included mayors of towns experiencing near total loss of employment, after major forest mills shut down. I expected a pep talk about business plans and government rescues. Helliwell surprised us all, with a new way of looking at success - one not based on wealth and more production. Instead, John Helliwell is part of a growing consensus that our economic emphasis is all wrong. We should be aiming for Gross National Happiness. An economist who sees the community links becoming more valuable than business, a voice long overdue.

First, let's talk with Riki Ott.

[Ott interview]

I want to add to Riki's Ott's response about the role of women when communities hit a calamity, whether it's natural or human-made. Riki explained that women took up a leadership role in organizing not just meetings, but the networking and re-organization that helped partly heal the community. Women tend to be experienced in both communication and working co-operatively.

The darker side is this: when things go badly, women can also be further victimized by the despair and rage felt by men. I've lived in a town where the mine closed. I reported on the increased domestic disputes, growing alcohol and drug abuse, and outright beating of women by their spouses. If a factory or a mill closes, or natural events wipe out jobs - the community will have to increase services for women, at the very time when there are fewer municipal resources to go around. A women's shelter, or at least a network of safe-houses, may be needed quickly. Keep that in mind.

In an ideal world, both men and women would find some kind of counseling for the loss of value which accompanies unemployment. Without a job, many lose their sense of self definition and worth. We can't count on higher levels of government to provide this. People need to self-organize to talk to one another.

It's my observation that larger governments are beginning to fail. They spend themselves into bankruptcy, and over-build into huge bureaucracies that are unable to respond in any meaningful way. This is true in the most advanced countries, as the bungled response to hurricane katrina in New Orleans and Mississippi showed. If your community is struck, don't wait around for the government to save you. Organize and act locally.

There are also a few cases where the community fails, and nothing can really save it. There are plenty of ghost towns where a big mine closed, and the economy shut down with it. People just moved on.

I can foresee similar situations coming from the developing economic meltdown, coupled with climate disruption. Take the Ohio rust-belt, where heavy industries fled overseas. Former CIBC investment guru Jeff Rubin predicts they will rebuild, because soaring oil prices will make shipping from China too expensive. Others calculate that ocean shipping will remain far cheaper than trucking, so imports of Chinese products will continue.

I say the Ohio and Indiana area will not re-industrialize because they are 95 percent powered by coal. As climate change becomes too obnoxious to deny, and carbon pricing clicks in, new industry will only locate where renewable power is available. The Mid-Western states will either have to enter a crash program to find carbon-free power, or face a permanent loss of population.

Sometimes communities do survive to find new and safer economies. It's happened many times, in many places. In some cases, though, it's better to get out, no matter what your loss in real estate, hopes, or good memories.

Let's get into a different kind of optimism, built from a different kind of economic world view. This speech by Dr. John Helliwell was recorded by film maker Clancy Dennehy on September 17th, 2009 at the Forestry building, University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. While it contains some references to B.C. towns devastated by mill closures - this speech is really about a global movement to redefine what an economy is. Does it produce happiness?

The introduction is by Jack Saddler, Dean of the UBC Faculty of Forestry.

[Helliwell]

You have just heard the 2009 Forestry Lecture in Sustainability, presented by economist Dr. John Helliwell. The speech was organized by the University of British Columbia Faculty of Forestry on September 17th, 2009.

The lecture was followed by an eminent panel including two top government officials, Doug Konkin, Deputy Minister of Environment, and Dana Hayden, Deputy Minister of Forests and Range. Plus Don Roberts, Managing Director, CIBC World Markets, offering a business critique.

You can download a full one hour presentation, which includes the panel comments, from the Brownbagger radio show archive, located at ecoshock.org. That's a free mp3.

My thanks to Clancy Dennehy for his recording. Look for Clancy's upcoming art film simply titled "Vancouver".

So what have we learned?

If a major disaster strikes your community, at some point you have to decide whether it's time to pitch in and rebuild - or to leave. There's an old saying, which is only true half the time: "The strong give up and move on. The weak give up and stay." I'm just saying.

If you decide to fight on - don't wait for an outside savior. Big government can't create community. Lawsuits can take 20 years before they let you down.

Big corporations can leave or fail. Build a local economy.

Redefine who you are, and include everybody. Listen to each other. Organize. And if you can, ...do it before disaster strikes.

I'm Alex Smith for Radio Ecoshock. Write me any time. The address is simply radio at ecoshock.org.

Thank you for listening this week.


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Podcaster:Jazzcorner Innerviews

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Relevant Show for hurricane katrina
Terence Blanchard - Making Choices
Updated
: 2009-09-29 06:15:03

In 2007 Terence Blanchard produced the haunting and mesmerizing CD "A Tale of God's Will" about the impact of hurricane katrina on his home town of New Orleans. Now Blanchard has come out with a new CD "Choices." Musically and thematically, Choices is a sequel to the previous CD, but conveys the positive developments in New Orleans since Katrina. Reese Erlich produced this Jazz Perspective. Terence Blanchard is performing at the Thelonious Monk Institute Bass Competition and Gala on October 11th, 2009. For more information, visit www.monkinstitute.org


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Podcaster:Jazzcorner Innerviews

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Relevant Show for hurricane katrina
Terence Blanchard - Making Choices
Updated
: 2009-09-29 06:15:03

In 2007 Terence Blanchard produced the haunting and mesmerizing CD "A Tale of God's Will" about the impact of hurricane katrina on his home town of New Orleans. Now Blanchard has come out with a new CD "Choices." Musically and thematically, Choices is a sequel to the previous CD, but conveys the positive developments in New Orleans since Katrina. Reese Erlich produced this Jazz Perspective. Terence Blanchard is performing at the Thelonious Monk Institute Bass Competition and Gala on October 11th, 2009. For more information, visit www.monkinstitute.org


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Podcaster:WNYC: The Leonard Lopate Show

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Leonard Lopate brings a diverse collection of great thinkers and talkers together for smart, unpredictable conversations. This daily program from WNYC, New York Public Radio is more like eavesdropping on a great dinner conversation than your usual talk ra


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New York NY USA

Relevant Show for hurricane katrina
A Paradise Built in Hell (The Leonard Lopate Show: Thursday, 24 September 2009)
Updated
: 2009-09-24 15:25:00

Rebecca Solnit investigates why in the aftermath of a disaster people suddenly become altruistic, resourceful, and brave. In A Paradise Built in Hell, she looks at the 1906 earthquake in San Francisco to 9/11 to hurricane katrina, among other crises, and describes how disasters can bring about social possibilities rather than leading to social break-down.

Event: Rebecca Solnit will be in conversation with Peter Coyote and will be answering audience questions
Thursday, September 24th, at 7:00 pm
New York Public Library
11 West 40th Street


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