Oh No Ross and Carrie! : Ross and Carrie try out all sorts of things and people making fringe claims about health, wellness, spirituality, psychic powers, etc. and then report back (So far in ten years they've found about half a dozen that actually worked.)
In Research Of: An archaeologist and a friend rewatch the 1970s Leonard Nimoy "In Search Of" TV and update us with the latest research on the topics it covered (Like Ghosts, Hurricanes, and the Loch Ness Monster)
Mathematical Objects: Two math professors discuss a neat math thing (like a mobius strip or a Rubik's cube or a twenty-sided die). Possibly on;y cool if you wee raised by feral mathematicians, but I enjoy it.
This Podcast Will Kill You: Two public health experts tell you all about something that could kill you every episode. (Lightning strikes? Polio? Guinea worm? Take your pick.) They cover both the biology/science and the public health/culture/history aspects.
Jay and Miles X-Plain the X-Men: Two comics nerds explain the entire history of X-Men comics, in order from the beginning. You don't have to know or care about the X-Men to enjoy this (but you will end up knowing and caring if you do.)
no subject
Oh No Ross and Carrie! : Ross and Carrie try out all sorts of things and people making fringe claims about health, wellness, spirituality, psychic powers, etc. and then report back (So far in ten years they've found about half a dozen that actually worked.)
In Research Of: An archaeologist and a friend rewatch the 1970s Leonard Nimoy "In Search Of" TV and update us with the latest research on the topics it covered (Like Ghosts, Hurricanes, and the Loch Ness Monster)
Mathematical Objects: Two math professors discuss a neat math thing (like a mobius strip or a Rubik's cube or a twenty-sided die). Possibly on;y cool if you wee raised by feral mathematicians, but I enjoy it.
This Podcast Will Kill You: Two public health experts tell you all about something that could kill you every episode. (Lightning strikes? Polio? Guinea worm? Take your pick.) They cover both the biology/science and the public health/culture/history aspects.
Jay and Miles X-Plain the X-Men: Two comics nerds explain the entire history of X-Men comics, in order from the beginning. You don't have to know or care about the X-Men to enjoy this (but you will end up knowing and caring if you do.)