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الساعة 11:00 م

Arbaeah | أربعة

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بودكاست الساعة 11:00 م بودكاست يأخذك في رحلة مشوقة قبل منتصف الليل، بين اليقظة والنوم، ليطل عليك بحكايات تثير رعبك وتجلب الإثارة. استعد لساعات مليئة بالدراما، الخيال العلمي، وقصص الجريمة الحقيقية. انضموا لنا في هذه الرحلة المخيفة وشاركوا في تجارب تستهوي مشاعركم المرعبة!
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عوالم غريبة، أسلحة سحرية، كنوز ذهبية، عمالقة و آلهة في قصص اسطورية. اتعرف علي أساطير جديدة في آيسيركاست. Magical weapons, golden treasures, gentle giants and glorious gods. Embrace mythology with a new story every week on Aesircast.
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يسلط بودكاست "غير شغل" الضوء على تجارب إيجابية وملهمة من خلال حوارات مع شخصيات اختارت تغيير مسار أعمالها أو شخصيات تابعت شغفها بالإضافة لعملها أوكانت مؤثرة و قدمت إنجازا يفتخر به . بإمكانكم دعم هذا البودكاست مشكورين من خلال الآشتراك عن طريق الضغط على Subscribe Inspirational podcast hosting personalities who shifted careers or their passion towards a hobby augmented their career or they achieved something exceptional that influenced others .Special thanks to: MIMBAR's Rajae Sahouri for all th ...
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Introducing ‘Storytime with Teta’. Arabic Language Podcast for kids!​Arabic stories from around the world and from famous publishing houses, narrated by your loving Teta Amal (grandma). Listen to fun and engaging stories on the go, wherever you are on iTunes and other podcast streaming platforms.​Storytime with Teta is always a Fun time!*All necessary permissions are taken from the publishers to record all books in our podcast* !الجديد والمتميز في عالم البودكاست للاطفال حكايات تيتا " قصص للا ...
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Mekudeshet ON AIR

מקודשת און אייר

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radio station that is cluing us into what the future could hold. Podcasts, pre-recorded slots, innovative magazines, audio twists, and original formats cooked up by us and served to the world in the city’s three main languages and a thousand different dialects. We tell the story of Jerusalem from Jerusalem, but we are actually talking to the world. בתוך האקס-טריטוריה הכי מסקרנת בירושלים יושבת תחנת שידור, ושולחת אל האוויר אותות שמצביעים אל העתיד. פודקאסטים, פינות מוקלטות, מגזינים חדשניים, פעי ...
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أي مبدع في العالم العربي يتطلع إلى الاستماع إلى جانبه من القصة. على الرغم من وجود الكثير من القضايا المشتركة بين المشهد الإبداعي العربي والعالم ، إلا أن لدينا بعض الخصائص التي نريد مشاركتها: تحدياتنا ومخاوفنا وسوقنا وتفكيرنا ... بشكل عام بالطريقة التي نراها!Any creative in the Arab world looking to get their side of the story heard. Although there is a lot of common issues between the Arab creative scene and the world, we have some specificities that we want to share: our challenges, our fea ...
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Shalabiyat

Shalabiyat | شلبيات

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للقصص قوة سحرية تُعيد لنا الخيال وتَطيرْ بنا إلى عوالم جديدة، وفي برنامجنا «شلبيات» تأخذنا شلبية الحكواتية إلى عالم قصصها الآسر والتي تروي من خلاله الشلبية قصص قد جمعتها على مر السنين بأسلوبها الخاص والمُمتع. تعمل شلبية الحكواتية «سالي شلبي» بين جمع القصص وروايتها منذ 12 عام. كانت بدايتها مع الأطفال وطوّرت عُروضها لتستقطب الجماهير العائلية والكبار. قصص الشلبية من كل مكان و إلهامها الأكبر من تراثها الشعبي، وفي مطبخها تستوي القصص بنكهتها الخاصة. وقد عرضت الشلبية قصصها محليًا في الأردن، ودوليًا ...
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دردشة

Islam Osman

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في دردشة هندردش كل يوم سوا في مواضيع زي البيزنيس و التقنية و غيره من المواضيع الي ممكن تهم اي حد فينا في حياته
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سيكون لي حديث معكم حول ما اراه في عالمي و محيطي وما اشعر به و احس,كم من كلمة كانت بلسماً لجرح, واخرى كانت رصاصة قاتلة, الكلمة مسؤولية
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We talk about anything normal or abnormal, anything wonderful in our lives, real horror stories, and explain real experiences that happened in real life. نتحدث عن أي شيء طبيعي أو غير طبيعي ، أي شيء رائع في حياتنا ، وقصص رعب حقيقية ، وشرح التجارب الحقيقية التي حدثت في الحياة الواقعية. وآمل أن تستمتع بمشاهدته لا تنسي ان تدعمنا بالاعجاب ومشاركه الفديوهات واشتراك فى القناه ليصلك كل الفديوهات الجديده
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HazCast

Hazem El Seddiq

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This is my podcast; the place where I speak my mind and bring on guests that I appreciate and that I want to get to know more and introduce to the world.
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Have you ever had a song continue to loop in your brain no matter how hard you tried to shake it? These “earworms” are more than just an annoyance—they’re a phenomenon scientists have studied for years. This episode dives into what makes certain melodies stick, why some tunes are more persistent than others and what our listeners shared as their mo…
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The Gaia spacecraft stopped collecting data this January after about 11 years and more than three trillion observations. Senior space and physics editor Lee Billings joins host Rachel Feltman to review Gaia’s Milky Way–mapping mission and the tidal streams, black holes and asteroids the spacecraft identified. Recommended reading: New Maps of Milky …
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The black hole at the center of our galaxy is emitting near-constant, random light. The European Space Agency has approved astronaut candidate John McFall, making McFall the first physically disabled candidate to be cleared to fly. The risk of asteroid 2024 YR4 hitting Earth rose to more than 3 percent and then dipped down to 1.5 percent with new d…
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السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته، أعزائي المستمعين، أود أن أبدأ بتقديم خالص شكري وامتناني لكم جميعًا على دعمكم المستمر وتشجيعكم. وأرحب بحرارة بجميع المتابعين الجدد الذين انضموا إلينا في هذا الموسم المميز! هذا الموسم مختلف تمامًا. سنستمع فيه معًا إلى قصص رائعة من القرآن الكريم، قصص الأنبياء والحضارات السابقة، التي تحمل بين طياتها دروسًا وحكمة وإلهامً…
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It’s fairly strange that humans, unlike many other mammals, don’t have hair all over. Our lack of body hair and wide geographic distribution led to the variation of sun-protective melanin in our skin. For the hair that remains, why did some groups develop curls while others did not? Biological anthropologist Tina Lasisi takes host Rachel Feltman th…
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Scientists now agree that COVID spreads via airborne transmission. But during the early days of the disease, public health officials suggested that it mainly did so via close contact. The subsequent back-and-forth over how COVID spread brought science journalist Carl Zimmer into the world of aerobiology. In his new book Air-Borne: The Hidden Histor…
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Love isn’t just about romance. This Valentine’s Day, we’re exploring the power of deep nonromantic bonds. Host Rachel Feltman sits down with Rhaina Cohen, a producer and editor for NPR’s podcast Embedded and author of The Other Significant Others, to discuss the history and psychology of friendship—and the reasons these connections deserve just as …
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The European Space Agency recently announced that the near-Earth asteroid 2024 YR4 has a 2 percent chance of hitting our planet in 2032. The probability of impact is difficult to predict exactly and will be clearer in 2028, when 2024 YR4 will whiz by us. But if the asteroid really is on a collision course with Earth, what can we do about it? Senior…
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A subtype of H5N1 bird flu that has been found in cattle for the first time suggests that the virus jumped from birds to the animals twice. A headline-making study estimates that we have a spoon’s worth of microplastics in our brain. Streams of rock from a cosmic impact created the moon’s two deep canyons, Vallis Schrödinger and Vallis Planck. A la…
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The first few weeks of the Trump administration have been marked by chaos and confusion for the nation’s health and science agencies. A funding freeze broadly targeting language around diversity, equity and inclusion has agencies evaluating research and initiatives. A hold on public communications from health agencies is affecting public health rep…
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It’s almost impossible not to feel outraged these days. But overexposure to information that makes us angry can wear us down. Senior health and medicine editor Tanya Lewis joins host Rachel Feltman to discuss how to combat outrage fatigue. Plus, we discuss a surprising finding about outrage and the spread of misinformation. Recommended reading: –Re…
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بدأنا حديثنا عن طفولته، وكيف نشأ في عائلة محافظة في سوريا، وتقبل عائلته لدراسته للموسيقى والفنون رغم تلك المحافظة. كما تناولنا تأثير وفاة والده على مسار حياته. تحدثنا أيضًا عن مسيرته الدراسية في الفن، وكيف اكتشف نفسه في هذا المجال، والدوافع التي دفعته للبدء فيه. كما استعرضنا تجربته الأولى في التمثيل وكيف كانت مشاعره تجاهها. ناقشنا كذلك دور ضيفنا في…
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في إطار سلسلة حلقات خاصة عن الجمهورية العربية السورية، استضفنا في الحلقة الثالثة والثلاثين من بودكاست "سطحي" الصحفي مصطفى رضوان، من أصول فلسطينية سورية ويحمل الجنسية البلغارية، ويعيش في سوريا منذ سنوات الحرب. بدأنا النقاش بالتطرق إلى "الإنسان السوري" وكيف كان يعيش وسط الأزمات والحروب المتلاحقة. تحدثنا أيضًا حياة السوريين قبل الثورة، حيث كانت الحياة…
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This week we’re recapping Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.’s confirmation hearings. Highly pathogenic H5N9, a strain of bird flu, was found in U.S. poultry. A tuberculosis outbreak in Kansas is making headlines—but how severe is the spread? Health equity reporter Bek Shackelford-Nwanganga of the Kansas News Service and KCUR joins host Rachel Feltman to unpac…
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It’s easy to be cynical about the state of the world—even when you’re a researcher who studies empathy and kindness. Stanford University psychologist Jamil Zaki turned his own negativity into his new book Hope for Cynics: The Surprising Science of Human Goodness. The book busts common myths about cynicism and explores what it could be doing to our …
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The sun is in the middle of its solar maximum, the part of its 11-year solar cycle that was responsible for the stunning auroras seen across the globe last year. This year is looking equally exciting, with more incoming space weather and a handful of science missions to study the sun’s wide-reaching behavior. Senior reporter Meghan Bartels reviews …
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Executive orders that impact science and health in the U.S. came quickly after the inauguration of President Donald Trump. Tanya Lewis, senior editor of health and medicine, explains how grievances over COVID and funding led Trump to order the U.S.’s withdrawal from the World Health Organization—and what that withdrawal would mean for global health…
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It’s easy to feel overwhelmed with the news these days and to fear for the future. What if you could interrupt doomscrolling and contribute to conservation at the same time? That’s the idea behind programs like Adventure Scientists, eBird and iNaturalist. Guest Gregg Treinish, founder and executive director of Adventure Scientists, joins host Rache…
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Net neutrality, the principle that all Internet traffic should be treated equally, was heralded by the Federal Communications Commission and open Internet advocates. A federal court struck down the FCC’s ability to enforce the policy earlier this month. What does that mean for the free and open Internet? Associate technology editor Ben Guarino join…
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A report that was recently released by the Department of Health and Human Services highlights the risks of drinking alcohol, even moderately. The Food and Drug Administration has banned the use of the dye Red No. 3 in food and other products. Experts argue that body mass index (BMI) is a flawed way to diagnose “obesity.” A SpaceX rocket successfull…
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Ouch! Ah! Aïe! The words we use when we stub our toe or receive a pinch may point to a common way to express pain across languages. Associate news editor Allison Parshall explores what linguistic commonalities in expressions of pain and joy might mean for our shared biology. Plus, Parshall and host Rachel Feltman chat about onomatopoeias, the “boub…
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H5N1 avian influenza has now reached almost 1,000 herds of dairy cattle in 16 states and has infected around 66 people, many of them agricultural workers, in the U.S. Host Rachel Feltman is joined by Amy Maxmen, a public health reporter at KFF Health News, to get the latest on bird flu. They explore how government and industry players lost control …
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Norovirus cases are up this year, with 91 reported outbreaks nationwide. Human metapneumovirus (HMPV) cases are up in China and India. There has also been an increase in the U.S., but HMPV is currently a cause for concern in the nation, where its relative commonality gives many people some immunity. Louisiana has reported the first U.S. death from …
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Pluto was unseated as our solar system’s ninth planet in 2006. Since then astronomers have found signs that a real ninth planet could be hiding at the edges of our solar system. Clara Moskowitz, senior editor for space and physics, explains how the forthcoming Vera Rubin Observatory could give researchers a way to find the real Planet Nine—if it’s …
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Going outside has many benefits, from positively affecting our nervous system to diversifying our microbiome. But you don’t need a forest preserve to benefit from nature—sometimes even a houseplant or the smell of lavender can improve our life. Kathy Willis, a professor of biodiversity at the University of Oxford, joins host Rachel Feltman to discu…
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2024 brought heat waves and hurricanes, bird flu and breakthroughs, and an overwhelming amount of progress in AI. Science Quickly host Rachel Feltman is joined by sustainability editor Andrea Thompson, health and medicine editor Tanya Lewis and technology editor Ben Guarino to recap a busy year and weigh in on the stories they’re watching in 2025. …
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Tens of thousands of animal species are facing extinction, mostly because of human activity. But thanks to conservationists, there are some animals that are making a comeback. This is part four of “The New Conservationists,” a four-part series about the evolving world of animal conservation. Listen to part one, part two and part three. Recommended …
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Ashleigh Papp, an animal scientist turned storyteller, shifts our perspective on the modern conservationist. With low wages and expectations of free work, conservation science lacks diversity as a field—but dedicated graduate students and new programs are trying to change that. Isaac Aguilar, a graduate student in the geology division at the Califo…
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Ashleigh Papp, an animal scientist turned storyteller, takes us on into the field. Conservationists and animal behaviorists were once restricted to wildlife data gathered manually. Now new technologies are expanding the amount of passively collected data—and machine learning is helping researchers cut through the noise. This is part two of The New …
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Ashleigh Papp, an animal scientist turned storyteller, takes us on a trip to the zoo. People are divided on zoos, but as Papp explains, the thoughtful work that goes into caring for animals makes modern zoos conservation powerhouses. This is part one of The New Conservationists, a four-part Friday Fascination series about the evolving world of anim…
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If you were intrigued—or disturbed—by the artificial intelligence podcast on your Spotify Wrapped, you may wonder how AI audio works. Audio Overview is a feature of the tool NotebookLM, released by Google, that allows for the creation of short podcasts with AI “hosts” summarizing information. But questions remain about the accuracy, usefulness and …
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An outbreak of an unknown illness has occurred in the Democratic of the Congo, which has already been dealing with the spread of mpox. A new study finds that leaded gasoline could be responsible for 151 million cases of mental health disorders, with impacts highest among members of Generation X. Upping your daily movement could protect you from car…
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Low iron levels can cause fatigue and impact mental health, but doctors often miss cases of iron deficiency and anemia. Pediatric hematologist Angela Weyand, a clinical associate professor at the University of Michigan Medical School in Ann Arbor, points to one population that could be at a higher risk—young women with heavy menstrual bleeding. In …
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Anthony Fauci speaks with Tanya Lewis, senior editor for health and medicine at Scientific American, about his remarkable career, as detailed in his new book On Call: A Doctor’s Journey in Public Service. They discuss the experiences he faced while guiding the U.S. through the pandemic, the lessons learned by public health practitioners and the cha…
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Black Friday sales have gone from one-day in-person shopping bonanzas to a multiday deals extravaganza. It’s tempting to give in to the seasonal pressures to shop, but knowing the tricks companies use to make sales so appealing can help us avoid overconsumption. Cathrine Jansson-Boyd, a professor of consumer psychology at Anglia Ruskin University i…
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Donald Trump has nominated RFK, Jr., to run the Department of Health and Human Services, a position that includes oversight of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Food and Drug Administration and the National Institutes of Health. Senior health and medicine editor Tanya Lewis explains what that would mean for antivaccine policies, f…
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Writings and records are how we understand long-gone civilizations without being able to interact with ancient peoples. A recent opinion paper suggested we could feed chatbots writings from the past to simulate ancient participants for social psychology studies. Similar survey experiments with modern participant data closely matched the outcomes of…
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Disparities in health are not indicated by adverse outcomes alone. Adriana Corredor-Waldron, an assistant professor of economics at NC State University, sought to understand why Black infants are more likely to be delivered by C-section than white infants. A working paper she co-authored found that the elevated number of low-risk Black pregnant peo…
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A wildfire in Brooklyn, N.Y.’s Prospect Park was in part linked to drought conditions nationally. Plastic waste is set to grow with our expanding economy, but potential solutions look promising. Drops in gonorrhea and early-stage syphilis point to the first decline in sexually transmitted infections in 20 years. Voyager 2’s fly-by of Uranus in the …
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Tomorrow marks the 50th anniversary of a transmission from the Arecibo Observatory, intended as our first attempt to send a message to intelligent life across the universe. Journalist Nadia Drake talks about the careful crafting of the signal and her personal connection with the astronomer who authored the transmission: her father Frank Drake. Reco…
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What does the Declaration of Independence have in common with Vincent van Gogh’s sketches? The ink used to produce them came from wasps. From pests to products, insects have played an enormous role in human history. Entomologist and animal behaviorist Barrett Klein encourages a historical and scientific perspective on these creatures and invites us…
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A wooden solution to metal satellites polluting space. Water woes create droughts in 48 of the 50 U.S. states—and climate change is of course a culprit. Microplastics could make wastewater recycling more challenging. And researchers figure out how mud from a secret spot off the Delaware River makes baseballs easier to grip. Recommended reading: How…
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في الحلقة الواحد والثلاثون من بودكاست سطحي، استضفنا فوزي بهزاد، مستشار اقتصاد. في البداية، ناقشنا موضوع الاستثمار الأجنبي، حيث أكد ضيفنا على أهمية الاستثمار المحلي والوطني. وأشار إلى أن الاستثمار الأجنبي يجب أن يأتي برأس مال كافٍ للمشروع الذي يتحدث عنه، وأن يتضمن تقنيات جديدة تساهم في قيمة مضافة للدولة. وأكد على أهمية أن تستهدف الدولة استثمارات لا …
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Send us a text ضيف الحلقة الإعلامي الاستثنائي ريكاردو كرم والذي امتاز في مقابلاته مع المشاهير الذين أحدثوا تغييرا ايجابيا في مجالاتهم. يتحدث ريكاردو عن بداياته وتطوَر مسيرته المهنية وتنوع أعماله. أيضا نتعرف على ريكاردو الإنسان وتطلعاته وما يراوده فيما يتعلق بمنطقتنا العربية وخاصة لبنان وفلسطين سجلت هذه الحلقة في أيلول ٢٠٢٤ In this episode I talk to…
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Could our fixation on weight actually be harming, rather than helping, people’s health? Host Rachel Feltman is joined by Ragen Chastain, a writer, researcher and board-certified patient advocate, to discuss how weight stigma could be fueling many of the negative health outcomes we commonly link to weight gain. This episode is part of “Health Equity…
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Rising Signs: The Medieval Science of Astrology, a new exhibit at the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles, takes a look at medieval manuscripts to showcase the importance of astrology to the period’s elites. Larisa Grollemond, an assistant curator at the museum, takes us through the impact of astrology on day-to-day decisions and the way it became …
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