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Catherine Juvinao: "El Partido Verde no es chicha ni limona, no se ha definido la visión del centro"




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“Esta es la inminente destrucción del sistema de salud”: Alejandro Gaviria

El exministro de Salud, cree que la intervención a la EPS Sanitas, es muestra de un revanchismo ideológico que se está anteponiendo al mismo sistema en el país.




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Catherine Juvinao denuncia cartelización de la Liga Profesional Femenina de Fútbol

La congresista se refirió en 6AM a la investigación que adelanta la Superintendencia de Industria y Comercio (SIC) en la que se evidenciaron varias irregularidades 




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Mineducación sobre elección de rector de la U. Nacional: “Acta no refleja la votación”

La jefe de la cartera de Educación,  Aurora Vergara, se refirió a la posesión de José Ismael Peña como el nuevo rector de la Universidad Nacional




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Ningún paciente se quedará sin su tratamiento mientras la Supersalud define la situación: Sura

En Caracol Radio estuvo Juana Francisca Llano, presidenta Suramericana.




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Este Gobierno está pasando por encima de lo técnico lo político: Asomineros

En Caracol Radio estuvo Ivonne Consuelo González, presidenta de la Asomineros




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Alejandro Santos al punto: ¿Qué implicaciones podría tener los constantes cambios del gabinete de Petro?

El presidente Gustavo Petro anunció el tercer remezón ministerial 




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Olmedo está induciendo a la justicia a errores para tapar el dinero que robó: Luis Velasco

En el programa 6AM Hoy por Hoy de Caracol Radio, el Ministro del interior no guarda sus palabras al señalar al exfuncionario Olmedo López




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“Dinero de venta de las acciones no entraría al distrito, pasaría a EPM”: Fico Gutiérrez

En 6AM Hoy por Hoy de Caracol Radio estuvo el alcalde de Medellín, Federico Gutiérrez, para hablar sobre cómo sería la venta que plantea para las acciones de EPM en Tigo-Une y en qué se invertirían los recursos recaudados.




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No todo es dinero, es más importante la camiseta del país: Entrenador de Ángel Barajas

En 6AM Hoy por Hoy de caracol Radio estuvo el entrenador de Ángel Barajas, gimnasta colombiano que ganó medalla de plata en la disciplina de barra fija. Le contamos lo que dijo.




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Hay que diferenciar intereses empresariales de las causas justas: Minenergía sobre paro

Andres Camacho, ministro de Minas y Energía, estuvo en 6AM para hablar del acuerdo entre el Gobierno y los transportadores que se manifestaron en los últimos días.




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“La ineptitud y la ineficacia no son excusas para clavar más impuestos”: Angélica Lozano

La senadora estuvo en 6AM para hablar sobre el presupuesto para el año 2025.




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Estamos tranquilos por Huracán Miltón, pero el peligro es inminente:colombiano en Florida

Alberto Caicedo. Colombiano en Tampa, habló en 6AM sobre las medidas que implementarán para mitigar consecuencias del paso del Huracán.




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CNE no tiene competencia para postularle cargos a Petro: Landinez

En Caracol Radio estuvo Heráclito Landinez, representante a la Cámara, conversando sobre la campaña del presidente




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Oro no se esconde porque la ministra Muhamad diga que es reserva: Asociación de Mineros

Ivonne González, presidenta de la Asociación de Mineros y Joyeros de Vetas, estuvo en 6AM para abordar la problemática alrededor del decreto 044 del 2024.




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“Esto es una muerte anunciada”: ACM sobre efectos de decreto para la minería

Juan Camilo Nariño, presidente de la Asociación Colombiana de Minería, estuvo en 6AM para ampliar la problemática sobre los efectos alrededor del decreto 044 del 2024.




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“Esto es una muerte anunciada”: ACM sobre efectos de decreto para la minería

Juan Camilo Nariño, presidente de la Asociación Colombiana de Minería, estuvo en 6AM para ampliar la problemática sobre los efectos alrededor del decreto 044 del 2024.




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Autopista Norte está encima del humedal, la situación de ayer era inevitable: Galán

Carlos Fernando Galán, alcalde de Bogotá, hizo hincapié en cuáles son las principales causas de las inundaciones en la Autopista Norte 




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PERFORMANCE / TOUR: Announcing SMOKE Jazz Club’s December Line-up Featuring The 12th Annual Coltrane Festival With Ravi Coltrane’s Smoke Debut, A Spectacular New Year’s Eve Celebration, Catherine Russell and Sean Mason, And More

Entering its second quarter century as committed as ever to pure jazz (All About Jazz),” SMOKE Jazz Club continues its 25th anniversary season with an exciting line-up in December. The holiday season kickstarts with “A Nat King Cole Christmas” featuring singer Allan Harris (Dec 4). SMOKE is thrilled to welcome acclaimed vocalist Catherine Russell in her club debut in a thrilling duo with pianist Sean Mason (Dec 5-8) performing repertoire off their latest album My Ideal...




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Engineering Search Outcomes

Kent Walker promotes public policies which advantage the Google monopoly.

His role doing that means he has to write some really bad hot takes that lack context or intentionally & dishonestly redirect attention away from core issues - that's his job.

With that in mind, his most recent blog post defending the Google monopoly was exceptional.

Force Ranking of Inferior Search Results

"When you have an urgent question — like “stroke symptoms” — Google Search could be barred from giving you immediate and clear information, and instead be required to direct you to a mix of low quality results."

On some search queries users get a wall of Google ads, the forced ranked Google insert (or sometimes multiple of them with local & ecommerce) and then there can even be a "people also ask" box above the first organic result.

The idea that organic results must be low quality if not owned & operated indicates 1 of the following 3 must be true:

  • they should not be in search
  • their content scraping & various revenue shifting scams with their ad tech stack demonetized legit publishers
  • their forced rank of their own content is stripping them of the signals needed to rank websites & pages

Whenever Google puts a "people also ask" box above the first organic result that is them saying they did not know what to rank, or they are just trying to create a visual block to push the organic result set down the page and user attention back up toward the ads.

The solution to Google's claims is easy to solve. Either of the following would work.

  • Have an API that allows user choice (to set rich snippet or vertical defaults in various categories), or
  • If the vertical inserts remain Google-only then for Google to justify force ranking their own results above the organic result set Google should also be required to rank those same results above all of their ads, so that Google is demonetizing Google along with the rest of the ecosystem, rather than just demonetizing third parties.

If the thesis that this information needs to be front and center & that is a matter of life or death, then asking searchers to first scroll past a page or two of ads is not particularly legitimate.

Spam & Security

"when you use Google Search or Google Play, we might have to give equal prominence to a raft of spammy and low-quality services."

Many of the worst versions of spam that have repeatedly made news headlines like fake tech support, fake government document providers, and fake locksmiths were buying distribution through Google Ads or were featured in the search results through Google force ranking their own local search offering even though they knew the results were vastly inferior to Yelp.

If Google did not force rank Google local results above the rest of the organic result set then the fake locksmiths would not have ranked.

I have lost count of how many articles I have read about hundreds or thousands of fake apps in the Google Play store which existed to defraud advertisers or commit identity theft, but there have been literally thousands of such articles. I see a similar headline at least once a month without eve looking for them. Here is one this week for scammers monetizing the popularity of Wordle with fake apps.

Making matters worse, some of the tech support scams showed the URL of a real business and rerouted the call through a Google number directly to a scammer. A searcher who trusted Google & sees Apple.com or Dell.com on Google Ads in the search results then got connected with a scammer who would commit identity theft or encrypt their computer then demand ransom cryptocurrency payments to decrypt it.

After making the ads harder to run for scammers Google decided the problem was too hard & expensive to sort out so they also blocked legitimate computer repair shops.

Sometimes Google considers something spam strictly due to financial considerations.

Their old remote rater documents stated *HELPFUL* hotel affiliate websites should be labeled as spam.

Years later the big OTAs are complaining about Google eating their lunch as well as Google is twice as big as the next player.

At one point Google got busted for helping an advertiser route around the automated safety features built into their ad network so that they could pay Google to run ads promoting illegal steroids.

With cartels, you can only buy illegal goods and services from the cartel if you don't want to suffer ill consequences. The same appears to be true here.

The China Problem

"Handicapping America’s technology leaders would threaten our leading sources of research and development spending — just as bipartisan voices in Congress are recognizing the need to increase American R&D investment to stay competitive in the global race for AI, quantum, and other advanced technologies."

We are patriotic, and, but China... is a favorite misdirection of a tech monopolist.

The problem with that is while Eric Schmidt warns it is a national emergency if China overtakes the US in AI tech, Google also operates an AI tech lab in China.

In other words, Eric Schmidt is trying to warn you about himself and his business interests at Google.

Duplicitous? Absolutely.

Patriotic? Less than Chamath!

Inflation

"the online services targeted by these bills have reduced prices; these bills say nothing about sectors where prices have actually been rising and contributing to inflation."

Technology is no doubt deflationary (moving bits on an optical line is cheaper than printing out a book and shipping it across the world) BUT some dominant channels have increased the cost of distribution by increasing the chunk size of information and withholding performance information.

Before Google Analytics was "free" there was a rich and vibrant set of competition in web analytics software with lots of innovation from players like ClickTracks.

Most competing solutions went away.

Google moved away from an installed licensing model to a hosted service where they can change the price upon contract renewal.

Search hid progressively more performance information over time, only sampled data from larger data sets, & now you can sign up for Google Analytics 360 starting at only $150,000 per year.

The hidden search performance data also has many layers to that onion. Not only does Google not show keyword referrers on organic search, but they often don't show your paid search keywords either, and they keep extending out keyword targeting broader than advertisers intend.

Google used to pay Brad Geddes to run official Google AdWords ad training seminars for advertisers, so the idea that *he* has to express his frustrations on Twitter is an indication of how little effort Google is putting into having open communications channels or caring about what their advertisers think.

This is in accordance with the Google customer service philosophy:

he told her that the whole idea of customer support was ridiculous. Rather than assuming the unscalable task of answering users one by one, Page said, Google should enable users to answer one another's questions.

Those who were paying for ads get the above "serve yourself" treatment, all the while Google regularly resets user default ad settings to extend out ad distribution, automatically ad keywords, shift to enhanced AdWords ad campaigns, etc.

Then there are other features which would be beneficial and offered in a competitive market that have been deprioritized. Many years ago eBay did a study which showed their branded Google AdWords ad buys were cannibalistic to eBay profits. Google maintained most advertisers could not conduct such a study because it would be too expensive and Google does not make the feature set available as part of their ad suite.

Missing Information

"When you search for local businesses, Google Search and Maps may be prohibited from highlighting information we gather about hours of operation, contact information, and reviews. That could hurt small businesses and local retailers, as well as their customers."

Claiming reviews or an attempt to offer a comprehensive set of accurate review data as a strong point would be economical with the truth.

Back when I had a local business page my only review was from a locksmith spammer / scammer who praised his own two businesses, trashed a dozen other local locksmiths, crapped on a couple local SEO services, and joked about how a local mover smashed the guts out of his dog. Scammer fake reviewer's name was rather sophisticated ... it was ... Loop Dee Loop

About a decade back when Google was clearly losing Google took Yelp reviews wholesale (sometimes without even attributing them to Yelp!) and told Yelp that if they did not want Google stealing their work and displacing them with a copy of it then they should block GoogleBot. Google offered the same sort of advice / threat to TripAdvisor.

A few years before that Google temporarily "forgot" to show phone numbers on local listings.

After Yelp turned down an acquisition offer by Google & Yelp did a great job making some people aware of how Google was stealing their reviews wholesale without attribution Google bought Zagat & Fromer's to augment the Google local review data and then sold those businesses off.

This is sort of the same playbook Google has run in the past elsewhere. After Groupon said no to Google's acquisition offer, Google quickly provided daily deal ads to over a dozen Groupon competitors to help commoditize the Groupon offering and market position.

Ultimately with the above sort of stuff Google is primarily a volume aggregator or has lower editorial costs than pure plays due to the ability to force bundle their own distribution. And they use the ability to rank themselves above a neutral algorithmic position as a core part of their biz dev strategy. When shopping search engines were popular Google kept rewording the question set they sent remote raters to justify rank demotion for shopping search engines & Google also came up with innovative ranking "signals" like concurrent ranking of their own vertical search offering whenever competitors x or y are shown in the result set & rolled out a "diversity" algorithm to limit how many comparison shopping sites could appear in the search results. The intent of the change was strictly anti-competitive:

"Although Google originally sought to demote all comparison shopping websites, after Google raters provided negative feedback to such a widespread demotion, Google implemented the current iteration of its so-called 'diversity' algorithm."

As a matter of fact, part of one of many document dumps in recent years went further than the old concurrent ranking signal to a rank x above y feature which highlights how YouTube can be hard coded at a number 1 ranking position.

Part of that guide highlighted how to hardcode ranking YouTube #1.

If you re-represent content & can force rank yourself #1 (with larger listings) that can be used to force other players onto your platform on your terms. Back when YouTube was must less of a sure thing Google suggested they could threaten to change copyright.

This same approach to "relevancy" is everywhere.

Did you watermark your images? Well shame on you, as that is good for a rank demotion

And if there are photos which are deemed illegal Google will make you file an endless series of DMCA removal requests even though they already had the image fingerprinted.

Now there are some issues where there is missing information. These areas involve original reporting on local politics & are called news deserts. As the ad pie has consolidated around Google & Facebook that has left many newspapers high and dry.

Private equity players like Alden Global Capital buy up newspapers, fire journalists, and monetize brand equity as they drive the papers into the ground.

If you are sub-scale maybe Google steals your money or hits you with a false positive algorithm flag that has you seeking professional mental health help.

Big players get a slower blood letting.

Google has maintained they do not make any money from news search, but the states lawsuit around ad tech made it clear Google promoted AMP for anti-competitive purposes to block header bidding, lied to news publishers to get them to adopt AMP and eat the tech costs of implementation, did a deal with their biggest competitor in online advertising Facebook to maintain the status quo, charge over double what their competitors do for ad tech, and had a variety of bid rigging auction manipulation algorithms they used to keep funneling more money to themselves.

Internally they had an OKR to make *most* search clicks land on AMP pages within a year of launch

"AMP launched as an open source project in October 2015, with 26 publishers and over 40 publications already publishing AMP files for our preview demo. Our team built g.co/ampdemo and is now racing towards launching it for all of our users. We're responsible for the AMP @ Google integrations, particularly focusing on Search, our most visible product. We have a Google-wide 2016 OKR to deliver! By the end of 2016, our goal is that 50%+ of content consumed through Search is being consumed through AMP."

You don't get over half the web to shift to a proprietary version of HTML in under a year without a lot of manipulation.

Categories: 




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Lemminkainen's Blues

Always listen to your mother — that's advice the = legendary Finnish figure Lemminkainen might have wanted to take. But he = thought he knew better and got into trouble for his antics. We hear = Lemminkainen and the Maidens of Saari, set to music by Jean Sibelius and = performed by the Iceland Symphony Orchestra and conductor Arvo Volmer in = Reykjavik.=20




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Scientists try to repopulate shorelines with an endangered snail

On a rare undeveloped point of the California coast, scientists are trying to repopulate shorelines with an endangered marine snail. This type of experimental conservation is becoming more necessary. This story first aired on All Things Considered on November 7, 2024.




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Gangs in Haiti shot at a Spirit Airlines plane as it was trying to land in Port-Au-Prince

Violence continues in Haiti, despite the appointment of a new prime minister. The international airport was shut down after shots were fired at a landing commercial flight.




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The long and complicated — and expensive — effort to replace lead lines in the U.S.

Cincinnati's public water utility is on a years-long effort to replace its lead service lines. They began in 2016 following the crisis in Flint, Michigan.




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WMM presents: Katie Gilchrist + Karalyne Winegarner + Destiny Atkinson & Kate Hall of Afterword Tavern & Shelves

Wednesday MidDay Medley Produced and Hosted by Mark Manning Wednesday, November 6, 2024 Katie Gilchrist + Karalyne Winegarner + Destiny Atkinson & Kate Hall of Afterword Tavern & Shelves Mark […]

The post WMM presents: Katie Gilchrist + Karalyne Winegarner + Destiny Atkinson & Kate Hall of Afterword Tavern & Shelves appeared first on KKFI.




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Artspeak Radio with David Tomas Martinez, Poppy Di Candelo, and Michael Baxley

Artspeak Radio, Wednesday, November 6, 2024, 9am -10am CST, 90.1fm KKFI Kansas City Community Radio, streaming live audio www.kkfi.org Producer/host Maria Vasquez Boyd talks with David Tomas Martinez, Poppy Di […]

The post Artspeak Radio with David Tomas Martinez, Poppy Di Candelo, and Michael Baxley appeared first on KKFI.




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Arts Magazine Show: KC Public Theatre Presents The Disappointments

KC Public Theatre: Three Cast Members join Michael in studio- Kelly Main Shane St. James Jake Golliher SHOW SCHEDULE Nov. 15-17 @ 7:30pm LOCATION KCPublic’s Oak Street Studio 1519 Oak […]

The post Arts Magazine Show: KC Public Theatre Presents The Disappointments appeared first on KKFI.




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Arts Magazine Show: KC Lyric Opera Presents The Barber of Seville

The Barber of Seville CONDUCTOR–James Lowe Johnathan McCullough–Figaro Join Michael in studio to talk Lyric Opera and the wonderful upcoming classic, The Barber of Seville. For more information, please visit- […]

The post Arts Magazine Show: KC Lyric Opera Presents The Barber of Seville appeared first on KKFI.




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Catherine Lacey imagines a character without race or gender in her novel, Pew

The American author of Pew spoke with Eleanor Wachtel about writing a novel that examines faith, forgiveness and identity politics.



  • Radio/Writers & Company

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Social tech can be a lifeline and challenge to friendship, says researcher

The evolutionary biology of friendship and how digital tech has shaped our fundamental sense of togetherness.




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Pandemic online shopping boom has generated bumper crop of vulnerable personal data, e-commerce experts warn

The pandemic has driven consumers online for everything from groceries to outdoor heaters. But e-commerce experts caution that online sellers are netting not just revenue, but a treasure trove of personal data, too.




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Decentralized web movement imagines 'a web with many winners' that puts community first

Mai Ishikawa Sutton and Alicia Urquidi Díaz discuss the vision behind the movement known as DWeb, and how the decentralized web combines the community aspect of the '90s online experience with today's equity and accessibility principles.




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Thanks to machines, humans are trained to change the way we speak

On today's social media platforms, people speak in code to elude algorithmic censors, an example of how improvisation reshapes language.




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Monday, Feb. 20, 2023: Neil Young and Da'Vine Joy Randolph

Today on Q with Tom Power: iconic musician Neil Young and actor Da'Vine Joy Randolph




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Tuesday, March 7, 2023: Catherine Hernandez and M. M. Keeravaani

Today on Q with Tom Power: author Catherine Hernandez and composer M. M. Keeravaani




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Oct. 18, 2024: Butter vs. Margarine & Newfoundland Time Zone

Is butter better than margarine? Derek Seguin and Matt Wright churn out jokes in a battle for the superior spread. Then, Nour Hadidi and Hisham Kelati get in the zone when they decide if Newfoundland has the best time zone.



  • Radio/The Debaters

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Nov. 8, 2024: Wine Appreciation & E-Bikes and E-Scooters

To honour the passing of Edmonton's wonderful and hilarious Kathleen McGee, The Debaters is re-airing one of her memorable debates from 2021. Featuring Kathleen McGee, Erica Sigurdson, Peter Brown and Ryan Williams in East Vancouver.



  • Radio/The Debaters

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Chris Hall: Conservative whip compares online Commons voting to 'swiping right' on Tinder

A senior Conservative MP is comparing a government proposal for online voting in the House of Commons to the dating app Tinder.



  • Radio/The House

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The risk of arming Ukraine, board game cafes in Iran, iconoclasm, Bayonetta 3, the Proud Boys and more

How a multi-Billion dollar campaign to arm Ukraine might fuel the illicit arms trade; How Iran's board game cafes allowed young people to imagine a different future; Bayonetta 3 is out this week — should you play it?; a brief history of targeting art for political protest; author Andy Campbell says the era of political violence the Proud Boys helped usher in is here to stay; and more.



  • Radio/Day 6

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RSV among Inuit kids, winter in Ukraine, Wales fans at the World Cup, Goodnight Oppy and more

Why RSV cases are so high among Inuit children; Wales soccer fans confront their misgivings about Qatar at their first World Cup in 64 years; as Russia ramps up missile strikes, Ukrainians brace for a cold, dark winter; how a provincial billing change could reduce gender-affirming health care in Ontario; and more.



  • Radio/Day 6

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Connor Bedard, Damar Hamlin, Prince Harry's book, Ozempic, Dry January, portable MRNA vaccine factories & more

Connor Bedard's former coach says the World Junior hockey phenom is something special; how Buffalo is rallying together after Damar Hamlin's near death on the football field; how the bid to keep Prince Harry's memoir from leaking plays into the hype; seriously though, what exactly is Ozempic?; Toronto bartender mixes alcohol-free cocktails for Dry January and beyond; why BioNTech's plan to ship prefabricated mRNA vaccine factories to Rwanda is controversial; and more.



  • Radio/Day 6

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Nine minutes that changed the world

In 1876, the poet Stéphane Mallarmé published a poem entitled "The Afternoon of a Faun." He doubted anyone could set it to music successfully. But composer Claude Debussy did exactly that. The music runs only about nine minutes long, but it helped give birth to the modern era as we know it.




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The Sunday Magazine for August 11, 2024

We explore how the white working class became a force in American politics, linguist Adam Aleksic spells out how online subcultures shape popular language, Shireen Ahmed and Morgan Campbell look back on the Paris Olympics, and historian Mary Beard shares lessons for our world from the Roman Empire.



  • Radio/The Sunday Magazine

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The Sunday Magazine for August 18, 2024

Toluse Olorunnipa, Molly Ball, and Keith Boag unpack the latest on Kamala Harris' election campaign, science writer Amorina Kingdon explains the effect of human activity on the natural marine soundscape, Jennifer Welsh and Arif Lalani discuss the latest developments in the conflicts in the Middle East and Ukraine, and Fei-Fei Li reflects on her groundbreaking work in AI.



  • Radio/The Sunday Magazine

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The Sunday Magazine for August 25, 2024

Emilie Nicolas, Marieke Walsh, and David Herle explore what's at stake for the federal Liberals ahead of Parliament's return, Viet Thanh Nguyen talks about his latest kids book Simone, and we present Piya Chattopadhyay's on-stage conversation with four journalists about the vital role of local news – and new ideas emerging to enhance it.



  • Radio/The Sunday Magazine

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The Sunday Magazine for September 1, 2024

Bea Bruske reflects on the state of the labour movement today, katherena vermette explores how "pretendians" damage Indigenous communities, Jon Ronson talks about how pandemic lockdowns helped fuel culture wars, and Maya Shankar offers advice on how we can all weather change better.



  • Radio/The Sunday Magazine

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The Sunday Magazine for September 8, 2024

Our Sunday Politics Panel breaks down the NDP-Liberal breakup, Roland Allen explores why the notebook endures in the digital age, Nate Silver weighs the rewards of taking risks in politics and beyond, and our monthly challenge That's Puzzling! returns.



  • Radio/The Sunday Magazine

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The Sunday Magazine for September 15, 2024

John Gradek unpacks the Air Canada pilot dispute, Marieke Walsh sets up Parliament's return, Walter Frisch explores why the classic song "Over the Rainbow" continues to endure, Armine Yalnizyan and Mikal Skuterud weigh the stakes of changes to Canada's immigration policy, and Ben Yagoda charts the rise of Britishisms in North American English.



  • Radio/The Sunday Magazine

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The Sunday Magazine for September 22, 2024

Christopher Kirchhoff explores how technology is shaping global conflict, Nathan Law reflects on fighting for democracy in Hong Kong, Susanne Craig shares her reporting on Donald Trump's wealth, and Guy Vanderhaeghe looks back on what shaped him as a writer.



  • Radio/The Sunday Magazine

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The Sunday Magazine for September 29, 2024

We unpack the latest on rising tensions in the Middle East, novelist Richard Powers reflects on finding possibility in the threats we face, Sixties Scoop survivor Andrea Currie shares her story and efforts to help other Indigenous people heal, and Eli Burnstein talks about the value of parsing fine distinctions in everyday language.



  • Radio/The Sunday Magazine