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101 Early Wallace Stevens Poems on Free Audio

≡ Category: Literature |2 Comments

Here’s a quick little find for the poetry lover: A slew of early poems by Wallace Stevens, the great American poet, can now be downloaded as podcasts (iTunes). They include many classics — Anecdote of the Jar, The Emperor of Ice Cream, Peter Quince at the Clavier, Sunday Morning, Thirteen Ways of Looking at a [...]

The Podcast Library

≡ Category: Uncategorized |2 Comments

100s of cultural and educational podcasts. Email a friend about Open
Culture.

Arts & Culture Podcasts
Audio Book Podcasts
Foreign Language Lesson Podcasts
News/Information Podcasts
Science Podcasts
Technology Podcasts
University Podcasts - All
University Podcasts - Business School

Einstein’s E = mc2 Explained

≡ Category: Science, Video - Science |1 Comment

E = mc2. It’s hands-down the most well known equation out there. But how many have the faintest idea what the equation really means? Not too long ago, PBS’ NOVA put together a “docudrama,” called Einstein’s Big Idea, which took a close look at how Einstein arrived at the equation and what it means. Along [...]

The Big Picture: Who Won and Lost in Iraq

≡ Category: Current Affairs |Leave a Comment

 

Open Source, an always insightful public radio program, aired last week a show that took a broad look at the winners and losers of the Iraq war. Taking up a theme that was also recently explored in an edition of Foreign Policy magazine, the host, Christopher Lydon, spoke with a panel of experts from respected [...]

Stanford Online Writing Courses: Now Open for Registration

≡ Category: Uncategorized |1 Comment

 

Here’s a quick heads up: Starting today, you can
register for online writing courses at Stanford. Offered by Stanford
Continuing Studies and the Stanford Creative Writing Program (which is
one of the most distinguished writing programs in the country), these online
courses give beginning and advanced writers, no matter where they live,
the chance to refine their craft in a [...]

The New Yorker Magazine’s Famous Cartoons Now Available on Podcast

≡ Category: Media |Leave a Comment

Here’s a different kind of podcast: You can now find on iTunes a new video podcast that features animated
versions of The New Yorker’s famous cartoons. A venture called RingTales has apparently been given an exclusive license to animate and distribute The New Yorker’s library of over 70,000 cartoons. Each week, they’ll issue three new [...]

More Free Classical Music Podcasts: Bach, Beethoven, Mozart, Wagner and Some Yo-Yo Ma

≡ Category: Music |2 Comments

 

We spent some time this weekend overhauling our Arts & Culture Podcast Collection (plus creating a
new Science Podcast Collection), and, along the way, we dug up several good free podcasts for classical music fans. Here’s a quick overview of what we found:
With last year being the 250th anniversary of Mozart’s birth, there was no [...]

Science Podcast Collection

≡ Category: Science |10 Comments

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All in the Mind iTunes Feed Web Site

An Australian podcast that explores the mental universe - neuroscience really - and takes a clear look at everything from addiction to artificial intelligence.

Astronomy Cast iTunes Feed Web Site

Take a weekly facts-based journey through [...]

College Bans Wikipedia

≡ Category: Uncategorized |Leave a Comment

A History Department Bans Citing Wikipedia as a Research Source
"…the Middlebury history department notified its students this month that Wikipedia could not be cited in papers or exams, and that students could not “point to Wikipedia or any similar source that may appear in the future to escape the consequences of errors.
With the move, Middlebury, [...]

Weekly Wrap-Up - Feb. 23

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Here’s a quick recap of what we brought you this week:

University Video Collection
The Top 25 Educational Podcasts on iTunes
Part 1: Learning the Languages of the New World Powers - Brazilian Portuguese
Part 2: Learning the Languages of the New World Powers - Russian
Part 3: Learning the Languages of the New World Powers [...]

University Video Collections

≡ Category: Uncategorized |2 Comments

Below, you will find enriching video collections from America’s leading colleges and universities. Take a look around, and you’ll be sure to find something that speaks to your personal passions and interests. If you know of other good collections that haven’t been included here, please feel free to let us know. Enjoy.

Columbia Interactive

A gateway to [...]

Goodies from Our Readers - Take 1

≡ Category: Uncategorized |Leave a Comment

Here’s a new feature that we’ll do on a regular basis. If you know of goodies (podcasts, videos, etc.) related to what we generally discuss here, and if you think other readers might appreciate them, please drop us an email (or post your tips in the comments section below) and we’ll do our best to [...]

The Top 25 Educational Podcasts on iTunes

≡ Category: Uncategorized |Leave a Comment

Below, you’ll find iTunes’ ranking of the top 25 educational podcasts. For your convenience, we’ve included links to the feed for each podcast so that you can access it any way you like. We’ll aim to
update this list twice per month and highlight what’s new and worth listening to.
#1. Coffee Break Spanish  iTunes  Feed  [...]

Quick View: Learning the Languages of the New World Powers

≡ Category: Business, Foreign Language |3 Comments

This page will give you quick access to our four-part series, Learning the Languages of the New
World Powers. Here, you’ll find articles highlighting free podcasts that will help you travel and do business in China, India, Russia and Brazil. Below, we’ve listed the links to each article, plus the podcasts mentioned in each:
Part 1: [...]

Part 4: Learning the Languages of the New World Powers - China

≡ Category: Foreign Language |2 Comments

China is the 800 pound gorilla among the new emerging world powers Its economy, says Goldman Sachs, may outsize every economy except the United States by 2016, and even surpass the US as soon as 2039. There is no point in belaboring things. China will be a force to be reckoned with.
According to yesterday’s New [...]

Steve Jobs on DRM: The Business Strategy Behind the Manifesto

≡ Category: Apple, Television |Leave a Comment

Most of the outside world didn’t care. They didn’t even know what Steve Jobs was talking about. But within tech circles it was a big deal, a landmark moment. Jobs’ s anti-DRM manifesto, Thoughts on Music, moved us all closer to the day when music would be set free. (DRM = Digital Rights Management. [...]

Part 3: Learning the Languages of the New World Powers - Hindi

≡ Category: Foreign Language |Leave a Comment

If you take even the slightest time to read the newspaper these days, you’ll know that the two
most important emerging powers are India and China. Goldman Sachs maintains that India has positioned itself to become a dominant global supplier of manufactured goods and services, and, in the coming decades, it’s economy will likely grow faster [...]

Open Culture Podcast Directories Viewable in Feed Readers

≡ Category: Uncategorized |Leave a Comment

The only downside to using a feed reader (Bloglines, Google Reader, MyYahoo, etc.) to access Open Culture
is that you won’t be able to see our podcast directories which reside
in our left nav bar. To assist you, we have pasted links below that
will give you direct access to the podcast collections. We’ll post this reminder from [...]

Part 2: Learning the Languages of the New World Powers - Russian

≡ Category: Foreign Language |Leave a Comment

Along with Brazil, Russia is the other junior member of the BRICs (see Part 1 for more on the BRIC concept.)
While it’s not necessarily the country that’s first on America’s list of future economic competitors, it’s expected to be a player. And, if Goldman Sachs is right, Russia, a resource-rich nation, will overtake Italy’s economy [...]

Learning the Languages of the New World Powers

≡ Category: Foreign Language |1 Comment

According to a much discussed report by Goldman Sachs, the economies of Brazil, Russia, India, and China — or what they collectively call the BRICs — are rapidly growing and could overshadow today’s major economic powers (including the US) by 2050. What does that mean for you? One thing is for sure: To stay competitive [...]

Weekly Wrap-Up - Feb. 16

≡ Category: Uncategorized |Leave a Comment

Here’s a quick recap of what we brought you this week:

Is America Broken?: A Talk with The Economist’s New Editor-in-Chief
Jazz Great Sonny Rollins on iTunes and Youtube
The Lowdown on the Shiite-Sunni Divide
The Mother Lode of Public Radio Podcasts
A Not-So-Cliché Valentine’s Day
Welcome to the Islamic Reformation (and How to Make Sense of [...]

Is America Broken?: A Talk with The Economist’s New Editor-in-Chief

≡ Category: Media |Leave a Comment

Even if you don’t agree with its Euro conservative posture, The
Economist always comes off as
eminently rational and sensible when
grappling with political issues, and certainly unwilling to put spin
ahead of good reporting, which separates it from many of its American
counterparts. This judiciousness comes across in a talk given last week
by John Micklethwait, the magazine’s newly [...]

Business School Podcast Collection - Download MBA Podcasts and other Business Podcasts

≡ Category: Business |1 Comment

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Get 294 issues of The Wall Street Journal for Less then $.67 per issue!

Columbia Business School: Ideas at Work iTunes Feed Web Site

Darden School of Business (The University of Virginia) iTunes - Feed - Web Site

Entrepreneurial Thought Leaders (Stanford University) iTunes Feed Web Site

A series [...]

Jazz Great Sonny Rollins on iTunes and Youtube

≡ Category: Video - Arts & Culture |Leave a Comment

Sonny Rollins, who made his name with the acclaimed album Saxophone Colossus, has defied the
fate
of other jazz greats. He’s long outlived his important contemporaries – Miles Davis, John Coltrane, and Thelonious Monk – and, at 76 years old, he’s still out there issuing new albums (the latest being Sonny, Please), and even new web [...]

The Lowdown on the Shiite-Sunni Divide

≡ Category: Current Affairs |1 Comment

Several months ago, The New York Times ran a rather striking piece
detailing how key US leaders
— ones playing integral roles in the war
on terror and the war in Iraq — couldn’t explain the basic difference between a Shiite and a Sunni. The disclosure, however, wasn’t terribly
surprising. We were, after all, already several years into [...]

A Mother Lode of Public Radio Podcasts

≡ Category: Uncategorized |Leave a Comment

This is a podcast compilation that we almost wish we had put together. The "Public Radio Podcast Catalogue" amazingly gives you access to over 900 public radio programs podcasted from around the globe, all of which are broken down into neat categories – Business, Culture, Literature, Music, News, Politics, etc. Quite conveniently, the organizers of [...]

A Not-So-Cliché Valentine’s Day

≡ Category: Foreign Language |Leave a Comment

The folks at Radio Lingua (whose foreign language podcasts we’ve promoted on previous occasions) shot us a quick note today, which seemed worth posting in full. Why? Because it will give you a chance to be something other than predictable and cliché on Valentine’s Day. And they’ll help you look pretty clever.
Here it goes:
"We [...]

Welcome to the Islamic Reformation (and How to Make Sense of bin Laden)

≡ Category: Religion |Leave a Comment

Speaking recently on Stanford’s campus, Reza Aslan, an Iranian-American scholar who has written for The New York Times, The Nation, and Slate, sketched out an interesting framework for making sense of recent trends within the Middle East, and more particularly within Islam itself (iTunes - feed N/A). His argument is essentially this: Islam is undergoing [...]

Malcolm X at Oxford University 1964

≡ Category: History |Leave a Comment

We love finding these vintage media gems. Last week, we served up Orson Welles’ famous radio broadcast from 1938. This week, we’ve got another one — Malcolm X speaking at Oxford University in 1964.In this classic speech, you get a good feel for Malcolm X’s presence and message, not to mention the social issues that [...]

Weekly Wrap-Up - Feb. 9

≡ Category: Uncategorized |Leave a Comment

Here’s a quick recap of what we brought you this week:

Open Culture on Future Tense (American Public Media)
The War of the Worlds on Podcast: How H.G. Wells and Orson Welles Riveted A Nation
Next Stop Iran? Podcast Perspectives from Two Sets of Experts
Pirating The Long Tail: The Audio Book Dilemma
New Italian and German Podcasts (Plus English [...]

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