Stop Censorship Now

hijinks ensued

beware: geeky and overall non-cool kid things abound from the head space of maggie.
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What’s different about Radiolab (and what I think is changing about the web) is that it *is* a production, just one of a very new kind. Radiolab is actually post-blog and post-livestream. It’s not aping the oratory of old or the raggedness of the new. It’s a hybrid that takes lessons from the past, recent and deep. That’s where I think web journalism is headed, too. “No one wants to read a 9,000-word treatise online,” reads a telling line from Sullivan piece. “On the Web, one-sentence links are as legitimate as thousand-word diatribes—in fact, they are often valued more.

How ‘Radiolab’ Is Changing the Sound of the Radio - Alexis Madrigal - Technology - The Atlantic (via thisistheverge)

Now, Radiolab is definitely in the new for producing a radio show. I’m just not a fan because it is soooooo overproduced. No one can finish a sentence without it not only being repeated, but being overshadowed by another abrasive sound. It’s really hard to listen to what they’re trying to say even if it’s interesting.

(via nprfreshair)

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    Now, Radiolab is definitely in the new for producing a radio show. I’m just not a fan because it is soooooo...
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    Interesting thought. I will say that I find that show a little bit of sensory overload at times. Like, you can’t blow my...
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    Oberlin grads represent!
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