Zócalo Public Square  (Audio) show

Zócalo Public Square (Audio)

Summary: Zócalo presents a vibrant series of programs that feature thinkers and doers speaking on some of the most pressing topics of the day. Bringing together an extraordinarily diverse audience, Zócalo --"Public Square" in Spanish -- seeks to create a non-partisan and multiethnic forum where participants can enjoy a rare opportunity for intellectual fellowship.

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  • Artist: Zócalo Public Square
  • Copyright: Zócalo Public Square 2015

Podcasts:

 Former Intel CEO Craig Barrett on the Future of Nanotechnology | File Type: audio/x-m4a | Duration: 58:16

Former Intel CEO and president Craig R. Barrett and Arizona State University president Michael M. Crow discussed what comes after the computer chip, the past 50 years of technological change, and what the United States needs to do to stay at the cutting edge of technology innovation.

 Anat Admati Asks If We Can Fix What's Wrong With Banking | File Type: audio/x-m4a | Duration: 1:09:37

Stanford University economist Anat Admati, author of The Bankers' New Clothes, argues that the roots of the 2008 financial crisis lie in the excessive debt the banking industry takes on. But the reforms that have been put in place over the past few years are woefully inadequate. If we can regulate the amount of money banks borrow, we might be able to prevent the next crisis.

 How Will L.A. Face Its Post-Immigrant Future? | File Type: audio/x-m4a | Duration: 1:09:37

How Will L.A. Face Its Post-Immigrant Future?

 Is Infotainment Good for Political Journalism? | File Type: audio/x-m4a | Duration: 1:11:32

Television and the Internet are pushing entertainment and journalism closer together than ever. Should journalists fight the trend of news as entertainment, or can responsible reporters find ways to embrace it? New York Times Hollywood correspondent Michael Cieply, former CNN anchor Aaron Brown, TMZ co-executive producer Charles Latibeaudiere, and Zócalo California editor Joe Mathews discussed how best to strike the balance between political journalism and entertainment.

 How Much Does Math Matter? | File Type: audio/x-m4a | Duration: 58:36

How much does math matter? In a New York Times op-ed last summer, political scientist Andrew Hacker suggested that the answer is not very much. Algebra, contended Hacker, isn’t necessary for all high school students—and it’s a barrier to graduation for some. But Washington Post education columnist Jay Mathews, The Calculus Diaries author Jennifer Ouellette, Southern California math teacher Sarah Armstrong, and workforce expert Caz Pereira expressed a very different point of view.

 Does Health Propaganda Work? | File Type: audio/x-m4a | Duration: 1:07:05

As much as social scientists have learned about what drives people’s decision-making, we still haven’t found a silver bullet for changing people’s behavior. Yet at a panel co-presented by UCLA at MOCA Grand Avenue and moderated by The Atlantic contributing editor David H. Freedman, L.A. County Director of Public Health Jonathan Fielding, University of Minnesota social psychologist Traci Mann, and UCLA health economist Frederick J. Zimmerman agreed that it is possible to get people to make better health choices—if you give them time, and you engage them on several fronts.

 Should We Just Adapt to Climate Change? | File Type: audio/x-m4a | Duration: 57:16

Should we just adapt to climate change? The question raises the hackles of environmentalists and global warming deniers alike—yet it’s one we should be asking sooner rather than later. That was the consensus of New York Times environmental reporter Andrew Revkin, UCLA climate scientist Alex Hall, and UCLA environmental historian Jon Christensen during a panel discussion at The Actors’ Gang, an event put on in partnership with the UCLA Institute of the Environment and Sustainability and with Environmental Humanities at UCLA.

 How Dwight D. Eisenhower Scarred Richard Nixon | File Type: audio/x-m4a | Duration: 1:08:46

Even a century after Richard Nixon’s birth, his life and political career are still almost always considered in light of his demons and dark side. But former New Yorker editor Jeffrey Frank, author of Ike and Dick: Portrait of a Strange Political Marriage, chose to dissect Nixon in an entirely different context—that of his relationship to his boss and eventual in-law, President Dwight D. Eisenhower, for whom Nixon was a two-term vice president. In a conversation with former Nixon Presidential Library director Tim Naftali, he explained how this relationship may have influenced the rest of Nixon's life and career.

 Rebuilding After a Bubblicious Bust | File Type: audio/x-m4a | Duration: 1:01:53

Rebuilding After a Bubblicious Bust

 Hot, Sometimes Bothered | File Type: audio/x-m4a | Duration: 45:10

Hot, Sometimes Bothered

 Linda Greenhouse on the Supreme Court's Next Move | File Type: audio/x-m4a | Duration: 57:02

In three decades of covering the Supreme Court for The New York Times, Linda Greenhouse wrote about 2,700 cases. Greenhouse—now the Knight Distinguished Journalist in Residence at Yale Law School—spoke with fellow legal journalist turned scholar Henry Weinstein, a professor of law and literary journalism at UC Irvine, about some of the court’s landmark cases throughout history and its role in American life today.

 Was Human Life Inevitable? | File Type: audio/x-m4a | Duration: 52:15

Was Human Life Inevitable?

 Name That Tune: Da-Da-Da-DUM | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 55:11

Name That Tune: Da-Da-Da-DUM

 Why Is Cancer Killing More African-Americans? | File Type: audio/x-m4a | Duration: 1:04:02

Why Is Cancer Killing More African-Americans?

 Will Gaming Change the Way We Learn? | File Type: audio/x-m4a | Duration: 1:08:43

Will Gaming Change the Way We Learn?

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