Life in a Barrel

Published: 04/03/2026 09:00:00
Life in a Barrel Episode Details
This week, in an episode we first aired in 2022, we flip the Disney story of life on its head thanks to a barrel of seawater, a 1970s era computer, and underwater geysers. Itâs the chaos of life. Latif, Lulu, and our Senior Producer Matt Kielty were all sitting on their own little stories until they got thrown into the studio, and had their cherished beliefs about the shape of life put on a collision course. From an accidental study of sea creatures, to the ambitions of Stephen J Gould, to
Antibiotic Apocalypse

Published: 03/27/2026 09:00:00
Antibiotic Apocalypse Episode Details
Doctor and special correspondent Avir Mitra takes Executive Editor Soren Wheeler, plus a live studio audience, on a journey from the operating room to inside the body to the farm to the sewers and back againâsearching for answers to an alarming threat to humanityâs existence as we know it: antibiotic resistance in bacteria. This live show, performed in New York City and also in Little Rock, Arkansas, is part of a series weâre doing with Avir that we are calling âViscera.â Each event is a conversation that takes the audience on
Staph Retreat

Published: 03/20/2026 09:00:00
Staph Retreat Episode Details
A strange brew that's hard to resist, even for a modern day microbe.In the war on devilish microbes, our weapons are starting to fail us. The antibiotics we once wielded like miraculous flaming swords seem more like lukewarm butter knives. But in this episode, originally released in 2015, we follow an odd couple, of a sort, to a storied land of elves and dragons. There, they uncover a 1,000-year-old secret that makes us reconsider our most basic assumptions about human progress and wonder: what if the only way forward is backward?
Return of the Flesh-Eaters

Published: 03/13/2026 09:00:00
Return of the Flesh-Eaters Episode Details
If a species is horrible enough, do we have the right to kill it forever? Seventy years ago, a nightmare parasite feasted on the live flesh of warm-blooded creatures in North America: the screwworm. That is, until a young scientist named Edward F. Knipling discovered a crucial screwworm weakness and hatched a sweeping project to wipe them out. Kniplingâs seemingly zany plan to spray screwworms out of planes all over the continentâ with US taxpayer moneyâ succeeded, becoming one of humanityâs biggest environmental interventions ever. Today, screwworms have been gone so
Snail Sex Tape

Published: 03/06/2026 10:00:00
Snail Sex Tape Episode Details
In this episode, we consider a creature we often donât think much aboutâthe snail. And not just snails, but their sex lives. Which, as it turns out, is epic. There is persuasion and subterfuge, spaghetti penises and co-copulation. And this very surprising habitâerm kinkâof making tiny arrows (actually!) and stabbing each other with them. Known as a âlove dart,â these limestone daggers arenât just a strange trick of natureâthey have a deep evolutionary purpose. Special thanks to Menno Schilthuizen and Aaron Chase.EPISODE CREDITS: Hosted by - Molly WebsterReported by - Molly
Black Box

Published: 02/27/2026 09:00:00
Black Box Episode Details
In this episode, first aired in 2014, we examine three very different kinds of black boxesâspaces where we know whatâs going in, we know whatâs coming out, but canât see what happens in-between. From the darkest parts of metamorphosis to a sixty-year-old secret among magicians, and the nature of consciousness itself, we shine some light on three questions. But for each, we contend with an answerless space, leaving just enough room for the mystery and magic, always wondering whatâs inside the Black Box. EPISODE CREDITS: Reported by Tim Howard and Molly
Gray's Donation

Published: 02/20/2026 09:00:00
Gray's Donation Episode Details
Before he was even born, Sarah and Ross Gray knew that their son Thomas wouldnât live long. But as they let go of him, they made a decision that reverberated through a world that they never bothered to think about. Years later, after a couple of awkward phone calls, they go on a quest and manage to meet the people and places for whom Thomasâ short life was an altogether different kind of gift. We originally made this story back in 2015, but we wanted to play it again because we
Time is Honey

Published: 02/13/2026 11:00:00
Time is Honey Episode Details
In the early 2000s, Sunil Nakrani felt stuck. Back then, websites crashed all the time. When Sunil noticed this, he decided he was going to fix the internet. But after nearly a year of studying the architecture of the web, he was no closer to an answer. In desperation, Sunil sent out a raft of cold emails to engineering professors. He hoped someone, anyone, could help him figure this out. Eventually, he learned that the internet could only be fixed if he paid attention to the humble honeybee. This is the
Kleptotherms

Published: 02/06/2026 09:00:00
Kleptotherms Episode Details
In this episode, we break the thermometer and watch the mercury spill out as we discover that temperature is far stranger than it seems. We first ran this episode in 2021: Five stories that run the gamut from snakes to stars. We start out underwater, with a species of snake that has evolved a devious trick for keeping warm. Then we hear the tale of a young man whose seemingly simple method of warming up might be the very thing making him cold. And Senior Correspondent Molly Webster blows the lid
Song of the Cerebellum

Published: 01/30/2026 09:00:00
Song of the Cerebellum Episode Details
One spring evening in 2024, a science journalist named Rachel Gross bombed at karaoke. The culprit was a bleed in a fist-sized clump of neurons tucked down in the back of her brain called the cerebellum. A couple weeks later, her doctors took a bit of it out, assuring her it was just helping her with motor coordination â she might be a bit clumsy for a while, but sheâd still be herself. But afterwards, she didn't feel like herself. So she dove into the dusty basement of the brain (and
You and Me and Mr. Self-Esteem

Published: 01/23/2026 05:00:00
You and Me and Mr. Self-Esteem Episode Details
Most of us spend some part of our lives feeling bad about ourselves and wanting to feel better. But this preoccupation is a surprisingly new one in the history of the world, and can largely be traced back to one man: a rumpled, convertible-driving California state representative named John Vasconcellos who helped spark a movement that took over schools, board rooms, and social-service offices across America in the 1990s. This week, we look at the rise and fall of the self-esteem movement and ask: is it possible to raise your self-esteem?
The Punchline

Published: 01/16/2026 09:00:00
The Punchline Episode Details
This episode, first aired in 2019, brings you the story of John Scott, the professional hockey player that every fan loved to hate. A tough guy. A brawler. A goon. But when an impish pundit named Puck Daddy called on fans to vote for Scott to play alongside the worldâs greatest players in the NHL All-Star Game, Scott found himself facing off against fans, commentators, and the powers that be. Was this the realization of Scottâs childhood dreams? Or a nightmarish prank gone too far? Today on Radiolab, a goof on
Brain Balls

Published: 01/09/2026 09:00:00
Brain Balls Episode Details
When neuroscientist Madeline Lancaster was a brand new postdoc, she accidentally used an expired protein gel in a lab experiment and noticed something weird. The stem cells she was trying to grow in a dish were self-assembling. The result? Madeline was the first person ever to grow what she called a âcerebral organoid,â a tiny, 3D version of a human brain the size of a peppercorn. In about a decade, these mini human brain balls were everywhere. They were revealing bombshell secrets about how our brains develop in the womb, helping
Moon Trees

Published: 01/02/2026 09:00:00
Moon Trees Episode Details
In 1971, a red-headed, tree-loving astronaut named Stu âSmokeyâ Roosa was asked to take something to the moon with him. Of all things, he chose to take a canister of 500 tree seeds. After orbiting the moon 34 times, the seeds made it back to Earth. NASA decided to plant the seeds all across the country and then⦠everyone forgot about them. Until one day, a third grader from Indiana stumbled on a tree with a strange plaque: "Moon Tree." This discovery set off a cascading search for all the trees
Fertility Cliff

Published: 12/26/2025 09:00:00
Fertility Cliff Episode Details
After 35, does fertility tank? As she -- and her friends â approached the age of 35, senior correspondent Molly Webster kept hearing a phrase over and over: âfertility cliff.â It was a short-hand term to describe what she was told would happen to her fertility after she turned 35 â that is, it would drop off. Suddenly, sharply, dramatically. And this was well before she was supposed to hit menopause. Intrigued, Molly decided to look into it â what was the truth behind this so-called cliff, and when, if so,
The Good Show

Published: 12/19/2025 09:00:00
The Good Show Episode Details
The standard view of evolution is that living things are shaped by cold-hearted competition. And there is no doubt that today's plants and animals carry the genetic legacy of ancestors who fought fiercely to survive and reproduce. But in this hour that we first broadcast back in 2010, we wonder whether there might also be a logic behind sharing, niceness, kindness ... or even, self-sacrifice. Is altruism an aberration, or just an elaborate guise for sneaky self-interest? Do we really live in a selfish, dog-eat-dog world? Or has evolution carved out
The Alien in the Room

Published: 12/12/2025 09:00:00
The Alien in the Room Episode Details
Itâs faster than a speeding bullet. Itâs smarter than a polymath genius. Itâs everywhere but itâs invisible. Itâs artificial intelligence. But what actually is it? Today we ask this simple question and explore why itâs so damn hard to answer. Special thanks to Stephanie Yin and the New York Institute of Go for teaching us the game. Mark, Daria and Levon Hoover Brauner for helping bring NETtalk to life. And a huge thank you to Grant Sanderson for his unending patience explaining the math of neural nets to us. To learn
Shell Game: Minimum Viable Company

Published: 12/05/2025 09:00:00
Shell Game: Minimum Viable Company Episode Details
A year ago we brought you a show called Shell Game where a journalist named Evan Ratliff made an AI copy of himself. Now on season 2 of the show, Evanâs using AI to do more than just mimic himself â heâs starting a company staffed entirely by AI agents, and making a podcast about the experience. The show is a smart, funny, and truly bizarre look at what AI can doâand what it canât. This week we bring you the first episode of Shell Game Season Two, Minimum Viable Company.
Fela Kuti: Enter the Shrine

Published: 11/28/2025 09:00:00
Fela Kuti: Enter the Shrine Episode Details
Our original host Jad Abumrad returns to share a new podcast series heâs just released. Itâs all about Fela Kuti, a Nigerian musician who created a genre, then a movement, then tried to use his hypnotic beats to topple a military dictatorship. Jad tells us about the series and why he made it, and we play the episode that, for us at least, gets to the heart of the matter: How exactly does his music work? What actually happens to the people who hear it and how does it move them
Our Common Nature: West Virginia Coal

Published: 11/21/2025 09:11:58
Our Common Nature: West Virginia Coal Episode Details
Today on the show, weâre bringing you an episode from Our Common Nature, a new podcast series where cellist Yo-Yo Ma and host Ana González travel around the United States to meet people, make music and better understand how culture binds us to nature. The series features a few familiar voices, including Ana González (host) and Alan Goffinski (producer), from our kids podcast, Terrestrials. About the episode: West Virginia is defined by its beauty and its coal, two things that can work against each other. Yo-Yo Ma felt this as soon
Quantum Refuge

Published: 11/14/2025 16:31:18
Quantum Refuge Episode Details
Qasem Waleed is a 28-year-old physicist who has lived in Gaza his whole life. In 2024, he joined a chorus of Palestinians sharing videos and pictures and writing about the chaos and violence they were living through, as Israelâs military bombardment devastated their lives. But Qasem was trying to describe his reality through the lens of the most notoriously confusing and inscrutable field of science ever, quantum mechanics. We talked to him, from a cafe near the Al-Mawasi section of Gaza, to find out why. And over the course of several
The Wubi Effect

Published: 11/07/2025 09:00:00
The Wubi Effect Episode Details
When we think of China today, we think of a technological superpower. From Huawei and 5G to TikTok and viral social media, China is stride for stride with the United States in the world of computing. However, Chinaâs technological renaissance almost didnât happen. And for one very basic reason: the Chinese language, with its 70,000 plus characters, couldnât fit on a keyboard. Today, we tell the story of Professor Wang Yongmin, a hard-headed computer programmer who solved this puzzle and laid the foundation for the China we know today. Special thanks
The Glow Below

Published: 10/31/2025 09:00:00
The Glow Below Episode Details
A call to oceanographer Edie Widder about a fish with a very odd immune system quickly becomes something else: a dive into the deep sea, into a world of brilliant light. But down there, the light doesnât behave like light -- it sparkles and glows, but also drips, squirts, and dribbles. Today, find out how creatures make the light and how they use it, from hunting and hiding to maybe even ⦠talking. And hear about a series of mysterious moments where Edie goes from studying the creatures to becoming one
What Up Holmes?

Published: 10/24/2025 09:00:00
What Up Holmes? Episode Details
Love it or hate it, the freedom to say obnoxious and subversive things is the quintessence of what makes America America. But our say-almost-anything approach to free speech is actually relatively recent, and you can trace it back to one guy: a Supreme Court justice named Oliver Wendell Holmes. Even weirder, you can trace it back to one seemingly ordinary eight-month period in Holmesâs life when he seems to have done a logical U-turn on what should be say-able. Why he changed his mind during those eight months is one of
Content Warning

Published: 10/17/2025 09:00:00
Content Warning Episode Details
Over the past five years TikTok has radically changed the online world. But trust us when we say, itâs not how youâd expect. Today we continue our yearslong exploration of what you can and canât post online. We look at how Facebookâs approach to free speech has evolved since Trumpâs victory. How TikTok upended everything we see. And what all this means for the future of our political and digital lives. Special thanks to Kate Klonick EPISODE CREDITS: Reported by - Simon Adler Produced by - Simon Adler Original music from
Creation Story

Published: 10/10/2025 09:00:00
Creation Story Episode Details
Ella al-Shamahi is one part Charles Darwin, one part Indiana Jones. She braves war zones and pirate-infested waters to collect fossils from prehistoric caves, fossils that help us understand the origin of our species. Her recent hit BBC / PBS series Human follows her around the globe trying to piece together the unlikely story of how early humans conquered the world. But Ellaâs own origins as an evolutionary biologist are equally unlikely. She sits down with us and tells us a story she has rarely shared publicly, about how she came
Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl

Published: 10/03/2025 09:00:00
Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl Episode Details
This is the story of a three-year-old girl and the highest court in the land. The Supreme Court case Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl is a legal battle that has entangled a biological father, a heart-broken couple, and the tragic history of Native American children taken from their families. We originally released this story back in 2013, when that girlâs fate was still in the balance of various legal decisions. We thought now was a good time to bring the story back, because the Act at the center of the story
Voice

Published: 09/26/2025 09:00:00
Voice Episode Details
Over the course of millions of years, human voices have evolved to hold startling power. These clouds of vibrating air carry crucial information about who we areâand we rely on them to push ourselves up and out into the physical world. This week, weâre on a journey to understand how we got our unique sonic fingerprint, the power it affords us, and what happens when itâs taken away. Special thanks to Alice Wong, Wren Farrell, Hector Espinal and his parents, Crisaly and Hector Espinal, Mary Croke, Nancy Kielty, Beth McEwen, Robin
The Spark of Life

Published: 09/19/2025 09:00:00
The Spark of Life Episode Details
In the 1920s, a Russian biologist studying onion roots made a surprising discovery: underground, down in the darkness, it seemed like the cells inside the onion roots were making their own ⦠light. The âonion root experimentâ went on to become something of a cult classic in science, and eventually the biologically-made light was dubbed âbiophotons.â In the ensuing century, biophoton discoveries moved from onion roots to bacteria, frog embryos, and humans. Today, scientist Nirosha Murugan is on a career-defining journey to learn more about the light. As she and her
Los Frikis

Published: 09/12/2025 09:00:00
Los Frikis Episode Details
How a group of 80âs Cuban misfits found rock-and-roll and created a revolution within a revolution, going into exile without ever leaving home. Reporter Luis Trelles brings us the story of punk rockâs arrival in Cuba and a small band of outsiders who sentenced themselves to death and set themselves free. We originally released this episode back in 2015 in a collaboration with Radio Ambulante, but the story is so fascinating (and, in many ways, still relevant) that we havenât stopped thinking about it. Special thanks to the bands VIH, Eskoria,
Screaming Into the Void

Published: 09/05/2025 09:00:00
Screaming Into the Void Episode Details
In August we performed a live taping of the show from a theater perched on the edge of Manhattan, overlooking the Hudson River, overshadowed by the wide open night sky. Three stories about voids. One about a fish that screams into the night â and the mystery of its counterpart that doesnât. Another about a group of women who gazed at the night sky and taught us just how vast the universe is, and a third about a man who talk to aliens â and the people who tell him heâs
Music Hat

Published: 08/29/2025 09:00:00
Music Hat Episode Details
With this episode, weâre putting on our music hat. For a program that relies so much on scoring and sound, itâs not often we talk about the musicians and the music they make that inspire us. Today, that changes. Today, we bring you two stories. Each about musicians that our former host and creator of Radiolab, Jad Abumrad, loves. We originally released these stories many years ago, and both start deep in music itself. Then quickly, they dig deeper â into our relationships with technology, and ourselves. We start with the
The Medical Matchmaking Machine

Published: 08/22/2025 09:00:00
The Medical Matchmaking Machine Episode Details
As he finished his medical school exam, David Fajgenbaum felt off. He walked down to the ER and checked himself in. Soon he was in the ICU with multiple organ failure. The only drug for his condition didnât work. He had months to live, if that. If he was going to survive, he was going to have to find his own cure. Miraculously, he pulled it off in the nick of time. From that ordeal, he realized that our system of discovering and approving drugs is far from perfect, and that
Weighing Good Intentions

Published: 08/15/2025 09:00:00
Weighing Good Intentions Episode Details
In an episode first released in 2010, then-producer Lulu Miller drives to Michigan to track down the endangered Kirtlandâs warbler. Efforts to protect the bird have lead to the killing of cowbirds (a species that commandeers warbler nests), and a prescribed burn aimed at creating a new habitat. Tragically, this burn led to the death of a 29-year-old wildlife technician who was dedicated to warbler restoration. Forest Service employee Rita Halbeisen, local Michiganders skeptical of the resources put toward protecting the warbler, and the family of James Swiderski (the man killed
The Menopause Mystery

Published: 08/08/2025 09:00:00
The Menopause Mystery Episode Details
Until recently, scientists assumed humans were the only species in which females went through menopause, and lived a substantial part of their lives after they were no longer able to reproduce. And they had no idea why that happens, and why evolution wouldnât push females to keep reproducing right up to the end of their lives. But after a close look at some whale poop, and a deep dive into chimp life, we find several new ways of thinking about menopause and the real purpose of this all too often overlooked
Galaxy Quenching

Published: 08/01/2025 09:00:00
Galaxy Quenching Episode Details
This week: the story of astrophysicist Charity Woodrum. Charity is an extragalactic astronomer who studies the life and death of galaxies, why some galaxies burn bright and others dim and sputter out. And in the midst of an unthinkable grief in her personal life, she discovers something in the sky â a new kind of light that would guide her path forward. Special thanks to Megan Stielstra, Jad Abumrad, Michael Woodrum, Gina Vivona, and Clair Reilly-Roe. EPISODE CREDITS: Reported by - Lulu MillerProduced by - Jessica YungFact-checking by - Diane Kelly
The Nothing Behind Everything

Published: 07/25/2025 09:00:00
The Nothing Behind Everything Episode Details
This week, two conversations from the archives about parts of the world that are imperceptible to us, verging on almost unthinkable. We start with a moment of uncertainty in physics. Inspired by an essay written by physicist and novelist Alan Lightman, called The Accidental Universe (https://zpr.io/4965dUdNqtpQ), taken from a book of the same name. Former Radiolab co-host Robert Krulwich pays a visit to Brian Greene to ask if the latest developments in theoretical physics spell a crisis for science. He finds that we've reached the limit of what we can see
More Perfect: The Hate Debate

Published: 07/18/2025 09:00:00
More Perfect: The Hate Debate Episode Details
Back in 2017 our colleagues at More Perfect gathered a room full of people together to debate a straight forward question: Can free speech go too far? Today, eight years have passed and plenty has changed, but this question feels alive as ever. And so weâre re-airing More Perfectâs The Hate Debate. Taped live at WNYC's Jerome L. Greene Performance Space, Elie Mystal, Ken White and Corynne McSherry duke it out over whether the first amendment needs an update in our digital world. Special thanks to Elaine Chen, Jennifer Keeney Sendrow,
Desperately Seeking Symmetry

Published: 07/11/2025 09:00:00
Desperately Seeking Symmetry Episode Details
This hour of Radiolab, former co-hosts Jad and Robert set out in search of order and balance in the world around us, and ask how symmetry shapes our very existence -- from the origins of the universe, to what we see when we look in the mirror. Along the way, we look for love in ancient Greece, head to modern-day Princeton to peer inside our brains, and turn up an unlikely headline from the Oval Office circa 1979. EPISODE CITATIONS: Videos - Back in the day, when we first aired this
On [The Divided Dial]: Fishing In The Night

Published: 07/04/2025 09:00:00
On [The Divided Dial]: Fishing In The Night Episode Details
Have you heard On the Mediaâs Peabody-winning series The Divided Dial? Itâs awesome and you should, and now you will. In this episode they tell the story of shortwave radio: the way-less-listened to but way-farther-reaching cousin of AM and FM radio. The medium was once heralded as a utopian, international, and instantaneous mass communication tool â a sort of internet-before-the-internet. But, like the internet, many people quickly saw the power of this new technology and found ways to harness it. State leaders turned it into a propaganda machine, weaponizing the airwaves
Sex, Ducks and the Founding Feud

Published: 06/27/2025 09:00:00
Sex, Ducks and the Founding Feud Episode Details
Jilted lovers and disrupted duck hunts provide a very odd look into the soul of the US Constitution. What does a betrayed loverâs revenge have to do with an international chemical weapons treaty? More than youâd think. From poison and duck hunts to our feuding fathers, we step into a very odd tug of war between local and federal law. When Carol Anne Bond found out her husband had impregnated her best friend, she took revenge. Carol's particular flavor of revenge led to a US Supreme Court case that puts into
Baby Shark

Published: 06/20/2025 09:00:00
Baby Shark Episode Details
This is episode five of Swimming with Shadows: A Radiolab Week of Sharks.Today, the strange, squirmy magic behind how sharks make more sharks. Drills. Drama. Death. Even a coliseum of baby sharks duking it out inside momâs womb. And a man on a small island in the Mediterranean trying, against all odds, to give baby sharks a chance in a little plastic aquarium in his living room. Can a human raise a shark? And if so, what good is that for sharks? And for us? Doo doo doo doo doo doo.Special
Mystery Bay

Published: 06/19/2025 09:00:00
Mystery Bay Episode Details
This is episode four of Swimming with Shadows: A Radiolab Week of Sharks. Alison Kock was working at a car wash in Cape Town when she made a discovery that completely changed the course of her life. Inside a customerâs trunk, she found photographs of white sharks flying so high above the water they looked like airplanes. She followed those photographs to False Bay, âthe Great White Capital of the World.â These sharks, in this place, are the apex of apex predators. Or they were. Until they mysteriously began to disappear.
The Shark Inside You

Published: 06/18/2025 09:00:00
The Shark Inside You Episode Details
This is episode three of Swimming with Shadows: A Radiolab Week of Sharks. Today, we take a trip across the world, from the south coast of Australia to ⦠Wisconsin. Here, scientists are scouring shark blood to find one of natureâs hidden keys, a molecular superhero that might unlock our ability to cure cancer: shark antibodies. Theyâre small. Theyâre flexible. And they can fit into nooks and crannies on tumors that our antibodies canât. We journey back 500 million years to the moment sharks got these special powers and head to
The Cage

Published: 06/17/2025 09:00:00
The Cage Episode Details
This is episode two of Swimming with Shadows: A Radiolab Week of Sharks. Jaws spawned a thousand imitators: sharks in tornados, sharks in avalanches, sharks that battle giant octopuses. Hollywood has officially turned sharks into monsters of every shape and size. And yet, somehow, there will always be more. But drop below the surface, into the cold, quiet blue, and another creature appears. One that has survived mass extinctions, outlasted ancient predators and pre-dates Mount Everest, the existence of trees, even the rings of Saturn. A shark that is somehow even
Making a Monster

Published: 06/16/2025 09:00:00
Making a Monster Episode Details
Episode one of Swimming with Shadows: A Radiolab Week of Sharks. Rodney Fox went into the ocean one summer day in 1963. He came out barely alive, his body torn apart by a great white shark. At the time, it was one of the worst shark attacks ever survived. After he recovered, he was pulled back into the shadowy world he feared most. Again and again and again. That shark attack left behind a question that still lingers, for Rodney, and for all of us: When you canât see the thing
It's Like ... Radiolab

Published: 06/13/2025 23:00:00
It's Like ... Radiolab Episode Details
Radiolab is on a curiosity bender. We ask deep questions and use investigative journalism to get the answers. A given episode might whirl you through science, legal history, and into the home of someone halfway across the world. The show is known for innovative sound design, smashing information into music. It is hosted by Lulu Miller and Latif Nasser.
Swimming with Shadows: A Radiolab Week of Sharks

Published: 06/13/2025 10:00:00
Swimming with Shadows: A Radiolab Week of Sharks Episode Details
In the summer of 1975, Jaws scared an entire generation out of the water. The film burned an idea into our cultural memory: they are mindless, man-eating monsters. We set out to tell a different story about sharks. Five stories over five days. We tear down deep-seated myths about sharks, plunge into the water with them, and find sharks that explode our sense of what they are â flying sharks, glowing sharks, baby sharks, sharks under attack, and sharks that may save millions of human lives. Look out for brand-new episodes
Double-Blasted

Published: 06/13/2025 09:00:00
Double-Blasted Episode Details
We first aired this episode in 2012, but at the show weâve been thinking a lot about resilience and repair so we wanted to play it for you again today. Itâs about a man who experienced maybe one of the most chilling traumas⦠twice. But then, it leads us to a story of generational repair. On the morning of August 6th, 1945, Tsutomu Yamaguchi was in Hiroshima on a work trip. He was walking to the office when the first atomic bomb was dropped about a mile away. He survived, and
The Elixir of Life

Published: 06/06/2025 09:00:00
The Elixir of Life Episode Details
Doctor and special correspondent, Avir Mitra takes Lulu on an epic journey live on stage at a little basement club called Caveat, here in New York. Starting with an ingredient in breastmilk that babies canât digest, a global hunt that takes us from Bangladesh to the Mennonite communities here in the US, we discover an ancient symbiotic relationship that might be on the verge of disappearing. So sip a vicarious cocktail, settle in, and explore the surprising ways our bodies forge deep, invisible connections that shape our lives. This live show
A Flock of Two

Published: 05/30/2025 09:00:00
A Flock of Two Episode Details
Animals rescue people all the time, but not like this. In this episode, first aired more than a decade ago, Jim Eggers is a 44-year-old man who suffers from a problem that not only puts his life at riskâit jeopardizes the safety of everybody around him. But with the help of Sadie, his pet African Grey Parrot, Jim found an unlikely way to manage his anger. African Grey Parrot expert Irene Pepperberg helps us understand how this could work, and shares some insights from her work with a parrot named Alex.And
The Echo in the Machine

Published: 05/23/2025 09:00:00
The Echo in the Machine Episode Details
Today you can convert speech to text with the click of a button. Youtube does it for all our videos. Our phones will do it in real time. Itâs frictionless. And yet, if it werenât for an unlikely crew of protesters and office workers, it might still be impossible. This week, the story of our attempts to make the spoken visible. The magicians who tried. And the crazy spell that finally did it. EPISODE CREDITS: Reported by - Simon AdlerProduced by - Simon AdlerOriginal music from - Simon AdlerSound design contributed
How to Cure What Ails You

Published: 05/16/2025 09:00:00
How to Cure What Ails You Episode Details
Now that we have the ability to see inside the brain without opening anyone's skull, we'll be able to map and define brain activity and peg it to behavior and feelings. Right? Well, maybe not, or maybe not just yet. It seems the workings of our brains are rather too complex and diverse across individuals to really say for certain what a brain scan says about a person. But Nobel prize winner Eric Kandel and researcher Cynthia Fu tell us about groundbreaking work in the field of depression that just may
The First Known Earthly Voice

Published: 05/09/2025 09:00:00
The First Known Earthly Voice Episode Details
What happens when a voice emerges? What happens when one is lost? Is something gained? A couple months ago, Lulu guest edited an issue of the nature magazine Orion. She called the issue âQueer Planet: A Celebration of Biodiversity,â and it was a wide-ranging celebration of queerness in nature. It featured work by amazing writers like Ocean Vuong, Kristen Arnett, Carmen Maria Machado and adrienne maree brown, among many others. But one piece in particular struck Lulu as something that was really meant to be made into audio, an essay called
Terrestrials: The Snow Beast

Published: 05/02/2025 09:00:00
Terrestrials: The Snow Beast Episode Details
Today we bring you a story stranger than fiction. In 2006, paleobiologist Natalia Rybczynski took a helicopter to a remote Arctic island near the North Pole, spending her afternoons scavenging for ancient treasures on the ground. One day, she found something the size of a potato chip. Turns out, it was a three and half million year old chunk of bone. Keep reading if youâre okay with us spoiling the surprise. Itâs a camel! Yes, the one we thought only hung out in deserts. Originally from North America, the camel trotted
The Age of Aquaticus

Published: 04/25/2025 09:00:00
The Age of Aquaticus Episode Details
For years, scientists thought nothing could live above 73â/163â. At that temperature, everything boiled to death. But scientists Tom Brock and Hudson Freeze werenât convinced. What began as their simple quest to trawl for life in some of the hottest natural springs on Earth would, decades later, change the trajectory of biological science forever, saving millions of livesâpossibly even yours. This seismic, totally unpredictable discovery, was funded by the U.S. government. This week, as the Trump administration slashes scientific research budgets en masse, we tell one story, a parable about the
Ghosts in the Green Machine

Published: 04/18/2025 09:00:00
Ghosts in the Green Machine Episode Details
In honor of our Earth, on her day, we have two stories about the overlooked, ignored, and neglected parts of nature. In the first half, we learn about an epic battle that is raging across the globe every day, every moment. It's happening in the ocean, and your very life depends on it. In the second half, we make an earnest, possibly foolhardy, attempt to figure out the dollar value of the work of bats and bees as we try to keep our careful calculations from falling apart in the face
Signal Hill: Caterpillar Roadshow

Published: 04/11/2025 09:00:00
Signal Hill: Caterpillar Roadshow Episode Details
A couple years ago, an entomologist named Martha Weiss got a letter from a little boy in Japan saying he wanted to replicate a famous study of hers. We covered that original study on Radiolab more than a decade ago in an episode called Goo and You â check it out here â and in addition to revealing some fascinating secrets of insect life, it also raises big questions about memory, permanence and transformation. The letter Martha received about building on this study set in motion a series of spectacular events
Killer Empathy

Published: 04/04/2025 09:00:00
Killer Empathy Episode Details
In an episode first aired in 2012, Lulu Miller introduces us to Jeff Lockwood, a professor at the University of Wyoming, who spent a part of his career studying a particularly ferocious set of insects: Gryllacrididae. Or, as Jeff describes them, "crickets on steroids." They have crushingly strong, serrated jaws, and they launch all-out attacks on anyone who gets in their way--whether it's another cricket, or the guy trying to take them out of their cages. In order to work with the gryllacridids, Jeff had to figure out how to out-maneuver
Malthusian Swerve

Published: 03/28/2025 09:00:00
Malthusian Swerve Episode Details
Earth can sustain life for another 100 million years, but can we?In this episode, we partnered with the team at Planet Money to take stock of the essential raw materials that enable us to live as we do here on Earthâeverything from sand to copper to oilâ and tally up how much we have left. Are we living with reckless abandon? And if so, is there even a way to stop? This week, we bring you a conversation thatâs equal parts terrifying and fascinating, featuring bird poop, daredevil drivers, and some
Everybody's Got One

Published: 03/21/2025 09:00:00
Everybody's Got One Episode Details
We all think we know the story of pregnancy. Sperm meets egg, followed by nine months of nurturing, nesting, and quiet incubation. this story isnât the nursery rhyme we think it is. In a way, itâs a struggle, almost like a tiny war. And right on the front lines of that battle is another major player on the stage of pregnancy that not a single person on the planet would be here without. An entirely new organ: the placenta. In this episode, which we originally released in 2021, we take you
Growth

Published: 03/14/2025 09:00:00
Growth Episode Details
Itâs easy to take growth for granted, for it to seem expected, inevitable even. Every person starts out as a baby and grows up. Plants grow from seeds into food. The economy grows. That stack of mail on your table grows. But why does anything grow the way that it does? In this hour, we go from the Alaska State Fair, to a kitchen in Berkeley, to the deep sea, to ancient India, to South Korea, and lots of places in between, to investigate this question, and uncover the many forces
More Perfect: Sex Appeal

Published: 03/07/2025 09:00:00
More Perfect: Sex Appeal Episode Details
In 2017 our sister show, More Perfect aired an episode all about RBG, In September of 2020, we lost Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg to the annals of history. She was 87. Given the atmosphere around reproductive rights, gender and law, we decided to re-air this More Perfect episode dedicated to one of her cases. Because it offers a unique portrait of how one person can make change in the world. This is the story of how Ginsburg, as a young lawyer at the ACLU, convinced an all-male Supreme Court
Revenge of the Miasma

Published: 02/28/2025 09:00:00
Revenge of the Miasma Episode Details
Today we uncover an invisible killer hidden, for over a hundred years, by reasonable disbelief. Science journalist extraordinaire Carl Zimmer tells us the story of a centuries-long battle of ideas that came to a head, with tragic consequences, in the very recent past. His latest book, called Airborne, details a largely forgotten history of science that never quite managed to get off the ground. Along the way, Carl helps us understand how we can fail, over and over again, to see a truth right in front of our faces. And how
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks

Published: 02/21/2025 09:00:00
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks Episode Details
Today, a story that starts small and private, with one woman alone in her bathroom, as she makes a quiet, startling discovery about her own body. But that small, private moment grows and grows, and pretty soon it becomes something so big that it has impacted the life of every person reading this right now⦠and all that without the woman ever even knowing the impact she had. We originally aired this story back in 2010, but we thought weâd bring it back today, as questions about bodily autonomy circle with
Quantum Birds

Published: 02/14/2025 09:00:00
Quantum Birds Episode Details
Annie McEwen went to a mountain in Pennsylvania to help catch some migratory owls. Then Scott Weidensaul peeled back the owlâs feathery face disc, so that she could look at the back of its eyeball. No owls were harmed in the process, but this brief glimpse into the inner workings of a bird sent her off on a journey to a place where fleshy animal business bumps into the mathematics of subatomic particles. With help from Henrik Mouristen, we hear how one of the biggest mysteries in biology might finally find
Vertigogo

Published: 02/07/2025 09:00:00
Vertigogo Episode Details
In this episode, first aired in 2012, we have two stories of brains pushed off-course. We relive a surreal day in the life of a young researcher hijacked by her own brain, and hear from a librarian experiencing a bizarre and mysterious set of symptoms that she called âgravitational anarchy.â Special thanks to Sarah Montague and Ellen Horn, as well as actress Hope Davis, who read Rosemary Mortonâs story. And the late Berton Roueché, who wrote that story down. EPISODE CREDITS: Produced by - Brenna FarrellOriginal music and sound design contributed
Forever Fresh

Published: 01/31/2025 09:00:00
Forever Fresh Episode Details
We eat apples in the summer and enjoy bananas in the winter. When we do this, we go against the natural order of life which is towards death and decay. What gives? This week, Latif Nasser spoke with Nicola Twilley, the author of Frostbite: How Refrigeration Changed Our Food, Our Planet, and Ourselves. Twilley spent over a decade reporting about how we keep food alive as it makes its way from the farm to our table. This conversation explores the science of cold, how fruits hold a secret to eternal youth,
Nukes

Published: 01/24/2025 09:00:00
Nukes Episode Details
In an episode first reported in 2017, we bring you a look up and down the US nuclear chain of command to find out who gets to authorize their use and who can stand in the way of Armageddon. President Richard Nixon once boasted that at any moment he could pick up a telephone and - in 20 minutes - kill 60 million people. Such is the power of the US President over the nationâs nuclear arsenal. But what if you were the military officer on the receiving end of that
The Darkest Dark

Published: 01/17/2025 09:00:00
The Darkest Dark Episode Details
We fall down the looking glass with Sönke Johnsen, a biologist who finds himself staring at one of the darkest things on the planet. So dark, itâs almost like heâs holding a blackhole in his hands. On his quest to understand how something could possibly be that black, we enter worlds of towering microscopic forests, where gold becomes black, the deep sea meets the moon, and places that are empty suddenly become full. Corrections/Clarifications:In this episode, dragonfish are described as having teeth that slide back into their skull; that is the
Smarty Plants

Published: 01/10/2025 09:00:00
Smarty Plants Episode Details
In an episode we first aired in 2018, we asked the question, do you really need a brain to sense the world around you? To remember? Or even learn? Well, it depends on who you ask. Jad and Robert, they are split on this one. Today, Robert drags Jad along on a parade for the surprising feats of brainless plants. Along with a home-inspection duo, a science writer, and some enterprising scientists at Princeton University, we dig into the work of evolutionary ecologist Monica Gagliano, who turns our brain-centered worldview on
Match Made in Marrow

Published: 01/03/2025 09:00:00
Match Made in Marrow Episode Details
In an episode first reported in 2017, we bring you what may be, maybe the greatest gift one person could give to another. You never know what might happen when you sign up to donate bone marrow. You might save a life⦠or you might be magically transported across a cultural chasm and find yourself starring in a modern adaptation of the greatest story ever told. One day, without thinking much of it, Jennell Jenney swabbed her cheek and signed up to be a donor. Across the country, Jim Munroe desperately
Probing Where the Sun Does Shine: A Holiday Special

Published: 12/23/2024 23:05:00
Probing Where the Sun Does Shine: A Holiday Special Episode Details
This holiday season, we want to take you on a trip around the heavens.First, co-host Latif Nasser, with the help of Nour Raouafi, of NASA, and an edge-cutting piece of equipment, explain how we may finally be making good on Icarusâs promise. Then, co-host Lulu Miller and Ada Limón talk about how a poet laureate goes about writing an ode to one of Jupiterâs moons. And one more thing! It is almost your last chance to make your mark on the heavens. Radiolab and The International Astronomical Unionâs Quasi Moon Naming
Curiosity Killed the Adage

Published: 12/20/2024 09:00:00
Curiosity Killed the Adage Episode Details
The early bird gets the worm. What goes around, comes around. Itâs always darkest just before dawn. We carry these little nuggets of wisdomâthese adagesâwith us, deep in our psyche. But recently we started wondering: are they true? Like, objectively, scientifically, provably true? So we picked a few and set out to fact check them. We talked to psychologists, neuroscientists, runners, a real estate agent, skateboarders, an ornithologist, a sociologist and an astrophysicist, among others, and we learned that these seemingly simple, clear-cut statements about us and our world, contain whole
Dark Side of the Earth

Published: 12/13/2024 09:00:00
Dark Side of the Earth Episode Details
Back in 2012, when we were putting together our live show In the Dark, Jad and Robert called up Dave Wolf to ask him if he had any stories about darkness. And boy, did he. Dave told us two stories that became the finale of our show. Back in late 1997, Dave Wolf was on his first spacewalk, to perform work on the Mir (the photo to the right was taken during that mission, courtesy of NASA.). Dave wasn't alone -- with him was veteran Russian cosmonaut Anatoly Solovyev. (That's a
How Stockholm Stuck

Published: 12/06/2024 09:00:00
How Stockholm Stuck Episode Details
How an idea born in a Swedish bank wormed its way into all of our brains. In August of 1973, Jan-Erik Olsson walked into the lobby of a bank in central Stockholm. He fired his submachine gun at the ceiling and yelled âThe party starts now!â Then he started taking hostages. For the next six days, Swedish police and international media would tie themselves in knots trying to understand what seemed to them a sordid attachment between captor and captives. And this fixation, later pathologized as âStockholm Syndrome,â would soon spread
Less Than Kilogram

Published: 11/29/2024 09:00:00
Less Than Kilogram Episode Details
In todayâs story, which originally aired in 2014, we meet a very special cylinder. It's the gold standard (or, in this case, the platinum-iridium standard) for measuring mass. For decades it's been coddled and cared for and treated like a tiny king. But, as we learn from writer Andrew Marantz, things changeâeven things that were specifically designed to stay the same. Special thanks to Ken Alder, Ari Adland, Eric Perlmutter, Terry Quinn and Richard Davis.And to the musical group, His Majestys Sagbutts & Cornetts, for the use of their song âHorses
Science Vs: The Funniest Joke in the World

Published: 11/22/2024 09:00:00
Science Vs: The Funniest Joke in the World Episode Details
When he rounded them up, he had a 100. A few months ago, Wendy Zukerman invited our own Latif Nasser to come on her show, and, of course, he jumped at the chance. Laughter ensued, as they set off to find the "The Funniest Joke in the World." When you just Google something like that, the internet might serve you, "What has many keys but can't open a single lock??â (Answer: A piano). So they had to dig deeper. According to science. And for this quest they interviewed a bunch of
Hello

Published: 11/15/2024 09:00:00
Hello Episode Details
It's tough to make small talk with a strangerâespecially when that stranger doesn't speak your language. (And he has a blowhole.) It's hard to start a conversation with a strangerâespecially when that stranger is, well, different. He doesn't share your customs, celebrate your holidays, watch your TV shows, or even speak your language. Plus he has a blowhole. In this episode, which originally aired in the summer of 2014, we try to make contact with some of the strangest strangers on our little planet: dolphins. Producer Lynn Levy eavesdrops on some
The Ecstasy of an Open Brain

Published: 11/08/2024 09:00:00
The Ecstasy of an Open Brain Episode Details
As we grow up, there are little windows of time when we can learn very, very fast, and very, very deeply. Scientists call these moments, critical periods. Real, neurological, biological states when our brain can soak up information like a sponge. Then, these windows of learning close. Locking us in to certain behaviors and skills for the rest of our lives. But ⦠what if we could reopen them? Today, we consider a series of discoveries that are reshaping our understanding of when and how we can learn. And what that
Haunted

Published: 10/30/2024 23:05:00
Haunted Episode Details
Do you believe in ghosts? In an episode we first aired in 2014, we meet a man named Dennis Conrow, who was stuck. After a brief stint at college, heâd spent most of his 20âs back home with his parents, sleeping in his childhood room. And just when he finally struck out on his own, fate intervened. He lost both his parents to cancer. So Dennis was left, back in the house, alone. Until one night when a group of paranormal investigators showed up at his door and made him realize
The Unpopular Vote

Published: 10/25/2024 08:00:00
The Unpopular Vote Episode Details
The closest we ever came to abolishing the electoral college and why we probably never will.As the US Presidential Election nears, Radiolab covers the closest we ever came to abolishing the Electoral College. In the 1960s, then-President Lyndon Johnson approached an ambitious young Senator known as the Kennedy of the Midwest to tweak the way Americans elect their President. The more Senator Birch Bayh looked into the electoral college the more he believed it was a ticking time bomb hidden in the constitution, that someone needed to defuse. With overwhelming support
Tweak the Vote

Published: 10/18/2024 09:00:00
Tweak the Vote Episode Details
Is democracy fundamentally broken? Or does i just need a ... tweak? Back in 2018, when this episode first aired, there was a feeling that democracy was on the ropes. In the United States and abroad, citizens of democracies are feeling increasingly alienated, disaffected, and powerless. Some are even asking themselves a question that feels almost too dangerous to say out loud: is democracy fundamentally broken? Today on Radiolab, we ask a different question: how do we fix it? We scrutinize one proposed tweak to the way we vote that could
Why Don't Sex Scandals Matter Anymore?

Published: 10/11/2024 09:00:00
Why Don't Sex Scandals Matter Anymore? Episode Details
Roosevelt, Kennedy, Eisenhower ⦠they all got a pass. But today we peer back at the moment when poking into the private lives of political figures became standard practice. In 1987, Gary Hart was a young charismatic Democrat, poised to win his partyâs nomination and possibly the presidency. Many of us know the story of what happened next, and even if you donât, itâs a familiar tale. Back in 2016, we examined how, when this happened, politicians and political reporters found themselves in uncharted territory. And with help from author Matt
Terrestrials: Stumpisode

Published: 10/04/2024 09:00:00
Terrestrials: Stumpisode Episode Details
As dead as they seem, tree stumps are hubs of life and relationships. Co-host Lulu Miller is back with another season of her hit spinoff show Terrestrials, and to celebrate, weâre sharing the first episode with you. From stumps to snags, dead wood provides habitat for rodents, falcons, insects, and even humans. Stumps hold together the forest floor, give hunting perches to birds of prey in flatlands, prevent erosion and the encroachment of invasive species, usher in sunlight, provide nutrients, store renewable fuel, and hold onto stories human beings might have
Octomom

Published: 09/27/2024 09:00:00
Octomom Episode Details
A mile under the ocean, we get to watch an octopus perform a heroic act of heart and determination. First aired back in 2020, this episode follows the story of an octopus living one mile under the ocean as she performs a heroic act of heart and determination. In 2007, Bruce Robisonâs robot submarine stumbled across an octopus settling in to brood her eggs. It seemed like a small moment. But as he went back to visit her, month after month, what began as a simple act of motherhood became a
A Little Pompeiian Fish Sauce Goes a Long Way

Published: 09/20/2024 09:00:00
A Little Pompeiian Fish Sauce Goes a Long Way Episode Details
Today we follow a sleuth who has spent over a decade working to solve an epic mystery hiding in plain historical sight: did anyone survive the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79AD? Tired of hearing the conventional narrative that every Pompeiian perished without any evidence to back it up, Classicist Steven Tuck decides to look into it himself. Although he is nearly two millennia late to ground zero, he uses all the available evidence to reimagine the disaster from the perspective of the people on the ground. Could anyone have survived
The Times They Are a-Changin'

Published: 09/13/2024 09:00:00
The Times They Are a-Changin' Episode Details
With the help of paleontologist Neil Shubin, reporter Emily Graslie and the Field Museum's Paul Mayer we discover that our world is full of ancient coral calendars. This episode first aired back in December of 2013, and at the start of that new year, the team was cracking open fossils, peering back into ancient seas, and looking up at lunar skies only to find that a year is not quite as fixed as we thought it was. With the help of paleontologist Neil Shubin, reporter Emily Graslie and the Field Museum's
Shell Game

Published: 09/06/2024 09:00:00
Shell Game Episode Details
One man secretly hands off more and more of his life to an AI voice clone. Today, we feature veteran journalist Evan Ratliff who - for his new podcast Shell Game - decided to slowly replace himself bit by bit with an AI voice clone, to see how far he could actually take it. Could it do the mundane phone calls heâd prefer to skip? Could it get legal advice for him? Could it go to therapy for him? Could it parent his kids? Evan feeds his bot the most intimate
Big Little Questions

Published: 08/30/2024 09:00:00
Big Little Questions Episode Details
Here at the show, we get A LOT of questions, tiny questions, big questions, weird questions, poop questions. Today, weâre dumping the bucket out. First aired back in 2017, hereâs a show of questions and, sometimes, answers. Cause, we get a lot of questions. Like, A LOT of questions. Tiny questions, big questions, short questions, long questions. Weird questions. Poop questions. We get them all. And over the years, as more and more of these questions arrived in our inbox, what happened was, guiltily, we put them off to the side,
Uneasy as ABC

Published: 08/23/2024 09:15:07
Uneasy as ABC Episode Details
How a plane crash in Nebraska gave us the modern ER. February 1976. A flight out of California turned catastrophic when it crashed into a farm in rural Nebraska. What happened that night at the local hospital, and crucially, what went wrong, would inspire a global sea-change in how emergency rooms operate and fundamentally alter the way doctors think in a crisis. Special thanks to Jody and Jay Upright, Heather Talbott, Dr. Ron Simon, Dr. John Sutyak, Dr. Paul Collicott, Irvene Hughe, Maimonides Medical Center, Karl Sukhia and Vanya Zvonar.We have
More Perfect: The Gun Show

Published: 08/16/2024 09:00:00
More Perfect: The Gun Show Episode Details
In 2008, the Supreme Court stepped in to settle our fight over the Second Amendmentâs meaning. They did. And they didnât. Given that weâre all gearing up for the Presidential race, and how gun rights and regulations are almost always centerstage during these times. Today, weâre re-releasing a More Perfect episode that aired just after the October 2017 Las Vegas shooting. It is an episode that attempts to make sense of our countryâs fraught relationship with the Second Amendment. For nearly 200 years of our nationâs history, the Second Amendment was
Up in Smoke

Published: 08/09/2024 09:00:00
Up in Smoke Episode Details
Wildfires, a mysterious outbreak, and a question â is there something in the smoke? Two scenes. In the first, a doctor gets a call â the hospital she works at is having an outbreak of unknown origin, in the middle of the worst wildfire season on record. In the second, an ecologist stands in a forest, watching it burn. Through very different circumstances, they both find themselves asking the same question: is there something in the smoke? This question will bring them together, and reveal â to all of us â
Sleep

Published: 08/02/2024 09:00:00
Sleep Episode Details
Birds do it, bees do it...yet science still can't answer the basic question: why do we sleep? We had a question back in 2007, about a thing every creature on the planet does--from giant humpback whales to teeny fruit flies. Why do we all sleep? What does it do for us, and what happens when we go without? We take a peek at iguanas sleeping with one eye open, get in bed with a pair of sleep-deprived new parents, and eavesdrop on the uneasy dreams of rats. We have some exciting
Terrestrials: The Trio

Published: 07/26/2024 09:00:00
Terrestrials: The Trio Episode Details
Look up in the sky! It is something that scientists thought could never happen. High above the banks of the Mississippi river, a nest holds the secret life of one of Americaâs most patriotic creatures. Their story puzzles scientists, reinforces indigenous wisdom, and wows audiences, all thanks to a park ranger named Ed, and a well-placed webcam. If you want to spoil the mystery, here ya go: itâs a bald eagle. Actually, itâs three bald eagles. A mama bird and daddies make a home together for over a decade and give
Lose

Published: 07/19/2024 09:00:00
Lose Episode Details
This episode we look at a high profile sporting event where, thanks to a quirk in the tournament rules, the best shot at winning was ⦠to lose. To celebrate the imminent start of the Summer Olympic Games in Paris, France we have an episode originally reported in 2016. No matter what sport you play, the object of the game is to win. And thatâs hard enough to do. But we found a match where four top athletes had to do the opposite in one of the most high profile matches
How to Save a Life

Published: 07/12/2024 09:00:00
How to Save a Life Episode Details
What would you do if someoneâs heart stopped right in front of you? We get it⦠the world feels too bleak and too big for you to make a difference. But there is one thing - one simple tangible thing - you can do to make all the difference in the world to someone, possibly even a loved one, at arguably the worst moment of their life. Statistics show that 1 out of every 5 people on earth will die of heart failure. Cardiac arrests can happen anywhere, anytime - in
Happy Birthday, Good Dr. Sacks

Published: 07/05/2024 09:00:00
Happy Birthday, Good Dr. Sacks Episode Details
Radiolab wishes Oliver Sacks a happy birthday. First aired back in 2013, we originally released this episode to celebrate the 80th birthday of one of our favorite human beings, Oliver Sacks. To celebrate, his good friend, and our former co-host Rober Krulwich, asks the good doctor to look back, and explain how thousands of worms and a motorbike accident led to a brilliant writing career. We have some exciting news! In the âZoozveâ episode, Radiolab named its first-ever quasi-moon, and now it's your turn! Radiolab has teamed up with The International
The Alford Plea

Published: 06/28/2024 09:00:00
The Alford Plea Episode Details
A man finds himself forever caught between guilt and innocence. In 1995, a tragic fire in Pittsburgh set off a decades-long investigation that sent Greg Brown Jr. to prison. But, after a series of remarkable twists, Brown found himself contemplating a path to freedom that involved a paradoxical plea dealâone that peels back the curtain on the criminal justice system and reveals it doesnât work the way we think it does.
Birdie in the Cage

Published: 06/21/2024 09:00:00
Birdie in the Cage Episode Details
Can you fit the identity of a whole nation into a dance? Of course not. But we tried anyway. People have been doing the square dance since before the Declaration of Independence. But does that mean it should be THE American folk dance? That question took us on a journey from Appalachian front porches, to dance classes across our nation, to the halls of Congress, and finally a Kansas City convention center. And along the way, we uncovered a secret history of square dancing that made us see how much of
