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podcast

The Chesapeake Bay is described in both enlightenment and medieval terms in this podcast where invisible microbes play the role of ancient faeries. The narrator weaves personal observation with scientific knowledge to unpack recent political events and argues for a broad perspective on diversity. The reader imagines the planet as an ensouled body soaked in a wet film that inhales and exhales like a living organism. Meandering stories reminisce on similar patterns in cryonics, meditation, the origins of the Internet, protests, US elections, and algae blooms all describing a world out of balance.

Under the Bay

 
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The Chesapeake Bay

is described in both enlightenment and medieval terms in this podcast where invisible microbes play the role of ancient faeries. The narrator weaves personal observation with scientific knowledge to unpack recent political events and argues for a broad perspective on diversity. The reader imagines the planet as an ensouled body soaked in a wet film that inhales and exhales like a living organism. Meandering stories reminisce on similar patterns in cryonics, meditation, the origins of the Internet, protests, US elections, and algae blooms all describing a world out of balance.

This podcast is an audio version of the augmented reality project “Under the Bay.”

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A scientist utters the taboo of how breath itself originated.

Internet pioneer, Ted Nelson, describes how he came up with the idea of "hypertext" when he was a boy on his grandfathers boat.

A swim in the Chesapeake Bay prompts memories of microbes responsible for chalk, cloud behavior, ancient coastlines, and wisdom from Selma Alabama, to art installations, and Steve Kornacki's 'big board’ election map.

This episode reminisces on cryonics and what architects can learn from microbes about building sustainable structures.

In this episode, the narrator looks to both flocking behavior and meditation to find the meaning of peace.

A composer is inspired by evolving water conditions influencing his music streaming in from the Chesapeake Bay.

Can we imagine a vaccine against oppression as the Women's March flows through the DC streets like Celtic interlacing patterns inscribed by 8th-century monks?

Tsetso, a marine biologist, encounters an algae bloom on Baltimore's Pier V. The red mahogony critters are enmeshed with the stone head of Christopher Columbus toppled into the City’s Inner Harbor by protestors the night before.

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Lisa Moren