
When We Talk About Animals
by Law, Environment & Animals Program at Yale Law School
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1 - 1,000 - Monthly Reach
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1 - 500
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On the show
Recent episodes
Ep. 51 – Novelist Ned Beauman on venomous lumpsuckers and the price of extinction
Apr 11, 2023
Unknown duration
Ep. 50 – Australian Biologist Danielle Clode on the Extraordinary World of Koalas
Feb 21, 2023
Unknown duration
Ep. 49 – Dog Cognition Expert Alexandra Horowitz on the Quiddity of Puppies
Oct 5, 2022
Unknown duration
Ep. 48 – Patrick Rose on the Fight to Save Florida’s Manatees
Aug 2, 2022
Unknown duration
Ep. 47 – Poet Aimee Nezhukumatathil on writing love letters to nature
May 24, 2022
Unknown duration
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| Date | Episode | Description | Length | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4/11/23 | Ep. 51 – Novelist Ned Beauman on venomous lumpsuckers and the price of extinction | Fiction can provide the most profound, incisive truths about the absurdities of our reality. In his most recent novel, Venomous Lumpsucker, Ned Beauman, a master of finding the humor and the fantastical in even the most devastating facets of human nature, has crafted a chilling—and deeply funny—look into what our future relationship with animals might … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 2/21/23 | Ep. 50 – Australian Biologist Danielle Clode on the Extraordinary World of Koalas | Upon seeing an adorable Koala sitting on an eucalyptus branch in Australia, few would expect the beloved marsupial to emit a booming bellow to alert potential mates or rivals of its presence. But this powerful roar is just one of koalas’ many surprises, which delight and astonish in Australian biologist Danielle Clode’s new book, “Koala: … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 10/5/22 | Ep. 49 – Dog Cognition Expert Alexandra Horowitz on the Quiddity of Puppies | Most books on puppies are dog-improvement manuals, guiding readers ‘How to Raise the Perfect Dog’ or how to achieve ‘Perfect Puppy in 7 Days.’ Alexandra Horowitz’s profound and totally delightful new book is not that type of book. It’s an unprecedented look at the complex, chaotic, fascinating, and often hilarious journeys of puppies becoming themselves. … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 8/2/22 | Ep. 48 – Patrick Rose on the Fight to Save Florida’s Manatees | Grazing peacefully through shallow waterways, the Florida manatee is one of the state’s most beloved creatures. Due to a multitude of compounding, human-caused crises, the last couple years have been some of the deadliest on record for manatees. Years of worsening water quality from Florida’s unfettered agricultural pollution and real estate development have resulted in … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 5/24/22 | Ep. 47 – Poet Aimee Nezhukumatathil on writing love letters to nature | Poet Aimee Nezhukumatathil’s exuberant book of essays, World of Wonders: In Praise of Fireflies, Whale Sharks, & Other Astonishments, has unlocked protective passion for nature among readers since its release in 2020. In the book’s thirty dazzling essays, Nezhukumatathil weaves love stories about being a daughter, a partner, a mother, and a teacher with reverence … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 3/21/22 | Ep. 46 – Paleobiologist Thomas Halliday on the Animals of Ancient Worlds | The fossil record acts as both a memorial to life’s spectacular possibilities and as a warning to humanity about how fast dominance can become forgotten history, according to our guest, Scottish paleobiologist Dr. Thomas Halliday. Halliday’s research investigates long-term patterns in the fossil record, particularly in mammals. In his magnificent and daring new book “Otherlands: … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 2/2/22 | Ep. 45 – Rob Dunn on what the laws of biology predict about our future | Amid the cataclysms of the Anthropocene, an era defined by humans’ attempts to control the natural world, it’s easy to forget that we remain as subject as ever to the ecological laws that govern living things. Like the laws of physics, paying attention to our planet’s biological laws empowers us to understand how the world … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 11/22/21 | Ep. 44 – Rick McIntyre on the stories of Yellowstone’s greatest wolves | In 1995, the U.S. government took unprecedented actions to restore the wolf population of Yellowstone National Park, which it had brutally destroyed seventy years prior. More than thirty wolves from multiple packs were captured in Canada, transported to the park, and released in a grand experiment that would become the most successful wildlife reintroduction effort … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 9/22/21 | Ep. 43 – Cynthia Barnett on our world of seashells | From tiny cowries to giant clams, seashells have gripped human imaginations since time immemorial. In her magnificent new book, The Sound of the Sea, journalist Cynthia Barnett tells the epic history of humanity’s interactions with shells and the soft-bodied animals who make them. These stories of how we have treasured, traded, plundered, and coveted shells … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 8/16/21 | Ep. 42 – Edie Widder on the ocean’s spectacular light | Most of us land-lubbers assume that light-making among ocean creatures is an exotic and rare phenomenon. But that’s wrong. The majority of animals in the ocean, which means the majority of animals on the planet, are capable of making light. From top to bottom, the ocean is teeming with unforgettably beautiful and extraordinarily diverse light … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
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| 5/27/21 | Ep. 41 – Ecologist Hugh Warwick on Loving Your Hedgehogs | Hedgehogs, despite being consistently voted the most beloved mammal in the United Kingdom, have suffered great population losses as industrial agriculture and other human impacts destroy their hedgerow habitats. Our latest guest, Hugh Warwick, has studied, celebrated, written about, and fought to protect hedgehogs for more than 30 years, leading a groundswell of local and … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 4/28/21 | Ep. 40 – Michelle Nijhuis on the history of the wildlife conservation movement | In “Beloved Beasts: Fighting for Life in an Age of Extinction,” science journalist Michelle Nijhuis chronicles the history of the wildlife conservation movement through the stories of the extraordinary people — both legendary experts and passionate amateurs — who shaped its evolution and expanding ambitions. Nijhuis introduces us to the Swedish scientists who devised the … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 2/24/21 | Ep. 39 – Bernie Krause on saving the music of the wild | In 1968, Dr. Bernie Krause was leading a booming music career. A prodigiously talented musician and early master of the electronic synthesizer, Krause was busy working with artists like the Doors and the Beach Boys and performing iconic effects for blockbuster films. Then Warner Brothers commissioned him to create an album incorporating the sounds of … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 12/9/20 | Ep. 38 – Margaret Renkl on discovering wonder, grief, and inspiration in backyard nature | In the long months we’ve all been confined to our homes, many people have become reacquainted with the vibrant life just outside their doors, finding unexpected joy, companionship, and hope through partaking in the cycles of love and loss that happen in the skies and yards around us. It is this wonder to be found … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 11/4/20 | Ep. 37 – Monica Gagliano on plant intelligence and human imagination | Are plants intelligent? Can they think? Can they hear, see, feel, smell and taste? Throughout history, most Western philosophers and scientists answered those questions with a resounding “no.” Plants have long been treated as passive, inanimate objects that form the backdrop to our active lives, rather than highly sensitive organisms with intelligence and agency of … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 9/28/20 | Ep. 36 – Rebecca Giggs on the world in the whale | In 2013, a sperm whale washed up dead on Spain’s southern coast. In its ruptured digestive tract, scientists found an entire flattened greenhouse that once grew wintertime tomatoes, complete with plastic tarps, hoses, two flower pots, and a spray canister. The whale also contained an ice cream tub, mattress parts, a carafe, and a coat … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 9/2/20 | Ep. 35 – J. Drew Lanham on finding ourselves magnified in nature’s colored hues | As Dr. Joseph Drew Lanham writes in his beautiful and deeply moving memoir, The Home Place: Memoirs of a Colored Man’s Love Affair with Nature, from his earliest days growing up in the piedmont forests and fields of Edgefield, South Carolina, he dreamed of flight. This fascination with the aerial journeys of the blue jays … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 7/20/20 | Ep. 34 – Daniel Pauly on why overfishing is a Ponzi scheme | Born in Paris to an African-American GI and a French woman at the end of World War II, Dr. Daniel Pauly rose from a difficult and extraordinarily unusual childhood in Europe to become one of the most daring, productive, and influential fisheries scientists in the history of the field — and the first to illuminate … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 6/15/20 | Ep. 33 – Valérie Courtois on Indigenous-led land and wildlife stewardship | As wildlife across Canada face unprecedented pressures from climate change and industrial development, Indigenous Peoples, who have relied upon and managed these animals for millennia, are leading the way on ensuring their protection. From Newfoundland and Labrador to the Yukon Territory, groundbreaking Indigenous-led protection initiatives are ensuring Canada’s treasured species like the boreal caribou and … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 5/18/20 | Ep. 32 – Gene Baur on changing hearts, minds and laws about farm animals | Amid the systematic cruelties and alienating conditions which define our factory farm system, Farm Sanctuary stands out as an exemplar of human kindness. Over the past thirty years, Farm Sanctuary — co-founded and led by our guest, Gene Baur — has rescued thousands of farm animals from short, tortured lives in industrial confinement and allowed … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 4/27/20 | Ep. 31 – Zak Smith on ending the international wildlife trade | The repercussions of the international wildlife trade, which is a primary driver of our planet’s biodiversity crisis, have recently hit close to home. With the society-altering impacts of Covid-19, which scientists think originated in wild animals, and the cultural storm around the Netflix hit “Tiger King,” the true cost of the wildlife trade and the … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 4/6/20 | Ep. 30 – Sonia Shah on how animal microbes become human pandemics | Roughly two-thirds of emerging infectious diseases — including COVID-19 and almost all recent epidemics — originate in the bodies of animals. Microbes have spilled over from animals to humans for time immemorial, but, as our species dominates the biosphere and transforms the frequency and nature of human-animal interactions, the rate at which microbes are jumping … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 3/9/20 | Ep. 29 – Amanda Hitt on why the animal agriculture industry needs whistleblowers | In an age where almost everything we eat is produced outside of public view, whistleblowers are critical to maintaining the integrity of our food systems. These principled insiders are often the first people to warn the public — often at grave personal cost — when food is unsafe, when workers face inhumane conditions, when food … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 2/10/20 | Ep. 28 – Bathsheba Demuth on capitalism, communism and arctic ecology | In her acclaimed first book, “Floating Coast,” historian Bathsheba Demuth explores how capitalism, communism and ecology have clashed for over 150 years in the remote region of Beringia, the Arctic lands and waters stretching between Russia and Canada. Demuth trekked through the landscape and historical archives in search of answers to questions such as: How … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
| 12/16/19 | Ep. 26 – Ian Urbina on the Outlaw Ocean | Over 40 percent of the Earth’s surface is open ocean that is over 200 miles from the nearest shore. These waters exist outside national jurisdiction and are almost entirely beyond the reach of law. Our guest, investigative journalist Ian Urbina, spent five years risking his life in these anarchic places to chronicle the lives he … Read More Read More | — | ||||||
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Chart Positions
3 placements across 3 markets.
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3 placements across 3 markets.
