Archive for the ‘Podcasts’ Category

A heartfelt plug for “A history of the world in 100 objects”

Saturday, February 13th, 2010
Statue of Ramesses II at the British Museum

Ramesses II at the British Museum


The BBC in conjunction with the British Museum is putting on a new series this year, “A history of the world in 100 objects”. Neil MacGregor, Director of the British Museum, has chosen 100 objects from their remarkable collection to illustrate the sweep of human history, ranging from early stone axes through modern icons such as credit cards. Each object gets a 15 minute episode broadcast on BBC Radio 4, and available on-line and as a podcast.

They’ve finish 4 weeks (or 20 episodes), and the objects and their stories have been consistently engaging and informative. Some standouts have been the carving of the swimming reindeer, the Egyptian clay model of cattle, and the Rhind mathematical papyrus, but it’s awfully hard to choose favorites when the quality has been this good. If I had to pick just one out of what they’ve broadcast so far, it would probably be the Jomon pot episode. This type of pottery changed the way we understood the development of this crucial technology, and the way these objects were revered in Japan thousands of years later is quite wonderful. This particular pot, made some 7,000 years ago, was valued so highly a few hundred years ago that it was lined with gold and incorporated into the tea ceremony.

I’ve been to the British Museum several times over the years, and taken way too many photos there. (A few on my “main” Flickr account, and way too many on my events account.) One thing that’s been cool about the series is that in the first 20 episodes there was only one object that I remember seeing and actually photographed: The statue of Ramesses II up above. He’s huge and pretty hard to miss there next to the Rosetta Stone. Many of the objects in the series have been small and subtle, however, which nicely illustrates the value of a cool program like this. Some objects are pretty remarkable in and of themselves, but others benefit enormously from a guide who suggests we slow down and really look at this stone or that statue. Here MacGregor and his guests help us understand the significance, context, and impact of these objects, and totally make me want to go back to the Museum and seek these treasures out.

There are some other objects in the series that I’ve seen and photographed (such as the Assyrian Reliefs below), but most of them will be new to me. I’m eagerly looking forward to the remaining 80 episodes!

And the world just keeps rolling along

Detail from Assyrian Reliefs in the British Museum

Let’s record some random crap and put it on the web

Sunday, December 25th, 2005

Bambi Meets Godzilla movie image
I’m sorry, but we’ve gone and done something silly: Sub-Evil Boy and I made our first podcast.

This is pretty rough and goofy stuff, so waste the bandwidth at your own peril. This episode features the two of us totally butchering a fine pair Christmas carols (I’m particularly amused by what we did with “Deck the halls” at the very end), and a perhaps slightly over-long “news” report on the demise of Godzilla followed by a discussion of the great short the classic short Bambi meets Godzilla (I got the names reversed in our discussion).

I have no idea if we’ll ever do another one of these again. It was way too amusing, but I could hardly describe the results as high art. It was also somewhat time consuming which made it easier to pull off on Christmas eve than during the chaos of “real life”. I’m also not entirely sure that WeatherGirl will continue to allow us to remain in the house if we continue to produce these insults to human intelligence, but we’ll have to wait and see :-) .

If you really want to suffer you can use stuff our RSS feed link into a Podcast capable thingy like iTunes and get automatic updates. Sorry about that. Really.