Shane Hewitt and The Nightshift

NEW - An Asteroid Just Rewrote What DNA Ingredients Look Like

10 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio NEW - An Asteroid Just Rewrote What DNA Ingredients Look Like

Descripción

A six-year-old sample from asteroid Ryugu just confirmed all five major DNA building blocks, and Dr. Samantha Yammine breaks down why that finding matters more than the headlines suggest. It separates what the data actually shows from the more dramatic claim that life itself started elsewhere. The conversation traces the Hayabusa2 mission's pristine sample collection, built specifically to rule out the Earth contamination that clouded earlier meteorite research. It explains a new detail from this study: the ratio of nucleobases shifts with ammonia levels, offering a clue to what other life forms might carry. It ends with the sheer improbability of any of this coming together at all, and a free, limited-time chance to send a name into deep space aboard the Nancy Grace Roman Telescope before the window closes. Topics: asteroid Ryugu, Hayabusa2, nucleobases, DNA ingredients, Nancy Grace Roman Telescope GUEST: Dr. Samantha Yammine | http://samanthayammine.com [http://samanthayammine.com] | @‌science.sam Originally aired on 2026-07-07

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300 episodios

Portada del episodio NEW - Smart Speakers - Should the Opposition Leader Keep His House?

NEW - Smart Speakers - Should the Opposition Leader Keep His House?

The agency that insures Canadian mortgages just paid out thirty two million dollars in staff bonuses. The people footing that bill are the same ones struggling to qualify for a mortgage in the first place. Jamie Ellerton, founding partner at Conaptus, and former Toronto City Councillor and TTC Chair Karen Stintz do not let that pass quietly. The same scrutiny lands on Stornoway. Elizabeth May has petitioned to sell the official opposition's government house to save money, and the response from both guests is not what you'd expect: not that she's wrong to ask, but that the reasoning misses what actually costs this country money. There is a harder question sitting underneath both stories, about who gets protected when a system is already broken and who pays for the protection. Two people who watch Canadian politics and money closely enough to be genuinely annoyed by it, saying so plainly. Topics: CMHC bonuses, Stornoway, 24 Sussex, housing affordability, Canadian politics GUEST: Jamie Ellerton | http://conaptus.com [http://conaptus.com]GUEST: Karen Stintz Originally aired on 2026-07-08

9 de jul de 202619 min
Portada del episodio SHIFTHEADS: Summer Jobs Aren't a Waste of Your Time. They're Free Education

SHIFTHEADS: Summer Jobs Aren't a Waste of Your Time. They're Free Education

Career myths convince people they get one shot at everything: wrong major, wrong first job, and that's the whole story decided. Candy Ho, a CERIC board member, makes the case that a summer job is closer to free training than a paycheque, and stacking the right experience early can change what happens next. Retail floors and customer service counters turn out to teach the stuff no course does: staying calm under pressure, solving problems on the spot, reading people fast. CERIC's free Career Mythbuster tool, live since last November, offers a way to test whether one wrong move really does end a career path before it starts. There's a case for volunteering too, not as time given away but as another form of unpaid education, plus a couple of career fantasies that never quite happened for either person in the room. Topics: career myths, summer jobs, CERIC, transferable skills, career mythbuster tool GUEST: Candy Ho | http://careermythbuster.ca/ [http://careermythbuster.ca/] Originally aired on 2026-07-08

9 de jul de 20269 min
Portada del episodio NEW - The Sound of the Sounds of the World Cup

NEW - The Sound of the Sounds of the World Cup

World Cup fan celebrations are the actual show this tournament, the games are just the excuse. If the sport itself has never made sense, this is the entry point that finally clicks: not the offside rule, but the noise a hundred years of rivalry makes when it finally boils over. There's a lost voice, a three in the morning wake-up call delivered as a favour, and a national anthem sung so hard it takes over a baseball game that has nothing to do with soccer. None of it needed context to be funny the first time, and none of it needs it now. Anyone who has ever wondered what makes a country lose its mind over a ball for a month gets the answer here, in sound, not stats. Topics: World Cup 2026, Harry Kane, Scotland fans, fan celebrations, football culture Originally aired on 2026-07-08

9 de jul de 20269 min
Portada del episodio Shiftheads - The Bermuda Triangle Is Safer Than This Canadian Lake

Shiftheads - The Bermuda Triangle Is Safer Than This Canadian Lake

The Great Lakes Triangle has claimed roughly six thousand ships and hundreds of planes, and Nathan Radke explains why the losses feel supernatural even when they are not. His book Uncover Up spent a decade tracing how ordinary people get talked into extraordinary beliefs. This episode follows his own trip into the vortex, out to isolated Main Duck Island, home to an old lighthouse and oversized, cannibalistic snakes. It also revisits the 1889 disappearance of the schooner Bavaria's crew, found missing from an undamaged ship with fresh bread still in the oven and a canary singing alone. It traces the region's vanishing planes and ghost ships back to atmospheric optics, an ancient meteor's magnetic pull, and weather violent enough to sink freighters and bury cars in snow, building a case for natural forces over portals, monsters, or ghosts. Topics: Great Lakes Triangle, Main Duck Island, Bermuda Triangle, ghost ships, shipwrecks GUEST: Nathan Radke | https://www.amazon.ca/Uncover-Up-Think-Clearly-Conspiracies/dp/1770418873 [https://www.amazon.ca/Uncover-Up-Think-Clearly-Conspiracies/dp/1770418873] | @‌theuncoverup Originally aired on 2026-07-08

9 de jul de 202619 min
Portada del episodio ICYMI - Your Boss Might Be Drunk on AI

ICYMI - Your Boss Might Be Drunk on AI

Something happens to a manager who spends all day getting agreed with. Greg Fish, a computer scientist behind Cyberpunk Survival Guide, lays out why the people running the meeting are more likely than anyone underneath them to fall into what he calls AI psychosis, and why it has nothing to do with curiosity and everything to do with pressure from above. The mechanics are almost too simple. An idea gets validated instead of challenged, a two-year project gets simulated in days, and thirty thousand lines of generated code get handed off to a team with no realistic way to check it all. When it breaks, there is a built-in excuse sitting right there: blame the machine, take the mulligan, look like a leader who was just trying something new. Anyone who has sat in a meeting that somehow always circles back to a chatbot will recognize exactly what is being described here. Topics: AI psychosis, corporate AI, managers, KPI pressure, workplace AI GUEST: Greg Fish | cyberpunksurvivalguide.com Originally aired on 2026-07-08

9 de jul de 20269 min