The Curiosity Desk

Do You Like, Hate When People Say Like?

51 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Do You Like, Hate When People Say Like?

Descripción

It’s another edition of “The Glitch Report” with Joan Donovan from the Critical Internet Studies Institute. She’ll talk about some implications of A.I. deepfake videos becoming indiscernible from the real thing, and the fun-house reality of right-wing podcaster Candace Owens – who’s been promoting a bizarre conspiracy theory about the death of Charlie Kirk.  Then, Neuroscientists Bob Datta and David Brann explain their groundbreaking research [https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/29/science/nose-brain-smell-olfaction.html] mapping out how our brains register smell.  Lastly, Edgar checks in with Martha Barnette & Grant Barrett from the public radio show A Way With Words to answer some listener-submitted etymological curiosity questions. We’ll get into the origin of “dust bunnies,” and why New Englanders call drinking fountains “bubblers."

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episode Do You Like, Hate When People Say Like? artwork

Do You Like, Hate When People Say Like?

It’s another edition of “The Glitch Report” with Joan Donovan from the Critical Internet Studies Institute. She’ll talk about some implications of A.I. deepfake videos becoming indiscernible from the real thing, and the fun-house reality of right-wing podcaster Candace Owens – who’s been promoting a bizarre conspiracy theory about the death of Charlie Kirk.  Then, Neuroscientists Bob Datta and David Brann explain their groundbreaking research [https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/29/science/nose-brain-smell-olfaction.html] mapping out how our brains register smell.  Lastly, Edgar checks in with Martha Barnette & Grant Barrett from the public radio show A Way With Words to answer some listener-submitted etymological curiosity questions. We’ll get into the origin of “dust bunnies,” and why New Englanders call drinking fountains “bubblers."

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