The Irreverent Podcast

Flood & the Consequences of At-Risk Building

2 min · 13. mars 2026
episode Flood & the Consequences of At-Risk Building cover

Beskrivelse

Last year’s 2025 Guadalupe River Flood was one of the most rapid and destructive flood events in recent U.S. history. In just forty-five minutes, the river rose more than twenty-five feet, overwhelming communities throughout Central Texas and exposing long-standing vulnerabilities in land-use decisions, floodplain policy, and local emergency systems. For our upcoming episode of The Irreverent Podcast, Jamie examines this event in depth — not through sensationalism, but through careful analysis. The episode explores the documented flood history of “Flash Flood Alley,” the structural incentives that continue to drive development into high‑risk zones, and the policy frameworks that shape how communities prepare for and respond to flash‑flood hazards. Today, we’re sharing the trailer for this episode. It offers a concise, research‑grounded introduction to the discussion and highlights why this event carries implications far beyond Central Texas. If you work in emergency management, planning, policy, environmental studies, or simply want a clearer understanding of the forces that shape risk in American communities, I invite you to listen.

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Alle episoder

9 Episoder

episode Flood & the Consequences of At-Risk Building cover

Flood & the Consequences of At-Risk Building

Last year’s 2025 Guadalupe River Flood was one of the most rapid and destructive flood events in recent U.S. history. In just forty-five minutes, the river rose more than twenty-five feet, overwhelming communities throughout Central Texas and exposing long-standing vulnerabilities in land-use decisions, floodplain policy, and local emergency systems. For our upcoming episode of The Irreverent Podcast, Jamie examines this event in depth — not through sensationalism, but through careful analysis. The episode explores the documented flood history of “Flash Flood Alley,” the structural incentives that continue to drive development into high‑risk zones, and the policy frameworks that shape how communities prepare for and respond to flash‑flood hazards. Today, we’re sharing the trailer for this episode. It offers a concise, research‑grounded introduction to the discussion and highlights why this event carries implications far beyond Central Texas. If you work in emergency management, planning, policy, environmental studies, or simply want a clearer understanding of the forces that shape risk in American communities, I invite you to listen.

13. mars 20262 min
episode Love in the Small: TikTok’s “Bird Theory,” Bids for Connection cover

Love in the Small: TikTok’s “Bird Theory,” Bids for Connection

If you’ve seen the viral “Bird Theory” on TikTok, someone says, “I saw a bird today,” and captures their partner’s reaction, then you’ve just glimpsed into the ever-evolving meme world. This one has real science behind it. The trend repackages John and Julie Gottman’s research on “bids for connection”, tiny attempts to engage, and what partners do next: turn toward, turn away, or turn against. In longitudinal studies, couples who stayed together, "turned towards" the bids ~86% of the time; those who later divorced did so ~33%. These “small” moments add up to a big predictor of resilience. To read our full article on Substack: https://substack.com/@theirreverentapproach/note/p-187868960?r=o3jrh&utm_source=notes-share-action&utm_medium=web [https://substack.com/@theirreverentapproach/note/p-187868960?r=o3jrh&utm_source=notes-share-action&utm_medium=web]

26. feb. 20267 min