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You're A Natural

Podcast de You're A Natural

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Prepare yourself to enjoy reading YAN's consumer intelligence reports. Each episode debates the key concepts and central tension of an article — unpacking the jargon so you arrive ready to read, not lost. Two hosts argue both sides. You decide which one you agree with. Then read the article at youreanatural.com.

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49 episodios

episode The Hidden Half — The Compost Problem (3/3) artwork

The Hidden Half — The Compost Problem (3/3)

Voluntary certifications draw a perimeter. We read the word inside it as the whole product. The same gap — between what a standard audits and what the shelf word implies — recurs across organic cotton, natural cosmetics, organic wine, and carbon-neutral airline tickets. In this episode, we debate: Is the gap between what voluntary certifications audit and what consumers read from the shelf word an unfixable structural feature of certification itself — or a navigable design problem that a three-question diagnostic makes solvable? We unpack 5 concepts you will need before reading the article: The Three-Question Diagnostic, The Four Drifts of "Organic", COSMOS-NATURAL and the Permitted Non-Natural, The Carbon-Neutral Remainder, and Architecture Not Conspiracy. This is part 3 of 3 in The Compost Problem series. Episode 1 ("The Dye Beneath") covered the chemistry. Episode 2 ("Where the Logo Ends") covered the rules. This episode asks whether the pattern is specific to cotton — or shows up everywhere voluntary certification meets a shelf word. Related episodes: The Dye Beneath, Where the Logo Ends, The Caddy Liner Topics: voluntary certification, organic labelling, GOTS, COSMOS natural cosmetics, carbon offsets, carbon neutral flying, audit scope, consumer trust, greenwashing, certification architecture, compost Read the full article: youreanatural.com/consumer-intelligence/the-hidden-half

22 de may de 2026 - 41 min
episode Where the Logo Ends artwork

Where the Logo Ends

GOTS — the Global Organic Textile Standard — wrote down the boundary of its job in plain language on its first body page: criteria for low-impact chemical inputs. Not soil-return. Not biodegradation. The label compresses that fifty-page scope into one word: organic. The consumer reads soil-return when the standard says nothing of the kind. In this episode, we debate: Is the gap between what GOTS certifies and what the consumer infers from "organic" a structural failure of the certification system — or a defensible, honest scope choice by a standard that named its own boundary? We unpack 6 concepts you will need before reading the article: Section 1.2.6 — The Standard's Own Sentence, The Logo Compression Problem, The Thirteen Confirmations, The Certifier That Doesn't Exist, Articulation by Exclusion (V8.0), and The Self-Stabilising Fee Architecture. This is part 2 of 3 in The Compost Problem series. Episode 1 ("The Dye Beneath") covered the chemistry — how reactive dyes bond to cotton and what the soil inherits. This episode examines the rules — what the standard actually says and why the gap persists. Related episodes: The Dye Beneath, The Certification Void Topics: GOTS certification, organic cotton, textile standards, certification scope, biodegradability, compost, voluntary standards, eco-labels, consumer trust, greenwashing Read the full article: youreanatural.com/consumer-intelligence/where-the-logo-ends

20 de may de 2026 - 39 min
episode 074 — The Dye Beneath (The Compost Problem 1/3) artwork

074 — The Dye Beneath (The Compost Problem 1/3)

A GOTS-certified organic cotton towel carries a covalent dye-cellulose bond engineered in the 1950s to survive hundreds of washes. When you compost it, the cotton biodegrades — but the dye chemistry survives the soil. What does your garden inherit? In this episode, we debate: Is a coloured organic cotton towel genuinely compostable, or does the reactive dye that holds the colour through the wash also survive the compost — meaning the certification scope stops short of the claim the consumer reads into the label? We unpack 5 concepts you will need before reading the article: The Certification Scope Gap, Reactive Dye Chemistry and the Covalent Bond, The Inheritance Adduct, Triazine Ring Homology and Selected Microbiology, and The Effluent-versus-End-of-Life Distinction. This is Part 1 of 3 in The Compost Problem series. This episode takes the chemistry — the bond, the dye, and what the soil inherits. Parts 2 and 3 cover the regulatory architecture and the cross-category pattern. Related episodes: The Caddy Liner (compostable certification vs real composting conditions), The Disclosure Gap (regulatory categories that leave materials between classifications) Topics: GOTS certification, organic cotton, reactive dye, textile composting, inheritance adduct, triazine ring, soil chemistry, dye-cellulose bond, home composting safety Read the full article: youreanatural.com/consumer-intelligence/the-dye-beneath

18 de may de 2026 - 47 min
episode The Disclosure Gap artwork

The Disclosure Gap

The Disclosure Gap: the EU banned titanium dioxide from food after EFSA found a genotoxicity concern it could not rule out. The same substance, at comparable nanoparticle sizes, migrates from the "ceramic" nonstick pan that cooks your dinner — and nobody is required to measure it, limit it, or tell you about it. The hosts debate whether that gap is reasonable risk management or an unfulfilled regulatory promise. In this episode, we debate: is the EU's general safety requirement for cookware coatings doing its job — or does a safety obligation with no testing protocol, no migration limits, and no disclosure mandate mean the word "safe" exists on paper but has no mechanism behind it? We unpack 5 concepts you will need before reading the article: The Two-Tier System (how EU Regulation 1935/2004 gives plastics an 800-substance positive list while coatings get a single sentence), The E171 Regulatory Irony (banned from sweets, unregulated from pans — same substance, different classification), The Sol-Gel Classification Void (what "ceramic" nonstick actually is — and why it falls between every regulatory category), Lobbying as Gap Maintenance (the Cookware Sustainability Alliance, $258,000 in lobbying, and the quiet part said loud), and The Disclosure Asymmetry (what cling film must tell you versus what your pan doesn't have to). This is a pre-reading companion to the You're a Natural consumer intelligence report. The hosts debate and define the key concepts so you're prepared to read the full article. Next step: turn over the nonstick pan in your kitchen drawer and check what the label actually tells you — then ask your manufacturer the three questions from the report. Topics: cookware safety, nonstick pan regulation, ceramic cookware, titanium dioxide nanoparticles, EU food contact regulation, PFAS cookware, cookware coatings, sol-gel, Regulation 1935/2004, Cookware Sustainability Alliance, food contact materials, E171 Related episodes: The Pan (The Kitchen Problem 1/3), The Contact (The Kitchen Problem 2/3), The Safe Substitute (The Coating Gap 1/2) Read the full article: youreanatural.com/consumer-intelligence/the-disclosure-gap

15 de may de 2026 - 58 min
episode The Coco Question: When SLS-Free Doesn't Mean What You Think artwork

The Coco Question: When SLS-Free Doesn't Mean What You Think

The Coco Question: when you pay a premium for an "SLS-free" shampoo bar, are you buying a meaningful chemistry difference — or a different name from a 1973 vocabulary list that was never designed to help you compare? The hosts debate six concepts: the INCI naming system (a regulator's inventory repurposed as a consumer shopping tool), the 1,4-Dioxane Inversion (the "natural upgrade" Sodium Cocoyl Isethionate sits downstream of the ethylene oxide pathway the substitution was sold as escaping), Critical Micelle Concentration and the monomer fraction (why the chain-length distribution inside Sodium Coco-Sulfate determines which molecules the skin actually encounters), Regrettable Substitution (BPA-to-BPS architecture applied to shampoo), Adjudicator Incoherence (five gatekeepers — Whole Foods, Sephora, Cosmébio, COSMOS, Boots — maintain contradictory exclusion lists), and the Anaerobic Biodegradation Inversion (decyl glucoside passes aerobic tests at 98% but inhibits biogas production at the second stage of municipal wastewater treatment). The 1998 chain email that launched an eleven-billion-dollar product segment. The Lush bar that lists SLS first. The 1886 Oleomargarine Act that solved this problem 140 years ago for food. This is a pre-reading companion to the You're a Natural consumer intelligence report. The hosts debate and define the key concepts so you're prepared to read the full article. Next step: read the back of your shampoo bar wrapper and check whether your bar is a syndet or a saponified soap — the pH difference alone may explain why your hair changed when you switched. Topics: shampoo bars, SLS, sodium lauryl sulfate, sulfate-free shampoo, INCI ingredients, natural shampoo, 1,4-dioxane, sodium cocoyl isethionate, SCI, regrettable substitution, surfactant chemistry, syndet bars, Sodium Coco-Sulfate, decyl glucoside, COSMOS certification, clean beauty Related episodes: The Safe Substitute (The Coating Gap 1/2), The Wooden Spoon, The Certification Void (Casual Shoes 3/3)

11 de may de 2026 - 44 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Fantástica aplicación. Yo solo uso los podcast. Por un precio módico los tienes variados y cada vez más.
Me encanta la app, concentra los mejores podcast y bueno ya era ora de pagarles a todos estos creadores de contenido

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