Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Search results for

  • The NCAA basketball tournaments can be onslaught of unfamiliar names and terms enough to make any casual viewer nervous. We're here to help. (Except for NET. We can't explain NET.)
  • Looking for a practical gift to give this holiday season. Why not a gift certificate for electricity or water. Robert talks with Terry Torres, who's the director of residential customer service for the Orlando Utilities Commission. Torres says they're offering gift certificates in denominations of $10, $25 and $50 to give to parents, grandparents, neighbors, and college students. The recipients of the certificates redeem them by including them with their bills. According to today's Wall Street Journal, gift certificates are also available for utility payments in Nashville, Tennessee, Norwich, Connecticut, and Kissimmee, Florida. You can visit the Orlando Utilities web site at http://www.ouc.com.
  • Two of the Amazon rainforest's staunchest advocates, Bruno Pereira and Dom Phillips, are believed to have been killed in one of its remotest corners.
  • All of the top 10 books borrowed through the public library app Libby were written by women. And Kristin Hannah's The Women was the top checkout in many library systems around the country.
  • From Dr. Anthony Fauci to Sacha Baron Cohen, the year's most popular Fresh Air web pages reflect the show's strength as a place where artists, authors and journalists speak to the moment.
  • Join Friends of California Condors Wild and Free for a captivating screening of “The Condor’s
    Shadow,” a one hour film by Mr. Jeff McLoughlin, exploring the remarkable journey of the critically
    endangered California Condor! The documentary follows biologist Mr. Joseph Brandt into the historic
    nesting habitat of this iconic bird located in Ventura County. After the film there will be a Q&A with Mr.
    Brandt. Our guest will speak to the public after the film viewing in the Topping Room at the Ventura
    Public Library located at 651 E. Main St. from 2:00 to 3:30 pm on Sunday, October 19, 2025.
    After graduating from the University of Oregon in 2004, Joseph Brandt found his way to the California
    Condor Recovery Program in 2005, working as a volunteer intern for the Hopper Mountain National
    Wildlife Refuge Complex. After a season of working with Magellanic Penguins in Southern Chile, he
    returned to the condor program to work as a condor nesting biologist along the Big Sur coast with the
    Ventana Wildlife Society. There he documented the first condor nest in over 100 years in Monterey
    County and the first ever in a coastal redwood tree.
    In 2007, he began his career with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service again working with the California
    Condor Recovery Program at the Hopper Mountain Complex. In 2009, he became the supervisory
    wildlife biologist for the condor program and he led the effort to release condors in the Transverse
    range, Tehachapi Mountains, and Southern Sierras for the next 10 years - more than quadrupling the
    wild population of condors in Southern California!
    In 2019, he changed roles with USFWS and started at the Ventura Fish and Wildlife Office working on
    section 7 consultations and incidental take permitting. In 2023, he was promoted to assistant field
    supervisor of the Central Coast Division of the Ventura Field Office, where he now leads a team of
    biologists who consult on a variety of endangered species, including condors, primarily in Santa
    Barbara and San Luis Obispo Counties and the Los Padres National Forest.
    The California condor was listed as an endangered species in 1967. In 1987 California
    Condors were on the verge of extinction with only 27 alive, as the last free flying condor, AC9,
    was taken from the wild. In 1992, the USFWS began reintroducing captive-bred condors to the
    wild to reestablish the population. Today, there are over 560 birds with over half of them flying
    free in the wild in various populations including California, Arizona, and Baja Mexico. The
    California Condor is a resident of the local area and can be found in the mountains behind
    Ojai, Santa Paula, Fillmore, Piru, and Santa Barbara.
    The Recovery Program is currently focusing its efforts on the captive breeding and reintroduction of
    California condors to the wild in the hopes of establishing a self sustaining population of two
    geographically separate populations, one in California and the other in Arizona, each with 150 birds
    and at least 15 breeding pairs.
    Friends of California Condors Wild and Free is a nonprofit 501c3 all volunteer organization,
    that has the mission to enhance public awareness of the endangered California Condor and to
    ensure that they are protected, healthy, and free.
    Come learn about the endangered California Condor, North America’s largest land

  • UCSB Library is pleased to present Jonathan Schooler (Psychological and Brain Sciences) in the Pacific Views: Library Speaker Series for Spring 2025. This event is in conjunction with the UCSB Reads 2025 book The Book of Delights: Essays by Ross Gay, a genre-defying collection of short lyrical essays that celebrate the small, ordinary wonders in the world around us.

    Children routinely experience wonder in everyday events, however, as we get older we can lose that childlike curiosity, and the pleasures that it affords. In this talk, Schooler will describe a smartphone-based intervention that his lab has been developing to promote curiosity through daily behavioral activities and “mindful curiosity” practices, which promote an inquiring stance towards everyday experiences.

    Schooler’s preliminary research results reveal that app users showed significant increases in perceptual curiosity, meaning in life, and creative behaviors, presence of meaning, mindful awareness, and reduced boredom proneness. These findings suggest that curiosity and its benefits can be cultivated through targeted interventions, particularly when combining attitudinal and behavioral strategies.

    Jonathan Schooler is a Distinguished Professor of Psychological and Brain Sciences at UCSB, Director of UCSB’s Center for Mindfulness and Human Potential, and Acting Director of the Sage Center for the Study of the Mind. His research intersects philosophy and psychology, including the relationship between mindfulness and mind-wandering, theories of consciousness, the nature of creativity, and the impact of art on the mind.

    Schooler’s research has been featured on television shows including BBC Horizon and Through the Wormhole with Morgan Freeman, as well as in print media including the New York Times, the New Yorker, and Nature Magazine. With over 250 publications and more than 40,000 citations he is a five-time recipient of the Clarivate Analytics Web of Science™ Highly Cited Researcher Award and is ranked by Academicinfluence.com among the 100 most influential cognitive psychologists.

    Schooler’s approximately 45-minute presentation will be followed by a Q&A session.

    This event may be photographed or recorded.

  • UCSB Library is pleased to present Jonathan Schooler (Psychological and Brain Sciences) in the Pacific Views: Library Speaker Series for Spring 2025. This event is in conjunction with the UCSB Reads 2025 book The Book of Delights: Essays by Ross Gay, a genre-defying collection of short lyrical essays that celebrate the small, ordinary wonders in the world around us.

    Children routinely experience wonder in everyday events, however, as we get older we can lose that childlike curiosity, and the pleasures that it affords. In this talk, Schooler will describe a smartphone-based intervention that his lab has been developing to promote curiosity through daily behavioral activities and “mindful curiosity” practices, which promote an inquiring stance towards everyday experiences.

    Schooler’s preliminary research results reveal that app users showed significant increases in perceptual curiosity, meaning in life, and creative behaviors, presence of meaning, mindful awareness, and reduced boredom proneness. These findings suggest that curiosity and its benefits can be cultivated through targeted interventions, particularly when combining attitudinal and behavioral strategies.

    Jonathan Schooler is a Distinguished Professor of Psychological and Brain Sciences at UCSB, Director of UCSB’s Center for Mindfulness and Human Potential, and Acting Director of the Sage Center for the Study of the Mind. His research intersects philosophy and psychology, including the relationship between mindfulness and mind-wandering, theories of consciousness, the nature of creativity, and the impact of art on the mind.

    Schooler’s research has been featured on television shows including BBC Horizon and Through the Wormhole with Morgan Freeman, as well as in print media including the New York Times, the New Yorker, and Nature Magazine. With over 250 publications and more than 40,000 citations he is a five-time recipient of the Clarivate Analytics Web of Science™ Highly Cited Researcher Award and is ranked by Academicinfluence.com among the 100 most influential cognitive psychologists.

    Schooler’s approximately 45-minute presentation will be followed by a Q&A session.

    This event may be photographed or recorded.
  • The 68-team fields for the men's and women's NCAA basketball tournaments will be unveiled Sunday night, and the games begin next week.
  • As one of the world's largest democracies heads to the polls on Sunday, here are the main candidates and issues in the Brazilian election.
92 of 6,908