With the year drawing to a close, a good resolution to consider would be to check out some podcasts you've never come across (or pick up podcast listening in general if this is your introduction). I mean, becoming smarter and gaining a more well-rounded perspective of the world on a weekly basis isn't such a bad way to pass 2018. So below are 120+ podcasts that both me and my wife have encountered since we first started listening.
Titles are organized by style of podcast and then sorted alphabetically. Since there is a mixture of genres as well as personal familiarity presented, the simplest way I chose to sift the wheat from the chaff was to rate them out of five stars like a standard podcast app. These ratings are based on my personal-Catholic-manly-engineering-musical background so take it all with a grain of salt.
5/5 - Recommended unabashedly for superior content and practicality.
4/5 - Frequently deep discussions that requires familiarity with jargon.
3/5 - Good content for its genre and doesn't delve into the weeds too much.
2/5 - Sometimes insightful, mostly passable.
1/5 - Avoid altogether or listen at your own risk! Usually carries a heavily contrarian agenda.
?/5 - Not enough listening experience to garner an accurate rating.
N.B. - I've complied a more detailed list of 20 podcasts here from January 2016.
P.S. - I didn't want to wait to get the list out before completely finishing the post, so there are some missing descriptions that I will include in the next couple of days.
Catholic - Commentary / Keynote / Presentation [19]
All Things Catholic (4/5) - Dr. Edward Sri offers insights on living a deeper and richer Catholic faith.
Aquinas College Lecture Series (?/5) - Older talks from Aquinas College
Aquinas College Podcast (?/5) - Guest lectures from Aquinas College in Nashville.
Augustine Institute Special Events (3/5) - Keynote speakers from the Augustine Institute in Denver.
Catholic:Under the Hood (3/5) - Franciscan Fr. Seraphim Beshoner offers a slow and thorough of the history of the Catholic Church through all its ecclesiastical conflicts and theological clarifications.
Showing posts with label Podcasts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Podcasts. Show all posts
Saturday, December 30, 2017
Friday, March 11, 2016
Podcast of the Week: Breaking Bad and Dealing with Darkness
Now that I live life outside of the realm of academia proper, I find myself with not only more time to watch television but also with more maturity of perspective in approaching this media. But as Uncle Ben says with every Spider-Man reboot, "With great power comes great responsibility." So although I can watch movies like Taxi Driver and series like Peaky Blinders and not feel the urge to beat up random people on the street (or vice versa, fear random people on the street beating me up), it is important to be aware of the sensibilities and temperaments of others when discussing or suggesting things to watch. This podcast was very helpful in reminding me that it's OK for everyone to not be into every show I enjoy and that even if a work of art cannot be commended because of its content (be it the graphic violence in Breaking Bad, the psycho-emotional manipulation in Jessica Jones or the stark sensuality of Game of Thrones) it can be lauded for the creativity of the writers and producers, which ultimately reveal an aspect of the Beauty of the Creator.
Listen to "Breaking Bad and Dealing with Darkness"
Visit Pop Culture Coffee Hour
Logos, yo,
Kelvin

Listen to "Breaking Bad and Dealing with Darkness"
Visit Pop Culture Coffee Hour
Logos, yo,
Kelvin
Monday, March 7, 2016
Podcast of the Week: The Science of Cheating
No, this is not a tutorial on how to cheat on your significant other. Instead, this podcast has the exact opposite purpose, namely describing the circumstances that would lead a reasonable and caring person into infidelity and what all parties involved can do to prevent this from happening (in the best case) and make amends to reconcile the relationship if it does happen (in the worst case).
I personally found the release of this episode very timely because it came shortly after a deep discussion I had with a close friend about how we would each react to being cheated on during a dating relationship or a marriage. Like anything in love, the will is the driving force and though one's conscience and intellect may be strong this does not equate to immunity from committing the most heinous offenses to those we care about most. However, there are definitive habits that those in relationships can cultivate, such as openness and transparency, in order for the probability of performing these acts to be at their lowest.
Listen to "The Science of Cheating — How to Prevent and Deal With Infidelity"
Visit The Art of Manliness
To love is to will the good of another,
Kelvin
I personally found the release of this episode very timely because it came shortly after a deep discussion I had with a close friend about how we would each react to being cheated on during a dating relationship or a marriage. Like anything in love, the will is the driving force and though one's conscience and intellect may be strong this does not equate to immunity from committing the most heinous offenses to those we care about most. However, there are definitive habits that those in relationships can cultivate, such as openness and transparency, in order for the probability of performing these acts to be at their lowest.

Listen to "The Science of Cheating — How to Prevent and Deal With Infidelity"
Visit The Art of Manliness
To love is to will the good of another,
Kelvin
Sunday, February 28, 2016
Podcast of the Week: Peeping Thomist
The hosts of the podcasts I've subscribed to have the nasty habit of referencing or suggesting other podcasts they enjoy and it leads me to accumulate more subscriptions than is reasonable for an average 8-to-5er. As such, I've gotten to the habit of listening to these shows at 2x speed (also a weird and not altogether advisable practice) in order to get through my weekly downloads.
All of this is to say that I encounter a lot of podcasts with good content worth highlighting for those unaware that such information exists. So I'd like to tack on another weekly segment, "Podcasts of the Week", that would help this blog become more than just an avenue for entertainment.
The first episode I'd like to promote comes from Catching Foxes and is titled "Interview with Peeping Thomist Brian Jones". This was one that I had to listen to twice at 1x speed because of all of the heady and philosophical content: St. Thomas Aquinas and Thomism, the Regensburg Lecture, positive psychology and medieval views on Islam. It felt like a fun graduate lecture replete with movie references to the Hail, Caeser!, The Royal Tenenbaums, Groundhog Day and Ghostbusters II.
All of this is to say that I encounter a lot of podcasts with good content worth highlighting for those unaware that such information exists. So I'd like to tack on another weekly segment, "Podcasts of the Week", that would help this blog become more than just an avenue for entertainment.
The first episode I'd like to promote comes from Catching Foxes and is titled "Interview with Peeping Thomist Brian Jones". This was one that I had to listen to twice at 1x speed because of all of the heady and philosophical content: St. Thomas Aquinas and Thomism, the Regensburg Lecture, positive psychology and medieval views on Islam. It felt like a fun graduate lecture replete with movie references to the Hail, Caeser!, The Royal Tenenbaums, Groundhog Day and Ghostbusters II.
Link to "Interview with Peeping Thomist Brian Jones".
Link to Catching Foxes.
Houston's best-kept Catholic secret,
Kelvin
P.S. - I would also be remiss if I didn't mention the recent Art of Manliness episode, "C.S. Lewis, J.R.R Tolkien, and the Inklings Mastermind Group", since it was the first spark of inspiration for starting this new segment.
Sunday, January 17, 2016
Casting Pods
When I was younger, I thought that podcasts were just glorified radio shows that only old people listened to. Now that I'm older, I think that they are one of the greatest media avenues ever created! Though I don't claim to know the first thing about podcast broadcasting, it is suffice to say for the layman still living under a rock that a podcast is an audio / video channel where the channel's host can upload episodic content to the podcast client server (which I presume is maintained by Apple) which is downloaded by the subscribers as often as the channel is updated. Basically, it's like TV for your earbuds.
The genres of podcasts seem as varied and versitile as what you could find on your phone's app store: news, sports, music, food, history, religion, comedy, education, etc. And I've yet to find any podcast whose content isn't free! So whatever you're into, it's likely that there's a podcast about it and that it's being regularly updated.
Below I've listed the podcasts I'm currently subscribed to and the reasons why I keep listening. I know there's dozens more I should also check out (some of which I'll list at the end), but I've kinda got my hands full with the content I already get from these 20 podcasts. If you have any suggestions, though, don't hesitate to leave a message on the (very lonely) comment bar :)
1. Lanky Guys (Runtime: 45 mins) (Updated: once a week)
This list is structured in the order that I have my podcast app (Podcast Republic) check for new updates and it's no surprise that I have it check for Lanky Guys first. Every week, Scott Powell and Fr. Peter Mussett call in from Bolder, Colorado, to break open the Scriptures and try and find the themes and topics that tie together each of the Sunday Mass readings from the Catholic Lectionary. I can always trust on the duo to be well researched, but far from sounding like a graduate lecture they do a good job of interspersing light banter and offering concrete take-aways that are pertinent to the Christian of today.
2. Word on Fire Sermons (Runtime: 15 minutes) (Updated: once a week)
On Word on Fire Sermons, Bishop Robert Barron of Los Angeles, California, shares his homily on the upcoming Sunday's Mass readings which is regularly dense with theological, philosophical, sociological and historical discussion.
3. St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology (Runtime: 3 minutes) (Updated: once a week)
Every week Dr. Scott Hahn from Steubenville, Ohio, offers in his podcast a short reflection on the Sunday Mass readings and draws out the implications of not only where do the readings fit in Salvation History but also how we are called to participate in the same.
The genres of podcasts seem as varied and versitile as what you could find on your phone's app store: news, sports, music, food, history, religion, comedy, education, etc. And I've yet to find any podcast whose content isn't free! So whatever you're into, it's likely that there's a podcast about it and that it's being regularly updated.
Below I've listed the podcasts I'm currently subscribed to and the reasons why I keep listening. I know there's dozens more I should also check out (some of which I'll list at the end), but I've kinda got my hands full with the content I already get from these 20 podcasts. If you have any suggestions, though, don't hesitate to leave a message on the (very lonely) comment bar :)
1. Lanky Guys (Runtime: 45 mins) (Updated: once a week)
This list is structured in the order that I have my podcast app (Podcast Republic) check for new updates and it's no surprise that I have it check for Lanky Guys first. Every week, Scott Powell and Fr. Peter Mussett call in from Bolder, Colorado, to break open the Scriptures and try and find the themes and topics that tie together each of the Sunday Mass readings from the Catholic Lectionary. I can always trust on the duo to be well researched, but far from sounding like a graduate lecture they do a good job of interspersing light banter and offering concrete take-aways that are pertinent to the Christian of today.
2. Word on Fire Sermons (Runtime: 15 minutes) (Updated: once a week)
On Word on Fire Sermons, Bishop Robert Barron of Los Angeles, California, shares his homily on the upcoming Sunday's Mass readings which is regularly dense with theological, philosophical, sociological and historical discussion.
3. St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology (Runtime: 3 minutes) (Updated: once a week)
Every week Dr. Scott Hahn from Steubenville, Ohio, offers in his podcast a short reflection on the Sunday Mass readings and draws out the implications of not only where do the readings fit in Salvation History but also how we are called to participate in the same.
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