Archive for June, 2008

In Memoriam: Tim Russert, 1950-2008

June 14th, 2008  |  Published by Mahesha Subbaraman in General

Rest in peace, Tim Russert.

You were a credit to your profession — and a ceasless inspiration to us here at Loquitur.

You will be missed.

On Citations and Other Requests

June 9th, 2008  |  Published by Brandon Sheats in General

Recently, we (Mahesha, who’s done wonders that I have yet to achieve with getting interviewers to the podcast, and myself) were asked about transcribing podcasts. While we understand the merits of transcribing our podcasts for student use, I can safely say that we will not transcribe podcasts for the very forseeable future. It goes against one of the core ideas of the podcast, to connect debaters with the evidence, not replace it with thirty-minute interviews that provide perspective, not in-depth knowledge. 

Ultimately, it is every debater’s responsibility to know what the source text of an author means, and that is achieved via reading the person’s books and papers, not these interviews. The podcast is a means to understand what a debater should be doing anyway, researching and brainstorming themselves. 

But for those of you that wish to use the podcast’s content, you should review the MLA format for audio citations. We will not go as far to say you cannot use the podcast, but we do heavily frown upon it. 

Also, I have recieved mail about the “unfair” distribution of podcasts. Here’s the deal: If we cannot find interviewees for a topic, we cannot create a podcast on it. We understand the PF topic at the NCFL was not covered, but as it was an already obscure topic, it is rather difficult to find professionals. I am engaging in talks with Mahesha to not cover the National Catholic Forensic League topics in the future, due to the limited lead time to the tournament. It is simply not effective to present interviews that cannot cover resolutions that a limited number of people will ever debate as opposed to the NFL.

 

NFL National 2008 PF Topic Interview: Joshua Muravchik

June 5th, 2008  |  Published by Mahesha Subbaraman in NFL PF National 2008,Podcast,Public Forum

 
 Standard Podcast [32:56m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (121)

Joshua Muravchik         

Guest: Joshua Muravchik — Resident Scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and author of The Future of the United Nations: Understanding the Past to Chart a Way Forward and Exporting Democracy: Fulfilling America’s Destiny.

Guest’s Biography

Host: Mahesha Subbaraman — A high school Lincoln-Douglas debate coach in Minnesota, an Amherst College graduate, the founder/owner of Trinity Briefs, and creator of Colloquy.

Topic Discussed: Have US policies established after September 11, 2001 substantially reduced the risk of terrorist acts against the United States?

Books Cited During Interview:

What Went Wrong?: Western Impact and Middle Eastern Response (Bernard Lewis)
The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11 (Lawrence Wright)

Length: 33 min.

How You Can Support Loquitur

June 2nd, 2008  |  Published by Mahesha Subbaraman in General


Although the Loquitur Podcast is the product of our own intiative, we still depend heavily on the active support of our listening audience as a constant source of feedback and inspiration.

To this end, there are three simple, yet important ways you can show your support for Loquitur:

1. Join The Loquitur Facebook Group

It doesn’t cost you a thing to become a member of the Loquitur Facebook Group — and by joining, you let us know that you really care about the work we are doing.

2. Tell Us What You Think

E-mail us your thoughts on the interviews that we have already posted — and feel free to send us suggestions for future episodes, particularly regarding experts we should interview and/or the questions we should ask them. Our e-mail address is loqdebate-at-gmail.com.

And if don’t want to e-mail us, then consider posting your thoughts directly to this blog  – all this requires is clicking directly on the title of the post you wish to comment on, and then typing your comments into the text box that appears in the resulting window.  

Again — we really want to hear what you think about the work we are doing.

3. Spread The Word About Loquitur

If you like the Loquitur interviews that you’ve listened to thus far, then please (please!) tell your friends and colleagues about us.

The easiest way to do this is by using the ShareThis Link located at the bottom of each post on this blog. Using ShareThis, you can e-mail links to this blog directly to your friends, and you can also share links to this blog via any of the major Web content aggregators (e.g., Digg). 

Also, if you happen to have your own weblog or website, please consider posting a link to our site.

It may not seem like much, but by showing your support for Loquitur in these three ways, you make a huge difference in terms of the work we do — and we can’t thank you enough for it.