Sign up

Radiolab

Not verified Updates instantly via WebSub No webmention support Not yet validated

Radiolab is on a curiosity bender. We ask deep questions and use investigative journalism to get the answers. A given episode might whirl you through science, legal history, and into the home of someone halfway across the world. The show is known for innovative sound design, smashing information into music. It is hosted by Lulu Miller and Latif Nasser.

Generator
https://simplecast.com
Rights
© WNYC Studios
Public lists
Featured
Fetched

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• Storytelling, Hormones, Sex hormones, Menstrual cycle, Men’s health, Women’s health, Mental Health, Philosophy, Neuroscience, Brain, Health

This is Your Brain on Hormones

39:43
After reading something that said her menstrual cycle changes her brain each month, Senior Correspondent Molly Webster goes on a reporting mission to see if that’s true, and, if so, how. This journey into sex hormones and the brain involves females and males, and exacting se...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

Bonus: Wild Animal Dads from Terrestrials

35:38
In honor of Father's Day, here is a family friendly bonus episode from our kids' podcast Terrestrials.  What does it really mean to be a dad? In the animal world, fathers have long been painted as aggressive or absent. At best providers and protectors, but certainly no...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

On the Media: American Emergency

55:34
A little while back, our friends over at On the Media released a gripping and immersive reporting series about FEMA, the agency that is supposed to be there for all of us in the wake of disaster. In American Emergency (https://zpr.io/MtrUmJU3yEMW), OTM investigates how the a...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

Oliver Sipple

01:03:23
One morning, Oliver Sipple went out for a walk. A couple hours later, to his own surprise, he saved the life of the President of the United States. In a story we reported back in 2017, we explain how in the days that followed, Sipple’s split-second act of heroism turned into...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

This American Roach

radiolab.org/podcast/this-american-roach

36:46
A couple summers ago, Radiolab reporter Alex Neason got out of the shower and almost stepped on her worst nightmare: an American Cockroach. It was flipped onto its back, struggling, and for a split second, Alex swears she felt the spiny tickle of its legs on the underside of...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

Worth

01:11:58
This episode makes three earnest, possibly foolhardy, attempts to put a price on the priceless. We figure out the dollar value for an accidental death, another day of life, and the work of bats and bees as we try to keep our careful calculations from falling apart in the fac...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

Your Friendly Neighborhood Hookworms

radiolab.org/podcast/your-friendly-neighborhood-hookworms

46:17
For most of human history, people went about their daily lives with a worm or two (or fifty) in their guts. Only in the past century, with pharmaceuticals and sanitation practices, have we made significant strides towards deworming the whole of humanity. And that’s typically...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

The Bad Show

01:06:38
With all of the black-and-white moralizing in our world today, we decided to bring back an old show from 2011 about the little bit of bad that's in all of us...and the little bit of really, really bad that's in some of us.   Cruelty, violence, badness... in this ep...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

What is a Pig Worth?

radiolab.org/podcast/what-is-a-pig-worth

42:48
In 2017, Wayne Hsiung and a crew of animal rights activists from Direct Action Everywhere broke into a Utah pig farm run by Smithfield Foods, one of the largest pork distributors in the world. They were there to capture video of what they say were thousands of mistreated and...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

Forests on Forests

radiolab.org/podcast/forests-on-forests

19:50
For much of history, tree canopies were pretty much completely ignored by science. It was as if researchers said collectively, "It's just going to be empty up there, and we've got our hands full studying the trees down here! So why bother?" But then around the mid-1980s, a f...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

The Resistance of a Cow

radiolab.org/podcast/the-resistance-of-a-cow

51:03
There’s something rotten in the cows of Denmark. And Minnesota. And Wisconsin. And Idaho. What could cause a previously thriving herd of majestic dairy cattle to stop drinking water and start drinking … urine? A Danish farmer calls a special investigator, who takes one look ...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

The Builders

radiolab.org/podcast/the-builders

30:00
In an episode first aired back in 2025 on our sister show, Terrestrials, we take you on a musical journey all about beavers. Few mammals have a bigger positive impact on the planet than the beaver. With its bright orange buck teeth, the creature is an expert engineer that br...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

Life in a Barrel

radiolab.org/podcast/life-in-a-barrel

54:42
This week, in an episode we first aired in 2022, we flip the Disney story of life on its head thanks to a barrel of seawater, a 1970s era computer, and underwater geysers. It’s the chaos of life. Latif, Lulu, and our Senior Producer Matt Kielty were all sitting on their own ...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

Antibiotic Apocalypse

radiolab.org/podcast/antibiotic-apocalypse

01:01:07
Doctor and special correspondent Avir Mitra takes Executive Editor Soren Wheeler, plus a live studio audience, on a journey from the operating room to inside the body to the farm to the sewers and back again—searching for answers to an alarming threat to humanity’s existence...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

Staph Retreat

radiolab.org/podcast/45573f6d87848f78d50c5efd

31:34
A strange brew that's hard to resist, even for a modern day microbe. In the war on devilish microbes, our weapons are starting to fail us. The antibiotics we once wielded like miraculous flaming swords seem more like lukewarm butter knives. But in this episode, originally r...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

Return of the Flesh-Eaters

radiolab.org/podcast/return-of-the-flesheaters

42:29
If a species is horrible enough, do we have the right to kill it forever? Seventy years ago, a nightmare parasite feasted on the live flesh of warm-blooded creatures in North America: the screwworm. That is, until a young scientist named Edward F. Knipling discovered a cruci...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

Snail Sex Tape

radiolab.org/podcast/snail-sex-tape

29:53
In this episode, we consider a creature we often don’t think much about—the snail. And not just snails, but their sex lives. Which, as it turns out, is epic. There is persuasion and subterfuge, spaghetti penises and co-copulation. And this very surprising habit—erm kink—of m...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

Black Box

radiolab.org/podcast/d8ce1611a9181dc253f262b0

01:05:47
In this episode, first aired in 2014, we examine three very different kinds of black boxes—spaces where we know what’s going in, we know what’s coming out, but can’t see what happens in-between. From the darkest parts of metamorphosis to a sixty-year-old secret among magicia...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

Gray's Donation

radiolab.org/podcast/5b8230b622213510e6b435fa

27:20
Before he was even born, Sarah and Ross Gray knew that their son Thomas wouldn’t live long. But as they let go of him, they made a decision that reverberated through a world that they never bothered to think about. Years later, after a couple of awkward phone calls, they go ...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

Time is Honey

radiolab.org/podcast/time-is-honey

38:31
In the early 2000s, Sunil Nakrani felt stuck.  Back then, websites crashed all the time. When Sunil noticed this, he decided he was going to fix the internet. But after nearly a year of studying the architecture of the web, he was no closer to an answer. In desperation,...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

Kleptotherms

44:45
In this episode, we break the thermometer and watch the mercury spill out as we discover that temperature is far stranger than it seems. We first ran this episode in 2021: Five stories that run the gamut from snakes to stars. We start out underwater, with a species of snake ...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

Song of the Cerebellum

42:48
One spring evening in 2024, a science journalist named Rachel Gross bombed at karaoke. The culprit was a bleed in a fist-sized clump of neurons tucked down in the back of her brain called the cerebellum. A couple weeks later, her doctors took a bit of it out, assuring her it...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

You and Me and Mr. Self-Esteem

01:17:54
Most of us spend some part of our lives feeling bad about ourselves and wanting to feel better. But this preoccupation is a surprisingly new one in the history of the world, and can largely be traced back to one man: a rumpled, convertible-driving California state representa...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

The Punchline

50:33
This episode, first aired in 2019, brings you the story of John Scott, the professional hockey player that every fan loved to hate.  A tough guy. A brawler. A goon. But when an impish pundit named Puck Daddy called on fans to vote for Scott to play alongside the world’s...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

Brain Balls

41:27
When neuroscientist Madeline Lancaster was a brand new postdoc, she accidentally used an expired protein gel in a lab experiment and noticed something weird. The stem cells she was trying to grow in a dish were self-assembling. The result? Madeline was the first person ever ...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

Moon Trees

35:06
In 1971, a red-headed, tree-loving astronaut named Stu ‘Smokey’ Roosa was asked to take something to the moon with him. Of all things, he chose to take a canister of 500 tree seeds. After orbiting the moon 34 times, the seeds made it back to Earth. NASA decided to plant the ...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

Fertility Cliff

26:28
As she -- and her friends — approached the age of 35, senior correspondent Molly Webster kept hearing a phrase over and over: “fertility cliff.” It was a short-hand term to describe what she was told would happen to her fertility after she turned 35 — that is, it would drop ...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

The Good Show

radiolab.org/podcast/the-good-show

01:02:31
The standard view of evolution is that living things are shaped by cold-hearted competition. And there is no doubt that today's plants and animals carry the genetic legacy of ancestors who fought fiercely to survive and reproduce. But in this hour that we first broadcast bac...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

The Alien in the Room

01:00:59
It’s faster than a speeding bullet. It’s smarter than a polymath genius. It’s everywhere but it’s invisible. It’s artificial intelligence. But what actually is it? Today we ask this simple question and explore why it’s so damn hard to answer. Special thanks to Stephanie Yin ...

Radiolab Updates instantly via WebSub
• WNYC Studios

Shell Game: Minimum Viable Company

39:49
A year ago we brought you a show called Shell Game where a journalist named Evan Ratliff made an AI copy of himself. Now on season 2 of the show, Evan’s using AI to do more than just mimic himself — he’s starting a company staffed entirely by AI agents, and making a podcast ...