The New York Times published an article titled "Trump's Return to Power Elevates Ever Fringier Conspiracy Theories" on May 6, 2025.
The article gives examples. "People who question whether the Earth is round — a fact understood by the ancient Greeks and taught to American children in elementary school — might have been political pariahs a decade ago. Now, they’re running local Republican parties in Georgia and Minnesota and seeking public office in Alabama."
A prominent far-right activist, who claimed the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, were an inside job by the U.S. government, commemorated the 9/11 anniversary last year alongside President Trump.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, pledged the agency’s support last month for a fight involving so-called chemtrails, a debunked theory that the white condensation lines streaming behind airplanes are toxic, or could even be used for nefarious purposes.
Kudos to EarBuds Podcast Collective: The Podcast Recommendation Newsletter for recommending the science podcasts we are discussing today. The recommendation newsletter provides subscribers with five podcast episodes on a theme, each week curated by a new expert.
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Hosts Rowan Hooper and Penny Sarchet are joined each week by expert scientists in the field. They draw on New Scientist’s unparalleled depth of reporting and put the stories that matter into context.
The podcast is one piece of New Scientist magazine, a popular weekly science and technology magazine, based in London, that covers international news from a scientific standpoint. It publishes English-language editions in the UK, US, and Australia, and also offers a Dutch-language edition. The magazine has been publishing issues since 1956.
One of the most recent episodes tackled the discovery of life on other planets. On the show, the hosts exclaim: "Big news has just broken - astronomers claim they’ve detected the strongest evidence for alien life yet."
In this episode, Alex Wilkins and Rowan Hooper offer some balance to the discussion and explore how far this is from definitive evidence of alien life. We also hear the views of Laura Kreidberg, managing director of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy.
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Award-winning science correspondent and TV journalist Ira Flatow is the host of Science Friday, heard on public radio stations across the country and distributed by WNYC Studios. He anchors the show each Friday, bringing radio and Internet listeners worldwide a lively, informative discussion on science, technology, health, space, and the environment. Ira is also founder and president of the Science Friday Initiative, a 501 (c)(3) non-profit company dedicated to creating radio, TV, and Internet projects that make science “user-friendly.”
Flatow’s interest in things scientific began in boyhood—he almost burned down his mother’s bathroom trying to recreate a biology class experiment. “I was the proverbial kid who spent hours in the basement experimenting with electronic gizmos, and then entering them in high school science fairs,” Flatow says. Mixing his passion for science with a tendency toward being a bit of a ham, Flatow describes his work as the challenge “to make science and technology a topic for discussion around the dinner table.”
He has shared that enthusiasm with public radio listeners for more
than 35 years. As a reporter and then news director at WBFO-FM in Buffalo, New York, Flatow began reporting at the station while pursuing his
engineering degree at the State University of New York in Buffalo. As NPR’s
science correspondent from 1971 to 1986, Flatow found himself reporting
from the Kennedy Space Center, Three Mile Island, Antarctica, and the
South Pole. In one memorable NPR report, Flatow took former All Things Considered host Susan Stamberg into a closet to crunch Wint-O-Green Lifesavers, proving they spark in the dark.
Check out Science In Action.
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