History's Lessons for Our Post-Virus Future

History's Lessons for Our Post-Virus Future

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Introducing: Levittown

When dozens of young women discover manipulated photos of themselves have been posted on a porn site, they fight back – joining up with a global band of investigators and hackers to battle the AI-fueled rise of deepfakes. Listen to episodes starting March 21.See omnystudio.com/li ...  عرض المزيد

Listen Now: Beak Capitalism from Odd Lots

In this limited series, Odd Lots explains some of the thorniest issues facing the US economy through the medium of … chicken. Chicken occupies a unique position in the US diet, but issues facing the poultry industry illustrate wider points about the development of the US economy ...  عرض المزيد

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#107 - John Barry: 1918 Spanish flu pandemic—historical account, parallels to today, and lessons
The Peter Attia Drive

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n this episode, John Barry, historian and author of The Great Influenza: The Story of the Deadliest Pandemic in History, describes what happened with the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic, including where it likely originated, how and why it spread, and what may have accounted f ...

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S3 Ep11: History of Pandemics: Coronavirus and ‘Disease X’
Futuremakers

Peter interviews the Oxford scientists working at the forefront of research into Disease X - a pathogen which the World Health Organization added to their shortlist of blueprint priority diseases in 2018 to represent the hypothetical cause of our next pandemic... This episode is ...  عرض المزيد

S3 Ep10: History of Pandemics: Ebola
Futuremakers

Peter begins the final episode of the series in 2014, at the onset of the Ebola outbreak in West Africa. Whilst that pandemic officially ended in 2016, this virus has caused a brutal outbreak nearly every year since. After his discussion at the start of the series about whether E ...  عرض المزيد

The Deadliest Pandemic in Modern History
HISTORY This Week

April 5, 1918. The first mention of a new influenza outbreak in Kansas appears in a public health report. That strain, later called the Spanish Flu, would go on to kill at least 50 million people worldwide. In a time before widespread global travel, how did this disease spread so ...  عرض المزيد