Synopsis
This is Undark. Were a digital science magazine situated at that place where science, culture, and politics collide. Tune in for in-depth interviews with some of the worlds top science journalists, a healthy serving of media criticism, and reported pieces from the intersection of science and society. Hosted by the former editor of The New York Times' weekly Science Times section, David Corcoran.
Episodes
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What Should We Risk to Settle Space?
24/09/2025 Duration: 35minThis week on Entanglements: Should we live on Mars, and beyond? Our hosts talk to Tiffany Vora, a biologist and space advocate who has done three analog Mars simulations, and Kelly Weinersmith, a biologist and the co-author of the book “A City on Mars."
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Should Companies Decide Our Tech Future?
17/09/2025 Duration: 37minThis week on Entanglements: Should tech companies — and the billionaires that often run them — decide for the rest of us how artificial intelligence is deployed? Our hosts dig into the topic with two book authors who have covered AI from essentially opposing perspectives: Greg Beato and Adam Becker.
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Should We Revamp Our Voting System?
10/09/2025 Duration: 32minThis week on Entanglements: Should we switch all U.S. elections to ranked choice voting? Our hosts discuss the pros and cons with Deb Otis, director of research and policy for Fair Vote, a non-profit that works on election reform, and David McCune, a professor of mathematics at William Jewell College in Missouri.
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Should We Change Our Planet's Climate...On Purpose?
03/09/2025 Duration: 25minThis week on Entanglements: Should we run outdoor geoengineering experiments? Our hosts dive into this fiercely debated topic with an atmospheric chemist from Harvard University and a planetary physicist from Oxford University.
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Should We Try to Prevent Autism?
27/08/2025 Duration: 36minThis week on Entanglements: Should we try to prevent autism? Our hosts speak with Jill Escher, a philanthropist, president of the National Council on Severe Autism, and parent of two young adults with severe nonverbal autism, and Eric García, the Washington bureau chief at The Independent, who himself is autistic.
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Kicking Off Season 2: Should We Make Viruses More Dangerous – For Science?
20/08/2025 Duration: 35minWe're back! This week on Entanglements: Should we make viruses more dangerous? Our hosts discuss this question, and its contentious history, with a microbiologist from the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health and a virologist from the Pasteur Institute in Paris.
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Wrapping Up Season 1
30/12/2024 Duration: 21minThis week on Entanglements: What did we learn from our first season? What’s on deck for the future? Our hosts explore these questions and more in conversations with a special guest.
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Is Fluoride Toxic at Low Levels?
23/12/2024 Duration: 50minThis week on Entanglements: Is fluoride toxic at low levels? Our hosts explore this question in conversations with a professor from the University of Illinois Chicago College of Dentistry and a neuropsychologist and professor at York University.
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Should We Unleash GMO Mosquitoes?
16/12/2024 Duration: 31minThis week on Entanglements: Should we unleash GMO mosquitoes? Our hosts explore this question in conversations with a molecular biologist from the University of California, San Diego, and a social scientist from North Carolina State University.
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Is the Misinformation Crisis Overblown?
09/12/2024 Duration: 31minThis week on Entanglements: Is the misinformation crisis overblown? Our hosts explore this question in conversations with a social psychologist from the University of Cambridge and a cognitive scientist from the Intstitut Jean Nicod.
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Cannabis and Severe Mental Health Disorders
02/12/2024 Duration: 32minThis week on Entanglements: Is cannabis safe for people with severe mental health disorders? Our hosts explore this question in conversations with a psychiatrist from Yale School of Medicine and a neuroscientist from the University of Calgary.
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Is It Likely that Covid-19 Came From a Lab?
25/11/2024 Duration: 43minThis week on Entanglements: Could the Covid-19 pandemic have been sparked by a lab leak? Our hosts explore this hot-button question in conversations with a Weill Cornell microbiologist and a Broad Institute scientist who is an avid lab-leak proponent.
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Risky Science and Public Consent
18/11/2024 Duration: 28minThis week on Entanglements: Should citizens decide on risky science? Our hosts talk to an Oxford political scientist and a former law and ethics professor about how democracy should play a role in high-stakes decisions.
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Will Artificial Intelligence Kill Us All?
11/11/2024 Duration: 32minThis week on Entanglements, hosts Brooke Borel and Anna Rothschild talk to a former OpenAI employee and a Princeton professor about AI and doom. Could AI really become an existential threat to humanity? Or is the possibility — highlighted by some 300 AI experts in an open letter last year — overhyped?
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The Undark Podcast Returns — as "Entanglements"
01/11/2024 Duration: 01minThe Undark podcast is back with a new format and a new name: Entanglements. Tune in as our hosts explore some of the most contentious topics in science today. Our first 8-episode season will launch November 11, with new episodes dropping every Monday through the end of the year.
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Ep. 63: For Deep Ocean Mining, Questions Abound
03/08/2022 Duration: 35minThis month: Some regions of the deep ocean contain vast amounts of key minerals, like cobalt and nickel, that are needed to power clean energy technologies. But some scientists warn that mining them could have tremendous consequences, not just for underwater ecosystems, but for the planet as a whole.
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Ep. 62: Restoring Landscapes and Livelihoods in Western Bosnia
29/06/2022 Duration: 31minThis month: Twenty-six years after the end of the Bosnian War, farmers in Livno are once again making cheese the traditional way, grazing herds of sheep on the wide-open plains. The animals' return is restoring natural wetlands, leading to cascading impacts on the environment and the economy.
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Ep. 61: When Accents Speak Louder Than Words
31/05/2022 Duration: 35minFor scientists who come from abroad to live and work in America, accents can be personal. It's discouraging to be misunderstood, even when they think they’re speaking clearly. Sometimes, it could even be a career liability. Is the problem the accent, or those on the receiving end?
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Ep. 60: Cascading Effects of Pollution in Lebanon’s Litani River
28/04/2022 Duration: 37minResidents of Lebanon's Beqaa Valley say pollution in the Litani River is responsible for a host of chronic health problems. While a causal link is hard to prove, cleanup efforts are precarious amid the country's economic crisis and shifting blame between refugees and government inaction.
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Ep. 59: Water Cremation Ignites Debate Over Dignified Death
30/03/2022 Duration: 29minAlkaline hydrolysis is an end-of-life option that’s gaining popularity in Canada and the U.S. It’s marketed as a greener form of cremation — a way to still end up with ashes, but without sending harmful emissions into the air. But getting the technology approved by lawmakers has proven difficult.