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  • Have you heard our groundbreaking series "Evolutionaries"? Check it out and hear the life stories of the people who changed food forever.
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    First Aired - 06/20/2011 02:00PM
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    Hosted By
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    This Week on Snacky Tunes welcomes legendary Brooklyn Brewery Brewmaster Garrett Oliver who dishes on a new wine-cask fermented beer that they are working on as well as their beer garden at the The Highline Park. Later they are joined by Patrick who runs Acephale Records as well as working for Modular. They discuss the duality of working for two labels at the same time, iPod battles, and the possibility of a new Avalanches record.

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    First Aired - 03/14/2010 03:30PM
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    Alice & Carmen talk about what to do in your garden during these March days, and Max gives a very special video game review.
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    Garden Tips & A Special Video Game Review (15:00)

    Tags:
    cool season crops, zone 7, annual seeds sown indoors 5 to 6 weeks before the last frost date, USDA zone map, arrugula, onions, beets, spinach, kale, tomato, peppers, broccoli, eggplants, these seeds will not germinate in cold soil, seed catalogs, photo tropism, constant moisture, good air circulation, plastic bags can cause problems, damping off, fungal disease, discard the seedling, cut back on the water, know your zone, use your common sense, 25 Vegetables Anyone Can Grow, if you can only grow one plant from seed it should be the tomato, Max's video game review, Plants vs Zombies, video, doom mushroom, the pea shooter, sunflowers, computer game, iPod touch or iPhone, Michael Jackson zombie, grandpa zombie, Max gives the game 4.5 stars!,

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    First Aired - 08/04/2010 07:00PM
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    On this week's Burning Down The House, Curtis is joined by Jessica Sheridan, Editor-In-Chief of the AIA NY's online magazine "e-Oculus", and Jacob Alspector, architect and Principal of Alspector Architecture. The three discuss the shifting power of the architect in today's economy and offer stories of the past and predictions for the future. Learn about the awesomeness of The Pantheon, the magic of the new Living Pavilion, and where to take a tourist to see great ephemeral architecture in New York City. This episode was brought to you by Tekserve, NYC's most remarkable Mac shop! Visit www.tekserve.com for all your Mac, iPod, and accessory needs.

    Photo 1: The Bridgehampton National Bank, designed and built by Curtis B. Wayne. Photo 2: Utah Valley University Digital Learning Center, designed by built by Jacob Jacob Alspector. Photo 3: The Living Pavillion, designed and built by Ann Ha & Behrang Behin.

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    Burning Down The House Intro (19:48)

    Tags:
    Burning Down The House, Cutis B. Wayne, heritageradionetwork.com, going viral, design and architecture, Tekserve, kick ass pro audio shop, Roberta's, sweatlodge kiva event, e-Oculus E-Zine, American Institute of Architecture, Jessica Sheridan, RISD, The Talking Heads, Oberlin College, Dr. Jacob Alspector, Cooper Union, Alspector Architecture, Twilight, Hunter Mountain New York, Katy Keifer, Chauncey Gardner in Being There, building onto existing structures, respecting the social contract of the existing context, utilitarianism, doctor of architecture, doctores, what it looks like should be an extension of solving problems, oculus, the Oculus of The Pantheon, The Pantheon is the greatest building ever, AIA New York Chapter, the AIA's stance on standard contract language, the litigious environment of the 1980s, limiting architects liability, the omnipotent construction manager, ionic capitals, construction from CAD files, digital exchange files, the dangers of misconstruing CAD files, Revit Architecture, Viollet Le-Duc, building The Bridgehampton National Bank,

    Revitalizing The City (21:47)

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    the bad man, the economy has totally decimated the architecture industry, the creative arts are in the tank, very little new construction lending, university spending continues, Paterson's not paying people, state spending frozen, what's really happening in New York, Mayor Bloomberg, The High Line, Times Square, revitalizing the city, pop-up stores, temporary art spaces, public space, public work, private educational and cultural work, fast track, the word construction manager did not exist, press releases, The Center for Architecture, 536 LaGuardia Place, The American Society for Landscape Architects, Eyes Wide Shut, reporting on architecture, contributing to the written world, ENYA Design Competitions, Emerging New York Architects, Governor's Island, International Ideas Competition, The ENYA Prize, encouraging people to get their licenses, Matt Arnold, the increasing amount of time it takes from graduation to licensing, NCARB, the social contract between employer and employee, Perkins Eastman, construction administration, the width of a carpenter's pencil, dimensioning masonry, ARE / IDP concurrency, the European model, Utah Valley University Digital Learning Center,

    I Love This Town (17:02)

    Tags:
    I Love This Town, Nancy Griffith and Jimmy Buffet, Brooklyn, Bloomberg, Riverside South, Chelsea Piers, Tom Balsley, I Can't Afford This Town, The Upper West Side, mitzvahs, AIA, Figment, participatory arts, The Living Pavilion on Governor's Island, The Serpentine Pavilion in London, reticulated structure, Ann Ha, Behrang Behin, evapotransporation, sustainability, milk crate construction, The Green Thumb Program, Department of Parks and Recreation, The Science Barge, The Living Wall, ephemeral architecture, Nancy from Cincinnati, Cats on Broadway, the TKTS booth, The Highline, PS1 Contemporary Art Center, SO-IL, instalation, Pole Dance, The Pepsi Pavilion at The World's Fair, New York in the 1950s/60s, creative eras in New York, Frank Lloyd Wright, The Guggenheim, The United Nations, Huntington Hartford, The Museum of Art and Design, The MAD Museum, architecture is becoming much more collaberative, the broadening of the scope, diversifying, the term building is becoming more vague, architecture melting into art and landscape, engagin the public, participatory architecture, empty lots and storefronts, struggling to stay in the proffession, optimism,

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