by podblack on May 29, 2009
Will see about getting an update here soonish, as I’m traveling to the YAS/Skeptic Zone presentation! There’s a dinner on Friday that I think a few of us are going to — if you see me around on the Saturday, I’ll be back-stage crew / support and wearing my Philadelphia Funk Authority t-shirt. Say hello! [...]
by podblack on January 12, 2009
UPDATE – This article was cross-posted at the Young Australian Skeptics website and Dr Mark Henn is responding to comments there too, if you’d like to check that out! It has also been printed in Skeptical Briefs – the newsletter for the Skeptical Inquirer. For a while now, I’ve become quite uncomfortable about an assumption [...]
by podblack on October 22, 2008
And if you’d prefer the audio version — head to Skeptic Zone! There is also a series of educational resources on Educational Zone: Episode One — 9/11 Conspiracy Theory Resources.
by podblack on September 11, 2008
The following footage (still in unedited and to be tidied up form, sorry about the quality!), was shot last month by me in New York for the Skeptic Zone Podcast/Vodcast. The full interview is available on iTunes and on the site www.skepticzone.tv. It is thanks to Mark ‘Gravy’ Roberts (who very kindly agreed to this [...]
by podblack on June 10, 2008
Following on from Women and Superstitions Part One and Women and Superstitions Part Two. Again, despite my own skepticism, I’d like to reiterate something – belief in weird things like charms, psychics, or conspiracies does not lead to justifiably claiming that someone must be stupid, insane, foolish or even irreversibly gullible. There’s plenty of people, [...]
Women and Superstitions – Part Three
by podblack on June 10, 2008
Following on from Women and Superstitions Part One and Women and Superstitions Part Two. Again, despite my own skepticism, I’d like to reiterate something – belief in weird things like charms, psychics, or conspiracies does not lead to justifiably claiming that someone must be stupid, insane, foolish or even irreversibly gullible. There’s plenty of people, [...]
{ 17 comments }