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The Viral Penguin Question.

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This video works because it refuses to tell you what to think. A penguin walks away from the colony toward the mountains, alone. Attempts to return him fail. Then the video ends with a question instead of a conclusion. Why? That open ending invites projection. Some see independence. Some see tragedy. Some see themselves. The moment hits because many people have felt the tension between belonging and following an inner pull they can’t explain. The penguin becomes a mirror, not a message. And maybe that is why it stays with you longer than most videos do.

#why #selfreflection #meaning

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68% say AI enhances efficiency. But only 10% report strong AI enablement. More trends on May 7.

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Navigating the next wave of AI transformation has its own set of challenges. Benchmark your engineering org to find out if you’re …

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‘Manuals of Immorality’: Censoring Publications in Twentieth Century Ireland | Dr Aoife Bhreatnach

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Speaker – Dr Aoife Bhreatnach
Date – Wednesday 15th April 2026
Venue – Wood Quay Venue, Civic Offices
Series – Dublin City Heritage Talks 2026

About this talk:
The scale and ambition of the Irish censorship regime is preserved in a blacklist of over 12,000 publications. From 1930 to 2016, the censorship board banned all manner of printed material. Sex education manuals, pulp fiction, nineteenth-century pornography, celebrity memoirs, and newspapers and magazines appear alongside literature from the greatest twentieth-century writers. This state censorship emerged from the report of the Committee on Evil Literature (1926), which gathered opinions from churchmen of all persuasions, newsagents, charities, trade unions and civil servants. The moral attitudes of the committee’s final report permeated the first Censorship of Publications Act in 1929. Through case studies of banned publications, this lecture will explore how sexuality and reproduction terrified Irish censors who believed banning advice manuals such as Married Love by Marie Stopes would protect children. John McGahern, famously censored in 1965, called the system ‘cruel, inhuman and fascistic’. It was also extraordinarily long-lived – In Dublin Magazine was banned in 1999 and the last book was added to the blacklist in 2016. This lecture will explore how censorship worked, who collaborated and who resisted, and how it profoundly affected human relationships in twentieth-century Ireland.

About the speaker:
Dr Aoife Bhreatnach is a researcher, writer and podcaster. She writes and presents Censored podcast, which explores the censorship culture of twentieth-century Ireland. In each episode, Aoife tells the story of a book that was banned in Ireland, reading out the rude bits and rating the filth through censorship bingo. The podcast, with over 90,000 downloads, was one of the Dublin Book Festival ‘Literary Podcasts We Love Right Now’ in 2021. In seasons 10 and 11, Aoife was joined by Dr Lloyd (Meadhbh) Houston to watch and review some of the filthy films banned in Ireland. She has written about censorship for the Irish Examiner and Irish Times while her historical writing includes thirteen articles and a book, Becoming Conspicuous: Irish Travellers, Society and the State (2006). Her creative writing appears in Howl, The Stinging Fly and in Radio na Gaeltachta’s ‘Aistí ón Aer’. In 2025, she was a recipient of the Hubert Butler Essay Prize. She is currently writing a book on living in a censored Ireland.

About the series:
The Dublin City Heritage Talks free public lecture series aims to showcase heritage projects, topics and new research across Dublin city, particularly seeking to highlight more underrepresented histories. The series is an action of the Dublin City Strategic Heritage Plan 2024 – 2029 and has received grant support from the Heritage Council.

Recording by Glasseye. With thanks to CLSignSearch Ltd for providing Irish Sign Language interpretation.

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NH Chronicle: Going thrifting for prom attire

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From reporter Kelly O’Brien: Come hang with me and Bill Sicbaldi as we shoot a segment for NH Chronicle! We had such a fun …

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I’m Sorry I Haven’t a Clue: ISIHAC’s Craziest Hospital Rounds | BBC Radio 4

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Welcome to the ward! Get ready for absolute medical mayhem with this ultimate collection of the funniest health and hospital rounds from the legendary BBC Radio 4 comedy panel game, I’m Sorry I Haven’t A Clue (ISIHAC).

Spanning over four decades of British comedy history, this archive features the brilliant deadpan delivery of Humphrey Lyttelton and the grumpy genius of Jack Dee. We kick things off with the absolute peak of medical puns in the 1998 “Hospital Book Club,” navigate the dark comedy of the A&E wards, face the universal fear of the “Dentist’s Film Club,” and finally travel back in time to the very origins of the show in the early 1970s.

🎧 Episodes included in this archive:
Surgical Satire: The Legendary Hospital Book Club (Series 32, Episode 1 – 1998)

Emergency Entertainment: A&E Film Club (Series 44, Episode 6 – 2005)

Drilling for Laughs: Dentist’s Film Club (Series 63, Episode 2 – 2015)

Pills & Punchlines: The Pharmacists Ball (Series 3, Episode 6 – 1974)

The Original Prescription: The Classic Doctors Ball (Series 1, Episode 7 – 1972)

🎙️ All audio tracks in this compilation have been lovingly carefully restored and remastered to provide the ultimate vintage radio listening experience.

What was your favorite medical pun from the panel? Let us know in the comments! If you enjoyed this trip through the ISIHAC archives, please hit the LIKE button, SUBSCRIBE to the channel, and ring the bell for more classic radio comedy restorations.

#ISIHAC #BBCRadio4 #BritishComedy #RadioArchive #ComedyPanelShow

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Fall For You | Michael Pangilinan

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The Art of Music searches talented singers and different skills from musicians around the world to give their records lyrics and also …

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