99% Invisible
By Roman Mars
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Description
Design is everywhere in our lives, perhaps most importantly in the places where we've just stopped noticing. 99% Invisible is a weekly exploration of the process and power of design and architecture. From award winning producer Roman Mars. Learn more at 99percentinvisible.org. A proud member of Radiotopia, from PRX. Learn more at radiotopia.fm.
Name | Description | Released | Price | ||
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1 |
Clean342- Beneath the Ballpark | The Dodgers needed a home in LA, but the home they chose already belonged to someone else | 2/19/2019 | Free | View in iTunes |
2 |
Clean341- National Sword | The biggest buyer of recycling just stopped buying | 2/12/2019 | Free | View in iTunes |
3 |
Clean340- The Secret Lives of Color | Throughout human history we've been driven to find the brightest splash of color | 2/5/2019 | Free | View in iTunes |
4 |
Clean339- The Tunnel | In May of 1990, law enforcement raided a warehouse in Douglas, AZ and a private home across the border in Agua Prieta, Mexico. | 1/29/2019 | Free | View in iTunes |
5 |
Clean338- Crude Habitat | What should we do with old infrastructure that has been incorporated into the natural ecosystem? | 1/22/2019 | Free | View in iTunes |
6 |
Clean337- Atomic Tattoos | Atomic tattoos and concept of survivability. The idea that with enough canned food, shelters, fearlessness (and maybe tattoos) the American people would be able to survive an atomic attack. | 1/15/2019 | Free | View in iTunes |
7 |
Clean336- Mini-Stories: Volume 6 | The sixth installment of our staff mini stories: mythical alleys, karaoke, burning monsters, time thieves, and where Canadians pick up their Amazon packages. | 1/8/2019 | Free | View in iTunes |
8 |
Clean335- Gathering the Magic | The magic of Magic with Eric Molinsky of Imaginary Worlds | 1/1/2019 | Free | View in iTunes |
9 |
Clean334- Christmas with The Allusionist | For the holidays this year, we're presenting a two-part Radiotopia feature with friend of the show (and host of The Allusionist podcast) Helen Zaltzman, each tackling a different aspect of this festive season. | 12/25/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
10 |
Clean333- Mini-Stories: Volume 5 | The 99pi crew tells short stories to the delight of Roman Mars | 12/18/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
11 |
CleanBonus Episode- Avery talks Articles of Interest with Roman | Roman talks with Avery about the lessons learned from making Articles of Interest | 12/14/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
12 |
Clean332- The Accidental Room | We explore (and live inside!) the fascinating public/private space known as "the mall." | 12/11/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
13 |
Clean331- Oñate's Foot | A years long fight in New Mexico over the best way to commemorate a "founding father" with a cruel past. | 12/4/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
14 |
Clean330- Raccoon Resistance | After Toronto unveiled its "raccoon-resistant" compost bins in 2016, some people feared the animals would be starved but many more celebrated the innovative design. Rolling out this novel locked bin opened a new battlefront in city's ongoing "war on rac | 11/27/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
15 |
Clean201- The Green Book redux | Two stories of the Green Book guide to Negro Motorists...not currently playing in a theater near you | 11/20/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
16 |
Clean329- Orphan Drugs | The fight to get drugs that treat rare diseases on the market and the unintended consequence of that fight, which affected the cost of all kinds of drugs. | 11/13/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
17 |
Clean328- Devolutionary Design | Devo’s first record and the fight over the arresting image of a flashy, handsome golf legend on the cover. | 11/6/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
18 |
Clean327- A Year in the Dark | The almost year-long struggle to get power working on the island and the utility worker who became a Puerto Rican folk hero. | 10/30/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
19 |
Clean326- Welcome to Jurassic Art | The illustrated interpretation of dinosaur morphology and behavior has had a big impact on how the public views dinosaurs and it's gone through a couple of key turning points, including a more recent push for more speculative paleoart. | 10/23/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
20 |
Clean325- The Worst Way to Start a City | Sam Anderson, author of Boom Town, guides us through the chaotic founding of Oklahoma City, which happened all in one day in 1889 | 10/16/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
21 |
CleanPunk Style: Articles of Interest #6 | Groups of people who historically haven’t had a voice, have expressed themselves on their bodies. Through their style, their hair, their tattoos, their piercings, and what they wear. | 10/12/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
22 |
CleanBlue Jeans: Articles of Interest #5 | You can learn a lot from observing an old pair of blue jeans. | 10/9/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
23 |
CleanHawaiian Shirts: Articles of Interest #4 | Much of understanding an aloha shirt is about paying attention to what is on the shirt itself. It’s about looking at the pattern to see the story it tells. | 10/5/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
24 |
CleanPockets: Articles of Interest #3 | Womenswear is littered with fake pockets that don’t open, or shallow pockets that can hardly hold more than a paperclip. If women's clothes have pockets at all, they are often and smaller and just fit less than men’s pockets do. | 10/2/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
25 |
CleanPlaid: Articles of Interest #2 | Lots of different groups have adopted plaid over the course of the 20th century, but if we want to explore how this pattern proliferated, we’ve got to go to Scotland. | 9/28/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
26 |
CleanKids' Clothes: Articles of Interest #1 | Articles of Interest is a show about what we wear: a six-part series looking clothing within 99% Invisible. Episode 1: Kids' Clothes | 9/25/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
27 |
Clean324- Billboard Boys: The Greatest Radio Contest of All Time | A radio contest offering a $18,000 modular home to the person who will live on a billboard platform the longest gets out of control | 9/18/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
28 |
Clean323- The House that Came in the Mail | The Sears catalog tells the tale of a world -- itemized. And starting in 1908, the company that offered America everything began offering what just might be its most audacious product line ever: houses. | 9/11/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
29 |
Clean322- The First Straw | A straw is a simple thing. It’s a tube, a conveyance mechanism for liquid. The defining characteristic of the straw is the emptiness inside it. This is the stuff of tragedy, and America. | 9/4/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
30 |
Clean321- Double Standards | Blepharoplasty is often done to lift loose or sagging skin around the upper eyelids caused by aging. But for a lot of people of Asian descent, this surgery is not strictly about aging and more commonly referred to as “double eyelid” surgery. | 8/28/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
31 |
Clean320- Bundyville | The first episode in a fascinating series about the fight over federal land in the western US and the family at the center of it. | 8/21/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
32 |
Clean319- It's Chinatown | For Americans, the sight of pagoda roofs and dragon gates means that you are in Chinatown. Whether in San Francisco, New York, Los Angeles, or Las Vegas, the chinoiserie look is distinctive. But for people from China, the Chinatown aesthetic can feel su | 8/14/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
33 |
Clean318- Fire and Rain | For Montecito, California, fire is predictable and it is inevitable. Now, coupled with multi-year drought, it is becoming unmanageable. | 8/7/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
34 |
Clean317- Built to Burn | After the massive Panorama Fire in southern California in 1980, a young fire researcher named Jack Cohen went in to investigate the houses that were destroyed and he found something surprising | 7/31/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
35 |
Clean316- The Shipping Forecast | Four times every day, on radios all across the British Isles, a BBC announcer begins reading from a seemingly indecipherable script. "And now the Shipping Forecast..." | 7/24/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
36 |
Clean315- Everything is Alive | Everything is Alive is an unscripted interview show with host Ian Chillag in which all the subjects are inanimate objects. In each episode, a different thing tells us its life story -- and everything it says is true. | 7/17/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
37 |
Clean314- Interrobang | In 1962, an ad man decided that excited and exclamatory questions needed their own end punctuation: the iterrobang | 7/10/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
38 |
CleanRoman Mars on ZigZag | A special presentation of Radiotopia's newest show ZigZag | 7/5/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
39 | CleanVideoVIDEO- Why Danger Symbols Can't Last Forever with Vox | The world is full of icons that warn us to be afraid — to stay away from this or not do that. And many of these are easy to understand because they represent something recognizable, like a fire, or a person slipping on a wet floor. But some concepts a | 7/3/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
40 |
Clean313- Right to Roam | In the United Kingdom, the freedom to walk through private land is known as “the right to roam.” The movement to win this right was started in the 1930s by a rebellious group of young people who called themselves “ramblers” and spent their days | 6/26/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
41 |
Clean312- Post-Narco Urbanism | In the 1980s, Pablo Escobar, the notorious drug lord, had effectively declared war on the Colombian state. The bloodshed was focused in the city of Medellin. As the years went on, Medellin became the most dangerous city in the world. But today, Medelli | 6/19/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
42 |
Clean311- The Barney Design | Until the early 90s, basketball uniforms were pretty tame. There had been real limits to what could be done with jerseys. All the details—the numbers, the names, the logos—had to be sewed on. Complicated graphics would have taken a massive amount of | 6/12/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
43 |
Clean310- 77 Steps | As the U.S. war effort ramped up in the early 1940s, the Navy put out a request for chair design submissions. They needed a chair that was fireproof, waterproof, lightweight and strong enough to survive a torpedo blast. In response, engineer named Wilto | 6/5/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
44 |
Clean309- The Vault | Svalbard is a remote Norwegian archipelago that's the home to a vault containing seeds for virtually every edible plant one can imagine. | 5/29/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
45 |
Clean308- Curb Cuts | If you live in an American city and you don’t personally use a wheelchair, it's easy to overlook the small ramp at most intersections, between the sidewalk and the street. Today, these curb cuts are everywhere. | 5/22/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
46 |
Clean307- Immobile Homes | About a third of mobile homeowners live in parks where they rent a plot of land for their home. This arrangement is filled with uncertainty. | 5/15/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
47 |
Clean306- Breaking Bad News | When a doctor reveals a terminal diagnosis to a patient -- that process is as delicate a procedure as any surgery, with potentially serious consequences if things go wrong. | 5/8/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
48 |
Clean305- The Laff Box | For nearly five decades, the laugh track was ubiquitous on television sitcoms, but in the early 2000s, it began to disappear. What happened? | 5/1/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
49 |
Clean304- Gander International Airport | The Gander Airport in Newfoundland was once the easternmost airfield in North America, so when transatlantic air travel was new and difficult, Gander played in critical role in getting people back and forth from Europe to America. | 4/24/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
50 |
Clean303- The Hair Chart | Andre Walker became famous for being Oprah Winfrey’s hair stylist, but he is also known for something else: a system that he created back in the 1990s to market his line of hair care products. The system categorizes natural hair types, and it's often | 4/17/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
51 |
Clean302- Lessons from Las Vegas | To this day, architects tend to turn their noses up at Las Vegas, or simply dismiss it as irrelevant to serious design theory. | 4/10/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
52 |
Clean301- Making it Rain | The battlefield has always been at the mercy of the climate, but there was a time in U.S. military history when we did more than just pray for advantageous weather. We tried to create it. | 4/3/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
53 |
Clean300- Airships and the Future that Never Was | They are hulking, but graceful -- human-made whales that float in the air. For over a century, lighter-than-air vehicles have captured the public imagination, playing a recurring role in our dreams of alternate realities and futures that might have been | 3/27/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
54 |
Clean299- Gerrymandering | The way we draw our political districts has a huge effect on U.S. politics, but the process is also greatly misunderstood. Gerrymandering has become a scapegoat for what’s wrong with the polarized American political system, blamed for marginalizing gr | 3/20/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
55 |
Clean200- Miss Manhattan Redux | All around the country, there stands a figure so much a part of historical architecture and urban landscapes that she is rarely noticed. | 3/13/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
56 |
Clean298- Fordlandia | In the late 1920s, the Ford Motor Company bought up millions of acres of land in Brazil. They loaded boats with machinery and supplies, and shipped them deep into the Amazon rainforest. Workers cut down trees and cleared the land and then they built a r | 3/6/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
57 |
Clean297- Blood, Sweat and Tears (City of the Future, Part 2) | The story of the Bijlmer continues | 2/27/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
58 |
Clean296- Bijlmer (City of the Future, Part 1) | After World War 2, city planners in Amsterdam wanted to design the perfect “City of the Future.” They decided to build a new neighborhood, close to Amsterdam, that would be a perfect encapsulation of Modernist principles. It was called the Bijlmerme | 2/20/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
59 |
Clean295- Making a Mark: Visual Identity with Tom Geismar | Tom Geismar has been a driving force in the field of design and graphic identity for over 60 years. The influence of the firm he co-founded can be felt in logos you see every day. | 2/13/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
60 |
Clean294- Border Wall | Three stories about the physical border at the southern edge of the U.S. | 2/6/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
61 |
Clean293- Managed Retreat | In the 1970s it looked like the beloved, 200-year-old Cape Hatteras lighthouse was in danger. The sea was getting closer and threatening to swallow it up. And people were torn over what to do about it -- they could move the lighthouse, or leave it in pl | 1/30/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
62 |
Clean292- Speech Bubbles: Understanding Comics with Scott McCloud | Cartoonist and theorist Scott McCloud has been making and thinking about comics for decades. He is the author of Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art. This classic volume explores formal aspects of comics, the historical development of the medium, it | 1/23/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
63 |
Clean291- Thermal Delight | Air conditioning does a lot more than cool spaces. It has dramatically changed where people in the United States live and the design of homes and other buildings. | 1/16/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
64 |
Clean290- Mini-Stories: Volume 4 | This part two of the 2017/2018 mini-stories episodes, where Roman interviews the staff and our collaborators about their favorite little design stories that don’t quite fill out an entire episode. | 1/9/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
65 | CleanVideoBiomimicry- Vox + 99% Invisible Video | Japan’s Shinkansen doesn’t look like your typical train. It is a fascinating example of biomimicry, the design movement pioneered by biologist and writer Janine Benyus. | 1/2/2018 | Free | View in iTunes |
66 |
Clean289- Mini-Stories: Volume 3 | Mysterious ice boats, green ruins, sack dresses, steampunk violins, and a little update from a couple of the notable city flags that have been redesigned around the country. | 12/19/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
67 |
Clean288- Guerrilla Public Service Redux | In the early morning of August 5, 2001, artist Richard Ankrom and a group of friends assembled on the 4th Street bridge over the 110 freeway in Los Angeles. They had gathered to commit a crime — one Ankrom had plotted for years. | 12/12/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
68 |
Clean287- The Nut Behind the Wheel | The culture of heavily regulated, data-driven, auto-safety engineering did not always exist. In fact, for decades, automakers tried to keep data about car wrecks to themselves. They not only resisted making cars safer, they argued the very idea of a “ | 12/5/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
69 |
Clean286- A 700-Foot Mountain of Whipped Cream | Clive Desmond covers the golden age of radio ads, featuring Frank Zappa, Ken Nordine, Linda Ronstadt, and Randy Newman in this featured episode. | 11/28/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
70 |
Clean285- Money Makers | For a long time, anti-counterfeiting laws made it illegal to show US currency in movies. Now you can show real money, but fake money is often preferred. Creating fake money that looks real enough for film is a tough design challenge. | 11/21/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
71 |
Clean284- Hero Props: Graphic Design in Film & Television | Annie Atkins specializes in graphics for filmmaking, including lettering, illustrations and more -- she has designed all kinds of graphic props, including telegrams, vintage cigarette packaging, maps, love letters, books, passports and fake CIA identifi | 11/14/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
72 |
Clean283- Dollhouses of St. Louis | People have been stealing the bricks of St. Louis. | 11/7/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
73 |
Clean282- Oyster-tecture | New York was built at the mouth of the Hudson River and one creature in particular shaped the landscape: the oyster. Over time, pollution and other environmental changes killed off that oyster population, but a new underwater landscape architecture proj | 10/31/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
74 |
Clean281- La Sagrada Familia | The line to enter Barcelona’s most famous cathedral often stretches around the block. La Sagrada Família, designed by Antoni Gaudí, draws millions of visitors each year. There are a lot of Gothic churches in Spain, but this one is different. | 10/24/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
75 |
Clean280- Half Measures | The United States is one of just a handful of countries that that isn’t officially metric. Instead, Americans measure things our own way, in units that are basically inscrutable to non-Americans, nearly all of whom have been brought up in … Continue | 10/18/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
76 |
Clean279- The Containment Plan | It’s hard to overstate the vastness of the Skid Row neighborhood in Los Angeles. It spans roughly 50 blocks, which is about a fifth of the entire downtown area of Los Angeles. It’s very clear when you’ve entered Skid Row. … Continue reading → | 10/10/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
77 |
Clean278- The Athletic Brassiere | Among the most important advances in sports technology, few can compete with the invention of the sports bra. Following the passage of Title IX in 1972, women’s interest in athletics surged. But their breasts presented an obstacle. | 10/3/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
78 |
Clean277- Ponte City Tower | Ponte City Tower, the brutalist cylindrical high-rise that towers over Johannesburg, has gone from a symbol of white opulence to something far more complicated. It’s gone through very hard times, but also it’s hopeful. | 9/26/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
79 |
Clean276- The Finnish Experiment | Around the world, there is a lot of buzz around the idea of universal basic income (also known as “unconditional basic income” or UBI). It can take different forms or vary in the details, but in essence: UBI is the … Continue reading → | 9/19/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
80 |
Clean275- Coal Hogs Work Safe | Coal miner stickers started out as little advertisements that the manufacturers of mining equipment handed out. Even before the late 1960s, when mining safety laws started requiring reflective materials underground, | 9/12/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
81 |
Clean274- The Age of the Algorithm | Computer algorithms now shape our world in profound and mostly invisible ways. They predict if we’ll be valuable customers and whether we’re likely to repay a loan. They filter what we see on social media, sort through resumes, | 9/5/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
82 |
Clean273- Notes on an Imagined Plaque | Monuments don’t just appear in the wake of someone’s death — they are erected for reasons specific to a time and place. In 1905, one such memorial was put up in downtown Memphis, Tennessee, to commemorate Nathan Bedford Forrest, who … Continue r | 8/29/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
83 |
Clean272- Person in Lotus Position | Tech analysts estimate that over six billion emojis are sent each day. Emojis, which started off as a collection of low-resolution pixelated images from Japan, have become a well-established and graphically sophisticated part of everyday global communi. | 8/22/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
84 |
Clean271- The Great Dismal Swamp | On the border of Virginia and North Carolina stretches a great, dismal swamp. The Great Dismal Swamp, actually — that’s the name British colonists gave it centuries ago. The swamp covers about 190 square miles today, but at its peak, … Continue re | 8/15/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
85 |
Clean270- The Stethoscope | Imagine for a moment the year 1800. A doctor is meeting with a patient – most likely in the patient’s home. The patient is complaining about shortness of breath. A cough, a fever. The doctor might check the patient’s pulse … Continue reading → | 8/8/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
86 |
Clean269- Ways of Hearing | When the tape started rolling in old analog recording studios, there was a feeling that musicians were about to capture a particular moment. On tape, there was no “undo.” They could try again, if they had the time and money, … Continue reading → | 8/1/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
87 |
Clean268- El Gordo | In Spain, they do the lottery differently. First of all, it’s a country-wide obsession — about 75% of Spaniards buy a ticket. There’s more than one lottery in Spain, but the one that Spaniards are the most passionate about is … Continue reading | 7/25/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
88 |
Clean267- The Trials of Dan and Dave | This is the story of an ad campaign produced for the 1992 Olympic games in Barcelona. Perennial runner-up in the sports shoe category, Reebok, was trying to make its mark and take down Nike. They chose two athletes, plucked them … Continue reading → | 7/18/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
89 |
Clean266- Repackaging the Pill | Most people are familiar with at least one version of the birth control pill’s packaging — a round plastic disc which opens like a shell and looks like a makeup compact. But the pill wasn’t always packaged this way. The … Continue reading → | 7/11/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
90 |
Clean265- The Pool and the Stream | This is the story of a curvy, kidney-shaped swimming pool born in Northern Europe that had a huge ripple effect on popular culture in Southern California and landscape architecture in Northern California, and then the world. | 7/4/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
91 |
Clean264- Mexico 68 | The 1968 Olympics took place in Mexico City, Mexico. It was the first games ever hosted in a Latin American country. And for Mexico City, the event was an opportunity to show the world that they were a metropolis as … Continue reading → | 6/27/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
92 |
Clean263- You Should Do a Story | “You should do a story…” is the first line to a lot of the conversations you have when you work at 99pi. This week we look into a bunch of those stories suggested by our listeners and present them to … Continue reading → | 6/20/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
93 |
Clean262- In the Same Ballpark | In the 1992, the Baltimore Orioles opened their baseball season at a brand new stadium called Oriole Park at Camden Yards, right along the downtown harbor. The stadium was small and intimate, built with brick and iron trusses—a throwback to … Contin | 6/13/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
94 |
CleanIntro to a new Roman Mars podcast: What Trump Can Teach Us About Con Law | Special introductory episode to a new podcast produced by Roman Mars and Elizabeth Joh. Professor Elizabeth Joh teaches Intro to Constitutional Law and most of the time this is a pretty straight forward job. But with Trump in office, | 6/8/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
95 |
Clean199- The Yin and Yang of Basketball | In 1891, a physical education teacher in Springfield, Massachusetts invented the game we would come to know as basketball. In setting the height of the baskets, he inadvertently created a design problem that would not be resolved for decades to … Cont | 6/6/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
96 |
Clean261- Squatters of the Lower East Side | In 1987, three years after moving to New York City, Maggie Wrigley found herself on the edge of homelessness. She was trying to figure out where to stay, when she heard about an abandoned tenement building on the Lower East … Continue reading → | 5/30/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
97 |
Clean260- New Jersey | The Brazilian soccer shirt is iconic. Its bright canary yellow with green trim, worn with blue shorts, is known worldwide. The uniform is joyful and bold and seems to capture something essential about Brazil. | 5/23/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
98 |
Clean259- This Is Chance: Anchorwoman of the Great Alaska Earthquake | This episode was recorded live as part of the Radiotopia West Coast Tour. It was the middle of the night on March 27, 1964. Earlier that evening, the second-biggest earthquake ever measured at the time had hit Anchorage, Alaska. 115 people died. | 5/16/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
99 |
Clean258- The Modern Necropolis | In the town of Colma, California, the dead outnumber the living by a thousand to one. Located just ten miles south of San Francisco, Colma is filled with rolling green hills, manicured hedges, and 17 full size cemeteries (18 if … Continue reading → | 5/9/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
100 |
Clean257- Reversing the Grid | For most people, electricity only flows one way (into the home), but there are exceptions — people who use solar panels, for instance. In those cases, excess electricity created by the solar cells travels back out into the grid to … Continue reading | 5/2/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean256- Sounds Natural | In most wildlife films, the sounds you hear were not recorded while the cameras were rolling. Most filmmakers use long telephoto lenses to film animals, but there’s no sonic equivalent of a zoom lens. Good audio requires a microphone close … Continu | 4/18/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
102 |
Clean255- The Architect of Hollywood | Los Angeles is rich with architectural diversity. On the same block, you could find a retro-futuristic Googie diner next to a Spanish-style mansion, sitting comfortably alongside a Dutch Colonial dwelling, all in close proximity to a Deconstructivist c. | 4/10/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
103 |
Clean254- Containers | We’re based in beautiful downtown Oakland, CA which is a port city in the San Francisco Bay. Massive container ships travel across the Pacific and end up here. From miles away you can see the enormous white cranes that pull … Continue reading → | 4/4/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
104 |
Clean253- Manzanar | When Warren Furutani was growing up in Los Angeles in the 1950s, he sometimes heard his parents refer to a place where they once spent time — a place they called “camp.” To him “camp” meant summer camp or a … Continue reading → | 3/28/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
105 |
Clean252- The Falling of the Lenins | On the night of December 8, 2013, a huge crowd gathered on a tree-lined boulevard in downtown Kiev, Ukraine. The crowd was there to watch as a statue in the boulevard was pulled down by a crane. The toppled statue … Continue reading → | 3/21/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
106 |
Clean251- Negative Space: Logo Design with Michael Bierut | Logos used to be a thing people didn’t really give much thought to. But over the last decade, the volume and intensity of arguments about logos have increased substantially. A lot of this is just the internet being the internet. … Continue reading | 3/14/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
107 |
Clean250- State (Sanctuary, Part 2) | In the 1980s, the United States experienced a refugee crisis. Thousands of Central Americans were fleeing civil wars in El Salvador and Guatemala, traveling north through Mexico, and crossing the border into the U.S. [Note: Just tuning in? | 3/7/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
108 |
Clean249- Church (Sanctuary, Part 1) | In the 1980s, Rev. John Fife and his congregation at Southside Presbyterian Church began to help Central American migrants fleeing persecution from US backed dictatorships. Their efforts would mark the beginning of a new — and controversial — social | 2/28/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
109 |
Clean248- Atom in the Garden of Eden | As the world entered the Atomic Age, humankind faced a new fear that permeated just about every aspect of daily life: the threat of nuclear war. And while the violent applications of atomic research had already been proven, | 2/21/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
110 |
Clean247- Usonia the Beautiful | Frank Lloyd Wright believed that the buildings we live in shape the kinds of people we become. His aim was nothing short of rebuilding the entire culture of the United States, changing the nation through its architecture. | 2/14/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
111 |
Clean246- Usonia 1 | Frank Lloyd Wright was a bombastic character that ultimately changed the field of architecture, and not just through his big, famous buildings. Before designing many of his most well-known works, Wright created a small and inexpensive yet beautiful hou. | 2/7/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
112 |
Clean245- The Eponymist | Eponym (noun): A person after whom a discovery, invention, place, etc., is named or thought to be named; a name or noun formed after a person. An eponym, almost by definition, has some kind of story behind it — some reason it … Continue reading | 1/31/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean244- The Revolutionary Post | Winifred Gallagher, author of How the Post Office Created America: A History, argues that the post office is not simply an inexpensive way to send a letter. The service was designed to unite a bunch of disparate towns and people … Continue reading → | 1/24/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
114 |
Clean243- Tom Swift and His Electric Rifle | On January 3, 1979, two officers from the Los Angeles Police Department went to the home of Eulia May Love, a 39-year-old African-American mother. The police were there because of a dispute over an unpaid gas bill. | 1/17/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean242- Mini-Stories: Volume 2 | Part 2 where host Roman Mars talks to the 99pi producers about their favorite “Mini-Stories.” These are little anecdotes or seeds of a story about design and architecture that can’t quite stretch into a full episode, but we love them … Continue | 1/10/2017 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean241- Mini-Stories: Volume 1 | Host Roman Mars talks to the 99pi producers about their favorite “Mini-Stories.” These are little anecdotes or seeds of a story about design and architecture that can’t quite stretch into a full episode, but the staff loves them anyway. | 12/20/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean240- Plat of Zion | The urban grid of Salt Lake City, Utah is designed to tell you exactly where you are in relation to Temple Square, one of the holiest sites for Mormons. Addresses can read like sets of coordinates. “300 South 2100 East,” … Continue reading → | 12/13/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean239- Guano Island | In 2014, President Obama expanded the Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument, making it the largest marine preserve in the world at the time. The expansion closed 490,000 square miles of largely undisturbed ocean to commercial fishing and unde. | 12/6/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean238- NBC Chimes | The NBC chimes may be the most famous sound in broadcasting. Originating in the 1920s, the three key sequential notes are familiar to generations of radio listeners and television watchers. Many companies have tried to trademark sounds but only around . | 11/29/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean237- Dollar Store Town | Dollar stores are not just a U.S. phenomenon. They can be found in Australia and the United Kingdom, the Middle East and Mexico. And a lot of the stuff—the generic cheap stuff for sale in these stores—comes from one place. … Continue reading → | 11/22/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean236- Reverb | Through a combination of passive and active acoustics, architects and acousticians can control the sounds of spaces to fit any kind of need. With sound-proofing and selective-amplification, we can add reverb or take it away. | 11/15/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean235- Ten Letters for the President | People who write the White House know that the president himself will most likely not see their message. Many of their letters start with phrases like, “I know no one will read this.” Although someone does read those letters. And … Continue readin | 11/7/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean234- The Shift | Every now and again, a truly great athlete shatters all previous assumptions about what’s possible to achieve in a sport. When this happens, opposing teams scramble to find ways to stop them or slow them down. In basketball, | 11/1/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean233- Space Trash, Space Treasure | In the summer of 1961 the upper stage of the rocket carrying the Transit 4A satellite blew up about two hours after launch. It was the first known human-made object to unintentionally explode in space, and it created hundreds of … Continue reading → | 10/25/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean232- McMansion Hell | Few forms of contemporary architecture draw as much criticism as the McMansion, a particular type of oversized house that people love to hate. McMansions usually feature 3,000 or more square feet of space and fail to embody a cohesive style … Continue | 10/18/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean231- Half a House | On the night of February 27th, 2010, a magnitude of 8.8 earthquake hit Constitución, Chile and it was the second biggest that the world had seen in half a century. The quake and the tsunami it produced completely crushed the … Continue reading → | 10/11/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean230- Project Cybersyn | On September 11, 1973, a military junta violently took control of Chile, which was led at the time by President Salvador Allende. Allende had become president in a free and democratic election. After the military coup, | 10/4/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean124- Longbox | Reporter Whitney Jones argues that R.E.M.’s Out of Time is the most politically significant album in the history of the United States. Because of its packaging. Longbox Please Vote. | 9/27/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean229- The Trend Forecast | Who decides that the color this season is “mint green” or that denim jackets are “back?” Of course, there’s top-down fashion, where couture houses and runway shows set a trend that trickles down through the rest of the industry. Then … Conti | 9/20/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean228- Making Up Ground | Large portions of San Francisco, New York City, Boston, Seattle, Hong Kong and Marseilles were built on top of human made land. What is now Mumbai, India, was transformed by the British from a seven-island archipelago to one contiguous strip … Continu | 9/13/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean227- Public Works | Infrastructure makes modern civilization possible. Roads, power grids, sewage systems and water networks all underpin society as we know it, forming the basis of our built environment … at least when they work. | 9/6/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean226- On Average | In many ways, the built world was not designed for you. It was designed for the average person. Standardized tests, building codes, insurance rates, clothing sizes, The Dow Jones – all these measurements are based around the concept of an … Continue | 8/23/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean225- Photo Credit | Founded by architect Walter Gropius in 1919, the Bauhaus school in Germany would go on to shape modern architecture, art, and design for decades to come. The school sought to combine design and industrialization, | 8/16/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean224- A Sea Worth its Salt | The largest body of water in California was formed by a mistake. In 1905, the California Development Company accidentally flooded a huge depression in the Sonora Desert, creating an enormous salty lake called the Salton Sea. | 8/9/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Explicit223- The Magic Bureaucrat | In 1996, President Bill Clinton and the Congress undertook a reform effort to redesign the welfare system from one that many believed trapped people in a cycle of dependence, to one, that in the President’s words, would give people “a … Continue r | 8/2/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean222- Combat Hearing Loss | The US military buys a lot of foam ear plugs. Visit any base and you’ll find them under the bleachers at the firing range, in the bottoms of washing machines. They are cheap and effective at making noise less … noisy. … Continue reading → | 7/26/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean221- America’s Last Top Model | In 1943, the Army Corps of Engineers began construction on a scale model that could test flooding in all 1.25 million square miles of the Mississippi River. It would be a three-dimensional map of nearly half of the continental United … Continue readin | 7/19/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean220- The Mind of an Architect | In the late 1950s, the Institute of Personality Assessment and Research embarked on a mission to study the personalities of particularly creative scientists and artists. Researchers established categories, grouping analytical creatives together (includ. | 7/12/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean219- Unpleasant Design | Benches in parks, train stations, bus shelters and other public places are meant to offer seating, but only for a limited duration. Many elements of such seats are subtly or overtly restrictive. Arm rests, for instance, | 7/5/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean218- Remembering Stonewall | It started with a place called the Stonewall Inn. Gay bars had been raided by police for decades. Gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender people had been routinely arrested and subjected to harassment and beatings by the people who were meant … Contin | 6/28/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean217- Home on Lagrange | In 1968, an Italian industrialist and a Scottish scientist started a club to address what they considered to be humankind’s greatest problems—issues like pollution, resource scarcity, and overpopulation. Meeting in Rome, Italy, | 6/21/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean216- The Blazer Experiment | In 1968, the police department in Menlo Park, California hired a new police chief. His name was Victor Cizanckas and his main goal was to reform the department, which had a strained relationship with the community at the time. | 6/14/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean215- H-Day | September 3rd, 1967, also known as H-Day, is etched in the collective memory of Sweden. That morning, millions of Swedes switched from driving on the left side of the road to driving on the right. The changeover was an unprecedented … Continue reading | 6/7/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean130- Holdout | Around 2005, a Seattle neighborhood called Ballard started to see unprecedented growth. Condominiums and apartment buildings were sprouting up all over the community which had once been mostly single family homes and small businesses. | 5/31/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean214- Loud and Clear | Sub Pop Records has signed some of the most famous and influential indie bands of the last 30 years, including Nirvana, Sleater-Kinney, The Postal Service, and Beach House. Over time, the stars and hits have changed and the formats have … Continue rea | 5/24/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean213- Separation Anxiety | “Für Elise” is one of the world’s most widely-recognized pieces of music. The Beethoven melody has been played by pianists the world over, and its near-universal recognition has been used to attract customers for companies as big as McDonald | 5/17/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean212- Turf Wars of East New York | Neighborhoods are constantly changing, but it tends to be the people with money and power who get to decide the shape of things to come. New York City has an especially long history with change driven by landlords and real … Continue reading → | 5/10/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean211- The Grand Dame of Broad Street | The Bellevue-Stratford opened in 1904 and quickly became one of the most luxurious hotels of its time, rivaling the Waldorf Astoria in New York. The building was an incredible work of French Renaissance architecture. It was 19 stories high, | 5/3/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean210- Unseen City | Humans form cities from concrete, metal, and glass, designing structures and infrastructure primarily to serve a single bipedal species. Walking down a familiar city street, it is easy to overlook squirrels climbing in trees, | 4/26/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean209- Supertall 101 | Starting in the late 1990s, the government of Taipei began looking into how they could turn global attention to their city, the capital of the small island of Taiwan. The initial idea was to create two 66-story office towers, which … Continue reading | 4/19/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean208- Vox Ex Machina | In 1939, an astonishing new machine debuted at the New York World’s Fair. It was called the “Voder,” short for “Voice Operating Demonstrator.” It looked sort of like a futuristic church organ. An operator — known as a “Voderette” — … | 4/12/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean207- Soul City | In the late 1960s, a civil rights leader named Floyd B. McKissick, at one time the head of CORE (the Congress on Racial Equality) proposed an idea for a new town. He would call this town Soul City and it would be … Continue reading → | 4/5/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean206- The White Elephant Of Tel Aviv | Israeli buses regularly make international headlines, be it for suicide bombings, fights over gender segregation, or clashes concerning Shabbat schedules. One particular ill-fated megastructure, however, has been at the nexus of various lesser-publiciz. | 3/29/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean205- Flying Food | The last hundred years or so of food advertising have been shaped by this one simple fact: real food usually looks pretty unappetizing on camera. It’s static and boring to look at, and it tends to wilt under the glare … Continue reading → | 3/22/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean204- The SoHo Effect | In San Francisco, the area South of Market Street is called SoMa. The part of town North of the Panhandle is known as NoPa. Around the intersection of North Oakland, Berkeley and Emeryville, real estate brokers are pitching properties as part … Conti | 3/15/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean203- The Giftschrank | Centuries ago, Germany came up with a way to keep books that contained “dangerous” information without releasing them to the general public: The Giftschrank. The word, a combination of “poison” and “cabinet, | 3/8/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean202- Mojave Phone Booth | Situated in the middle of the Mojave desert, over a dozen miles from the nearest pavement, a lone phone booth sat along a dirt road, just waiting to become an international sensation. Mojave Phone Booth 760-733-9969 The piece was produced by … Contin | 3/1/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
158 | CleanVideoVideo- The Norman Door with Vox | There is an epidemic of terrible doors in the world. But when Don Norman got frustrated with them, he ended up changing the way people everywhere think about design. Video by Joe Posner of Vox, featuring Roman Mars of 99% … Continue reading → | 2/27/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean201- The Green Book | The middle of the 20th Century was a golden age for road travel in the United States. Cars had become cheap and spacious enough to carry families comfortably for hundreds of miles. The Interstate Highway System had started to connect … Continue readin | 2/23/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean200- Miss Manhattan | All around the country, there stands a figure so much a part of historical architecture and urban landscapes that she is rarely noticed. She has gone by many names, from Star Maiden to Priestess of Culture, Spirit of Life to … Continue reading → | 2/16/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean199- The Yin and Yang of Basketball | In 1891, a physical education teacher in Springfield, Massachusetts invented the game we would come to know as basketball. In setting the height of the baskets, he inadvertently created a design problem that would not be resolved for decades to come. | 2/9/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean198- The Ice King | In the mid-19th century, decades before home refrigeration became the norm, you could find ice clinking in glasses from India to the Caribbean, thanks to a global commodities industry that has since melted into obscurity: the frozen water trade. | 2/2/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean197- Fish Cannon | The Iron Curtain was an 8,000-mile border separating East from West during the Cold War. Something unexpected evolved in the “no man’s land” that the massive border created. In the absence of human intervention and disruption, | 1/26/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean196- The Fresno Drop | In September 1958, Bank of America began an experiment – one that would have far reaching effects on our lives and on the economy. They decided after careful consideration to conduct this experiment in Fresno, California. | 1/19/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean195- Best Enjoyed By | Date labels (e.g. “use-by”, “sell-by”, “best-by”, “best if used by,” “expires on”, etc.) are on a lot of products. Forty-one states require a date label on at least some food product, but there are huge inconsistencies, | 1/12/2016 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean194- Bone Music | In 1950s Soviet Russia, citizens craved Western popular music—everything from jazz to rock & roll. But smuggling vinyl was dangerous, and acquiring the scarce material to make copies of those records that did make it into the country was expensive. | 12/22/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean193- Tube Benders | The skyline of beautiful downtown Oakland, California, is defined by various towers by day, but at night there is one that shines far more brightly than the rest: the neon-illuminated Tribune Tower. Each side of the tower says “Tribune” in … Conti | 12/15/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean192- Pagodas and Dragon Gates | For Americans, the sight of pagoda roofs and dragon gates means that you are in Chinatown. Whether in San Francisco, New York, Los Angeles, or Las Vegas, the chinoiserie look is distinctive. But for those just arriving from China, the … Continue readi | 12/8/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean191- Worst Smell in the World | Many material trifles, such as Silly Putty, started as attempts at serious inventions, but in rare cases, the process works in reverse: something developed as a gag gift can turn into something truly heroic. | 12/2/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean190- Fixing the Hobo Suit | Superhero costumes for TV and film used to be pretty cringe-worthy. Lately, however, super outfits are looking much better. Costume designers are learning new tricks, and using better technology, but there has also been a change in attitude. | 11/24/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean189- The Landlord’s Game | From rock-paper-scissors, to tennis, to Mario Kart, every game is a designed system and all games are grounded in the same design principles. One popular game in particular has a mixed reputation with game players and designers alike: Monopoly. | 11/17/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean188- Fountain Drinks | On April 21st, 1859, an incredible thing happened in London and thousands of people came out to celebrate it. Women wore their finest clothing. Men were in suits and top hats, and children clamored to get a glimpse…of the very … Continue reading → | 11/10/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean187- Butterfly Effects | Ballots are an essential component to a working democracy, yet they are rarely created (or even reviewed) by design professionals. Good ballot design is mainly a matter of following good design principles in general—familiar territory for graphic desi | 11/3/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean186- War and Pizza | Households tend to take pantry food for granted, but canned beans, powered cheese, and bags of moist cookies were not designed for everyday convenience. These standard products were made to meet the needs of the military. Reporter Tina Antolini, | 10/27/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean185- Atmospherians | The phrase ‘from Central Casting’ has become a kind of cultural shorthand for a stereotype or archetype, a subject so visually suited to its part it appears to have been designed for that role. Search the news for ‘straight out … Continue readin | 10/20/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean110- Structural Integrity (Rebroadcast) | 99% Invisible is honored to accept a 2015 Third Coast International Audio Festival award for Structural Integrity, a story of architectural engineering gone wrong, and then covertly made right. When it was built in 1977, | 10/13/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean184- Rajneeshpuram | Indian philosopher and mystic Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh had a vision: he would build a Utopian city from the ground up, starting with 64,000 acres of muddy ranchland in rural Oregon. Purchased in 1981, this expanse was to become both a … Continue reading | 10/6/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean183- Dead Letter Office | When something is lost in the mail, it feels like it has disappeared into the ether, like it was sucked into a black hole, like it no longer exists. But, it turns out, a lot of the mail we think … Continue reading → | 9/29/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean182- A Sweet Surprise Awaits You | On the night of March 30, 2005, the Powerball jackpot was 25 million dollars. The grand prize winner was in Tennessee, but all over the United States, one hundred and ten second-place winners came forward. Normally just three or four … Continue readin | 9/22/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean181- Milk Carton Kids | On a Sunday morning in 1982, in Des Moines, Iowa, Johnny Gosch left his house to begin his usual paper route. A short time later, his parents were awakened by a phone call–it was a neighbor—their paper hadn’t come. When … Continue reading → | 9/15/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean180- Reefer Madness | There are around 6,000 cargo vessels out on the ocean right now, carrying 20,000,000 shipping containers, which are delivering most of the products you see around you. And among all the containers are a special subset of temperature-controlled units kn. | 9/8/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean179- Bathysphere | In 1860, a chance find at sea forever changed our understanding of marine habitats, sparking an unprecedented push to explore a new world of possibilities far below the surface of our planet’s oceans. Deep sea life, | 9/1/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean178- The Great Restoration | Stirling, Scotland is the home of Stirling Castle, which sits atop a giant crag, or hill, overlooking the whole town of Stirling. There has been a castle on that hill since the 12th century at least, and maybe before, but … Continue reading → | 8/25/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
184 |
Clean177- Lawn Order | In communities across America, lawns that are brown or overgrown are considered especially heinous. Elite squads of dedicated individuals have been deputized by their local governments or homeowners’ associations to take action against those whose law | 8/18/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean176- Hard to Love a Brute | No matter which James Bond actor is your favorite, it’s undeniable that the Sean Connery films had the best villains. There’s Blofeld, who turned cat-stroking into a thing that super-villains do, and then there’s Goldfinger—Bond’s flashiest ne | 8/11/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean175- The Sunshine Hotel | The Bowery, in lower Manhattan, is one of New York’s oldest neighborhoods. It’s been through a lot of iterations. In the 1650s, a handful of freed slaves were the neighborhood’s first residents. At the time, New York was still a … Continue readi | 8/4/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean174- From the Sea, Freedom | In 1933, delegates from the United States and fourteen other countries met in Montevideo, Uruguay to define what it means to be a state. The resulting treaty from the Montevideo Convention established four basic criteria for statehood—essentially, | 7/28/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean173- Awareness | By the late 1980s, AIDS had been in the United States for almost a decade. AIDS had be the number one killer of young men in New York City, then of young men in the country, then of young men … Continue reading → | 7/21/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
189 |
Clean172- On Location | So many classic movies have been made in downtown Los Angeles. Though many don’t actually take place in downtown Los Angeles. L.A. has played almost every city in the world, thanks to its diverse landscape and architectural variety, | 7/14/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean171- Johnnycab (Automation Paradox, Pt. 2) | More than 90% of all automobile accidents are all attributable to human error, for some car industry people, a fully-automated car is a kind of holy grail. However, as automation makes our lives easier and safer, it also creates more … Continue readin | 6/30/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean170- Children of the Magenta (Automation Paradox, pt. 1) | On the evening of May 31, 2009, 216 passengers, three pilots, and nine flight attendants boarded an Airbus 330 in Rio de Janeiro. This flight, Air France 447, was headed across to Paris. Everything proceeded normally for several hours. Then, | 6/23/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean169- Freud’s Couch | Sigmund Freud’s ground-breaking techniques and theories for therapy came to be called “psychoanalysis,” and it was embodied, in practice and popular culture, by a single piece of furniture: the couch. Producer Ann Hepperman explores the role of t | 6/16/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean168- All In Your Head | People who make horror movies know: if you want to scare someone, use scary music. Some of the most creative use of music and sound to evoke fear and anxiety is on the TV show Hannibal. Hrishikesh Hirway of Song … Continue reading → | 6/10/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
194 |
Clean167- Voices in the Wire | This week on 99% Invisible, we have two stories about the early days of broadcasting and home sound recording, produced by Radio Diaries and the Kitchen Sisters. The sounds that came out Frank Conrad’s Garage in 1919 and 1920 are … Continue reading | 6/2/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean166- Viva La Arquitectura! | On January 3rd, 1961, Che Guevara suggested to Fidel Castro that they go play a round of golf. They drove out to what was then the ritziest, most elite country club in Havana. It was empty—almost all the members had … Continue reading → | 5/26/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean165- The Nutshell Studies | The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Baltimore, Maryland is a busy place. Anyone who dies unexpectedly in the state of Maryland will end up there for an autopsy. On an average day, they might perform twelve autopsies; on … Continue reading → | 5/19/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
197 |
Clean164- The Post-Billiards Age | We live in a post-billiards age. There was an age of billiards, and it has been over for so long, most of us have no idea how huge billiards once was. For many decades, starting in the mid-19th Century, billiards … Continue reading → | 5/12/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
198 |
Clean163- The Gruen Effect | Retail spaces are designed for impulse shopping. When you go to a store looking for socks and come out with a new shirt, it’s only partly your fault. Shops are trying to look so beautiful, so welcoming, the items so enticingly displayed and … C | 5/5/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
199 |
Clean162- Mystery House | According to legend, Sarah Winchester’s friends advised the grieving widow to seek the services of a Boston spiritual medium named Adam Koombs. The story goes, Koombs put Mrs. Winchester in touch with her deceased husband—but William had bad news. | 4/28/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
200 |
Clean161- Show of Force | During World War II, a massive recruitment effort targeted students from the top art schools across the country. These young designers, artists, and makers were being asked to help execute a wild idea that came out of one the nation’s most conser | 4/21/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean160- Perfect Security | The pursuit of lock picking is as old as the lock, which is itself as old as civilization. But in the entire history of the world, there was only one brief moment, lasting about 70 years, where you could put … Continue reading → | 4/14/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
202 |
Clean159- The Calendar | A month is hardly a unit of measurement. It can start on any day of the week and last anywhere from 28 to 31 days. Sometimes a month is four weeks long, sometimes five, sometimes six. You have to buy … Continue reading → | 4/8/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
203 |
Clean158- Sandhogs | Eighty years ago, New York City needed another tunnel under the Hudson River. The Holland Tunnel and the George Washington Bridge could no longer handle the mounting traffic between New Jersey and Manhattan. | 3/31/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
204 |
Clean54- The Colour of Money (R) | United States paper currency is so ubiquitous that to really look at its graphic design with fresh eyes requires some deliberate and focused attention. Pull a greenback out from your wallet (or look at a picture online) and really take … Continue read | 3/25/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean157- Devil’s Rope | In the mid 1800s, not many (non-native) Americans had ever been west of the Mississippi. When Frederick Law Olmstead visited the west in the 1850s, he remarked that the plains looked like a sea of grasses that moved “in swells after … Continue re | 3/17/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean156- Coin Check | design, coin, military, clip art, recognition, challenge, currency, medal, honor | 3/10/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
207 |
Clean155- Palm Reading | design, city, landscape, tree, palm, architecture, California, Los Angeles | 3/3/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
208 |
Clean154- PDX Carpet | design, carpet, rug, PDX, airport, cult, pattern, foot, selfie, rendered, panther | 2/24/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
209 |
Clean153- Game Over (R) | design, video games, a life well wasted, sims, archive, ea land, apocalypse | 2/17/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
210 |
Clean152- Guerrilla Public Service | design, road, sign, highway, freeway, wayfinding, signage, caltrans, transportation | 2/10/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
211 |
Clean151- La Mascotte | design, costume, mascot, sports, baseball, Phanatic, Phillies, Muppet, Youppi, Max Patkin | 2/3/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
212 |
Clean150- Under The Moonlight | In 1885, Austin, Texas was terrorized by a serial killer known as the Servant Girl Annihilator. The murderer was never actually found, but he claimed eight victims, mostly black servant girls, all attacked in the dark of night. The very, | 1/27/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
213 |
Clean149- Of Mice And Men | If you are looking at a computer screen, your right hand is probably resting on a mouse. To the left of that mouse (or above, if you’re on a laptop) is your keyboard. As you work on the computer, your right hand … Continue reading → | 1/20/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
214 |
Clean148- The Sizzle | The first trademark for a sound in the United States was issued in 1978 to NBC for their chimes. MGM has a sound trademark for their roaring lion, as does 20th Century Fox for their trumpet fanfare. Harley Davidson tried to trademark the sound … C | 1/13/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
215 |
Clean147- Penn Station Sucks | New Yorkers are known to disagree about a lot of things. Who’s got the best pizza? What’s the fastest subway route? Yankees or Mets? But all 8.5 million New Yorkers are likely to agree on one thing: Penn Station sucks. … Continue reading → | 1/6/2015 | Free | View in iTunes |
216 |
Clean146- Mooallempalooza | As you probably know, 99% Invisible is a show about the built world, about things manufactured by humans. We don’t tend to do stories about animals or nature. But our friend Jon Mooallem writes brilliant stories about the weird interactions betwe | 12/30/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
217 |
Clean145- Octothorpe | If you want to follow conversation threads relating to this show on social media—whether Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram, Tumblr—you know to look for the hashtag: #99pi. In our current digital age, the hashtag identifies movements, events, happening | 12/16/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
218 |
Clean144- There Is A Light That Never Goes Out | Hanging in the garage of Fire Station #6 in Livermore, California, there’s a small, pear-shaped light bulb. It is glowing right now. This lightbulb has been glowing, with just a couple of momentary interruptions, for 113 years. | 12/9/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
219 |
Clean143- Inflatable Men | You see them on street corners, at gas stations, at shopping malls. You see them at blowout sales and grand openings of all kinds. Their wacky faces hover over us, and then fall down to meet us, and then rise … Continue reading → | 12/2/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
220 |
Clean142- And The Winner Is | There’s a little trophy shop called Aardvark Laser Engraving down the street from our office in Oakland. Its small but bustling, and its windows are stuffed to the brim with awards made of all kinds of materials and in any … Continue reading → | 11/25/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
221 |
Clean141- Three Records from Sundown | This week on the show we’re presenting one of our favorite radio features, “Three Records from Sundown,” about singer Nick Drake. The documentary, by producer Charles Maynes, retraces the roots of Drake’s legend through interviews with Drake’ | 11/18/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
222 |
Clean140- Vexillonaire | Vexillologists—those who study flags—tend to fall into one of two schools of thought. The first is one that focuses on history, category, and usage, and maintains that vexillologists should be scholars and historians of all flags, | 11/11/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
223 |
Clean139- Edge of Your Seat | “A Chair is a difficult object. A skyscraper is almost easier.” — Mies van der Rohe. The chair presents an interesting design challenge, because it is an object that disappears when in use. The person replaces the chair. | 11/4/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
224 |
Clean138- O-U-I-J-A | The Ouija board is so simple and iconic that it looks like it comes from another time, or maybe another realm. The game is not as ancient as it was designed to look, but those two arched rows of letters have … Continue reading → | 10/28/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
225 |
Clean137- Good Bread | The first print advertisement for Wonder Bread came out before the bread itself. It stated only that “a wonder” was coming. In a lot of ways, the statement was true. Wonder Bread was the perfect loaf. “Slow food” advocates have pronounced in | 10/22/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
226 | CleanVideoKickstart Radiotopia- A Storytelling Revolution | When you support Radiotopia, you are making sure 99% Invisible can keep coming to you weekly and you’ll be supporting our entire collective of award-winning, independent radiomakers. Thanks! | 10/19/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
227 |
Clean136- Lights Out | On July 13th, 1977, lightning struck an electricity transmission line in New York City, causing the line’s automatic circuit breaker to kick in. The electricity from the affected line was diverted to another line. | 10/14/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
228 |
Clean135- For Amusement Only | Everyone has tried it at some point. The authorities started turning a blind eye years ago, but it wasn’t officially legalized until the summer of 2014. Finally, after more than 80 years of illegitimacy, the City of Oakland has legalized…pinball … | 10/7/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
229 |
Clean134- The Straight Line Is A Godless Line | Straight lines form the core of our built environment. Building in straight lines makes predicting costs and calculating structural loads easier, since building materials come in linear units. Straight lines might be logical, predictable, | 9/30/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
230 |
Clean133- Port of Dallas | There’s a photograph we have tacked to our studio at 99% Invisible HQ. The photo, taken 1899, shows three men, all looking very fashionable, suspended mid-air on the lifted arm of a giant dredging machine. There are plenty of images … Continue readi | 9/23/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
231 |
Clean132- Castle on the Park | On the southwest corner of Central Park West and 106th Street in New York City, there’s an enormous castle. It takes up the whole east end of the block, with its red brick cylindrical turrets topped with gleaming silver cones. … Continue reading → | 9/16/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
232 |
Clean131- Genesis Object | In the beginning, there was design. Before any other human discipline, even before the dawn of mankind its self, design was a practice passed down from generation to generation of early humans. Today, everything that has been designed–space ships, | 9/10/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
233 |
Clean130- Holdout | Around 2005, a Seattle neighborhood called Ballard started to see unprecedented growth. Condominiums and apartment buildings were sprouting up all over the community which had once been mostly single family homes and small businesses. | 9/2/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
234 |
Clean129- Thomassons | Cities, like living things, evolve slowly over time. Buildings and structures get added and renovated and removed, and in this process, bits and pieces that get left behind. Vestiges. Just as humans have tailbones and whales have pelvic bones, | 8/26/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
235 |
Clean128- Hacking IKEA | IKEA hacking is the practice of buying things from IKEA and reengineering—or “hacking”—them to become customized, more functional, and often just better designed stuff. The locus of the IKEA hacking movement is a website called IKEAhackers.net. | 8/19/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
236 |
Clean127- The Sound of Sports | Way back in October 2011 (see episode #38, true believers!), we broadcast a short excerpt of a radio documentary produced by Peregrine Andrews about faking the sounds of sports on TV broadcasts. It was one of our most popular and provocative programs | 8/11/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
237 |
Clean126- Walk This Way | As humans have developed cities and built environments, we have also needed to develop ways to find our way through them. Sam Greenspan went on a wayfinding tour with Jim Harding in the Atlanta airport. Harding is one of the … Continue reading → | 8/4/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
238 |
Clean125- Duplitecture | The best knock-offs in the world are in China. There are plenty of fake designer handbags and Rolexes, but China’s knock-offs go way beyond fashion. There are knock-off Apple stores that look so much like the real thing, | 7/29/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
239 |
Clean124- Longbox | Reporter Whitney Jones argues that R.E.M.’s Out of Time is the most politically significant album in the history of the United States. Because of its packaging. | 7/22/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
240 |
Clean123- Snowflake | Well before the early 1500s, when Sir Thomas Moore first coined the term “Utopia,” people have been thinking about how to design their ideal community. Maybe it’s one that doesn’t use money, or one that drops traditional family structures and | 7/15/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
241 |
Clean122- Good Egress | When designing a commercial structure, there is one safety component that must be designed right into the building from the start: egress. “Egress” refers to an entire exit system from a building: stairs, corridors, | 7/8/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
242 |
Clean121- Cold War Kids | During the 1961 Berlin Crisis—one of the various moments in the cold war in which we came frighteningly close to engaging in actual war with the Soviets—President John F. Kennedy vowed to identify spaces in “existing structures both public and … | 7/1/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
243 |
Clean120- Skyjacking | The term “hijacking” goes back to prohibition days, when gangsters would rob moonshine trucks saying, “Hold your hands high, Jack!” However, in the early days of commercial air travel, the idea that someone would hijack a plane was scarcely even | 6/23/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
244 |
Clean119- Feet of Engineering | As a fashion object and symbol, the high heel shoe is weighted with meaning. It’s also weighted with the wearer’s entire body weight. The stiletto might be one of the only designs that is physically painful but has somehow has … Continue reading | 6/17/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
245 |
Clean118- Song Exploder | 99% Invisible presents Song Exploder. A song is a product of design. It’s difficult to create an original melody, but that’s only the blueprint. Every element of a piece of music could be produced any number of ways, | 6/10/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
246 |
Clean117- Clean Trains | In just about every movie set in New York City in the 1970s and 80s there’s an establishing shot with a graffiti-covered subway. For city officials, train graffiti was a sign that they had lost control. So, starting in the … Continue reading → | 6/3/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
247 |
Clean116- Breaking the Bank | When I go into a bank, especially if I have to stand in line waiting to make a deposit, my mind wanders. And one of the first place it wanders to is: how I would rob the place. How could … Continue reading → | 5/27/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
248 |
Clean115- Cow Tunnels | The westernmost part of Manhattan, between 34th and 39th street, is pretty industrial. There’s a bus depot, a ferry terminal, and a steady stream of cars. But in the late 19th early 20th centuries, this was cow country. Cows used … Continue reading | 5/20/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
249 |
Clean114- Ten Thousand Years | In 1990, the federal government invited a group of geologists, linguists, astrophysicists, architects, artists, and writers to the New Mexico desert, to visit the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant. They were there on a mission. | 5/13/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
250 |
Clean113- Monumental Dilemma | About ten miles north of Concord, New Hampshire, off of interstate 93 there’s a little island with a great, big monument on it. The monument depicts a woman, who is holding a hatchet in her right hand and bunch of … Continue reading → | 5/5/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
251 |
Clean112- Young Ruin | If you’ve wandered around Machu Picchu, or Stonehenge, or the Colosseum, or even snuck into that abandoned house on the edge of town, you know the power in a piece of decrepit architecture. And even if you don’t want to … Continue reading → | 4/29/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
252 |
Clean111- Masters of the Uni-verse | Uniforms matter. When it comes to sports, they might be the only thing to which we’re actually loyal. Sports uniforms are packaging. But unlike any other packaging, if the product inside changes or degrades, we remain loyal. | 4/22/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
253 |
Clean110- Structural Integrity | When it was built in 1977, Citicorp Center (later renamed Citigroup Center, now called 601 Lexington) was, at 59 stories, the seventh-tallest building in the world. You can pick it out of the New York City skyline by its 45-degree … Continue reading | 4/15/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
254 |
Clean109- Title TK | The name is important. It’s the first thing of any product you use or buy or see. The tip of the spear. You are bombarded by thousands of names every day. In this daily barrage, only the names that are … Continue reading → | 4/8/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
255 |
Clean108- Barcodes | When George Laurer goes to the grocery store, he doesn’t tell the check-out people that he invented the barcode, but his wife used to point it out. “My husband here’s the one who invented that barcode,” she’d occasionally say. And … Continue | 4/1/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
256 |
Clean107- Call Now | When it’s three o’clock in the morning and everything is going wrong in your life, there’s a certain kind of ad you might see on basic cable. Lawyers–usually guys–promise to battle the heartless, tight-wad insurance companies on your behalf. | 3/25/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
257 |
Clean106- The Fancy Shape | Quatrefoil is the name of the four-lobed cloverleaf shape. It’s everywhere: adorning Gothic cathedrals, more modern churches, Rhode Island mansions, mission-style roofs in California, and decorating victorian homes from coast to coast. | 3/17/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
258 |
Clean105- One Man is An Island | A few years ago, reporter Sean Cole was working on a radio story and needed to interview the rapper Busta Rhymes. Sean was living in Boston at the time, so he did a Google search for “Busta Rhymes” and “Boston” to see … Continue reading → | 3/11/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
259 |
Clean104- Tunnel 57 | At its peak, the Berlin Wall was 100 miles long. Today only about a mile is left standing. Compared with other famous walls in history, this wall had a pretty short life span. The Great Wall of China has been … Continue reading → | 3/4/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
260 |
Clean103- UTBAPH | It started with some Pittsburgh humor. Pittsburgh-based comedian Tom Muisal does a bit about a GPS unit that can give directions in “Pittsburghese.” Because in Pittsburgh, no one calls it “Interstate 376,” it’s “The Parkway. | 2/25/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
261 |
Clean102- Icon for Access | There is a beauty to a universal standard. The idea that people across the world can agree that when they interact with one specific thing, everyone will be on the same page– regardless of language or culture or geographic locale. … Continue reading | 2/18/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
262 |
Clean101- Cover Story | You know the saying: you can’t judge a book by its cover. With magazines, it’s pretty much the opposite. The cover of a magazine is the unified identity for a whole host of ideas, authors, and designers who have created … Continue reading → | 2/11/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
263 |
Clean100- Higher And Higher | Like the best of these stories, the two bitter rivals started out as best friends: William Van Alen and Craig Severance. They were business partners. Van Alen was considered the artistic maverick and Severance was the savvy businessman. | 2/3/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
264 |
Clean99- The View From The 79th Floor | On July 28, 1945, an airplane crashed into the Empire State Building. A B-25 bomber was flying a routine mission, chartering servicemen from Massachusetts to New York City. Capt. William F. Smith, who had led some of the most dangerous … Continue read | 1/14/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
265 |
Clean98- Six Stories- the memory palace | Elevators are old. They would have to be. Because it is in our nature to rise. History is full of things that lift other things. In ancient Greece, and China, and Hungary, there were systems of weights and pulleys and … Continue reading → | 1/2/2014 | Free | View in iTunes |
266 |
Clean97- Numbers Stations | If you tune around on a shortwave radio, you might stumble across a voice reciting an endless stream of numbers. Just numbers, all day, everyday. These so-called “numbers stations,” say nothing about where they are transmitting from or who they … | 12/20/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
267 |
Clean96- DIY Space Suit | Cameron Smith is building a space suit in his apartment. He’s not an astronaut. He’s not even an engineer. Cameron Smith is an archaeologist–on faculty in the anthropology department at Portland State University in Oregon. | 12/2/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
268 |
Clean95- Future Screens are Mostly Blue | We have seen the future, and the future is mostly blue. Or, put another way: in our representations of the future in science fiction movies, blue seems to be the dominant color of our interfaces with technology yet to come. … Continue reading → | 11/20/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
269 |
Clean94- Unbuilt | There is an allure in unbuilt structures: the utopian, futuristic transports, the impossibly tall skyscrapers, even the horrible highways, all capture our imagination with what could have been. Whether these never built structures are perceived as good. | 11/12/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean93- Revolving Doors | The story goes like this: Theophilus Van Kannel hated chivalry. There was nothing he despised more than trying to walk in or out of a building, and locking horns with other men in a game of “oh you first, I … Continue reading → | 11/6/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
271 |
Clean92- All the Buildings | I love those moments when you’re walking in your neighborhood and suddenly nothing is familiar. In a good way. Sean Cole began seeing his neighborhood, actually the whole city of New York, with new eyes because of one artist who … Continue reading | 10/29/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
272 | CleanVideoKickstart Season 4 of 99% Invisible- Weekly Episodes | 99% Invisible started as a side project I made in my bedroom at night, and after two years of making the program, I turned to Kickstarter to see if I should keep it going. To my great surprise, the Season … Continue reading → | 10/23/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
273 |
Clean91- Wild Ones Live | We have one cardinal rule on 99% Invisible: No cardinals. Meaning, we deal with the built world, not the natural world. So, when I read Jon Mooallem’s brilliant book, Wild Ones: A Sometimes Dismaying, Weirdly Reassuring Story About Looking at … Cont | 10/14/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
274 |
Clean90- Strowger and Purple Reign Redux | If you are an undertaker in 1878 Kansas City, and you learn that your competitor’s wife works as a telephone switchboard operator and has been diverting business calls meant for you to her husband, you have a few potential courses … Continue reading | 10/2/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
275 |
Clean89- Bubble Houses | If you were a movie star in the market for a mansion in 1930s Los Angeles, there was a good chance you might call on Wallace Neff. Neff wasn’t just an architect–he was a starchitect. One of his most famous … Continue reading → | 9/17/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
276 |
Clean88- The Broadcast Clock | There’s a term that epitomizes what we radio producers aspire to create: the “driveway moment.” It’s when a story is so good that you literally can’t get out of your car. Inside of a driveway moment, time becomes elastic–you could … Contin | 9/3/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
277 |
Clean87- I Heart NY, TM | By now, the story is well known. A man sits in the backseat of a cab, sketching on a notepad as night falls over a crumbling city. He scribbles the letter I. He draws a heart. And then an N, … Continue reading → | 8/21/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
278 |
Clean86- Reversal of Fortune | Chicago’s biggest design achievement probably isn’t one of its amazing skyscrapers, but the Chicago River, a waterway disguised as a remnant of the natural landscape. But it isn’t natural, not really. It’s hard to tell when you see the river, | 8/8/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
279 |
Clean85- Noble Effort | If you grew up watching Warner Brothers cartoons, you might remember seeing the name Chuck Jones in big letters in the opening credits. Chuck Jones directed cartoons like Looney Tunes from the 1930s until his death in 2002. He was … Continue reading | 7/29/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
280 |
Clean84- Ode to Ladislav Sutnar plus Trading Places with Planet Money | An ode to an information designer who made life a little bit easier for millions and millions of people: Ladislav Sutnar, the man who put parentheses around area codes. Plus 99% Invisible and Planet Money team up and we talk … Continue reading → | 7/15/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
281 |
Clean83- Heyoon | Growing up in Ann Arbor, Michigan, Alex Goldman was a misfit. Bored and disaffected and angry, he longed for a place to escape to. And then he found Heyoon. The only way to find out about Heyoon for someone to … Continue reading → | 7/2/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
282 |
Clean82- The Man of Tomorrow | I’m willing to concede from the get-go that I might be wrong about the entire premise of this story, but Superman has never really worked for me as a character. I preferred the more grounded Marvel Comic book characters, like … Continue reading → | 6/20/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
283 |
Clean81- Rebar and the Alvord Lake Bridge | There’s something about rebar that fascinates me. If nothing else because there are very few things that invoke a fear of being skewered. My preoccupation with metal reinforcement bars dovetails nicely with a structure in San Francisco I’ve kind of | 6/6/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
284 |
Clean80- An Architect’s Code | Lawyers have an ethics code. Journalists have an ethics code. Architects do, too. According to Ethical Standard 1.4 of the American Institute of Architects (AIA): “Members should uphold human rights in all their professional endeavors. | 5/28/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
285 |
Clean79- The Symphony of Sirens plus Soviet Design | For the ancient Greeks, sirens were mythical creatures who sang out to passing sailors from rocks in the sea. Their music was so beautiful, it was said, that the sailors were powerless against it–they would turn their ships towards these … Continue | 5/8/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
286 |
Clean78- No Armed Bandit | Americans have always had an uneasy relationship with gambling. To circumvent anti-gambling laws in the US, early slot machines masqueraded as vending machines. They gave out chewing gum as prizes, and those prizes could be redeemed for cash. | 4/29/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
287 |
Clean77- Game Changer | Regardless of how you feel about basketball, you’ve got to appreciate the way it can bring groups of strangers together to share moments of pure adulation and collective defeat. That moment when time is running out, the team is down … Continue readi | 4/15/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
288 |
Clean76- The Modern Moloch | On the streets of early 20th Century America, nothing moved faster than 10 miles per hour. Responsible parents would tell their children, “Go outside, and play in the streets. All day.” And then the automobile happened. | 4/3/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
289 |
Clean99% Invisible-75- Secret Staircases | Wherever there is sufficient demand to move between two points of differing elevation, there are stairs. In some hilly neighborhoods of California–if you know where to look–you’ll find public, outdoor staircases. | 3/20/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
290 |
Clean99% Invisible-74- Hand Painted Signs | There was a time when every street sign, every billboard, and every window display was made by a sign artist with a paint kit and an arsenal of squirrel- or camel-hair brushes. Some lived an itinerant lifestyle, traveling from town … Continue reading | 3/7/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
291 |
Clean99% Invisible-73- The Zanzibar and Other Building Poems | There comes a time in the life of a modern city where it begins to grow up–literally. Santiago, the capital of Chile, has been going through a tremendous growth spurt since its economic boom of the mid 1990s. It happened … Continue reading → | 2/18/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
292 |
Clean99% Invisible-72- New Old Town | Like many cities in Central Europe, Warsaw is made up largely of grey, ugly, communist block-style architecture. Except for one part: The Old Town. Walking through this historic district, it’s just like any other quaint European city. | 2/5/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
293 |
Clean99% Invisible-71- In and Out of LOVE | Though its officially name is JFK Plaza, the open space near Philadelphia’s City Hall is more commonly known as LOVE Park. With its sleek granite benches, geometric raised planter beds, and long expanses of pavement, | 1/23/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
294 |
Clean99% Invisible-70- The Great Red Car Conspiracy | When Eric Molinsky lived in Los Angeles, he kept hearing this story about a bygone transportation system called the Red Car. The Red Car, he was told, had been this amazing network of streetcars that connected the city–until a car … Continue reading | 1/11/2013 | Free | View in iTunes |
295 |
Clean99% Invisible-69- The Brief and Tumultuous Life of the New UC Logo | If you’re not from California, or missed this bit of news, the University of California has a new logo. Or rather had a new logo. To be more precise they had a new “visual identity system,” which is the kind … Continue reading → | 12/31/2012 | Free | View in iTunes |
296 |
Clean99% Invisible-68- Built for Speed | I want you to conjure an image in your mind of the white stripes that divide the lanes of traffic going the same direction on a major highway. How long are the stripes and the spaces between them? You can … Continue reading → | 12/12/2012 | Free | View in iTunes |
297 |
Clean99% Invisible-67- Broken Window | When Melissa Lee was growing up in Hastings-on-Hudson, a small town in upstate New York, there were only so many fun things to do. One was buying geodes and smashing them apart with a hammer. (You know geodes, right? Those … Continue reading → | 11/29/2012 | Free | View in iTunes |
298 |
Clean99% Invisible-66- Kowloon Walled City | Kowloon Walled City was the densest place in the world, ever. By its peak in the 1990s, the 6.5 acre Kowloon Walled City was home to at least 33,000 people (with estimates of up to 50,000). That’s a population density … Continue reading → | 11/19/2012 | Free | View in iTunes |
299 |
Clean99% Invisible-65- Razzle Dazzle | When most people think of camouflage they think of blending in with the environment, but camouflage can also take the opposite approach. It has long been hypothesized that stripes on zebras make it difficult for a predator to distinguish one … Continu | 11/5/2012 | Free | View in iTunes |
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Clean99% Invisible-64- Derelict Dome | In the Cape Cod town of Woods Hole, buildings are not usually dome-shaped. Producer Katie Klocksin was pretty surprised when she came across one. Katie started asking around about the dome. She found it was built by the late Buckminster … Continue r | 10/25/2012 | Free | View in iTunes |
300 Items |
Customer Reviews
100% treasure
Roman has a uncanny knack for focusing on topics which are part of my peripheral curiosity and making them center-stage for further exploration. He is engaging, a masterful sound designer, smart and funny. I highly recommend giving 99% invisible a listen - you will be hooked.
Right on!
That TAL + Radio Lab thing I love, in bite-sized chunks. All from one of the most interesting people I've ever met.
Pleasantly surprised!!
So many podcasts are unbearable right now but, by chance, I stumbled upon this one and it's terrific!! I never leave reviews but felt I had to on this gem. Fully engaging, witty, and unique. Worth every second, can't wait for more.

- Free
- Category: Design
- Language: English
- Copyright © 2017 Roman Mars. All rights reserved.