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Ep. 12: Narrator Origins with January LaVoy and Will Damron
- De: The Audible Editors
- Narrado por: Kat Johnson, Katie O’Connor
- Duración: 1 h y 23 m
- Grabación Original
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General
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Narración:
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Historia
In this season finale, acclaimed narrators January LaVoy and Will Damron join our Audicted hosts Katie O’Connor and Kat Johnson to discuss everything from their recording schedules, to dream roles, making a two-narrator household work, and much more
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Bright communications majors selling.
- De Doc en 07-27-22
Bright communications majors selling.
Revisado: 07-27-22
was hoping this would be a thematic tour through a particular genre of audiobooks. instead, it sounded very much like two communications professionals trying to sell me on a particular product in the service line. audible, please focus on providing quality audio books, not sales event that push into my app.
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The Bias Diagnosis
- De: Ivan Beckley, Emma Barnaby, Yero Timi-Biu, y otros
- Grabación Original
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General
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Narración:
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Historia
Ivan Beckley is about to become a fully-qualified doctor in the UK. But he’s not convinced that healthcare works for everyone equally. In this series he uncovers one of the biggest and most insidious injustices in modern medicine. Fixing it could save thousands of lives every year. And yet it’s invisible, unless it directly affects you. Statistics show that black, indigenous and people of colour have worse health outcomes and die more often than white people, across many fields of medicine and diverse illnesses.
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Sound FX, anyone?
- De Michelle W. en 02-17-21
compelling stories wrapped in tripe.
Revisado: 03-17-21
The series presents some excellent story-based examples of inequities in health outcomes. It wraps them, however, in completely inappropriate dramatic music (a ball rolling around a bowl, really?). More importantly, the author (the person telling the story is not the author - who confusingly appears in the series, too) keeps realigning like a magnet to the idea that the inequities are not multifactorial, but rather simply a racist/mysoginistic/discriminatory system at work. thus, a great opportunity to discuss this complex but very real issue in human terms is buried in the reductive argument of systemic racism. a lost opportunity, indeed. 3 stars for the great stories in this series.
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