As we hit the one year mark since the first U.S. state (California) issued a stay-at-home order to prevent the spread of COVID-19, we put out a call to see if any of you would take us to your secret escape spot and record audio there.
\nAnd you astounded us with what you brought in.\xa0
\nIn this soundrich, kaleidoscopic episode, we journey around the planet and then, quite literally, beyond it. Listen only if you want a boatload of fresh air, fields of wildflowers, stars, birds, frogs, and a riveting tale involving Isaac Newton and a calm beyond any calm you knew could exist.
\nThis episode was produced by Matt Kielty and Lulu Miller, with production support from Jonny Moens and Suzie Lechtenberg.\xa0
\nSpecial thanks to:
\nLynn Levy, who went on to host the space-a-licious series, The Habitat, and edit (among other things) the powerful and beautiful new podcast Resistance.
\nMerav Opher, an astronomy professor at BU, who now directs the SHIELD DRIVE Science Center which is studying the data collected by the Voyagers at the edge of the heavens, or--err, the \u201cheliosphere\u201d as the scientists call it.
\nEdward Dolnick, The Clockwork Universe: Isaac Newton, the Royal Society, and the Birth of the Modern World
\nAnn Druyan, one of the creators of the 1977 Golden Album traveling on the Voyager probe, has recently released a new series on National Geographic, \xa0\u201cCosmos: Possible Worlds\u201d
\nA.J. Dungo, who submitted a postcard while surfing, is author of the mesmerizing graphic novel, In Waves, a memoir about surfing and grief.
\nSupport Radiolab by becoming a member today at\xa0Radiolab.org/donate.\xa0 \xa0