Lord Of The Fireflies

Kell's Wonderful Life
Kell's Wonderful Life
Lord Of The Fireflies
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In this final episode, Dr. Kell looks at children’s education and asks why we teach the way we teach. Are we just trying to create passable human beings who can get a job? A chance encounter with a swarm of glowing bugs leads Kell to contemplate the tyrannies of childhood. “What works for Johnny make not work for Jimmy. And nobody has any idea what to do for Jimbo.”

The Glorious History Of Bacon

Kell's Wonderful Life
Kell's Wonderful Life
The Glorious History Of Bacon
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Kell’s Wonderful Life: The Glorious History Of Bacon Bacon. What is it? Where does it come from? What makes it magical. Dr. Kell asks and finds out. “You would be surprised to learn that it isn’t forged by dark elves in salty subterranean bacon mines deep within the bowels of the Earth.”

Robots In Fact And Fiction

Kell's Wonderful Life
Kell's Wonderful Life
Robots In Fact And Fiction
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The area of robotics isn’t new. Humans have tried to create humanoid machines for hundreds of years. Dr. Kell traces our crude attempts, outright fakes and flights of fancy. “Undoubtedly, our imagination for sentient artificial people had long outstripped ability to fabricate them.”

The Importance of Coffee

Kell's Wonderful Life
Kell's Wonderful Life
The Importance of Coffee
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Each and every morning, millions of people chemically augment their frail meat bodies with a black brew. But the importance of coffee extends beyond keeping people upright for the day, as the history of coffee is rich and aromatic, spanning a multitude of countries and religions.

Exoskeletal

Kell's Wonderful Life
Kell's Wonderful Life
Exoskeletal
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In 1890 Nicholas Yagn, a Russian inventor, received a patent for an assisted device to aid a user walking and running using pneumatically powered gas bags.” As Dr. Kell explains, the history of human augmentation via exoskeleton stretches further back than you might think – and the future of exoskeletons is tantalisingly close.

Whirlygigs

Kell's Wonderful Life
Kell's Wonderful Life
Whirlygigs
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“Telling the pilot I was a helicopter engineer, I challenged him to make the helicopter do something I wouldn’t think was possible.” This show comes from a time when Dr. Kell was working in the USA and he had the opportunity to see military helicopters at MIT in Boston, New York and was introduced to some of the biggest, baddest whirlygigs that the United State of America has to offer.

Legal Technicalities

Kell's Wonderful Life
Kell's Wonderful Life
Legal Technicalities
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Anyone who has tried to fill out the ballot papers below the line knows that legal and political systems can be complicated. Dr. Kell attempts to explain some of the peculiar legislative curiosities in the United States, Australia. “In order for a product to be labelled a pickle, it must be able to bounce.”

A Fairy Tale

Kell's Wonderful Life
Kell's Wonderful Life
A Fairy Tale
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Once upon a time, there was a kingdom filled with all manner of magical creatures. Dragons, tolls, fairies and more! But there was trouble in the kingdom when…ok, this is a story about marriage equality. Just listen, OK? This episode was recorded a while ago as indicated by the reference to the overturning of Proposition 8. But this thinly veiled story of thinly veiled homophobia is still relevant today.For those wanting more on the history of the legal battle over Prop 8, I highly recommend the Joy 94.9 radio play on the subject for a reading of some of the legal poetry Kell mentions.

Trapped In The Tunnel

Kell's Wonderful Life
Kell's Wonderful Life
Trapped In The Tunnel
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Imagine driving into tunnel and discovering a car rolled over onto its roof with a man inside, shaking and incoherent. Dr. Kell – who is a doctor of robotics and not a medical doctor – recounts his experiences as a first responder during a tunnel accident.

Serial Killers

Kell's Wonderful Life
Kell's Wonderful Life
Serial Killers
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The Halloween moon has come and gone – but the monsters that lurk under the bed aren’t as fearsome as the monsters that lurk in your neighbourhood. “He was always so quiet and reserved,” they said. “The first inkling we had that something was wrong was when they walked into the kitchen drenched in blood.” Dr. Kell brings a delicious sampling of some of his ‘favourite’ murderers.