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5.10.13: Enter the Realm - Death Metal 101

So, if we were to draw a Venn Diagram with ‘public radio listeners’ in one circle and ‘death metal fans’ in the other circle, we’re not quite sure what the overlap would be.  Maybe the results would surprise us.



Glengarry Glen Ross at F.P.C.T., Remembering Mick the Pirate, Sickweather, and Shirley Brewer’s “After Words”

As David Mamet’s “Glengarry Glen Ross” gets set to open at Fells Point Corner Theatre, we drop in at a rehearsal to meet the cast of scheming, swearing sales sharks who aim, at all costs, to “always be closing.”

Mick Kipp, AKA Mick the Pirate, was a beloved bartender, an unlikely hot sauce entrepreneur, a former stuntman, and a bona fide Baltimore personality.  He passed away this week, and we remember him with a listen back to his 2007 story from The Stoop.



5.3.13: Stephen Pitcairn remembered in "After Words"

 

When Stephen Pitcairn was murdered in Shirley Brewer’s neighborhood, she sent a poem to the young man’s grieving mother.  That gift has proven to be more meaningful than the writer ever expected.  Shirley Brewer joins The Signal’s Aaron Henkin to share from her poetry collection, After Words.

 



5.3.13: Cloudy with a Chance of Influenza

 

What if predicting the flu was as common as forecasting the weather? That’s the concept behind Sickweather, a Baltimore start-up that mines public data from Facebook and Twitter for key words and phrases about symptoms of sickness. The Signal’s Lisa Morgan interviews Sickweather’s Graham Dodge.

 



5.3.13: Remembering Mick the Pirate

He was a beloved bartender, an unlikely hot sauce entrepreneur, a cancer survivor, and a retired stuntman.  When Mick Kipp, better known as “Mick the Pirate,” died from cardiac arrest on Sunday, April 28th, Baltimore lost a kind soul and a larger-than-life personality.



5.3.13: “Always Be Closing”

Think your workplace is stressful?  It might be worth remembering that it could be much worse.



Carnatic singer K.S. Resmi, Lee Boot’s “Who We Am,” and poet Shiori

There’s practice, and then there’s practice…  For much of her childhood, South Indian Carnatic singer K S Resmi woke up every day before dawn to begin singing – and she’d keep singing, until after dark.


4.26.13: The Girl who Loved Mothra

Shiori was born in Tokyo six years after the end of World War II.  She’s the daughter of an American father and a Japanese mother, and her family moved to the US when she was a toddler.  Shiori joins The Signal’s Aaron Henkin to share from her poetry collection, The Girl Who Loved Mothra

 



4.26.13: “Who We Am”

Lee Boot’s Who We Am is an interactive website that seeks to create a dialog about how we create culture through our thoughts, beliefs, actions, rituals and everyday interactions. He talks about “Who We Am” with The Signal’s Lisa Morgan.

 



4.26.13: Carnatic Singer K S Resmi

Beneath K S Resmi’s shy exterior is a beautiful story, and, as you’ll hear, a beautiful singing voice.  The Signal’s Aaron Henkin talked with Resmi about her childhood in the South Indian state of Kerala, her lifelong devotion to singing Carnatic music, and the cross-cultural love story that eventually brought her to Maryland.

 



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