Adventures in Podcasting, Radio, and Dramatic Readings
- Feb 5, 2015
- 2 min read
This is a pretty exciting day at Archaeology of the Mediterranean World Headquarters.
My colleague, Richard Rothaus and I are pleased to release the first episode of our new podcasting adventure:
We are both pretty happy with the results, although we’ll certainly refine the sound quality and the flow of our banter a bit as we move forward. The current plan is to release a few podcasts a month and once we have a little gaggle of them, we’ll push them to iTunes and some other services.
Here are the show notes from our first podcast:
Bill’s Blog: https://mediterraneanworld.wordpress.com/ Richard’s Blog: http://www.whitewashedtomb.com/ and http://www.demandmenothing.com/
Timothy Gregory: http://history.osu.edu/directory/Gregory4 Ohio State Excavations at Isthmia: http://isthmia.osu.edu/ Eastern Korinthia Archaeological Survey (EKAS): http://www.ascsa.edu.gr/index.php/publications/hesperia/article/75/4/453-523
Mt. Oneion in the Corinthia: http://www.ascsa.edu.gr/index.php/publications/hesperia/article/75/3/327-356
Rough Cilicia Archaeological Survey Project: http://opencontext.org/projects/295B5BF4-0F44-4698-80CD-7A39CB6F133D Pyla-Koutsopetria Archaeological Project: http://opencontext.org/projects/3F6DCD13-A476-488E-ED10-47D25513FCB2
Kostis Kourelis, “Byzantium and the Avant-Garde: Excavations at Corinth, 1920s-1930s”: http://www.ascsa.edu.gr/index.php/publications/hesperia/article/76/2/391-442
But wait, there’s more!
Bret Weber, Richard Rothaus, and I got some great press coverage by Emily Guerin from Inside Energy. We really happy with how this sounded. I’m a bit embarrassed about how excited I got when we pulled into one of our favorite workforce housing sites:
And because you read this blog regularly, you are eligible for a very special bonus track!
Yesterday, my buddy Dimitri Nakassis posted a link to a brilliantly bizarre blog post that compared the Archaeological Institute of America (aka Archaeology in America) to the Islamic State. The post was so remarkable that I decided to perform a dramatic reading. I don’t do this very often, folks. What’s better is that this dramatic reading will be part of a (only slightly) larger project conjured by Andrew Reinhard. It’s going to be epic. You can download my reading of this post for a limited time here.









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