Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Interview.
Andrii Kovalenko, Reporting War’s Reality: International Journalism and Witnessing the Aftermath of Bucha
Andrii Kovalenko is a Ukrainian local producer and executive director of Academy of Ukrainian Press who supports international correspondents reporting on Russia’s war against Ukraine. Working closely with foreign media crews since the first days of the 2022 full-scale invasion, he has helped journalists navigate dangerous frontline regions, including Kyiv, Bucha, Irpin, and the wider Kyiv and Zhytomyr areas. His work includes logistical coordination, translation, and field production under combat conditions. Kovalenko has witnessed the aftermath of Russian occupation and the humanitarian consequences of the war. For his safety while working with international reporters, he has been equipped with protective gear and a drone detection device.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen15 days ago in Interview
Finding His Voice: Steven McCoy on Storytelling, Silence, and the Power of Media
For Steven McCoy, journalism isn’t just a career, it’s a lifeline. As a child, bullying left him silenced, struggling with selective mutism, unable to fully share his thoughts with the world. But where words failed, pencils, pens, and paper spoke. He built entire worlds on paper, channeling his imagination and voice through stories, drawings, and poems. That early refuge became the foundation of his calling: telling stories that matter and giving voice to those who feel unheard.
By Tales From The Media16 days ago in Interview
I MADE THE SHADE ROOM!!!!
Honestly, this was unexpected but yes I was on the Shade Room. Three months ago, I wrote a story about Celebrities getting Honorary Degrees and how Rapper Young Joc, Reality Stars Cynthia Bailey and Towanda Braxton are receiving their honorary doctorates and accepting their titles from this so-called bible christian university.
By Gladys W. Muturi16 days ago in Interview
The Great Transformation: Two Decades of Evolution in African Trade, As Told by Expert Daniel Holztreger of DH Consult
Fast forward twenty years, and the landscape has undergone a seismic shift. While challenges remain, the continent—particularly West Africa—has emerged as a dynamic hub of regional integration, digital innovation, and burgeoning industrial capacity.
By Lisa Rosenberg16 days ago in Interview
Fumfer Physics 42: Geometry, Predictive Cognition, Information Theory, and the Dimensionality of Space
In this interview, Scott Douglas Jacobsen speaks with Rick Rosner about geometry, dimensionality, predictive cognition, and informational structure. Rosner begins by distinguishing the one-dimensional perimeter of a square from the two-dimensional surface of a sphere, using that contrast to explain inverse-square laws in physics. He then advances a speculative hypothesis that three-dimensional space may reflect informational complexity and non-overlapping histories across regions of the universe.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen16 days ago in Interview
Sports podcast What's The Call Premieres
Tennis is one of my favorite sports. And, I enjoy the women’s game much more than men’s tennis. Why? Who wants to see 40 aces in a game? It’s like watching teams strike out in baseball. I like the ball in play in any sport. Sports mean action. Even Curling has action. In golf, there should be a shot clock. Stop throwing grass in the air and just hit the ball!
By Frank Racioppi18 days ago in Interview
Podcaster Profiles
Multicultural is defined as relating to or constituting several cultural or ethnic groups within a society. Multiculturalism is the coexistence of multiple cultures. The word is used in sociology, in political philosophy, and colloquially. Right now in the U.S., multiculturalism has been attached to three words condemned by the present administration: diversity, equity, and inclusion.
By Frank Racioppi21 days ago in Interview
Melbourne to Walmart: How CEO Qinghua Siluo Built a $10M Sustainable Global Pet Empire
Entrepreneur Qinghua Siluo did not set out to just sell pet supplies; he set out to fix a seventy-year-old mistake. For decades, the world relied on heavy clay, which filled homes with dust and scarred the earth through mining. Most people accepted the mess as a part of owning a cat. Siluo did not. From his home in Melbourne, he looked at this stagnant $12 billion industry and saw an opportunity to do better.
By Arpan Thapa22 days ago in Interview










