{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/80057992-f79a-4567-8ba0-45e1e97771ed/66b91bad-f968-49c1-b646-7aab12648561?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Re:sound #240 The Aftermath Show","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/61009a3631fd81f125b34e75/61009ac8121e70001399e280.jpg?height=200","description":"This hour two stories about what remains after the fighting stops.\n\nGuilty Landscape \nBy Anik See for Earth Beat from Radio Netherlands Worldwide (2012) \nWorld War I started nearly one hundred years ago. As far as wars go, it was epic – ten million soldiers died in just four years. Over two million of them alone died on the Western Front near Ypres, and the landscape of Flanders was completely devastated. Not a living tree or blade of grass survived. But are the marks of war still visible? What’s it like there now? To find out, Anik went there with her young son.\n\nSaigon, 1965 \nBy Malcolm Gladwell, Mia Lobel, Roxanne Scott and Jacob Smith Revisionist History (2016) \nIn the early 1960s the Pentagon set up a top-secret research project in an old villa in downtown Saigon. The task? To interview captured North Vietnamese soldiers and guerrillas in order to measure the effect of relentless U.S. bombing on their morale. Yet despite a wealth of great data, even the leaders of the study couldn’t agree on what it meant.\n\nThis episode or Re:sound was produced by Dennis Funk. He also hosted because Gwen Macsai is an amazing human being who was away donating her kidney to save someone else's life.\n\nMusic for Re:sound is provided by Patient Sounds, a private press record label and book publisher in Chicago. \nYou can check them out at patient-sounds.com","author_name":"Third Coast International Audio Festival"}