Sean Rameswaram
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
We would see like a fully colored in world map of people going from this continent to that and the other for various procedures.
Is there a dark side to this for those who are less wealthy? I mean, if you're rich and you go to Iran for gender reassignment surgery and something goes wrong, Maybe you can just easily buy your way out of that situation, but if you're poor, maybe you get stuck, maybe there's a language barrier, and then what? How ugly can this get for people?
Is there a dark side to this for those who are less wealthy? I mean, if you're rich and you go to Iran for gender reassignment surgery and something goes wrong, Maybe you can just easily buy your way out of that situation, but if you're poor, maybe you get stuck, maybe there's a language barrier, and then what? How ugly can this get for people?
Is there a dark side to this for those who are less wealthy? I mean, if you're rich and you go to Iran for gender reassignment surgery and something goes wrong, Maybe you can just easily buy your way out of that situation, but if you're poor, maybe you get stuck, maybe there's a language barrier, and then what? How ugly can this get for people?
I think that's what brought us here to you is how much social video has blown up this industry. Can you give us a sense of how big it is at this point?
I think that's what brought us here to you is how much social video has blown up this industry. Can you give us a sense of how big it is at this point?
I think that's what brought us here to you is how much social video has blown up this industry. Can you give us a sense of how big it is at this point?
Professor David Vequist, University of the Incarnate Word. Hadi Mawagdi produced our show today. He was edited by Jolie Myers, fact-checked by Laura Scabhelmet Bullard, and mixed by Andrea Christensdottir and Mr. Rob Byers, who's saying goodbye to Vox today. He's been a friend of Today Explained since the show's inception seven years ago, and we hope he'll continue to be one hereafter.
Professor David Vequist, University of the Incarnate Word. Hadi Mawagdi produced our show today. He was edited by Jolie Myers, fact-checked by Laura Scabhelmet Bullard, and mixed by Andrea Christensdottir and Mr. Rob Byers, who's saying goodbye to Vox today. He's been a friend of Today Explained since the show's inception seven years ago, and we hope he'll continue to be one hereafter.
Professor David Vequist, University of the Incarnate Word. Hadi Mawagdi produced our show today. He was edited by Jolie Myers, fact-checked by Laura Scabhelmet Bullard, and mixed by Andrea Christensdottir and Mr. Rob Byers, who's saying goodbye to Vox today. He's been a friend of Today Explained since the show's inception seven years ago, and we hope he'll continue to be one hereafter.
The rest of the team includes N-O-E-L King, executive producer Miranda Kennedy, supervising editor Amina Alsadi, Miles Bryan, Avishai Artsy, Amanda Llewellyn, Peter Balanon-Rosen, Victoria Chamberlain, Travis Larchuk, Patrick Boyd, and welcome Devin Schwartz. Breakmaster Cylinder makes music, and I made a mistake.
The rest of the team includes N-O-E-L King, executive producer Miranda Kennedy, supervising editor Amina Alsadi, Miles Bryan, Avishai Artsy, Amanda Llewellyn, Peter Balanon-Rosen, Victoria Chamberlain, Travis Larchuk, Patrick Boyd, and welcome Devin Schwartz. Breakmaster Cylinder makes music, and I made a mistake.
The rest of the team includes N-O-E-L King, executive producer Miranda Kennedy, supervising editor Amina Alsadi, Miles Bryan, Avishai Artsy, Amanda Llewellyn, Peter Balanon-Rosen, Victoria Chamberlain, Travis Larchuk, Patrick Boyd, and welcome Devin Schwartz. Breakmaster Cylinder makes music, and I made a mistake.
On Monday's show, I said there's no Silk Road movie, but it turns out there is a Silk Road movie. It's called Silk Road, and seven people saw it when it came out in 2021. Maybe after this correction, it could be eight. I apologize. Today Explained is distributed by WNYC, and the show is a part of Vox. You can support our journalism by joining our membership program today.
On Monday's show, I said there's no Silk Road movie, but it turns out there is a Silk Road movie. It's called Silk Road, and seven people saw it when it came out in 2021. Maybe after this correction, it could be eight. I apologize. Today Explained is distributed by WNYC, and the show is a part of Vox. You can support our journalism by joining our membership program today.
On Monday's show, I said there's no Silk Road movie, but it turns out there is a Silk Road movie. It's called Silk Road, and seven people saw it when it came out in 2021. Maybe after this correction, it could be eight. I apologize. Today Explained is distributed by WNYC, and the show is a part of Vox. You can support our journalism by joining our membership program today.
Go to vox.com slash members to sign up. Thank you if you do that. And if you don't, you can always leave us a nice review. Or you can tell us that we forgot about the Silk Road movie.