Latest Stories
Most recently published stories 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 Racioppiabout a month 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 Racioppiabout a month 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 Thapaabout a month ago in Interview
Nashville Actor Michael Ocean Steps Into the National Spotlight in 2026 with Four Network Credits and Major Documentary Revival
In 2026, Nashville actor Michael Ocean steps firmly into national visibility, appearing in four network television productions — a defining surge for the dedicated family man whose steady, disciplined work has steadily built toward this moment.
By Kathryn Monroeabout a month ago in Interview
Amended! Podcast Launches About The First Amendment
The United States Constitution has 27 amendments. These changes, which have been ratified over the course of U.S. history since 1788, begin with the Bill of Rights (the first 10 amendments, ratified in 1791) and conclude with the 27th Amendment, which was ratified in 1992.
By Frank Racioppiabout a month ago in Interview
Between Saudi Arabia and Ukraine: Saba Yamani on Faith, Gender, and LGBTQ+ Survival
Saba Yamani is a Kyiv-based dental professional who was born in Saudi Arabia to a Saudi father and Syrian mother. She first arrived in Ukraine at age three after her father married a Ukrainian woman, whom she considers her mother. Raised in Kyiv, Yamani was baptized in the Orthodox Church and later came out as LGBTQ+. During the full-scale invasion she sought protection from Ukraine’s State Migration Service after facing pressure to leave and risk of deportation. She currently works at a private dental clinic and is preparing for the Ukrainian citizenship exam in May.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen2 months ago in Interview
Bringing the Creepy to Horror: Inside the Sound of Fresh Meat
In the trailer for the VR movie, Fresh Meat, spooky sounds thrust the viewer right into the story before any scary visuals are seen by the audience…and then you “take your seat at the dining table…”
By ashley collie2 months ago in Interview
Alex Craiu, Russia’s 2025 Escalation in Ukraine: Energy Attacks, Frontline Pressure, and Civilian Resilience
Alex Craiu is a Romanian war correspondent based in Ukraine, reporting from the frontline and rear areas for international audiences. Trained in documentary and cinematography production, he studied in the United Kingdom and in California, United States. He works as an independent, freelance journalist and has produced short-form video reporting for social platforms as well as written analysis. In 2017, he completed an internship with the BBC in London, then expanded his field reporting during Russia’s full-scale invasion. Craiu has contributed to outlets including Veridica and In-Sight Publishing, focusing on civilian life, information warfare, battlefield realities, and humanitarian consequences under fire.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen2 months ago in Interview
How Thorne Empire Challenges Traditional Ideas of Music. AI-Generated.
Thorne Empire is not your typical musician. He is what some people call an EchoScribe; someone who writes lyrics in collaboration with artificial intelligence to build songs that might not fit into a neat box. Most musicians, whether human or AI assisted, tend to stay in one genre for a while. It makes sense: sticking to a sound helps listeners recognize you and form a connection. Pop artists become known for pop, rappers for rap, country singers for country. But Thorne Empire takes a different path.
By Thorne Empire2 months ago in Interview








