Category: Society, Culture & Current Events

Cultural Differences and Human Connection April 28, 2015

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Ben Starr, Eliana Banagudo, Giullian Gioiello

Cultural differences shape how people experience intimacy, personal space, and even anxiety disorders. Armand DiMele, co-hosts Ben Starr and Giullian Gioiello, and therapist Eliana Banagudo examine culture-bound syndromes, racial profiling in the wake of Baltimore unrest, family secrets, and what fairness actually requires across cultures.

Ferguson and the Psychology of Racial Rage November 26, 2014

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Ben Starr, Giullian Gioiello

The Ferguson grand jury decision not to indict officer Darren Wilson sets off a live call-in discussion on race, anger, and systemic injustice. Armand DiMele and co-hosts Ben Starr and Giullian Gioiello take calls from activists, community members, and everyday listeners grappling with grief, outrage, and whether lasting change is possible.

The Pace and Psychology of City Life November 25, 2014

City life moves fast, but what does that speed cost us emotionally? Armand DiMele and co-hosts Giullian Gioiello and Ben Starr examine urban pace, walkability, and the numbness the city breeds. Guest Audrey Clark shares the warmth of tight-knit communal life in Guyana against the harder, lonelier rhythms of New York.

Smartphones Anxiety and the Need for Connection September 24, 2014

Constant connectivity feeds anxiety rather than relieving it: Armand DiMele argues the smartphone is a modern “stick” the nervous mind uses to scan for danger. With co-hosts Linda Vanella, LCSW-R, Giullian Gioiello, and Ben Starr, plus guest Michael Jessen, the group examines phone-checking as compulsion, passive aggression, and a substitute for real presence.

Why Soccer Captured America July 15, 2014

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Giullian Gioiello

What turned millions of Americans into soccer fans almost overnight? Armand DiMele and co-host Giullian Gioiello dig into the psychology behind the 2014 World Cup frenzy, tracing fan devotion to three core needs: status, affiliation, and meaning. A caller’s story of giving without receiving brings it home.

The Roots of Human Violence June 18, 2014

Why do human beings turn violent, against themselves or others? Armand DiMele and co-host Giullian Gioiello survey the scope of violence, from suicide and child firearms deaths to intimate partner abuse and collective atrocities like the Cambodian killing fields, urging listeners to look inward rather than only outward at the problem.

The Art of Mentoring with Esther Armand August 14, 2013

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Esther Armand

Esther Armand, producer and WBAI colleague, brings a Ghanaian Ashanti perspective to the question of why Americans struggle with mentoring. She argues that supporting others is not a special act but a natural function of community, and shares her work helping formerly incarcerated young women discover their own strength through media and storytelling.

Disappointment and Activism in the Occupy Movement May 1, 2012

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Linda Vanella, Lisa Arnone

Disappointment is the hidden threat to political activists: it slides into apathy, rage, or depression if left unexamined. Armand DiMele, joined by Lisa Arnone, LCSW, and Linda Vanella, LCSW-R, uses the Occupy Wall Street moment to explore what happens psychologically when passionate effort seems to yield no visible result.

Work Identity and the Theft of Time June 29, 2011

Host: Armand DiMele

What does it mean to steal from your employer when the workplace has already stolen your sense of self? Armand DiMele traces how cubicles, microchips, and smartphones eroded worker identity, then opens the question of workplace theft, personal ethics, and what it costs to live with or without integrity.

Elder Abuse and the Aging Society June 21, 2011

Host: Armand DiMele

Aging in America leaves too many people vulnerable to harm by those they trust most. Armand DiMele breaks down the full spectrum of elder abuse, from physical and financial exploitation to neglect and rights violations, then opens the phones to callers wrestling with the real costs of caring for aging parents.