
Harsha Nahata
Associate Producer at TED Radio Hour
Making audio @NPR and @SelfEvidentShow. Alum @inthethickshow and @newmarkjschool Views mine. RT not an endorsement.
Articles
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2 weeks ago |
npr.org | Manoush Zomorodi |Harsha Nahata |Rachel White |Sanaz Meshkinpour
Part 2 of the TED Radio Hour episode How you see yourself Psychologist and New York University business school professor Dolly Chugh has spent years studying morality and how "good" people see themselves. "Many of us have what psychologists call a central moral identity. We care about whether we're seen as a good person … and whether we feel like good people," Chugh told NPR's Manoush Zomorodi. But every individual has a different definition of what "good" is.
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2 weeks ago |
npr.org | Manoush Zomorodi |Harsha Nahata |Sanaz Meshkinpour
Part 2 of TED Radio Hour episode How you see yourself Psychologist Dolly Chugh says many of us want to be seen as good people, but that desire holds us back from actually improving. Instead, she suggests aiming for "good-ish"—open to growth and learning. About Dolly Chugh Dolly Chugh is a professor at New York University's Stern School of Business in the full-time MBA program and the NYU Prison Education Program.
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1 month ago |
m.kuow.org | Manoush Zomorodi |Harsha Nahata |Rachel Faulkner |Sanaz Meshkinpour
Laurel Braitman speaks at TEDWomen 2023 TED Part 3 of the TED Radio Hour episodeCurious stories of coexistenceAfter her father's death, Laurel Braitman chased success as a way to suppress her grief. But she eventually learned that running from pain prevented her from experiencing joy. About Laurel BraitmanLaurel Braitman is the director of writing and storytelling at the Stanford University School of Medicine's Medical Humanities and the arts program and a Senior TED Fellow.
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1 month ago |
npr.org | Manoush Zomorodi |Harsha Nahata |Rachel White |Sanaz Meshkinpour
Grief and joy go hand in hand. How one woman learned to embrace both Transcript Download Embed <iframe src="https://www.npr.org/player/embed/g-s1-54979/g-s1-55134" width="100%" height="290" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" title="NPR embedded audio player"> Transcript Part 3 of the TED Radio Hour episodeCurious stories of coexistence After her father's death, Laurel Braitman chased success as a way to suppress her grief.
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2 months ago |
npr.org | Manoush Zomorodi |Harsha Nahata |Sanaz Meshkinpour
Are you suited to the single life? Here's how to find out Download Embed <iframe src="https://www.npr.org/player/embed/g-s1-46818/g-s1-47006" width="100%" height="290" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" title="NPR embedded audio player"> Transcript Part 3 of TED Radio Hour episode Who counts as a significant other? Bella DePaulo has been single her whole adult life––by choice. She's found many more people like her, who love the freedom and autonomy.
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