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Tony Onuchukwu

Tony Onuchukwu is a freelance audio producer for The Guardian

July 2024

  • Seagulls

    Science Weekly
    ‘Lesbian’ seagulls and ‘gay’ rams: the endless sexual diversity of nature – podcast

  • A close-up image of a blue-grey coloured single sperm cell on black background

    Science Weekly
    ‘Spermageddon’: is male fertility really in crisis? – podcast

June 2024

  • Pedestrians shelter underneath a union jack umbrella on a wet Westminster Bridge in London

    Science Weekly
    Are cold and wet UK summers here to stay? - podcast

  • A scientist shows "Golden Rice" and ordinary rice at the laboratory of the International Rice Research Institute in Los Banos<br>A scientist shows "Golden Rice" (L) and ordinary rice at the laboratory of the International Rice Research Institute in Los Banos, Laguna south of Manila, August 14, 2013. Bruce Tolentino, Deputy Director of the International Rice Research Institute, said his team has been perfecting their decades-old research on “Golden Rice”, which consists of genetically-modified rice grains infused with beta-carotene, a chemical substance responsible in producing Vitamin A in the body. He also said,“ In a Vitamin A-enriched rice, what the scientists did was to select three genes out of roughly 30,000 genes in a rice plant. REUTERS/Erik De Castro (PHILIPPINES - Tags: FOOD AGRICULTURE BUSINESS)

    Science Weekly
    Golden rice: why has it been banned and what happens now? – podcast

May 2024

  • A Singapore Airlines airplane in the sky

    Science Weekly
    Why is air turbulence getting worse? – podcast

  • Happy couple texting on their smart phones

    Science Weekly
    Apps and algorithms: can dating be boiled down to a science? – podcast

  • G2: how to harness protein power

    Science Weekly
    How much protein is too much? – podcast

  • A nurse holding a syringe gives a man an injection

    Science Weekly
    The extraordinary promise of personalised cancer vaccines

April 2024

  • 20240309-140 Plastic pollution and wildlife on Galapagos Islands, Ecuador, by Karen

    Science Weekly
    The stream of plastic pollution: could a global treaty help us turn off the tap? – podcast

  • Dairy cattle feeding at a farm as a bird looks on

    Science Weekly
    From birds, to cattle, to … us? Could bird flu be the next pandemic? – podcast

  • Australia's James Magnussen winning a medal in Spain in 2013. The retired swimmer says he will compete in next year's Enhanced Games

    Full Story
    Who really wins if the Enhanced Games go ahead? – Full Story podcast

  • James Magnussen celebrating a win in swimming

    Science Weekly
    Who really wins if the Enhanced Games go ahead? – podcast

  • Science Weekly
    The senior Swiss women who went to court over climate change, and won – podcast

  • Science Weekly
    Horny tortoises and solar mysteries: what scientists can learn from a total eclipse – podcast

  • Science Weekly
    The science of ‘weird shit’: why we believe in fate, ghosts and conspiracy theories

March 2024

  • CT scan of the head of a young woman who has multiple sclerosis

    Science Weekly
    The virus that infects almost everyone, and its link to cancer and MS – podcast

  • A blue car parked near the US embassy in Havana

    Science Weekly
    Havana syndrome: will we ever understand what happened? – podcast

  • Artist's impression of boiling sea

    Science Weekly
    A waterworld with a boiling ocean and the end of dark matter? The week in science – podcast

  • A woman looking through a microscope

    Science Weekly
    What’s behind the rapid rise of cancer in the under-50s? – podcast

February 2024

  • human male ear on a dark background isolated<br>KCMDRE human male ear on a dark background isolated

    Science Weekly
    The debilitating impact of tinnitus, and how a new app could help – podcast

    It’s thought that about 15% of us are affected by tinnitus, and despite its potentially debilitating impact on mental health and quality of life, there isn’t any cure for the condition. Madeleine Finlay speaks to John, who has used CBT techniques to learn to live well with his tinnitus, and Dr Lucy Handscomb, a tinnitus researcher who is involved in trialling a new app that could hold promise for sufferers.
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