• In Roxbury, tattoing reinvented as fine art
    Nov 26 2024

    Lush plants, bright walls and booming Spanish pop music welcome customers to Ink Source, a new tattoo shop in Roxbury — but the parlor's warm ambience isn't the only feature setting it apart. Jordan Ziese and Sofia Baah sat down with Ink Source co-owners Estefani Benitez and Daniel Sanchez to talk about their culturally-informed approach to tattooing.


    This episode was produced by Jordan Ziese and Sofia Baah and edited by Rebeca Pereira and Marigo Farr.


    Want to keep up with the latest community news in Boston? Follow us online and on social media for more.

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    Contact The Scope editorial team by sending an email to Marigo Farr at ⁠thescopenu@gmail.com⁠.

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    9 mins
  • Boston’s ‘wicked’ high tide
    Nov 5 2024

    The King Tide rolled into Boston on Saturday, Oct. 19, flushing harbor water through the concrete seawall at Long Wharf, where climate activists gathered to protest the state legislature’s inaction on a climate bill.

    King Tides are created by the moon’s orbit and have been happening for millenia. But rising sea levels exacerbate flooding during these tidal events, and experts say that since the start of the industrial revolution ocean levels in Boston have already risen ten inches.

    To learn more about Boston's 'wicked' high tide, visit thescopeboston.org.

    This episode was produced and edited by Rebeca Pereira.

    Music by Victor_Natas and 0megaMan, License: Attribution 4.0

    Want to keep up with the latest community news in Boston? Follow us online and on social media for more.

    Website: ⁠⁠thescopeboston.org⁠⁠

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    Contact The Scope editorial team by sending an email to Marigo Farr at thescopenu@gmail.com.

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    7 mins
  • Up, around and upside down: Pole dancing as a radical art form
    Sep 6 2024

    For years, pole dancing has been associated with stripping. Yet in Boston and across the country, fitness studios are bringing this radical art form into the mainstream, drawing dancers in search of a good workout and a sense of belonging.


    This episode was produced by Nora Holland and edited by Rebeca Pereira.


    Want to keep up with the latest community news in Boston? Follow us online and on social media for more.

    Website: ⁠⁠thescopeboston.org

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    Contact The Scope editorial team by sending an email to Marigo Farr at thescopenu@gmail.com.

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    10 mins
  • A Different Tune: The women reforming jazz
    May 6 2024

    Jazz has long been a male dominated genre, embracing female vocalists but rarely female bassists, drummers, and other musicians. In Sudbury, an all-female ensemble, Women in World Jazz, is playing a different tune — one of progress and inclusion.


    This episode was produced by Mirjana Hutnik and edited by Rebeca Pereira.


    Want to keep up with the latest community news in Boston? Follow us online and on social media for more.

    Website: ⁠⁠thescopeboston.org⁠⁠

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    Contact The Scope editorial team by sending an email to Elisabeth Hadjis at thescopenu@gmail.com.

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    8 mins
  • Mardi Gras, Cambridge style
    Apr 25 2024

    Even northerners know how to get down like the folks in Louisiana! On the Saturday before Mardi Gras, Cambridge, Massachusetts’ Regattabar hosted a jazz-centered jubilee in the spirit of the land of jambalaya.

    Elana Lane transports us there, introducing us to Josiah Reibstein’s band and Robbie Pate’s vocals.

    This episode was produced by Elana Lane and edited by Rebeca Pereira.

    Want to keep up with the latest community news in Boston? Follow us online and on social media for more.

    Website: ⁠⁠thescopeboston.org⁠⁠

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    Contact The Scope editorial team by sending an email to Elisabeth Hadjis at thescopenu@gmail.com.

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    5 mins
  • In Conversation with The Scope: Judge Rotenberg Center’s Controversial Skin Shocks
    Apr 16 2024

    Disability rights activists are engaging in a renewed effort to ban an aversive therapy — electric shock therapy — that, despite being condemned as torture by the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture, is still practiced at the Judge Rotenberg Center in Canton, Massachusetts. The center is a day and residential school for students with intellectual disabilities.

    Contributing writer Darin Zullo joins us on The Scope Podcast to discuss his article “Self-advocates lead movement against Judge Rotenberg Center’s controversial skin shocks.”

    Zullo won a Best of SNO award for his article, which you can read at thescopeboston.org.

    This episode was produced, hosted, and edited by Rebeca Pereira with reporting by Darin Zullo.

    Music from Mattc90, striptheband, and smethng through freesound.org.

    Want to keep up with the latest community news in Boston? Follow us online and on social media for more.

    Website: ⁠⁠thescopeboston.org

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    Contact The Scope editorial team by sending an email to Elisabeth Hadjis at thescopenu@gmail.com.

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    14 mins
  • En Plein Air: The Commons is a studio for artist Nick Shea
    Apr 10 2024

    Boston’s public parks are like open-air studios for the city’s artists and street performers. At the Boston Commons, Nick Shea attracts crowds with his one-dollar portraits and simple tools: a stack of index cards and a Sharpie marker.

    One Sunday afternoon in February, Mirjana Hutnik sat beside Shea to watch the artist at work and survey his customers.

    This episode was produced by Mirjana Hutnik and edited by Rebeca Pereira.

    Want to keep up with the latest community news in Boston? Follow us online and on social media for more.

    Website: ⁠⁠thescopeboston.org⁠⁠

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    Contact The Scope editorial team by sending an email to Elisabeth Hadjis at thescopenu@gmail.com.

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    5 mins
  • Max Rome's guide to restoring the Charles River
    Apr 1 2024

    Near Dover, MA, reeds grow out of sandbars along the Charles River where sediment has built up over time. Wetland vegetation offers a diverse habitat for microorganisms to thrive and pathways for nutrients like nitrogen, which in excess quantities can pollute the water, to exit the river.

    Yet in the Charles’s lower basin, an area that extends from the Watertown Dam to Boston Harbor, that natural process is completely absent. Here, large rocks, granite retaining walls, and the Esplanade’s manicured lawns contain the river, limiting habitat diversity for microorganisms and contributing to nutrient pollution.

    Engineer Max Rome estimates that, in the steady climb toward total ecological restoration, the Charles is “90% of the way there,” but there is still more to be done.

    Rome, a stormwater program manager at the Charles River Watershed Association, investigated ways of reintroducing vegetation to the river and came across “one simple way to take a granite wall and turn it into something that’s very alive”: Rafts carrying wetland plants rooted entirely in the water column.

    “All of the nutrients that they need to grow, they're pulling right out of the water. So, the same things that are pollution to the Charles River — excess nitrogen, excess phosphorus — those things are actually sustaining the growth of these wetland plants,” Rome said in an interview with The Scope. “The roots that are going down to the water are creating a kind of complex habitat as a substrate for microorganisms and tiny animals to survive in ways that would be difficult for them to survive elsewhere in the river.”
    These symbiotic platforms are called "floating wetlands." Rome sat down with The Scope’s audio editor Rebeca Pereira to talk about them and the future of the Charles River.

    This episode was produced and edited by Rebeca Pereira.

    Music from Alec Cowan, Tim Kahn, MattJ99, Logic Moon, and EminYILDIRIM through freesound.org.

    Want to keep up with the latest community news in Boston? Follow us online and on social media for more.

    Website: ⁠⁠thescopeboston.org⁠⁠

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    16 mins