Épisodes

  • Moonshot Radio [S1:E6] - Emil Kendziorra: Cryopreservation, Biostasis & Living Longer
    Jan 14 2026

    What if death could be treated as a pause?


    In this episode of Moonshot Radio, I speak with Emil Kendziorra, founder of tomorrow.bio, about cryopreservation (cryonics) as a real-world bridging technology — preserving people after legal death in the hope that future medicine can cure the underlying disease, reverse aging, and one day revive them.


    We unpack biostasis vs cryopreservation, why revival isn’t possible yet, the ethics of access and inequality, how time scarcity shapes meaning, what memory and identity might look like after revival, and how Tomorrow Bio actually operates end-to-end (subscriptions, life insurance, medical response, long-term storage).


    #MoonshotRadio #TomorrowBio #Cryonics #Cryopreservation #Biostasis #Longevity #LifeExtension #Bioethics #FutureOfMedicine #Neuroscience #SciencePodcast #TechPodcast

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    56 min
  • Moonshot Radio [S1:E5] - Leo Kayali : Invo Station,  eVTOLs & Cities Reimagined
    Jan 6 2026

    What if cities weren’t built around roads but around airspace?In this episode of Moonshot Radio, host @du_mplings sits down with Leo Kayali, founder of Invo Station, to explore a radical vision for the future of transportation: fully autonomous, electric flying vehicles designed to scale like cars.A former Tesla engineer, Leo shares how personal loss during COVID reshaped his sense of urgency and why he believes rethinking movement is one of the fastest ways to reduce emissions, reclaim time, and redesign urban life.In this conversation, we explore:✈️ Why most “flying car” concepts fail at scaleThe safety, cost, and infrastructure challenges holding the industry back and why simply scaling up drones doesn’t work.🛸 A UFO-inspired design for urban flightHow enclosing propellers inside the vehicle body radically improves safety, redundancy, and noise, and enables street-level takeoff and landing.🤖 Autonomy first, not as an afterthoughtWhy Invo Station is building AI-driven air highways that mirror existing road networks, instead of point-to-point chaos in the sky.🗺️ Air traffic like Google MapsHow Leo’s team is designing vertical and horizontal “lanes” in the air to regulate traffic at city-scale.⚖️ Regulation is finally catching upWhat recent FAA rule changes and White House executive orders mean for eVTOLs, autonomous flight, and commercial deployment.(Featuring insights on the Federal Aviation Administration certification process.)💰 From $10M aircraft to $60K flying vehiclesHow Invo Station plans to bring costs down through manufacturing design, mass production, and software-driven business models.🏙️ Who are the first customers?From individual owners to ride-sharing, family vehicles, emergency response, and cities themselves.🧠 AI beyond driving: fundraising, ops & leadershipHow Leo is using AI agents for fundraising, sales, marketing, and simulation—and why he believes most white-collar work will be automated.🔋 What comes next: solid-state batteries & Blackwell GPUsWhy breakthroughs in energy storage and compute change what’s possible right now, not in 50 years.🌍 Optimism without denialWhy Leo believes technological progress, when paired with ethics and systems thinking, can still bend the future in a better direction.This episode isn’t just about flying cars—it’s about how infrastructure shapes civilization, and what happens when we design mobility for people, not congestion.⸻🔔 Subscribe to Moonshot Radio for conversations with the founders, scientists, and builders reprogramming our future.⸻References & Links (from the episode) • Invo Station • Joby Aviation • NVIDIA Blackwell GPU platform • Waymo autonomous vehicles • FAA powered-lift / eVTOL rulemaking (SFAR No. 120) • Isaac Asimov — Three Laws of Robotics

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    1 h et 13 min
  • Moonshot Radio [S1:E4] - Luke Iseman: Weather Hacking: Make Sunsets, Solar Geoengineering & Climate Urgency
    Dec 23 2025

    Who gets to control the Earth’s thermostat?


    In this episode of Moonshot Radio, host Linda Du speaks with Luke Iseman, founder of Make Sunsets, a startup experimenting with solar geoengineering by releasing reflective particles into the stratosphere to cool the planet.


    Luke’s work has ignited global debate about ethics, governance, risk, and radical action in the face of climate collapse. This conversation goes deep into the science, philosophy, and urgency behind a technology many consider taboo.


    Themes:

    • Solar geoengineering explained

      How releasing sulfur dioxide (SO₂) into the stratosphere mimics volcanic eruptions to reflect sunlight and reduce global temperatures.

    • From science fiction to startup reality

      How Termination Shock inspired Luke to investigate geoengineering—and why scientific consensus existed long before public action.

    • Why entrepreneurs act when institutions stall

      The tension between academic caution, government inaction, and founder-led experimentation in an accelerating climate crisis.

    • Cloud seeding vs. stratospheric aerosols

      The difference between traditional cloud seeding (using silver iodide) and high-altitude aerosol reflection, and why Make Sunsets chose the latter.

    • Regulation (or lack thereof) in the stratosphere

      Why international airspace law remains unresolved above ~20km, and what Luke learned from engineers who worked on Project Loon.

    • Cooling credits & climate economics

      How Make Sunsets sells “cooling credits” directly to individuals, why governments and corporations have been slow to engage, and what this reveals about carbon markets.

    • Carbon markets, fraud & moral hazard

      A critical look at voluntary carbon credits, including findings that large portions may be ineffective or fraudulent.

    • Public backlash & political controversy

      From scrutiny by the Environmental Protection Agency to reactions from climate activists and regulators.

    • Is geoengineering playing God?

      Why Luke argues that everything we already do, from flying planes to burning fossil fuels, is geoengineering, just in the wrong direction.

    • Scaling planetary infrastructure

      What it would take to meaningfully cool the planet, from balloon launches to military-grade deployment by G20 nations.

    • Other frontier climate ideas

      Including space-based sunshades like those proposed by the Planetary Sunshade Foundation, nuclear power revival, and climate-aligned AI infrastructure.

    • Activism, blockchain & coordination at scale

      Reflections on movements like Extinction Rebellion, DAOs, crypto-enabled coordination, and what GameStop-style collective action could mean for climate.

    • Work, automation & post-scarcity futures

      Drawing on ideas from David Graeber, including critiques of “bullshit jobs” and what people might build if survival wasn’t the constraint.

    • Immigration, innovation & global growth

      Why openness to migration, experimentation, and building may matter more than any single technology.


    This episode doesn’t offer easy answers, but it confronts the uncomfortable reality that not acting may be the most dangerous choice of all.

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    57 min
  • Moonshot Radio [S1:E3] - Andrew Hessel: Programming Life & the Future of Genomics
    Dec 16 2025

    What happens when life itself becomes programmable?


    In this episode of Moonshot Radio, host Linda Du speaks with Andrew Hessel: futurist, synthetic biologist, and co-founder of GP-write; about the radical shift underway in biology, where DNA is increasingly treated like software and living systems can be designed, edited, and built from scratch.


    Andrew explains how synthetic (or “digital”) biology is transforming medicine, food, and industry, and why the ability to read and write genetic code could reshape evolution itself. From cancer-fighting viruses and personalized “n-of-one” gene therapies to human cloning, longevity, and biological banking, this conversation explores both the promise and the peril of engineering life.


    We also dive into the ethical, regulatory, and security challenges that come with unprecedented biological power:

    – Who regulates programmable life?

    – How do we prevent misuse, lab leaks, or bio-engineered pandemics?

    – What happens when individuals — not governments — can design viruses or proteins?


    Andrew shares insights from his work on Humane Genomics, the future of personalized cancer treatments, and why biodefense and global cooperation are now existential priorities. The conversation expands beyond biology into big questions about mortality, digital twins, cloning, AI-assisted parenting, and what it might truly mean to pursue immortality.


    At its core, this episode asks a fundamental question:

    As we gain god-like powers over life, are we ready for the responsibility?


    🎙️ Guest: Andrew Hessel

    🧬 Topics: Synthetic Biology, Genomics, Biosecurity, Longevity, AI & Life, Ethics of Engineering Life

    🌍 Part of Moonshot Radio, a podcast exploring the people and technologies reprogramming our future.


    Subscribe for more conversations on what it means to be human in the age of technology.

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    53 min
  • Moonshot Radio [S1:E2] Intimacy Engineered - Philipp Fussenegger
    Dec 11 2025

    What happens when intimacy becomes something we can design, program, and scale?In this episode of Moonshot Radio, host Linda Du sits down with Philipp Fusenegger, founder of Cybrothel, to explore the emerging world of AI sex dolls, synthetic companionship, and the technologies reshaping human desire.We dive into: • How Cybrothel builds responsive AI sex dolls • Why synthetic relationships are becoming mainstream • The psychology behind digital intimacy • Ethical and societal implications: consent, autonomy, and attachment • What happens when machines learn to meet our deepest needs • The future of relationships in a world where not all partners are humanIf you’re curious about the intersection of AI, sexuality, psychology, and the future of human connection, this episode is for you.

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    32 min
  • Moonshot Radio [S1:E1] Digital Corporeality - Jo Ho: Avatars, AI Art & Our Bodies Online
    Dec 5 2025

    What happens to our sense of self when our bodies spill into screens, avatars and AI-generated worlds?


    In this episode of Moonshot Radio, host Linda Du speaks with interactive media artist Jo Ho about digital corporeality, the messy, material, and very physical reality behind our supposedly “immaterial” technologies.


    Together they explore:


    • Why our phones, headsets and screens aren’t weightless at all, and how Jo’s installations expose the wires, circuits and “forgotten materiality” behind our digital lives.

    • Avatars, gaming and VRChat: how queer communities use digital bodies to explore identity, safety and freedom beyond the limits of the physical world.

    • AI as both collaborator and threat in art—what’s really at stake with scraped datasets, authorship, and the difference between art and craft in an age of generative images.

    • Relationships with chatbots and robots, the limits of haptics, and why human touch, mistakes and awkwardness still matter.

    • A manifesto eaten by an LLM: Jo’s work on how language gets flattened, sanitized and emptied of emotion by automated systems.

    • NFTs, value, and speculative futures for blockchain beyond pure hype and flipping JPEGs.



    If you’re curious about where the body ends and the machine begins, this one’s for you.

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    46 min
  • Moonshot Radio - Trailer: What it means to be human in the age of technology
    Dec 5 2025

    Welcome to Moonshot Radio, a show where we pause amid rapid technological change to ask deeper questions about the world we’re building. Each episode, host Linda Du speaks with the thinkers, artists, and innovators reprogramming our future.


    Together, we explore what’s coming next, how technology is reshaping our societies, and what it truly means to be human in the age of machines.


    Subscribe and join us on the journey.

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    1 min