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The Forensic Lens Podcast

The Forensic Lens Podcast

By: Richard Jonathan O. Taduran Ph.D. (Adel) Ph.D. (UPD)
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The Forensic Lens Podcast is the narrated edition of biological and forensic anthropologist Dr. Richard Jonathan O. Taduran’s weekly column on Agham Road. Each episode delivers his essays in audio form, exploring the intersections of science, justice, and anthropology. 📖 Read the columns on Agham Road: https://aghamroad.org/rjotaduran/ 🌐 Learn more about the author: https://rjotaduran.com/Richard Jonathan O. Taduran, Ph.D. (Adel), Ph.D. (UPD) Science
Episodes
  • The Senate, the Shove, and the Screenshot
    Jun 10 2026

    When a physical confrontation between Senator Robin Padilla and Interior Secretary Jonvic Remulla became a viral clip, screenshot, and meme, the moment seemed almost too absurd for a week already overflowing with Senate drama. But beneath the humor was something more serious: a visual fragment that functioned as digital evidence.


    In this episode of The Forensic Lens Podcast, I examine how video, screenshots, and memes now shape public interpretation of political events. A clip does not tell the whole truth, but it changes where debate begins. It gives the public something concrete to replay, question, mock, and scrutinize—while also raising forensic concerns about context, sequence, metadata, editing, and selective framing.


    The Senate shove became powerful because it condensed institutional confusion into one image. In the age of screenshots, political power can still explain itself—but it can also be paused, zoomed in, remixed, and laughed at.


    📖 Read the full article on Agham Road.

    🌐 Learn more about my work here.


    #TheForensicLens #DigitalEvidence #ForensicScience #PhilippinePolitics #MediaForensics

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    7 mins
  • Digital Evidence and the Senate Siege
    Jun 3 2026

    When gunfire echoed inside the Philippine Senate during an attempted arrest involving an ICC warrant, competing narratives quickly took over: was it a siege, a security response, political theater, or a calculated distortion of events?


    In this episode of The Forensic Lens Podcast, I examine how digital evidence can cut through politically charged claims and counterclaims. From CCTV footage and smartphone videos to livestreams, audio, timestamps, and metadata, the episode explores how modern investigations reconstruct sequence, movement, and accountability when public narratives collide.


    In moments where truth is contested, evidence must test every version of reality. A single clip can mislead, but multiple digital traces can cross-examine one another. The timeline does not care about politics—and sooner or later, the evidence reveals who is telling the truth.


    📖 Read the full article on Agham Road.

    🌐 Learn more about my work here.


    #TheForensicLens #DigitalEvidence #ForensicScience #PhilippinePolitics #EvidenceBasedAnalysis

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    8 mins
  • Anthropology of Pluribus
    Apr 22 2026

    What happens when humanity becomes one mind?


    In this episode of The Forensic Lens Podcast, I explore the sci-fi series Pluribus (created by Vince Gilligan) through a biocultural and forensic lens. The show imagines a world where an extraterrestrial signal transforms humanity into a unified collective consciousness—peaceful, cooperative, and eerily harmonious. But beneath that calm lies a deeper question: where does the individual end, and where does the collective begin?


    Drawing from anthropology, this episode examines how humans are already wired for connection—how belonging, shared memory, and distributed cognition shape who we are. Pluribus does not invent these tendencies; it amplifies them. It presents a world where the drive to belong no longer negotiates identity—it replaces it.


    From a forensic perspective, the implications are profound. If decisions emerge from a collective mind, who is responsible? What happens to agency, intention, and accountability when individuality dissolves?


    This is not just a story about aliens or futures. It is a reflection on the present—on culture, systems, and the subtle convergence of thought in an age of algorithmic influence.


    📖 Read the full article on Agham Road.


    🌐 Learn more about my work here.


    #TheForensicLens #Anthropology #CollectiveConsciousness #BioculturalAnthropology #Pluribus

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    7 mins
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