Listening library and claims
Podcasts and Media
People often discover Iboga and Ibogaine through podcasts, interviews, documentaries, books, and social posts. Media records need short summaries, source labels, claim notes, and links to originals.
Key Points
- Media entries distinguish interviews, journalism, personal anecdotes, clinic marketing, documentaries, books, social posts, and peer-reviewed sources.
- Summaries are original, brief, and linked to the original source rather than copying transcripts or show notes.
- High-profile interviews can be useful, but claims still need evidence and safety context.
- A strong media library helps journalists and newcomers avoid repeating outdated or overstated claims.
Directory Record Standard
- Title, guest, host, date, platform, original link, archived link when available, and source type.
- Whether Iboga or Ibogaine is the main topic, a segment, a passing reference, or part of a wider psychedelic discussion.
- Original summary, major claims, safety statements, cultural claims, commercial interests, and follow-up sources.
- No copied transcripts, no long show-note republishing, and no rehosted audio or video.
How To Read Interviews
A great interview can preserve field history and lived experience. It can also mix anecdote, expertise, marketing, spiritual claim, and scientific interpretation in one conversation.
Interviews are primary sources for what the speaker said, not proof that the speaker's claims are true.
Priority Queues
- Hamilton Morris interviews and reporting related to Iboga or Ibogaine.
- Gabonese and Bwiti-linked public interviews shared with permission.
- Medical, cardiology, pharmacology, legal, and policy interviews with clear credentials.
- Clinic, company, and influencer media that makes claims readers may repeat.
Where The Directory Points
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Reader Boundary
Educational reference material only; not medical advice, legal advice, dosing instruction, provider referral, or emergency guidance. Emergency, treatment, and legal decisions belong with qualified professionals and local emergency systems.