
Heather Heying: Mugged in Ecuador
09/07/21 • 88 min
Evolutionary biologist Heather Heying isn't shy when it comes to controversy. She first rose to national attention when her and her husband, Bret Weinstein found themselves embroiled in a scandal at Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington. Recently, she's been in the hot seat again with controversial takes on Ivermectin and Covid vaccination policy.
But the mild-mannered Heying's true passion lies in uncovering the human condition, especially through travel. In this episode of Baggage Claim: travel stories no one tells, Heather describes the fickleness of memory, a mugging at knifepoint in Quito, Ecuador, an ill-fated road trip with her husband from the United States to Guatemala, an Ayahuasca ceremony in the Amazon and much more.
This is Heather Heying's full interview on the Baggage Claim podcast: travel stories no one tells. New interviews twice a month. In the meantime, Baggage Claim also has plenty of immersive travel stories designed to transport you to another world - those come out whenever they're ready.
SUBSCRIBE to Baggage Claim for more incredible stories about humans on the road. Or, better yet, text POD to (332) 877-9540 for text alerts on new episodes, stories and musings about humanity and a personal call from Will. If you're outside the US and Canada, visit http://www.heybaggageclaim.com instead.
Text MEMBER to that same number if you're interested in bonus questions from this and other interviews about amazing humans around the globe, long-form thoughts and essays and more. Outside the United States and Canada or just not into texting strangers? Fair. Visit heybaggageclaim.com. Music is by Kit Conway of Stello. Show notes, weird trivia and credits are available at: https://www.heybaggageclaim.com/heather_heying_mugged_ecuador
Evolutionary biologist Heather Heying isn't shy when it comes to controversy. She first rose to national attention when her and her husband, Bret Weinstein found themselves embroiled in a scandal at Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington. Recently, she's been in the hot seat again with controversial takes on Ivermectin and Covid vaccination policy.
But the mild-mannered Heying's true passion lies in uncovering the human condition, especially through travel. In this episode of Baggage Claim: travel stories no one tells, Heather describes the fickleness of memory, a mugging at knifepoint in Quito, Ecuador, an ill-fated road trip with her husband from the United States to Guatemala, an Ayahuasca ceremony in the Amazon and much more.
This is Heather Heying's full interview on the Baggage Claim podcast: travel stories no one tells. New interviews twice a month. In the meantime, Baggage Claim also has plenty of immersive travel stories designed to transport you to another world - those come out whenever they're ready.
SUBSCRIBE to Baggage Claim for more incredible stories about humans on the road. Or, better yet, text POD to (332) 877-9540 for text alerts on new episodes, stories and musings about humanity and a personal call from Will. If you're outside the US and Canada, visit http://www.heybaggageclaim.com instead.
Text MEMBER to that same number if you're interested in bonus questions from this and other interviews about amazing humans around the globe, long-form thoughts and essays and more. Outside the United States and Canada or just not into texting strangers? Fair. Visit heybaggageclaim.com. Music is by Kit Conway of Stello. Show notes, weird trivia and credits are available at: https://www.heybaggageclaim.com/heather_heying_mugged_ecuador
Previous Episode

Ali A. Rizvi: Reading Bootlegged Bertrand Russell in Pakistan
His book, "The Atheist Muslim: A Journey from Religion to Reason" has earned him death threats that make a return to his childhood homes impossible.
He's known as The Atheist Muslim to some. For others, he's the Secular Jihadist. Ali A. Rizvi was born and raised in a bubble inside a bubble: in a middle-class liberal family in ultra-conservative Saudi Arabia (he also spent time in Pakistan and Libya). Today, he lives in Toronto, Canada with his daughter. His writing on secularism, jihad and rationality has appeared in The Huffington Post, CNN and more. He's been a guest on The Rubin Report, The Joe Rogan Experience, The Saad Truth and other podcasts, and he co-hosts Secular Jihadists.
Will Conway and Ali Rizvi discuss the psychology of extremism (on both sides), the reverse culture shock of emigrating to Canada, Islam, standing up to the Twitter mob, cancel culture, the alignment between science and faith, and developing compassion for beliefs different from your own.
This is Ali A. Rizvi's full interview on the Baggage Claim podcast: travel stories no one tells. New interviews twice a month. In the meantime, Baggage Claim also has plenty of immersive travel stories designed to transport you to another world - those come out whenever they're ready.
Text POD to (332) 877-9540 to join a wonderful community of travelers and definitely get a call from host Will Conway. Text MEMBER to that same number if you're interested in bonus questions from this and other interviews about amazing humans around the globe, long-form thoughts and essays and more. Outside the United States and Canada or just not into texting strangers? Fair. Visit heybaggageclaim.com. Music is by Kit Conway of Stello. Show notes, weird trivia and credits are available at: https://www.heybaggageclaim.com/ali_rizvi_reading_bertrand_russell_pakistan
If you like this episode you’ll love
Episode Comments
Generate a badge
Get a badge for your website that links back to this episode
<a href="https://goodpods.com/podcasts/baggage-claim-175033/heather-heying-mugged-in-ecuador-16354385"> <img src="https://storage.googleapis.com/goodpods-images-bucket/badges/generic-badge-1.svg" alt="listen to heather heying: mugged in ecuador on goodpods" style="width: 225px" /> </a>
Copy