Programs/Content
KUTX podcast explores pandemic’s impact on Austin’s live music scene
|
Launched in September, “Pause/Play” is the station’s most popular podcast to date.
Current (https://current.org/tag/podcasts/page/5/)
Launched in September, “Pause/Play” is the station’s most popular podcast to date.
The last episode of “Here’s the Thing” as a WNYC podcast was released this week.
“We believe both shows will tell some of our nation’s most important stories and provide programming for your audiences that is relevant and engaging,” said NPR’s Andrew Haden.
“The faith that we have is like blood in our bodies. … We can talk about real life, and you’ll see the stream of faith come through that.”
NPR Music’s “Louder Than a Riot” explores hip-hop as a “microcosm for the Black American experience” with the criminal justice system.
“The power dynamic is off in a way that doesn’t account for the world that we’re in today.”
“By Every Measure” takes a data-driven approach to uncovering Milwaukee’s racial disparities.
The “Black in Appalachia” podcast marks East Tennessee PBS’ first foray into the medium, an unusual step for a project that started as a TV show.
In early 2005, few people inside NPR understood podcasts or knew how to listen to one. But that would change by summer’s end.
NPR will continue to distribute the radio show.
“One of the biggest things for me was to know that we would be treating these stories with justice and presenting them in the most honest and effective way possible,” says host and producer Ahmed Badr.
“Kids These Days” looks beyond stereotypes to focus on what teens “are thinking about, laughing about and stressing about.”
WNYC and ProPublica “are committed to reporting and producing new episodes through November,” a WNYC spokesperson said.
Journalists revisited sources from the show’s second season to examine the pandemic’s effects on Mississippi.
The producer of “Our Show” has sifted through almost 400 phone recordings her correspondents have sent her.
The rise of centralizing platforms could pose a threat to podcasts that embody the public media mission.
NPR, WBEZ and WNYC Studios are also co-owners of Pocket Casts.
Vic Vela, a journalist and recovering drug addict, hosts Colorado Public Radio’s “Back From Broken.”