Schedule on Air Minnesota Public Radio

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Schedule on Air Minnesota Public Radio SCHEDULE ON AIR MINNESOTA PUBLIC RADIO Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday 4 am 4 am 5 am BBC World Service BBC World Service 5 am Morning Edition® 6 am 6 am with Steve Inskeep and Renée Montagne The Splendid Table® On Being in Washington, D.C. with and Lynne Rossetto Kasper with Krista Tippett 7 am Cathy Wurzer in St. Paul 7 am 8 am 8 am Weekend Edition® Weekend Edition® Saturday Sunday 9 am with Scott Simon with Rachel Martin 9 am 10 am 10 am ® ® The Daily Circuit™ Marketplace Money The Splendid Table with Kerri Miller and Tom Weber with with 11 am Carmen Wong Ulrich Lynne Rossetto Kasper 11 am Car Talk® with Tom and Ray Magliozzi A Prairie noon ® noon ® Home Companion Wait, Wait ... Don’t Tell Me! with Garrison Keillor MPR News Presents with Peter Sagal 1 pm and Carl Kasell 1 pm ® The Takeaway™ Science Friday This American Life Car Talk with John Hockenberry with Ira Flatow with Ira Glass with 2 pm Tom and Ray Magliozzi 2 pm Radiolab® Wait, Wait ... Don’t Tell Me!® BBC’s Newshour with Jad Abumrad with Peter Sagal 3 pm and Robert Krulwich and Carl Kasell 3 pm The Dinner Party Download™ On the Media® with Rico Gagliano and with Brooke Gladstone 4 pm Brendan Francis Newnam and Bob Garfield 4 pm All Things Considered® with Robert Siegel, Melissa Block and Audie Cornish All Things Considered® All Things Considered® with Arun Rath with Arun Rath 5 pm in Washington, D.C. 5 pm and Marketplace Money® Tom Crann in St. Paul with A Prairie Carmen Wong Ulrich 6 pm Home Companion® 6 pm with Garrison Keillor TED Radio Hour® ® with Guy Raz 7 pm Marketplace with Kai Ryssdal 7 pm The World Ask Me Another On Being with Marco Werman with Ophira Eisenberg with Krista Tippett 8 pm 8 pm Fresh Air® Wits™ This American Life with Terry Gross with John Moe with Ira Glass 9 pm 9 pm Tell Me More Studio 360™ Snap Judgment with Michel Martin with Kurt Andersen with Glynn Washington 10 pm 10 pm As It Happens The Arts Hour™ The Moth Radio Hour with Carol Off and Jeff Douglas 11 pm 11 pm to BBC World Service BBC World Service BBC World Service to 4 am 4 am 1/14 KNOW 91.1 FM | Minneapolis / St. Paul Schedule subject to change. Local station schedules may vary. Visit mprnews.org for more information..
Recommended publications
  • U.S. PODCAST REPORT TOP 100 PODCASTS by DOWNLOADS Podcasts Ranked by Average Weekly Downloads in the United States Reporting Period: March 16 - April 12, 2020
    U.S. PODCAST REPORT TOP 100 PODCASTS BY DOWNLOADS Podcasts Ranked by Average Weekly Downloads in the United States Reporting Period: March 16 - April 12, 2020 # OF NEW RANK PODCAST PODCAST NETWORK SALES REPRESENTATION EPISODES CHANGE 1 NPR News Now NPR National Public Media 672 0 2 Up First NPR National Public Media 30 h2 3 The Ben Shapiro Show Cumulus Media/Westwood One Cumulus Media/Westwood One 22 0 4 My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff Stitcher Midroll 9 i2 and Georgia Hardstark 5 Planet Money NPR National Public Media 11 h3 6 NPR Politics NPR National Public Media 21 h1 7 Fresh Air NPR National Public Media 24 i1 8 Pod Save America RADIO.COM/Cadence13 Cadence 13 8 h1 9 Dateline NBC NBC News Wondery Brand Partnerships 13 i4 10 Indicator from Planet Money NPR National Public Media 20 h3 11 Hidden Brain NPR National Public Media 4 i1 12 Fox News Radio Newscast FOX News Podcasts FOX News Podcasts 672 h4 13 TED Radio Hour NPR National Public Media 5 h1 14 Office Ladies Stitcher Midroll 4 i3 15 How I Built This NPR National Public Media 6 0 16 Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! NPR National Public Media 5 h5 17 The Dan Bongino Show Cumulus Media/Westwood One Cumulus Media/Westwood One 21 i5 18 Freakonomics Radio Stitcher Midroll 5 h1 19 The Rachel Maddow Show NBC News Wondery Brand Partnerships 21 h1 20 Unlocking Us with Brené Brown RADIO.COM/Cadence13 Cadence13 7 New 21 Conan O’Brien Needs A Friend Stitcher Midroll 4 i3 22 Oprah’s SuperSoul Conversations Stitcher Midroll 4 i5 23 VIEWS with David Dobrik and Jason RADIO.COM/Cadence13 Cadence13
    [Show full text]
  • The Guide Your Connection to Spokane Public Radio Name(S) ______Volume 40 / No
    Spokane Public Radio Membership and Donation Form Annual or additional contributions to Spokane Public Radio are always welcome. Mail to: Spokane Public Radio,1229 N. Monroe St., Spokane, WA 99201 THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT The Guide Your Connection to Spokane Public Radio Name(s) ___________________________________________________________________ Volume 40 / No. 2 April to June 2020 Address ___________________________________________________________________ SPR: The Information, News, & Entertainment Day Phone ( ) __________________ Evening Phone ( ) _____________________ You Need E-Mail ____________________________________________________________________ A note from Cary Boyce, President and General Manager Type of Gift/Pledge Dear Listeners, □ New membership □ Extra Gift □ Renewing Member □ Payment on Existing Pledge First, thank you for your ongoing support. These are unprecedented times Donation Amount $ ____________________________ in public radio as they are across the nation, and in our communities. At SPR we are doing our best to bring you news and information you can Payment Option rely on and use, in as timely a manner as possible. News from around the □ Sustaining Membership - ongoing monthly gift with automatic membership renewal nation, the state, and world—from NPR and BBC and our own reporters—is □ Credit/Debit card (see below) □ Auto Bill Pay from my bank brought to your cars and living rooms through SPR. It’s truly a great honor to Part of the NPR network □ Full payment enclosed □ First payment of $ ________________ enclosed work with such selfless and diligent colleagues here and around the world. The COVID-19 virus has changed the way SPR operates. Several staff □ Monthly: __________ months for $ ________________ per month □ EFT - for Sustaining monthly members are working from home as they can, even as others hold down the Pledge securely on-line: WA fort in our studios.
    [Show full text]
  • PRACHTER: Hi, I'm Richard Prachter from the Miami Herald
    Bob Garfield, author of “The Chaos Scenario” (Stielstra Publishing) Appearance at Miami Book Fair International 2009 PACHTER: Hi, I’m Richard Pachter from the Miami Herald. I’m the Business Books Columnist for Business Monday. I’m going to introduce Chris and Bob. Christopher Kenneally responsible for organizing and hosting programs at Copyright Clearance Center. He’s an award-winning journalist and author of Massachusetts 101: A History of the State, from Red Coats to Red Sox. He’s reported on education, business, travel, culture and technology for The New York Times, The Boston Globe, the LA Times, the Independent of London and other publications. His articles on blogging, search engines and the impact of technology on writers have appeared in the Boston Business Journal, Washington Business Journal and Book Tech Magazine, among other publications. He’s also host and moderator of the series Beyond the Book, which his frequently broadcast on C- SPAN’s Book TV and on Book Television in Canada. And Chris tells me that this panel is going to be part of a podcast in the future. So we can look forward to that. To Chris’s left is Bob Garfield. After I reviewed Bob Garfield’s terrific book, And Now a Few Words From Me, in 2003, I received an e-mail from him that said, among other things, I want to have your child. This was an interesting offer, but I’m married with three kids, and Bob isn’t quite my type, though I appreciated the opportunity and his enthusiasm. After all, Bob Garfield is a living legend.
    [Show full text]
  • Journalistic Ethics and the Right-Wing Media Jason Mccoy University of Nebraska-Lincoln, [email protected]
    University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Professional Projects from the College of Journalism Journalism and Mass Communications, College of and Mass Communications Spring 4-18-2019 Journalistic Ethics and the Right-Wing Media Jason McCoy University of Nebraska-Lincoln, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/journalismprojects Part of the Broadcast and Video Studies Commons, Communication Technology and New Media Commons, Critical and Cultural Studies Commons, Journalism Studies Commons, Mass Communication Commons, and the Other Communication Commons McCoy, Jason, "Journalistic Ethics and the Right-Wing Media" (2019). Professional Projects from the College of Journalism and Mass Communications. 20. https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/journalismprojects/20 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Journalism and Mass Communications, College of at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in Professional Projects from the College of Journalism and Mass Communications by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. Journalistic Ethics and the Right-Wing Media Jason Mccoy University of Nebraska-Lincoln This paper will examine the development of modern media ethics and will show that this set of guidelines can and perhaps should be revised and improved to match the challenges of an economic and political system that has taken advantage of guidelines such as “objective reporting” by creating too many false equivalencies. This paper will end by providing a few reforms that can create a better media environment and keep the public better informed. As it was important for journalism to improve from partisan media to objective reporting in the past, it is important today that journalism improves its practices to address the right-wing media’s attack on journalism and avoid too many false equivalencies.
    [Show full text]
  • Radiowaves Will Be Featuring Stories About WPR and WPT's History of Innovation and Impact on Public Broadcasting Nationally
    ON AIR & ONLINE FEBRUARY 2017 Final Forte WPR at 100 Meet Alex Hall Centennial Events Internships & Fellowships Featured Photo Earlier this month, WPR's To the Best of Our Knowledge explored the relationship between love WPR Next" Initiative Explores New Program Ideas and evolution at a sold- out live show in Madison, We often get asked, "Where does WPR come up with ideas for its sponsored by the Center programs?" First and foremost, we're inspired by you, our listeners for Humans in Nature. and neighbors around the state. During our 100th year, we're looking Excerpts from the show, to create the public radio programs of the future with a new initiative which included storyteller called WPR Next. Dasha Kelly Hamilton (pictured), will be We're going to try out a few new show ideas focused on science, broadcast nationally on pop culture, life in Wisconsin, and more. You can help our producers the show later this month. develop these ideas by telling us what interests you about these topics. Sound Bites Do you love science? What interests you most ---- do you wonder about new research in genetics, life on other planets, or ice cover on Winter Pledge Drive the Great Lakes? What about pop culture? What makes a great Begins February 21 book, movie or piece of music, and who would you like to hear WPR's winter interviewed? How about life in Wisconsin? What do you want to membership drive is know about our state's culture and history? What other topics would February 21 through 25.
    [Show full text]
  • Thesis a Uses and Gratification Study of Public Radio Audiences
    THESIS A USES AND GRATIFICATION STUDY OF PUBLIC RADIO AUDIENCES Submitted by Scott D. Bluebond Speech and Theatre Arts Department In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts Colorado State University Fort Collins, Colorado Spring, 1982 COLORADO STATE UNIVERSITY April 8, 1982 WE HEREBY RECOMMEND THAT THE THESIS PREPARED UNDER OUR SUPERVISION BY Scott David Bluebond ENTITLED A USES AND GRATIFICATIONS STUDY OF PUBLIC RADIO AUDIENCES BE ACCEPTED AS FULFILLING IN PART REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF Master of Arts Committee on Graduate Work ABSTRACT OF THESIS A USES AND GRATIFICATION STUDY OF PUBLIC RADIO AUDIENCES This thesis sought to find out why people listen to public radio. The uses and gratifications data gathering approach was implemented for public radio audiences. Questionnaires were sent out to 389 listener/contrib­ utors of public radio in northern Colorado. KCSU-FM in Fort Collins and KUNC-FM in Greeley agreed to provide such lists of listener/contributors. One hundred ninety-two completed questionnaires were returned and provided the sample base for the study. The respondents indicated they used public radio primarily for its news, its special programming, and/or because it is entertaining. Her/his least likely reasons for using public radio are for diversion and/or to trans­ mit culture from one generation to the next. The remain­ ing uses and gratifications categories included in the study indicate moderate reasons for using public radio. Various limitations of the study possibly tempered the results. These included the sample used and the method used to analyze the data. Conducting the research necessary for completion of this study made evident the fact that more i i i research needs to be done to improve the uses and gratifica- tions approach to audience analysis.
    [Show full text]
  • Montana Public Radio Drops 'Car Talk,' Adds 'Wait Wait…Don't Tell Me!' and More
    University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana University of Montana News Releases, 1928, 1956-present University Relations 10-22-2009 Montana Public Radio drops 'Car Talk,' adds 'Wait Wait…Don't Tell Me!' and more University of Montana--Missoula. Office of University Relations Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/newsreleases Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation University of Montana--Missoula. Office of University Relations, "Montana Public Radio drops 'Car Talk,' adds 'Wait Wait…Don't Tell Me!' and more" (2009). University of Montana News Releases, 1928, 1956-present. 22003. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/newsreleases/22003 This News Article is brought to you for free and open access by the University Relations at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in University of Montana News Releases, 1928, 1956-present by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The University of M ontana UNIVERSITY RELATIONS • MISSOULA. MT 59812 • 406.243.2522 • FAX: 406.243.4520 TT / i Oct. 22, 2009 Contact: William Marcus, station manager, 406-243-4931, [email protected]; Linda Talbott, associate director, 406-243-4931. [email protected]; Michael Marsolek, program director, 406-243-4931, [email protected]. MONTANA PUBLIC RADIO DROPS ‘CAR TALK,’ ADDS ‘WAIT WAIT ... DON’T TELL ME!’ AND MORE MISSOULA - Fueled by the need to economize and to direct resources to local initiatives, Montana Public Radio is dropping “Car Talk” from its schedule. At $21,500 per year for a weekly one-hour show, “Car Talk” costs eight times the average of other national shows the station buys.
    [Show full text]
  • 2010 Npr Annual Report About | 02
    2010 NPR ANNUAL REPORT ABOUT | 02 NPR NEWS | 03 NPR PROGRAMS | 06 TABLE OF CONTENTS NPR MUSIC | 08 NPR DIGITAL MEDIA | 10 NPR AUDIENCE | 12 NPR FINANCIALS | 14 NPR CORPORATE TEAM | 16 NPR BOARD OF DIRECTORS | 17 NPR TRUSTEES | 18 NPR AWARDS | 19 NPR MEMBER STATIONS | 20 NPR CORPORATE SPONSORS | 25 ENDNOTES | 28 In a year of audience highs, new programming partnerships with NPR Member Stations, and extraordinary journalism, NPR held firm to the journalistic standards and excellence that have been hallmarks of the organization since our founding. It was a year of re-doubled focus on our primary goal: to be an essential news source and public service to the millions of individuals who make public radio part of their daily lives. We’ve learned from our challenges and remained firm in our commitment to fact-based journalism and cultural offerings that enrich our nation. We thank all those who make NPR possible. 2010 NPR ANNUAL REPORT | 02 NPR NEWS While covering the latest developments in each day’s news both at home and abroad, NPR News remained dedicated to delving deeply into the most crucial stories of the year. © NPR 2010 by John Poole The Grand Trunk Road is one of South Asia’s oldest and longest major roads. For centuries, it has linked the eastern and western regions of the Indian subcontinent, running from Bengal, across north India, into Peshawar, Pakistan. Horses, donkeys, and pedestrians compete with huge trucks, cars, motorcycles, rickshaws, and bicycles along the highway, a commercial route that is dotted with areas of activity right off the road: truck stops, farmer’s stands, bus stops, and all kinds of commercial activity.
    [Show full text]
  • Podcast Directory of Influencers
    The Ultimate Directory of Podcasters 670 OF THE WORLD’S LEADING PODCASTERS Who Can Make You Famous By Featuring YOU On Their High-Visibility Platforms Brought to you by & And Ken D Foster k Page 3 1. Have I already been a guest on other shows? 3. Do I have my own show, or a substantial online presence, and Let’s face it, you wouldn’t have wanted your first TV interview have I already connected with, featured, or had a podcaster on to be with Oprah during her prime, or your first radio interview my show? with Howard Stern during his. The podcasters featured within these pages are the true icons of the podcasting world. You When seeking to connect with podcasters, it is certainly easier have ONE shot to get it right. Mess it up and not only will to do so if you’re an influencer in your own right, have existing you never be invited back to their show, given that the world relationships with other podcasters and/or have a platform that of podcasters is tight, word will spread about your rivals theirs. Few, however, will meet one, let alone all three, of appearance and the odds of being invited onto others’ shows these criteria. There is, however, an easy solution. Rather than will be dramatically reduced. wait for someone to come to your door and ‘anoint’ you as being ready to get onto the influencer playing field, take matters into Recommendation: Cut your teeth on shows with significantly your own hands and start embodying the character traits, and less reach before reaching out for those featured in this replicating the actions, of influencers you admire.
    [Show full text]
  • The Voices of NPR
    Episode 11 – Michael Goldfarb – All Along the Watchtower The Voices of NPR And now a personal word, Michael Goldfarb has the voice of a journalist who has witnessed important events. He speaks with weariness and authority. His voice evokes a chorus of NPR announcers who report from near and distant places. Writer Dierdre Mask noted in an article in the Atlantic magazine, “We can’t see NPR reporters, so we have to picture them. And because they are with us in our most private moments—alone in the car, half-asleep in bed—we start to think we know them.” And we do think we know them. Their voices are iconic: distinct, informative, comforting, familiar. Their voices are the sounds of our better selves when we are bright and learned and engaged in the affairs of the world. No matter the day’s events, they give us hope that in a crazy world, sense and sensibility will prevail. Here are a few names I grew up with: Susan Stamberg, Bob Edwards, Carl Kasell, Noah Adams, Linda Wertheimer, Robert Siegel, Scott Simon, Cokie Roberts, and Bob Mondello. Each name evokes a voice, a style, a beat, that is the news soundtrack of our lives and shared imagination. We hear their stories as they report from bureaus from foreign capitals: Eleanor Beardsley, Paris; Rob Gifford, London; Ofiebea Quist-Arcton, Dakar; and, of course, Sylvia Poggioli, Rome. We hear war correspondents in the thick of battle: Michael Golfarb in Northern Ireland and Bosnia; Kelly McEvers in the midst of death and kidnapping in the Arab Spring, Tom Bowman among the fire and mortars of Helmand Province, and David Gilkey ambushed and killed by the Taliban.
    [Show full text]
  • Attributions, 2003-1
    INSTITUTE for ADVANCED STUDY Einstein Drive Princeton, NJ 08540-0631 Telephone 609.734.8204 Fax 609.683.7605 Email <[email protected]> Attributions 2003 – ISSUE ONE A NEWSLETTER FROM THE DIRECTOR’S OFFICE INSTITUTE for ADVANCED STUDY “ he Institute for Advanced Study has Talways been very fortunate in its Nancy S. and friends, whose ongoing support has been critical to the success of this institution Duncan L. MacMillan: since its earliest days. Over the decades, Leading by Example friends have made vital contributions to the Institute in many different ways. They have ancy and Duncan MacMillan have been Friends helped it to grow and thrive, and to have of the Institute for Advanced Study since 1993, an extraordinary impact on research and Nand members of the Chairman’s Circle of the scholarship worldwide. This issue of Friends since 1997. Nancy joined the Board of Trustees Attributions pays tribute to three couples in 2001 and currently serves as Chair of the Develop- who, as good Friends of the Institute, have ment Committee and as a member of the Search Com- shown consistent commitment to its work. mittee for the seventh Director of the Institute. The Nancy and Duncan MacMillan are MacMillans have made generous contributions in nurturing the young field of theoretical support of the Professorship in Theoretical Computer computer science with their support of the Science in the School of Mathematics. Professorship in Theoretical Computer Computers have played a significant role in the lives Science in the School of Mathematics. As a of Nancy and Duncan MacMillan. The couple first met member of the Director’s Search Committee in the operations research department of Bankers Trust and Chair of the Institute’s Development in 1967, when working on financial modeling using DAVID GRAHAM Committee, Nancy MacMillan is helping to computers.
    [Show full text]
  • Kimberly Marten
    Marten CV, p. 1 KIMBERLY MARTEN (formerly, Kimberly Marten Zisk) Department of Political Science Barnard College, Columbia University 3009 Broadway New York, NY 10027 [email protected] DEGREES IN HIGHER EDUCATION 9/85 - 9/90 Stanford University. Ph.D. in Political Science; concentration in international relations, comparative politics, and Soviet politics. Ph.D. received 1/91. Dissertation: “Soviet Reactions to Shifts in U.S. and NATO Military Doctrine in Europe: The Defense Policy Community and Innovation.” Member, Berkeley-Stanford Program in Soviet Studies. 9/81 - 6/85 Harvard University. A.B. in Government, magna cum laude. Undergraduate Honors Thesis: “The Soviet Reaction to the Iranian Revolution, 1979-84.” PROFESSIONAL POSITIONS 9/97 - present Barnard College. Department of Political Science. Chair (7/18 – 6/21, 7/06 – 6/09; Acting Chair, 1/03 – 5/03). Ann Whitney Olin Professor (2013-18, 5-year term appointment). Professor (2005-present). Associate Professor (2000-2005). Assistant Professor (1997-2000). 7/15 – 6/19 Columbia University, Harriman Institute for Russian, Eurasian, and East European (concurrent) Studies. Founding Director, Program on U.S.-Russia Relations. 9/13—6/15 Columbia University. Deputy Director for Development, Harriman Institute. (concurrent) 7/12 – 6/13 Columbia University. Acting Director, Harriman Institute. (concurrent) 7/02 – 5/04 Columbia University. Associate Director of the Harriman Institute. (concurrent) 7/01 - 6/02 Council on Foreign Relations, New York. Resident Fellow (on sabbatical leave from (concurrent) Barnard). 5/02 National Defense Academy, Yokosuka, Japan. Visiting Professor. Invited to give a (concurrent) series of 7 lectures to cadets and graduate students on “Complex Peacekeeping Operations.” 5/00-8/00 Institute for International Policy Studies (Nakasone Institute), Tokyo.
    [Show full text]