Weekly Schedule

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Weekly Schedule NEWS STATION MUSIC STATION 90.9 FM SACRAMENTO ∙ 90.5 FM TAHOE/RENO ∙ 91.3 FM STOCKTON/MODESTO ∙ 88.1 FM QUINCY 88.9 FM SACRAMENTO ∙ 91.7 FM GROVELAND/SONORA ∙ 88.7 FM SUTTER/YUBA CITY MON TUES WED THURS FRI SAT SUN MON TUES WED THURS FRI SAT SUN 12 a.m. 12 a.m. BBC World Service 1 a.m. 1 a.m. 2 a.m. 2 a.m. 3 a.m. BBC World Service Classical Music 3 a.m. Classical Music 4 a.m. 4 a.m. 5 a.m. Morning Edition 5 a.m. 6 a.m. 6 a.m. 7 a.m. Weekend Edition Classical 8 a.m. 7 a.m. Music 9 a.m. Classical Music With Mike Nelson Insight With Vicki Gonzalez Reveal Saturday 8 a.m. Cinema Wait Wait... Hidden Sunday 10 a.m. Here & Now Baroque Don’t Tell Me Brain Classical Here & Now 9 a.m. Music 11 a.m. Science It’s Been a Wait Wait... Friday Minute Don’t Tell Me 10 a.m. 12 p.m. This The Takeaway The Moth 11 a.m. American Life The Met Classical Opera Code Switch Snap Music 1 p.m. Fresh Air Mick 12 p.m. Classical Music With Jennifer Reason (Dec - May) / Life Kit Judgment Martin’s Chamber 2 p.m. The World Blues Party Radiolab Classical Music 1 p.m. Music Society of 3 p.m. (June - Nov) Lincoln Marketplace This Center American 3:30 p.m. California Hey, Listen! Life 2 p.m. Connections 4 p.m. Throughline Classical From The 3 p.m. All Things Music Top All Things Considered 5 p.m. Considered All Things Considered 4 p.m. Classical Music With Victor Forman Connections 6 p.m. It’s Been a Symphony- Bullseye California Minute Thistle & Cast 6:30 p.m. 5 p.m. Shamrock 7 p.m. Marketplace K-ZAP On 6 p.m. Latino USA Saturdays 7:30 p.m. The Daily CapRadio At 6 7 p.m. 8 p.m. Our Body Fresh Air Fresh Air Excellence Politic 8 p.m. Hey, Listen! In Jazz Excellence In Jazz 9 p.m. Travel With Science Rick Steves 9 p.m. At The BBC World Service Friday Opera With 10 p.m. 10 p.m. BBC World Sean Bianco Acid Jazz Service 11 p.m. BBC World Service Classical 11 p.m. Classical Music Music Changes are highlighted Updates Effective: 8/27/2021 Times in Pacific Timezone .
Recommended publications
  • NPR Mideast Coverage April - June 2012
    NPR Mideast Coverage April - June 2012 This report covers NPR's reporting on events and trends related to the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians during the second quarter of 2012. The report begins with an assessment of the 37 stories and interviews, covered by this review, that aired from April through June on radio shows produced by NPR. The 37 radio items is just one more than the lowest number for any quarter (in July-September 2008) during the past ten years. Over that period, NPR programs have carried an average of nearly 100 items per quarter related to Israel, the Palestinians, or both. I also reviewed 20 news stories, blogs and other items carried exclusively on NPR's website. All of the radio and website-only items covered by this review are shown on the "Israel-Palestinian coverage" page of the website. The opinions expressed in this report are mine alone. Accuracy I carefully reviewed all items for factual accuracy, with special attention to the radio stories, interviews and website postings produced by NPR staffers. NPR's coverage of the region continues to be remarkably accurate for a news organization with very tight deadlines. NPR has posted no corrections on its website for stories that originated during the April-June quarter; two corrections were posted in April concerning items dealt with in my report for the January-March quarter. I found no outright inaccuracies during the period, but I will point out two instances of misleading use of language. Freelance correspondent Sheera Frenkel reported for All Things Considered on May 8 about the status of a hunger strike among Palestinian prisoners.
    [Show full text]
  • Looking for Podcast Suggestions? We’Ve Got You Covered
    Looking for podcast suggestions? We’ve got you covered. We asked Loomis faculty members to share their podcast playlists with us, and they offered a variety of suggestions as wide-ranging as their areas of personal interest and professional expertise. Here’s a collection of 85 of these free, downloadable audio shows for you to try, listed alphabetically with their “recommenders” listed below each entry: 30 for 30 You may be familiar with ESPN’s 30 for 30 series of award-winning sports documentaries on television. The podcasts of the same name are audio documentaries on similarly compelling subjects. Recent podcasts have looked at the man behind the Bikram Yoga fitness craze, racial activism by professional athletes, the origins of the hugely profitable Ultimate Fighting Championship, and the lasting legacy of the John Madden Football video game. Recommended by Elliott: “I love how it involves the culture of sports. You get an inner look on a sports story or event that you never really knew about. Brings real life and sports together in a fantastic way.” 99% Invisible From the podcast website: “Ever wonder how inflatable men came to be regular fixtures at used car lots? Curious about the origin of the fortune cookie? Want to know why Sigmund Freud opted for a couch over an armchair? 99% Invisible is about all the thought that goes into the things we don’t think about — the unnoticed architecture and design that shape our world.” Recommended by Scott ABCA Calls from the Clubhouse Interviews with coaches in the American Baseball Coaches Association Recommended by Donnie, who is head coach of varsity baseball and says the podcast covers “all aspects of baseball, culture, techniques, practices, strategy, etc.
    [Show full text]
  • Airwaves (1985-08 And
    / AIRWAVES \ · A Service of Continuing Education & Extension University of Minnesota-Duluth Volume 6, Number 4 ' August-September 1985 Special •· Ray Charles: His Life and Music. kumd 103.3 fm Station Manager • Paul Schmitz Program Director • John Ziegler Public Aflairs Director • Jean Johnson Report to the Listeners Outreach Coordinator • Bob DeArmond Engineer • Kirk Kersten by Paul Schmitz, Station Manager Secretary • Donna Neveau Volunteer Staff • Remember the slighlly perplexed look patience. Projects of this magnitude jus.t couple of different departments at UMD, Lake Lime. Bil l Agnew, Bob Allen, Craig Anderson, Jon on Kirk Kerslen's face in lasl month's started with us on July 17, and will be Anderson, Kath Anderson, Mark Anderson, Bob issue when he was plugging in our new al the front desk from about 9:30 a.m. Lo Andresen, Leo Babcau, Todd Borstad, John"llrazner, antenna? I don't really know what he You may notice a change in our staff list - 2:30 p.m. four days a week. We are look- Dave Brygger, Jan Cohen, Tim Connelly, was thinking about al the moment that this issue; if you visit the station 'in ing forward Lo having her with us, and Christopher Devaney, Bruce Eckland, Dann Edholm, Pat Eller, Phil Enke, Linda Estel, Doug Fifield, photo was taken, but ever since he's been person, you will certainly notice a LO utilizing her previous experience with Kerry Fillmore, Susanna Frenkel, Scott Frisby, Brian thinking about "field Lun·ing .." That's a change becau e we have lost Helen computers as we are about LO enter the Gitar, Stan Goltz, Doug Greenwood, Jim Gruba, term for a specialized kind of work on Prekker.
    [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]
  • Firstchoice Wusf
    firstchoice wusf for information, education and entertainment • auGuSt 2010 Marvin Hamlisch Presents: The 70s, The Way We Were Renowned composer and conductor Marvin Hamlisch hosts and performs in this musical blast from the past. Three Dog Night, Debby Boone, Bobby Goldsboro, Peaches and Herb, Gloria Gaynor are a few of the musical greats who join him. The 1970s hit parade includes “You Light Up My Life,” “Raindrops Keep Fallin’ on My Head,” “Joy to the World,” and, of course, “The Way We Were.” Hamlisch fondly recalls the way we were in the 1970s. As he says in this special, “The country breathed a sigh of relief when the 1970s began. The new decade brought us peace, confidence and a feeling of national pride in our accomplishments. We had reached the stars we were aiming for; it’s a goal worth remembering today.” Airs Sunday, August 1, at 8 p.m., and Saturday, August 7, at 4 p.m. radio television WUSF 89.7 RADIO SCHEDULE AUGUST TV HIGHLIGHTS Monday through Friday Saturday continued Morning Edition ~ Classical Music 6-8 a.m. Carson Cooper 5-9 a.m. Weekend Edition 8-10 a.m. Classical Music ~ Car Talk 10-11 a.m. Russell Gant 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Wait Wait... Don’t Tell Me! 11-noon Classical Music ~ Classical Music noon-5 p.m. Bethany Cagle 1-4 p.m. All Things Considered 5-6 p.m. All Things Considered ~ Joshua Stewart A Prairie Home Companion 6-8 p.m. & Susan Giles Wantuck 4-6 p.m. This American Life 8-9 p.m.
    [Show full text]
  • Chenjerai Kumanyika
    Updated on January 14, 2019 Chenjerai Kumanyika Assistant professor Department of Journalism and Media Studies School of Communication and Information 4 Huntington Street New Brunswick, New Jersey 08901 [email protected] EDUCATION Ph.D., Department of Mass Communications, The Pennsylvania State University, May 2013 Dissertation: Producing the Cause: Branded Social Justice, Hip-Hop and the Promotional Public Sphere. Dissertation co-chairs: Matthew McAllister and C. Michael Elavsky B.A., The Pennsylvania State University, Major: African-African American Studies, May 1995 ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS Assistant professor, Department of Journalism and Media Studies, fall 2017-present Department of Journalism and Media Studies, Associate member, Ph.D. faculty, School of Communication & Information, fall 2017-present Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey Assistant professor, summer 2013-summer 2017 Department of Communication Studies, College of Architecture, Arts and Humanities, Clemson University Instructor, summer 2011-fall 2012 Department of Communication Arts and Sciences, College of Communications, The Pennsylvania State University Co-instructor, fall 2008-spring 2013 Department of Sociology and Criminology, College of Liberal Arts The Pennsylvania State University Graduate teaching assistant, fall 2008-spring 2010 Department of Communication Arts and Sciences, College of Communications The Pennsylvania State University PRIZES, AWARDS, FELLOWSHIPS George Foster Peabody Award, May 2018 For “The Raid,” an episode of the podcast “Uncivil,” for which I was co-creator, co-executive producer, co-producer, and co-host. The award was one of 30 Peabody awards for video or audio storytelling given in 2018 from among about 1,200 electronic media entries across news, entertainment, documentary, children’s, and web-interactive programming.
    [Show full text]
  • JAN 2017 KQED Perks
    Member Magazine JAN 2017 KQED Perks 2-for-1 Tickets to PHOTOFAIRS Experience cutting-edge, contemporary artworks by emerging and internationally photography on a global scale. Don’t miss recognized artists working with still and the inaugural launch of PHOTOFAIRS moving images. For more information, visit San Francisco, January 27–29, at Fort photofairs.org. Mason’s Festival Pavilion. The new boutique fair, presenting prominent galleries from For special 2-for-1 ticket offer, enter around the world, is the West Coast’s leading promo code KQED: fortmason.org/ destination for discovering and collecting event/photofairs-san-francisco Free Admission to the de Young See Frank Stella: A Retrospective © 2016 Frank Stella / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. 1967. Polymer and fluorescent polymer paint on canvas, 120 x 240 in (308.4 609.6 cm). 1967. Polymer and fluorescent Harran II, Frank Stella, Since bursting into the New York art world On Friday, January 20, and Saturday, in 1959, Frank Stella has challenged and January 21, admission to the de Young expanded the definitions of painting and museum is free to KQED members who sculpture. Frank Stella: A Retrospective includes present a current KQED MemberCard 50 major works that span the artist’s career, and valid ID (up to two tickets per from his legendary early Black paintings through MemberCard). Tickets must be picked up his groundbreaking shaped canvases and relief on-site and are subject to availability. For constructions to recent sculptural works created hours, information about the exhibition and with cutting-edge digital technologies. On view more, visit deyoung.famsf.org.
    [Show full text]
  • Chenjerai-Kumanyika-Review.Pdf
    The Transom Review Volume 15/Issue 2 Chenjerai Kumanika March 2015 (Edited by Sydney Lewis) Chenjerai Kumanyika The Transom Review – Vol.15/ Issue 2 Intro from Jay Allison Chenjerai took our Transom Traveling Workshop on Catalina and suddenly had to reckon with his own voice, his own identity, in the role of a public radio reporter. In his manifesto, Chenjerai confronts this question of how we sound, how we want ourselves to sound, and what’s permitted. I remember Tavis Smiley once saying, “Public radio wants me to be black, but not TOO black.” Chenjerai tackles that issue straight on — reading copy in various versions of his “self”— and examining the sound of public media, on the air and in the podcast world. These are key questions for public radio and it’s good to have them right out on the table. Vocal Color In Public Radio This summer during the Transom Catalina workshop, I produced my first public radio piece. While writing my script, I was suddenly gripped with a deep fear about my ability to narrate my piece. As I read the script back to myself while editing, I realized that as I was speaking aloud I was also imagining someone else’s voice saying my piece. The voice I was hearing and gradually beginning to imitate was something in between the voice of Roman Mars and Sarah Koenig. Those two very different voices have many complex and wonderful qualities. They also sound like white people. My natural voice –– the voice that I most use when I am most comfortable –– doesn’t sound like that.
    [Show full text]
  • THE FIRST FORTY YEARS INTRODUCTION by Susan Stamberg
    THE FIRST FORTY YEARS INTRODUCTION by Susan Stamberg Shiny little platters. Not even five inches across. How could they possibly contain the soundtrack of four decades? How could the phone calls, the encounters, the danger, the desperation, the exhilaration and big, big laughs from two score years be compressed onto a handful of CDs? If you’ve lived with NPR, as so many of us have for so many years, you’ll be astonished at how many of these reports and conversations and reveries you remember—or how many come back to you (like familiar songs) after hearing just a few seconds of sound. And you’ll be amazed by how much you’ve missed—loyal as you are, you were too busy that day, or too distracted, or out of town, or giving birth (guess that falls under the “too distracted” category). Many of you have integrated NPR into your daily lives; you feel personally connected with it. NPR has gotten you through some fairly dramatic moments. Not just important historical events, but personal moments as well. I’ve been told that a woman’s terror during a CAT scan was tamed by the voice of Ira Flatow on Science Friday being piped into the dreaded scanner tube. So much of life is here. War, from the horrors of Vietnam to the brutalities that evanescent medium—they came to life, then disappeared. Now, of Iraq. Politics, from the intrigue of Watergate to the drama of the Anita on these CDs, all the extraordinary people and places and sounds Hill-Clarence Thomas controversy.
    [Show full text]
  • TELEVISION NATIONAL HONOREES 24 Hours: Assault on the Capitol
    TELEVISION NATIONAL HONOREES 24 Hours: Assault On the Capitol (ABC News and Hulu) ABC NEWS Frontline - Special Report [TV - National] 60 in 6: Covid and Domestic Abuse CBS News Investigative Feature [TV - National] 60 Minutes: Talking to the Past CBS News Soft News Feature [TV - National] Alexa Mansour & Aliyah Royale (The Walking Dead: World Beyond) AMC Networks Actress in a Breakthrough Role- Drama [TV - National] Bess Kalb, Karen Chee, Akilah Green, Franchesca Ramsey, Jocelyn Richard (Yearly Departed) Amazon Studios Writer Scripted- Comedy [TV - National] Between the World and Me HBO Special [TV - National] black-ish Disney Television Studios Comedy [TV - National] Bravery and Hope: 7 Days on the Front Line (CBS News Special) CBS News Documentary- Covid Special [TV - National] Breonna Taylor: Her Life, Death and Legacy (CBS This Morning) CBS News Hard News Feature- Interview [TV - National] Caitriona Balfe (Outlander) Starz Actress in a Leading Role - Drama [TV - National] Catherine O'Hara (Schitt's Creek) Not a Real Company Productions, Inc., Pop TV, CBC Actress in a Leading Role - Comedy or Musical [TV - National] Catherine Reitman (Workin' Moms) Wolf + Rabbit Entertainment ULC Showrunner Fiction- Comedy [TV - National] Cecilia Peck, Inbal B. Lessner (Seduced: Inside the NXIVM Cult) Starz Showrunner Nonfiction [TV - National] Erin Andrews (FOX NFL) FOX Sports On-Air Talent - Sports [TV - National] Eve Lindley (Dispatches from Elsewhere) AMC Networks Actress in a Supporting Role - Made for TV Movie or Limited Series [TV - National] folklore: the long pond studio sessions Disney+ Grand Award for Special or Variety [TV - National] Gina Brillon (Gina Brillon: The Floor is Lava) Amazon Prime Video & Comedy Dynamics Variety [TV - National] Hear Her Voice (Nightline) ABC NEWS Hard News Feature [TV - National] Hoda Kotb & Jenna Bush Hager (TODAY with Hoda & Jenna) TODAY Show/NBC News On-Air Talent - Lifestyle, Entertainment [TV - National] Jessica Goldberg (AWAY) True Jack Productions USA, Sixth and Idaho, Refuge Inc.
    [Show full text]
  • KCUR 18073107 Fall Newsletter 2018.Indd
    FALL 2018 THE MEMBER NEWSLETTER OF KCUR 89.3 COUNTDOWN TO THE MIDTERMS MEET THE TEAM DEDICATED TO KEEPING YOUR TRUST THIS ELECTION SEASON ON THE How we’re working COVER Meet the team to earn the trust delivering election coverage you can you’ve placed in us trust as we enter the midterms (left to right): Madeline Fox, t KCUR we are committed Amy Jeff ries, Lisa to fact-based journalism and Agreat storytelling. To better Rodriguez, Brian serve members like you, we’ve Ellison, Samuel King, been working hard to expand Sam Zeff and Maria our audience on regional issues Carter. Photo by and connect with listeners on Brandon Parigo. both sides of the aisle and both sides of the state line. We are See story ............ 6-7 always looking for partners that allow us to incorporate a broad perspective and delve deeper into the most signifi cant issues of WHAT’S our time. This summer, we added Samuel INSIDE King, a reporter dedicated solely We’re incredibly proud of our growth and partnerships, but StoryCorps makes to Missouri politics, to our team. most of all, we’re proud of the another trip to He’ll be working closely with partner stations in St. Louis relationship we have with you. Kansas City to hear and Columbia as we cover the As trust in media continues to tales of life, love and mid-term elections together. In erode across the country, we being a baby ...... 2-3 addition, we are continuing to are constantly hearing how grow the Kansas News Service’s much you value our fact-based Achieving justice ability to cover the state with journalism.
    [Show full text]