Daily Schedule

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  • 12:00 AM
  • What's Cooking?

    Award-winning food writer Rozanne Gold and Alice Walton, of Katchie Farm, tell how to cook weird winter vegetables, like kohlrabi and rutabaga! Then, biographer Donald Bogle discusses the life and career of actress and singer Ethel Waters. Also, curators of an exhibition at the Museum of Biblical Art discuss the theme of Christ as a “Man of Sorrows” in art. And The Daily Show’s Samantha Bee talks about her quirky collection of personal essays, I Know I Am, But What Are You?

  • 02:00 AM
  • BBC World Service delivers breaking news and information programming around the world, in English and 28 other language services, on radio, TV and digital.

  • 05:00 AM
  • Your morning companion from NPR and the WNYC Newsroom, with world news, local features, and weather updates.

  • 09:00 AM
  • BBC World Service delivers breaking news and information programming around the world, in English and 28 other language services, on radio, TV and digital.

  • 10:00 AM
  • Learning Curve
    WNYC’s education reporter Beth Fertig discusses the latest on PCB’s in the New York City schools. Plus: Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission chairman, Phil Angelides, explains how exac...
  • 12:00 PM
  • Shifting Sands

    Veteran Middle East correspondent Charles Sennott, who has just returned from Egypt, discusses the Muslim Brotherhood, which he covered for an upcoming Frontline documentary. Then, Ben Anderson talks about his documentary, "The Battle for Marjah," which chronicles one of the most decisive operations of the Afghan War. Also, Ari Brand and Carolyn McCormick talk about starring in the new A. R. Gurney comedy “Black Tie.” Plus, we’ll look at the Obama Administration’s enormous 2012 defense budget on Backstory!

  • 02:00 PM
  • Singing the Suburbs

    The Canadian band Arcade Fire just won Album of the Year for their record, "The Suburbs." Today, a scholar of suburbia deconstructs the Grammy-winning album. Plus: a look the enduring genre of docu-opera. And later: a live performance from British classical pianist Paul Lewis.

  • 03:00 PM
    Special Programming
     
     
  • 04:00 PM
  • A wrap-up of the day’s news, with features and interviews about the latest developments in New York City and around the world, from NPR and the WNYC newsroom.

  • 06:30 PM
  • Marketplace is not only about money and business, but about people, local economies and the world — and what it all means to us.

  • 07:00 PM
  • A wrap-up of the day’s news, with features and interviews about the latest developments in New York City and around the world, from NPR and the WNYC newsroom.

  • 08:00 PM
    State Of Siege: Mississippi Whites And The Civil Rights Movement
  • State Of Siege: Mississippi Whites And The Civil Rights Movement

    This new American RadioWorksprogram shines a light on the stories and strategies of the white opponents in Mississippi during the '60s, including their extraordinary tactics used to battle integration—and the legacy they left.

  • 09:00 PM
  • Tell Me More focuses on the way we live, intersect and collide in a culturally diverse world. Capturing the headlines, issues and pleasures relevant to multicultural life in America, the daily one-hour series is hosted by award-winning journalist Michel Martin. Tell Me More marks Martin's first role in hosting a daily program. She views it as an opportunity to focus on the stories, experiences, ideas and people important in contemporary life but often not heard.

  • 10:00 PM
  • Singing the Suburbs

    The Canadian band Arcade Fire just won Album of the Year for their record, "The Suburbs." Today, a scholar of suburbia deconstructs the Grammy-winning album. Plus: a look the enduring genre of docu-opera. And later: a live performance from British classical pianist Paul Lewis.

  • 11:00 PM
  • #3171: Collaborative Efforts

    For this New Sounds, we'll take a sneak peak at the forthcoming "Tirtha," a collaboration between the South Indian guitarist Prasanna   and pianist/composer Vijay Iyer.  Also, the venerable sax titan Charles Lloyd together with MacArthur “genius grant”-winning pianist Jason Moran, from a live performance on Soundcheck.  And more.