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Unfinished Business
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of 1996 was supposed to uncover the facts about South Africa’s apartheid past - Dumisa Buhle Ntsebeza looks into why the Commission has been a failure. Then Diane Middlebrook offers her interpretation of the Sylvia Plath-Ted Hughes marriage. And New Yorker cartoonists Robert Mankoff and Bruce McCall talk about their magazine's upcoming comic issue.
Dumisa Buhle Ntsebeza
According to Dumisa Buhle Ntsebeza, a Cape Town lawyer and
visiting professor at the University of Connecticut, South
Africa hasn’t confronted its apartheid past. He’s co-author
of the recent book Unfinished Business: South Africa,
Apartheid and Truth.
Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes
Sylvia
Plath and Ted Hughes were married only 112 days after they met. Diane Middlebrook explores their literary, intellectual, and erotic bond in her latest book, Her Husband: Hughes and Plath: A Marriage.
Bruce McCall and Robert Mankoff
Frequent New Yorker contributor Bruce McCall shares his
latest book. It's called All Meat Looks Like South
America, and in it he explains things like "The Rise
and Fall of the Butter Tart: A Brief But Exhaustive History
of Canada's Premier Patriotic Pastry." Joining him is New Yorker cartoonist Robert Mankoff, and they'll discuss the magazine's upcoming comic issue.
(Picture right from All Meat Looks Like South America. Click on picture for
a larger image)
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Tributes: Jeanne-Claude
The Leonard Lopate Show
Jeanne-Claude created environmental works of art with her husband and fellow-conspirator/collaborator Christo. Together, they wrapped the Reichstag in Berlin, the Pont-Neuf in Paris, and created The Gates, with billowy orange drapes, in Central Park. Jeanne-Claude just died at the age of 74. You can hear Leonard Lopate’s last interview with them both, from July 19, 1999.
Video Pick: David Chang on Momofuku
The Leonard Lopate Show
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Let’s Go Swimming!
The Leonard Lopate Show
According to the Centers for Disease Control, bacterial, viral, and parasitic organisms found in recreational water in the United States sicken thousands of people every year, and even result in deaths. We’ll speak with chemist and industrial hygienist Monona Rossol about the protozoa, amoebas and other things that love to go swimming with us. Monona is also founder and President of Arts, Crafts and Theater Safety.
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Frank McCourt
The Leonard Lopate Show
Frank McCourt has been a guest many times on this show over the years, starting in 1996 for the memoir, Angela’s Ashes, that would earn him a Pulitzer Prize. Fame came to him late in life, after he’d retired at the age of 65 from teaching English and creative writing at public schools here in New York. He was a sweet, eloquent man who spoke with grace and humility; he just died at the age of 78 after a battle with cancer. You can hear him speaking with Leonard Lopate for his Survival Kit in 2000, and in 2005, for his memoir, Teacher Man.
- Comments [1]
Science and Faith
The Leonard Lopate Show
Earlier this week, Pres. Obama announced that he plans to nominate geneticist Dr. Francis Collins to lead the National Institutes of Health. You can listen to Leonard’s 2006 conversation with Dr. Collins about how he reconciles his personal faith with his professional scientific knowledge.
FDA to Regulate Tobacco?
The Leonard Lopate Show
May 14, 2009
Congress is getting ready to a vote on whether to make tobacco subject to FDA regulation. You can listen to a segment we did in May about the bill and what it would mean for the cigarette companies.
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Our 3-ingredient Challenge wins a James Beard Award
The Leonard Lopate Show
On May 3, the Lopate Show won its third James Beard Award for our 3-ingredient challenge. In August, we asked our listeners to call in and name 3 ingredients and then challenged New York chef and 3-ingredient expert Rozanne Gold to whip up a recipe! You can listen to the 3-ingredient challenge and get some inspiration for simple, delicious, and unexpected dishes.
Leonard is on Facebook
Now Leonard is on Facebook! We’re posting photos, status updates, links to notable interviews, and lots more. Check it out.
Barack Obama, Circa 2004
The Leonard Lopate Show
Listen to President-Elect Barack Obama on the Leonard Lopate Show in November 2004. He had recently won a seat in the U.S. Senate, and only a few months before, his rousing speech during the 2004 Democratic National Convention catapulted him into the national spotlight.
- Comments [4]