Daily Schedule
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12:00 AM
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Primary ChallengesWe’ll examine how Texas Governor Rick Perry is fending off a primary challenge from Kay Bailey Hutchinson, and what it means for the future of his state and the Republican Party. Then, we examine the history of dissection in American medicine. Also, world-renowned photojournalist Harry Benson discusses his long career. ...Go to program: The Leonard Lopate Show
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02:00 AM
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BBC World Service delivers breaking news and information programming around the world, in English and 42 other language services, on radio, TV and digital.
Go to program: BBC World Service -
05:00 AM
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Your morning companion from NPR and the WNYC Newsroom, with world news, local features, and weather updates.
Go to program: Morning Edition -
06:00 AM
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07:00 AM
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Your morning companion from NPR and the WNYC Newsroom, with world news, local features, and weather updates.
Go to program: Morning Edition -
09:00 AM
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BBC World Service delivers breaking news and information programming around the world, in English and 42 other language services, on radio, TV and digital.
Go to program: BBC World Service -
10:00 AM
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Making Marriage WorkThere is an entire industry out there hoping to create perfect, happy marriages. Elizabeth Weil’s , latest New York Times Magazine piece takes readers through her marriage classes, counseling, and self-help-book-filled journey to improve her mostly-good relationship with her husband. Also, Garden State Senator Loretta Weinberg on gay marriage legislation ...Go to program: The Brian Lehrer Show
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12:00 PM
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Seeds of ChangeTime magazine reporter Bryan Walsh gives us an update on the UN climate change summit in Copenhagen. Then, Nobel Peace Laureate Jody Williams discusses why the United States has resisted signing the International Mine Ban Treaty. And we learn about a scientist's efforts to preserve the world's wheat harvest with ...Go to program: The Leonard Lopate Show
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02:00 PM
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Back to Her RootsSheryl Crow could have spent her entire career backing up the likes of Don Henley and Sting. But in 1993, the then-31-year-old released Tuesday Night Music Club, a slow-burning hit album that won three Grammys and sold 7 million copies. Today, Crow revisits the album that changed her life. And ...Go to program: Soundcheck
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03:00 PMSpecial Programming
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04:00 PM
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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.
Go to program: All Things Considered -
06:30 PM
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Marketplace is not only about money and business, but about people, local economies and the world — and what it all means to us.
Go to program: Marketplace -
07:00 PM
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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.
Go to program: All Things Considered -
08:00 PM
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A hybrid of a talk program and a newsmagazine, On Point puts each day's news into context and provides a lively forum for discussion and debate.
Go to program: On Point -
09:00 PM
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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.
Go to program: Tell Me More -
10:00 PM
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Back to Her RootsSheryl Crow could have spent her entire career backing up the likes of Don Henley and Sting. But in 1993, the then-31-year-old released Tuesday Night Music Club, a slow-burning hit album that won three Grammys and sold 7 million copies. Today, Crow revisits the album that changed her life. And ...Go to program: Soundcheck
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11:00 PM
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#3012: Violin and Cello PlusListen to works for violin and cello, with electronics and without, or with piano or voice on this New Sounds. There's music from Princeton-based composer Frances White, "The Old Rose Reader" for violin, voice, video animation, and electronics. It's a romantic work containing stories about all varieties of roses, some ...Go to program: New Sounds