Daily Schedule

Show All Details
  • 12:00 AM
  • On the Field and in the Kitchen

    For today's Labor Day show, we're replaying some favorite recent interviews. Former New York Yankee star outfielder Bernie Williams talks about his career, and the links he sees between his musical training and his performance as an athlete. We’ll look at how the sexual revolution came to post-war America. Cookbook editor Molly Birnbaum recounts how she lost her sense of smell in an accident, and the impact it had on her life and her relationship to food. Plus, Jessica B. Harris looks at the history of African American cuisine.

  • 02:00 AM
  • BBC World Service delivers breaking news and information programming around the world, in English and 42 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 42 other language services, on radio, TV and digital.

  • 10:00 AM
  • Image Control
    Decade 9/11 conversations continue with New Yorker architecture critic Paul Goldberger and “I ♥ NY” designer Milton Glaser about the image and brand of New York City pre and post Sept...
  • 12:00 PM
  • Keeping Watch

    Joel Meyerowitz was the only professional photographer granted entry to Ground Zero. On today’s show, he discusses recording the recovery efforts after 9/11. We’ll also hear one woman’s story of recovering after flames from the World Trade Center burned 80 percent of her body. Alexandra Styron talks about growing up the daughter of the brilliant and tormented writer, William Styron. Plus, we’ll take a look at how architecture has changed in the last decade.

  • 02:00 PM
  • Making Art in a Post-9/11 World

    How was creativity affected by 9/11? Today: As part of WNYC's ongoing coverage of the 10-year anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, we hear from musicians, artists, arts administrators and listeners about how 9/11 impacted their art. Plus: The Baseball Project pays tribute to America’s pastime live in our studio.

  • 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
  • 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.

  • 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
  • Making Art in a Post-9/11 World

    How was creativity affected by 9/11? Today: As part of WNYC's ongoing coverage of the 10-year anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, we hear from musicians, artists, arts administrators and listeners about how 9/11 impacted their art. Plus: The Baseball Project pays tribute to America’s pastime live in our studio.

  • 11:00 PM
  • #3242: The Australian-American Connection

    Australia's surprising and flexible new music ensemble, Topology, comprised of saxophone, strings and piano, takes center stage on this New Sounds program.  We'll hear chamber works by American and Australian composers, some in the vein of the perpetual motion machines, all performed by Topology.  Plus, other works by Americans living and working in Australia.