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WGBH said it plans to air more of its popular TV programs on the radio starting Tuesday as part of its effort to reinvent 89.7 FM as Boston’s next full-time news and information radio station - and set it apart from competitors that dominate the market. Full Article at Boston Globe
''Will there be new definitions of "war crimes"? But even with the YouTube wars ahead, P.W. Singer advises that "wars are complex, messy, and unpredictable. And this will remain the case even as unmanned systems increasingly substitute for humans." Full Article at Town Hall
This photo received May 28, 2009 courtesy of National Public Radio (NPR) shows Roxana Saberi as she speaks with NPR Host Melissa Block at NPR headquarters in Washington DC, on May 27, 2009. View Photo »
I'm looking forward to the PBS show ... I think PBS and NPR, that kind of thing, they're the only tax dollars where I feel like, 'Oh, I got my money's worth.' I like supporting the arts.
You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login | Register NPR reserves the right to read on the air and/or publish on its Web site or in any medium now known or unknown the e-mails and letters that we receive. Full Article at NPR
Last year, over 4,000 people died as a result of truck related accidents. As part of NPR's series, On The Road To Safety, guests look at what's being done to make big rig driving on the long haul safer for truck drivers and for motorists. Full Article at NPR
Main Blog Page Older Post » New Avett Brothers Video "Slight Figure Of Speech" by Meg Ruddick The man behind comedies like Eastbound and Down and Observe and Report , Jody Hill, has extended his filmmaking endeavors to music videos. Full Article at NPR
WASHINGTON - MAY 20: (L-R) Lawyer W. Mark Lanier NPR reporter Nina Totenberg and Arizona Supreme Court Chief Justice Ruth McGregor join a panel on 'A Storm in the State Courts: Examining the Elected Judge Paradigm' at Georgetown University Law Center M... View Photo »
And the purported view of Walter Reed officials that Hasan might be a threat? Shortly after the NPR story aired, the Washington Post asserted the possibility that Hasan might be 'delusional' was never taken seriously and addressed by his supervisors only 'in passing.'
Sorry! We can't seem to find the page you were looking for. Please visit the NPR Help Center to report this page as missing, or use the links below to continue your search. Full Article at NPR
Take the flowers, for instance: NPR's Andrea Seabrook writes: The first lady said every detail of the decorations has meaning. Full Article at Jezebel
National Public Radio (NPR) is a privately- and publicly-funded non-profit membership media organization that serves as a national syndicator to public radio stations in the United States. Full Article
DULLES, VA - MAY 22: US-Iranian journalist Roxana Saberi speaks to the news media after arriving back in the United States at Dulles International Airport May 22, 2009 in Dulles, Virginia.
View Photo »DULLES, VA - MAY 22: US-Iranian journalist Roxana Saberi (L) speaks to the news media with her mother, Akiko Saberi, after arriving back in the United States at Dulles International Airport May 22, 2009 in Dulles, Virginia.
View Photo »DULLES, VA - MAY 22: US-Iranian journalist Roxana Saberi (R) is followed by her parents after arriving back in the United States at Dulles International Airport May 22, 2009 in Dulles, Virginia.
View Photo »DULLES, VA - MAY 22: US-Iranian journalist Roxana Saberi (C) speaks to the news media with her parents at her side after arriving back in the United States at Dulles International Airport May 22, 2009 in Dulles, Virginia.
View Photo »DULLES, VA - MAY 22: US-Iranian journalist Roxana Saberi (C) speaks to the news media with her parents at her side after arriving back in the United States at Dulles International Airport May 22, 2009 in Dulles, Virginia.
View Photo »DULLES, VA - MAY 22: US-Iranian journalist Roxana Saberi (2nd L) speaks to the news media with her father (L), mother (2nd R) and a family friend after arriving back in the United States at Dulles International Airport May 22, 2009 in Dulles, Virginia.
View Photo »DULLES, VA - MAY 22: US-Iranian journalist Roxana Saberi (C) is escorted by police and officials from the State Department after arriving back in the United States with her parents and a family friend at Dulles International Airport May 22, 2009 in Dulles, Virginia.
View Photo »DULLES, VA - MAY 22: US-Iranian journalist Roxana Saberi (C) is escorted by police and officials from the State Department after arriving back in the United States with her parents and a family friend at Dulles International Airport May 22, 2009 in Dulles, Virginia.
View Photo »DULLES, VA - MAY 22: US-Iranian journalist Roxana Saberi (C) is escorted by police and officials from the State Department after arriving back in the United States with her parents and a family friend at Dulles International Airport May 22, 2009 in Dulles, Virginia.
View Photo »DULLES, VA - MAY 22: US-Iranian journalist Roxana Saberi (C) is escorted by police and officials from the State Department after arriving back in the United States with her parents and a family friend at Dulles International Airport May 22, 2009 in Dulles, Virginia.
View Photo »DULLES, VA - MAY 22: US-Iranian journalist Roxana Saberi (R) is presented with a bouquet of flowers after arriving back in the United States with her parents and a family friend at Dulles International Airport May 22, 2009 in Dulles, Virginia.
View Photo »DULLES, VA - MAY 22: US-Iranian journalist Roxana Saberi (C) is escorted by police and officials from the State Department after arriving back in the United States with her parents and a family friend at Dulles International Airport May 22, 2009 in Dulles, Virginia.
View Photo »DULLES, VA - MAY 22: US-Iranian journalist Roxana Saberi (R) is greeted by well-wishers after arriving back in the United States with her parents and a family friend at Dulles International Airport May 22, 2009 in Dulles, Virginia.
View Photo »DULLES, VA - MAY 22: US-Iranian journalist Roxana Saberi (C) smiles after arriving back in the United States at Dulles International Airport May 22, 2009 in Dulles, Virginia.
View Photo »NEW YORK - APRIL 27: (L-R) CEO of Carbon Conservation Dorjee Sun, Elisabeth Rosenthal of the New York Times, director Cathy Henkel, and NPR's Ira Flatow speaks during the screening and panel discussion of 'The Burning Season' during the 2009 Tribeca Film Festival at SVA Theater on Apri...
View Photo »NEW YORK - APRIL 27: (L-R) CEO of Carbon Conservation Dorjee Sun, Elisabeth Rosenthal of the New York Times, director Cathy Henkel, and NPR's Ira Flatow speaks during the screening and panel discussion of 'The Burning Season' during the 2009 Tribeca Film Festival at SVA Theater on Apri...
View Photo »WASHINGTON - APRIL 12: (L-R) Alex Blumberg, producer of Chicago Public Radio's 'This American Life', and Adam Davidson, international business and economics correspondent for NPR, listen to moderator David Gregory speak about a newspaper article during a live taping of 'Meet the Pre...
View Photo »WASHINGTON - APRIL 12: Alex Blumberg (L), producer of Chicago Public Radio's 'This American Life', listens to Adam Davidson, international business and economics correspondent for NPR, speak during a live taping of 'Meet the Press' at NBC April 12, 2009 in Washington, DC.
View Photo »WASHINGTON - APRIL 12: Alex Blumberg, producer of Chicago Public Radio's 'This American Life', speaks during a live taping of 'Meet the Press' at NBC April 12, 2009 in Washington, DC.
View Photo »WASHINGTON - APRIL 12: Alex Blumberg (L), producer of Chicago Public Radio's 'This American Life', and moderator David Gregory (R) listen to Adam Davidson, international business and economics correspondent for NPR, speak during a live taping of 'Meet the Press' at NBC April 12, 2009...
View Photo »WASHINGTON - APRIL 12: Byron York, Chief Political Correspondent for The Washington Examiner, speaks during a live taping of 'Meet the Press' at NBC April 12, 2009 in Washington, DC.
View Photo »WASHINGTON - APRIL 12: (L-R) Jeffrey Goldberg, National Correspondent for The Atlantic, Byron York, Chief Political Correspondent for The Washington Examiner, and Robin Wright, a public policy scholar at the Woodrow Wilson Center, listen to Michele Norris, host of NPR's 'All Things Co...
View Photo »WASHINGTON - APRIL 12: Byron York (2L), Chief Political Correspondent for The Washington Examiner, Michele Norris (2R), host of NPR's 'All Things Considered', and moderator David Gregory (R) listen to Robin Wright (L), a public policy scholar at the Woodrow Wilson Center, speak during...
View Photo »WASHINGTON - APRIL 12: Jeffrey Goldberg, National Correspondent for The Atlantic, speaks during a live taping of 'Meet the Press' at NBC April 12, 2009 in Washington, DC.
View Photo »WASHINGTON - APRIL 12: Robin Wright, a public policy scholar at the Woodrow Wilson Center, listens during a live taping of 'Meet the Press' at NBC April 12, 2009 in Washington, DC.
View Photo »DULLES, VA - MAY 22: US-Iranian journalist Roxana Saberi (L) speaks to the news media with her mother, Akiko Saberi, after arriving back in the United States at Dulles International Airport May 22, 2009 in Dulles, Virginia.
View Photo »There was an NPR story that tracked President Obama's first 100 days called '100 Days: On the Road in Troubled Times,'
I remember the first show they did for NPR in 1989
An outrageously funny one-man play (from NPR's well-loved humorist David Sedaris) about the author's experiences as an unemployed writer taking a job as an elf at Macy's. At first the job is simply humiliating, but once the thousands of visitors start pouring through Santa's workshop, he becomes battle ...
hey, it won!) It was not commissioned by the chairman. Still, says NPR: Prakash works in the Pentagon for the undersecretary of defense for acquisition, technology and logistics… [He] is one of only a handful of active military officers who, in published comments, have called for a repeal of the law. It...
As the country's largest not-for-profit news organization and one that is gaining audience and innovating, NPR and its member stations are uniquely positioned to respond to the crisis in American journalism
NPR is showing that it has what it takes to evolve along with the media industry by listening to its customers and developing its online strategy accordingly
The world of talk radio programming has changed radically over these thirty years, but seems more important than ever to our national debates on critical issues ... Those of us who produce The Diane Rehm Show have always been committed to civil and informative dialogue, and I am grateful to all who've h...
Lots of modern R&B — anything Maxwell, Conya Doss or Chico Debarge-ish; old school jazz — particularly Miles Davis, Ahmad Jamal and John Coltrane, and all types of talk radio news from NPR to WJBO.
How can we allow the only NPR station on Long Island to go away?
We want these people to know that we're bigger, we're cooler, we're more technology-forward than they might think ... There's plenty of people, too, who, through our direct sales force efforts, are well-versed on NPR and what we offer. But it's hard to get to everybody all of the time.
It's something we've never done ... So it's certainly an effort to get our name out there. Overall, I think a lot of people know NPR as a news provider, mostly on the radio. This [campaign] is to let the agencies and the corporate community know that we are a very viable sponsorship platform, and that t...
As the first female president of the Chicago Urban League and after holding high-level positions with Amtrak and National Public Radio, Cheryle is an experienced executive dedicated to fostering economic growth and empowering people across Illinois
Working with Bottle Rocket, we built a road map for NPR news and programs and NPR station programming that is audience driven
They consider Gainesville to be their American home ... We had them here before they did anything - before they were on NPR, before they were on Oprah, before they were in New York. Every time they make an American tour, they request a Gainesville show so they can come to their American home.
It started when liberals just stopped making sense to me ... I was listening to NPR, and nothing was making sense. So I started reading more and more conservative things, and here I am.
I spent my first day on the job with Don Adams as a teacher — the man who became Noah Adams, an icon of National Public Radio
This American Life is the best part of NPR. I could listen to the stories all day long! #NPR
- bobafettm 8 minutes ago
Hmmm, Chuck Klosterman on NPR? interesting.
- hello_photo 8 minutes ago
All night spent listening to NPR podcasts. I feel so cultured
- Adamukun 10 minutes ago
- Anglishteacha
10 minutes ago
