Podcast network
WNYC Studios
is a producer and distributor of
podcasts
and on-demand and broadcast audio.
[1]
[2]
WNYC Studios is a subsidiary of
New York Public Radio
and is headquartered in New York City.
[3]
History
[
edit
]
In May 2015, WNYC began distributing its shows
Radiolab
and
On The Media
.
[4]
WNYC Studios was founded on 13 October 2015 with an inventory of 17 podcasts and national radio shows.
[2]
The venture is funded with a diversified model consisting of philanthropy, membership
[5]
and sponsorship.
[6]
The first podcast launched by WNYC Studios was
The New Yorker Radio Hour
, a co-production with
The New Yorker
magazine. Hosted by
The New Yorker
editor
David Remnick
, the national radio show and podcast debuted on 24 October 2015.
[7]
On 29 March 2016, WNYC Studios announced the launch of the
2 Dope Queens
podcast hosted by
The Daily Show
'
s
Jessica Williams
, and
Broad City
's Phoebe Robinson.
2 Dope Queens
premiered on 5 April 2016.
[8]
On 6 April 2016,
2 Dope Queens
reached #1 on the iTunes chart.
[9]
In late 2017, WNYC Studios launched two new podcasts for kids:
This Podcast Has Fleas
and
Pickle
(in production with
ABC Australia)
.
Current shows
[
edit
]
La Brega
[
edit
]
Launched in February 2021,
La Brega
is a dual-language podcast series, co-produced with Futuro Studios, about life, politics, history, and music on the island of Puerto Rico. All episodes are available in English and Spanish. Season 1, "Stories of the Puerto Rican Experience," focuses on challenges faced by people who live in Puerto Rico. Season 2, "The Puerto Rican Experience in Eight Songs," debuted in 2023. "La Brega: El Album, " a companion album to season 2, appeared April 11, 2023.
[10]
Consider This
[
edit
]
Launched in September 2020,
Consider This
is a shortform daily news podcast from
WNYC
and
NPR
. Hosted by Janae Pierre, the show offers a mix of the day's top local stories from WNYC and national stories from NPR.
[11]
It releases each weekday at 5pm ET.
[11]
WNYC was part of the pilot group of twelve public radio stations across ten U.S. region that NPR tapped to bundle local news content with the national
Consider This
podcast that was launched in June 2020.
[12]
[11]
Death, Sex & Money
[
edit
]
Death, Sex + Money
is an interview-style podcast hosted by Anna Sale that discusses the big questions "often left out of polite conversation."
[13]
[14]
The podcast launched in May 2014 features celebrities, experts and listeners on topics of finance, grief, love and relationships.
[15]
[16]
Stella Bugbee, editor in chief of
The Cut
hailed Sale as "a master of the craft."
[17]
More Perfect
[
edit
]
Officially titled
Radiolab Presents: More Perfect
, the series was the first spinoff series from
Radiolab
, debuting in 2016. Hosted by
Jad Abumrad
, it explored how the
Supreme Court
's rulings shape the lives of Americans, as well as telling the stories behind some of the Court's most significant rulings.
[18]
[19]
[20]
The three seasons aired from June 2016 to December 2018. The show relaunched with a new host, Julia Longoria, in May 2023.
[21]
The New Yorker
has hailed the series as being "subtly astonishing...both sobering in its thoughtful investigations of the United States government's unfairness to many of its own citizens and quietly optimistic in its desire to make us understand."
[22]
The series won the American Bar Association's Silver Gavel Award in 2017.
[23]
The New Yorker Radio Hour
[
edit
]
The New Yorker Radio Hour
is a co-production of
The New Yorker
and WNYC Studios.
[24]
It is hosted by
David Remnick
, who has been editor of
The New Yorker
since 1998. The hour-long national broadcast show and podcast is based on conversation, debate, humor, and regularly features writers, editors and cartoonists from The New Yorker.
[25]
On the Media
[
edit
]
On the Media
is an hour-long weekly radio program and podcast, hosted by
Brooke Gladstone
, covering journalism, technology and
First Amendment
issues.
On the Media launched in 1995 and was reformatted and relaunched in 2001, and since then has been one of WNYC Studios' fastest growing programs, with more than 400 public radio stations broadcasting the show weekly.
[26]
It won a
Peabody Award
in 2004 for providing listeners "an insightful journey into the inner workings and outer effects of the media".
[27]
In 2013, co-host Brooke Gladstone won a
Gracie Award
for Outstanding Host.
[28]
The episode "Bench Press," which looked at the Supreme Court and its relationship with the media, won both a
New York Press Club
Award and the
American Bar Association
's Silver Gavel Award in 2016.
[29]
[30]
In 2023, On the Media won a Peabody Award for its series "The Divided Dial,” which "offers listeners a [ ] window into the rise of Salem Media Group, a conservative Christian radio network."
[31]
Radiolab
[
edit
]
Radiolab
was created in 2002 by
Jad Abumrad
.
Robert Krulwich
joined as co-host in 2005.
[32]
The radio program and podcast explores broad, difficult topics such as "time" and "morality" in an accessible and light-hearted manner and with a distinctive audio production style.
[33]
[34]
Radiolab
received a 2007 National Academies Communication Award "for their imaginative use of radio to make science accessible to broad audiences".
[35]
The program has received two Peabody Awards; first in 2010 and again in 2014.
[36]
[37]
In 2015 the episode "
60 Words
," which looked at the language used in the
Authorization for Use of Military Force
(AUMF), won a Headliner Award, a New York Press Club Award, and was the New York Festivals' Gold Radio Winner and Grand Award Winner.
[38]
[39]
[40]
Also in 2015, the episode "Galapagos" won first place in the Society of Environmental Journalists Awards for Reporting on the Environment.
[41]
The episode "Sight Unseen" won the Gold Award for Best Documentary from Third Coast Festival.
[42]
In 2011, Abumrad received the MacArthur grant.
[43]
The show has done several special multi-episode series exploring various areas. "Border Trilogy" was a three-part series that explored the
United States Border Patrol
's policy "
Prevention Through Deterrence
." The "Gonads" series, hosted by Molly Webster, looked at aspects of reproduction, fertility, and gender. "In the No" was a three-part series that looked at consent in the wake of
#MeToo
. "G" was a six-part series that explored the controversial science of
human intelligence
, from IQ testing and genetic intelligence predictors to the quest for genius.
On 5 December 2019, it was announced that
Robert Krulwich
would be retiring in January 2020, after fifteen years with the show.
[44]
[45]
On 25 September 2020 it was announced that
Lulu Miller
and Latif Nasser would be joining the show as co-hosts alongside Jad Abumrad.
[46]
[47]
In January 2022, it was announced that Abumrad would leave the show and in April 2022, he joined the faculty at Vanderbilt University.
[48]
Science Friday
[
edit
]
Science Friday
(known as
SciFri
for short) is a weekly call-in
talk show
that broadcasts each Friday on over 400 public radio stations and is distributed by WNYC Studios.
SciFri
is hosted by award-winning science journalist
Ira Flatow
and was created and is produced by the Science Friday Initiative. The program is divided into two one-hour programs, with each hour ending with a complete sign-off. The focus of each program is news and information on science, nature, medicine, and technology.
SciFri
is also available as a podcast and is one of the most popular iTunes downloads, frequently in the top 15 downloads each week.
[49]
Terrestrials
[
edit
]
Terrestrials,
from Radiolab for Kids Presents, launched on 22 September, 2022. The six-part podcast series explores the natural world.
Radiolab
co-host Lulu Miller created and narrates the series, which includes interviews with entomologists, physicists, surfers, hip hop artists and other experts who are in search of new knowledge and ways to interpret natural phenomena.
[50]
Notes from America with Kai Wright
[
edit
]
Hosted by
Kai Wright
,
Notes from America
debuted as
The United States of Anxiety
in mid-2016 and featured the voices of voters in
Suffolk County, Long Island, NY
, the deeply
purple region
of a blue state where
Donald Trump
won the
GOP
primary with 73% of the vote.
[51]
[52]
[53]
Following seasons have explored "culture warriors",
[54]
surge of female candidates in the
2018 mid-term elections
,
[55]
and a post-
Reconstruction
America.
[56]
In 2017 Season One of the series was named Best Podcast by the New York Press Club in a special competition focused on coverage of the 2016 presidential campaign.
[57]
The Atlantic
included the series as one of the "Best Podcasts of 2018."
[58]
On 24 August 2020, it was announced that
The United States of Anxiety
would begin airing on
WNYC-FM
and AM on Sunday evenings.
[59]
The show expanded to a nationally-syndicated, live call-in radio show on 25 September, 2022 and changed its name to
Notes from America with Kai Wright.
The current show leads discussions that situate current events within historical and cultural contexts.
[60]
Past shows
[
edit
]
2 Dope Queens
[
edit
]
2 Dope Queens
was a podcast hosted by
The Daily Show
'
s
Jessica Williams
and
Broad City
's
Phoebe Robinson
. The podcast features female comedians, comedians of color, and LGBT comedians, in an effort to represent people from different backgrounds. The podcast's guests include
Naomi Ekperigin
,
Nore Davis
,
Aparna Nancherla
, and
Michelle Buteau
.
[61]
On 6 April 2016
2 Dope Queens
reached #1 on the iTunes chart.
[9]
The last episode was released 14 November 2018 and featured an interview with former First Lady
Michelle Obama
.
[62]
Adulting
[
edit
]
Hosted by comedians
Michelle Buteau
and
Jordan Carlos
,
Adulting
was launched in May 2019.
[63]
[64]
The podcast was taped in front of a live audience, and featured hosts Buteau and Carlos discussing topics surrounding adulthood with guests.
[65]
[66]
[67]
[68]
Guests included
Phoebe Robinson
,
Wyatt Cenac
,
Jim Gaffigan
,
Samantha Bee
, and
Vanessa Williams
.
[69]
[70]
[71]
[72]
The last episode was released 3 September 2019.
[73]
American Fiasco
[
edit
]
Hosted by
Roger Bennett
, co-host of the
Men in Blazers
television show and podcast,
American Fiasco
was a ten-episode podcast series that told the true story of the
United States men's national soccer team
's surprising failure in the
1998 World Cup
. It included interviews with former players, coaches, executives, and TV personnel, as well as archival audio from key matches.
[74]
[75]
[76]
[77]
Awful Announcing
said the series "showcases great storytelling."
[78]
The Anthropocene Reviewed
[
edit
]
The Anthropocene Reviewed
was a podcast hosted by author and
YouTube
personality
John Green
in which he reviewed different facets of the
Anthropocene
, the
epoch
that includes significant
human impact on the environment
, on a five-star scale. This can include completely artificial products like
Diet Dr. Pepper
, natural species that have had their fates altered by human influence like the
Canada goose
, or phenomena that only influence humanity such as
Halley's Comet
. Episodes were released monthly and typically contained Green reviewing two topics, accompanied by stories on how they impacted Green's own life.
[79]
[80]
[81]
Green announced that the podcast is being adapted into a book that is set to be published by
Dutton Penguin
in May 2021, his first nonfiction book.
[82]
Blindspot: Road to 9/11
[
edit
]
Launched September 2020,
Blindspot
: The Road to 9/11
was an eight-part narrative podcast series that explored the history of the lead-up to the
September 11 attacks
.
[83]
The podcast was hosted by Jim O'Grady, a
WNYC
and former
New York Times
reporter. It was a co-production with
HISTORY
, and was based on the channel's television documentary
Road to 9/11
.
[84]
[85]
[86]
[87]
[88]
Blindspot: Tulsa Burning
[
edit
]
Blindspot: Tulsa Burning,
hosted by KalaLea is about a Tulsa, OK neighborhood that was deliberately set on fire on May 31, 1921.
[89]
The podcast features stories from survivors and their descendents. A co-production of The History Channel and WNYC Studios, in collaboration with KOSU and Focus Black Oklahoma.
[90]
Caught: The Lives of Juvenile Justice
[
edit
]
Caught
was a nine-episode podcast series that examined juvenile justice in America.
[91]
[92]
[93]
Hosted by
Kai Wright
, it featured contributions from
WNYC
reporters, as well as poet and activist
Reginald Dwayne Betts
.
[94]
In 2018
Caught
won a duPont-Columbia Award.
[95]
[96]
Come Through with Rebecca Carroll
[
edit
]
Launched in April 2020,
[97]
Come Through with Rebecca Carroll
was a limited-run podcast series that featured a range of guests discussing issues of race amidst the backdrop of the pressing issues of the day, including the
COVID-19 pandemic
and the
2020 Presidential election
.
[98]
[99]
[100]
Dear Hank & John
[
edit
]
Hosted by the
Green brothers
: authors and YouTube
vloggers
Hank Green
and
John Green
. First released in 15 June, Hank and John Green answer questions e-mailed by listeners, give "dubious" advice and talk about the weekly news from the planet
Mars
and the 3rd tier
English football
club
AFC Wimbledon
. Episodes are typically around 45 minutes in length.
[101]
[102]
Upon the podcast's debut, it reached the number 4 position on the US iTunes performance chart and hit a peak position of number 2 two days later.
Dear Hank & John
has also been charted on iTunes in the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Italy, Canada, Spain, Australia and Brazil.
[103]
WNYC Studios was a co-producer of the show from November 2018 to November 2020.
Freakonomics Radio
[
edit
]
Created in September 2010,
Freakonomics Radio
is a weekly public radio show and podcast hosted by journalist
Stephen Dubner
, with economist
Steven Levitt
as a regular guest.
[104]
The two had previously collaborated on the 2005 book
Freakonomics
. In July 2018 production moved from WNYC Studios to
Stitcher Radio
.
[105]
Free Shakespeare on the Radio
[
edit
]
Free Shakespeare on the Radio
was a co-production with WNYC Studios and
The Public Theater
that reimagined the Theater's annual
Free Shakespeare in the Park
into a multi-episode
radio play
.
[106]
The production was conceived after the
COVID-19 pandemic
prevented the annual outdoor play from taking place, the first time in nearly 60 years.
[106]
[107]
The originally scheduled performance of
Richard II
was adapted for radio and directed by Shaeem Ali. The performance was dedicated to the
Black Lives Matter
movement and featured a cast composed predominantly of
BIPOC
actors, including
Andre Holland
,
Phylicia Rashad
, and
Lupita Nyong'o
.
[108]
The New York Times
said the cast "delivered electric performances, spotlighting the aural delights of Shakespeare's language."
[109]
Here's the Thing
[
edit
]
Here's the Thing
is a podcast interview series hosted by actor
Alec Baldwin
. On 24 October 2011, New York City's
WNYC
released the first episode of Baldwin's podcast,
[110]
a series of interviews with public figures including artists, policy makers and performers.
[111]
It was announced that WNYC Studios will no longer be producing the show after 10 November 2020.
[112]
Nancy
[
edit
]
Hosted by Kathy Tu and Tobin Low, Nancy was a podcast that featured stories and conversations exploring the LGBTQ experience.
[113]
The show ran from 2017 to 2020.
[114]
Note to Self
[
edit
]
Note to Self
is a podcast hosted by Manoush Zomorodi featuring interviews about the impact of technology on everyday life.
[115]
Before she began hosting Note to Self, Zomorodi was a television reporter for the
BBC
.
[116]
Only Human
[
edit
]
Only Human
was a health-oriented podcast produced by WNYC Studios.
[117]
The podcast was hosted by Mary Harris, who previously covered health for ABC News.
[118]
Scattered
[
edit
]
Launched in October 2019,
[119]
Scattered was a six-part podcast billed as an "audio memoir."
[119]
The series traced comedian Chris Garcia's search to discover more about his father's life after his father died due to complications from
Alzheimer's disease
. Garcia first spoke publicly about his father's Alzheimer's on
This American Life
.
[120]
He also appeared on
2 Dope Queens
,
[121]
recorded six days before his father died and what Garcia has called the "best set of my life."
[122]
Robin Williams
had called one of Garcia's many sets about his father, "beautiful, fearless, and straight from the heart."
[123]
[124]
[125]
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[
edit
]
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Thelaughbutton.com
.
External links
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