With Radiolab bringing its live show to the Fillmore Wednesday night, Miami is about to get a whole lot smarter. But don’t worry; our beloved good times and sexy dancers aren’t going anywhere. We can ...
One year after taking over the beloved radio show from Jad Abumrad, Lulu Miller and Latif Nasser (gently) make it their own. By Reggie Ugwu No one can accuse Lulu Miller and Latif Nasser — co-hosts of ...
What does it mean to “innovate”? How does it feel to make something new in the world? Radiolab host Jad Abumrad spent three-years investigating the science, philosophy and art of innovation, and he’s ...
KERA and the AT&T Performing Arts Center are co-producing a summer speaker series called #thinkspeak, which features some public radio heroes. The host and producer of Radiolab will kick off the first ...
Hundreds of people filled Shannon Hall at the University of Wisconsin’s Memorial Union Monday to hear a lecture from award-winning Radiolab host Jad Abumrad. The host and creator of the radio program, ...
Considered the father of Afrobeat, Nigerian musician Fela Kuti used his music in the 1970s to combat colonial values and brutal dictatorship. Former Radiolab host Jad Abumrad tells his story in the ...
Radiolab is hard to define. The hour-long radio program, co-hosted by Jad Abumrad and Robert Krulwich and produced by WNYC in New York, draws on philosophy, literature, popular culture, and even ...
When I get mad, I pretend I’m a director watching the me that’s mad on stage acting out a scene and really killing it. Director Me then claps and says, “Nice performance!” Tell us a little about your ...
Public radio fans, we know you're out there. So, if you had the chance to do a phone interview with and the hosts of the Peabody Award-winning show, what would you ask them? The two will be talking ...
Robert Krulwich, half of WNYC's Radiolab radio program and podcast is retiring. After co-hosting the public radio show with Jad Abumrad — who created it two years before Krulwich joined — for 15 years ...
AMES, Iowa -- While working at New York's public radio station WNYC, Jad Abumrad began tinkering with an idea for a new kind of radio program. His idea evolved into one of NPR's most popular shows ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results