Studio 360 with Kurt Andersen
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Studio 360 with Kurt Andersen
The Peabody Award-winning Studio 360 with Kurt Andersen, from PRX, is a smart and surprising guide to what's happening in pop culture and the arts. Each week, Kurt introduces the people who are creating and shaping our culture. Life is busy – so let Studio 360 steer you to the must-see movie this we...
Neueste Episoden
273 EpisodenIntroducing: One by Willie - Conor Oberst on "Undo the Right"
On One by Willie, Texas Monthly’s John Spong hosts intimate conversations with a range of prominent guests about the Willie Nelson songs that mean the...
American Railroad - Ep 2 New York
Embark on American Railroad, a five-episode podcast hosted by Rhiannon Giddens that seeks to right historical wrongs by highlighting the untold storie...
Introducing: American Railroad - Ep 1 North Carolina
Embark on American Railroad, a five-episode podcast that seeks to right historical wrongs by highlighting the untold stories and unheard voices from t...
Introducing: Magic in the United States
Join host Heather Freeman as she explores the secrets of America's rich magical tapestry. Each episode uncovers the fascinating magical practices, bel...
Introducing: What's Ray Saying?
Meet Ray Christian.
Some people call him a storyteller, historian, father. Shoot, if you’ve got the time, he could fill you in on everything he...
Introducing: We Disrupt This Broadcast
We Disrupt This Broadcast, a new podcast from The Peabody Awards and the Center for Media & Social Impact, features intimate interviews with award-win...
Introducing: Monumental - Whispers in Wilmington
For listeners of Studio 360, we’re featuring an episode from the new PRX podcast Monumental.
The landscape of public memory is shifting. As we r...
S360 Extra: Nixon at War - Ep 1 October Surprise
Hello Studio 360 fans!
We're sharing the first episode of a new podcast project, Nixon at War, hosted by Studio 360's Kurt Andersen. Nixon at Wa...
The final episode
After 20 years, Studio 360 is switching off the ON AIR light one last time. Alec Baldwin conducts Kurt Andersen’s exit interview and they listen to so...
Studio 360 Extra: American Icons: The Migration Series by Jacob Lawrence
From 1910 to 1970, 6.6 million African Americans migrated from the rural south – a dramatic movement that would permanently change the social, politic...
Studio 360 Extra: Aural History: How Studio 360 Got Started
Studio 360 broadcast its first episode on November 4, 2000, just before we elected George W. Bush as President and we all learned what a “hanging chad...
Public Enemy’s groundbreaking album, Maya Angelou’s classic memoir and Angie Thomas on TLC
How Public Enemy brought the revolution to hip-hop with “It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back.” Plus, our Americans Icons segment on Maya Ang...
Extra: New York Icons: Kaufman Astoria Studios
New York was the original center of American moviemaking. But soon filmmakers figured out it was cheaper and simpler to work in California’s open spac...
Delilah, the making of Yanni and loving ‘Sweet Valley High’
Where do you turn when you’re heartbroken in the dead of night? Delilah, of course. Her radio call-in show pairs romantic advice with the perfect song...
The Oscar episode
It’s all about the Oscars. Kurt talks with Thelma Schoonmaker, the longtime editor for Martin Scorsese who’s up for an Academy Award for “The Irishman...
Extra: This Woman’s Work: ‘Black Gold’ by Nina Simone
This Woman’s Work is a series of stories from Classic Album Sundays and Studio 360, highlighting classic albums by female artists who have made a last...
‘12 Angry Men’ and the music of Cuphead
For our latest installment of American Icons, Studio 360’s Sam Kim explores “12 Angry Men,” the courtroom drama that has inspired jurists — and Hollyw...
Wynton Marsalis and Kate Bush
He’s a jazz icon, but Wynton Marsalis has always been drawn to classical music as well. Marsalis talks with Kurt Andersen about composing symphonies a...
Extra: ‘BoJack Horseman’ creator Raphael Bob-Waksberg
The final eight episodes of “BoJack Horseman” — Netflix’s animated series about a washed-up ’90s sitcom star living in the Hollywood Hills — will be r...
Images of New York: ‘West Side Story’ and Garry Winogrand’s ‘Central Park Zoo’
Six decades after it premiered on Broadway, “West Side Story” is everywhere again, with a revival on Broadway and a movie in the works. But many still...
Tig Notaro’s case for Nickelback, Ranky Tanky live, and Jamie Barton’s bisexual spin on classical music
Ranky Tanky performs live in our studio, and explains to Kurt Andersen how their music is rooted in the regional Gullah culture — descendants of West...
Extra: New York Icons: ‘Central Park Zoo’ by Garry Winogrand
Garry Winogrand was a master of street photography, even though he disavowed that label. He photographed across the United States, including Texas and...
American Icons: ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ — Part Two
A half century later, Stanley Kubrick’s “2001: A Space Odyssey” is still shaping our future. With no help from CGI, the movie predicted private space...
American Icons: ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ — Part One
A half century later, Stanley Kubrick’s “2001: A Space Odyssey” is still shaping our future. With no help from CGI, the movie predicted private space...
Extra: Human Intelligence: A Holiday Tale
Kurt Andersen’s version of a Christmas story doesn’t have your typical talking snowman or mistletoe. Instead, this holiday tale involves extraterrestr...
Jukebox heroes
Our latest New York Icons segment is about Midtown Manhattan’s Brill Building era, when songwriters like Carole King, Ellie Greenwich and Cynthia Weil...
Raising a glass ... to glass!
To celebrate the 75th anniversary of Tennessee Williams’ classic play, “The Glass Menagerie,” Studio 360 is devoting a whole hour to the art of glass....
Extra: New York Icons: The Brill Building
For a few years in the late 1950s and early ‘60s, the heart of the music industry was an 11-story structure in midtown Manhattan: The Brill Building....
‘The Talented Mr. Ripley,’ perfumer Tanwi Nandini Islam, and say “moist,” everybody!
Our latest American Icons feature explores Patricia Highsmith’s series that began with “The Talented Mr. Ripley,” and how Tom Ripley fits into an Amer...
Extra From ‘Aria Code’: The shattered illusions of Puccini’s Madama Butterfly
On this Studio 360 extra, we’re sharing a podcast called “Aria Code.” Produced by WQXR and the Metropolitan Opera, it features singers and opera obser...
Jennifer Reeder, ‘Naked Came the Stranger’ and ‘Love Actually’
Kurt Andersen talks with director Jennifer Reeder about her path from making short arthouse films in the 1990s to her new film, “Knives and Skin.” Pro...
Extra: The Symphonic Side of Wynton Marsalis
Wynton Marsalis is a jazz icon — a renowned trumpet player and composer, he is also the music director of the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra. But si...
‘My Ántonia,’ Lynda Barry and Roger Deakins
Cartoonist Lynda Barry is famous for drawing the darkly funny strip “Ernie Pook’s Comeek” that appeared in alternative newsweeklies for three decades,...
Extra: New York Icons: West Side Story
West Side Story, the tragic musical about star-crossed lovers from two rival gangs, was a hit on Broadway in the 1950s and then exploded across the co...
New York Icons: ‘The Bell Jar’ & ‘Siembra’
Studio 360’s American Icon series has explored dozens of influential works of art and entertainment that have shaped who we are as Americans. Now we t...
Extra: Guilty Pleasure: Comic Sans
The childlike, cartoonish typeface Comic Sans is the most hated font in the world. Twenty-five years after its release, it's become notorious for show...
Mark Morris, Carmen Maria Machado and ‘Rocky and Bullwinkle’
Kurt Andersen talks with the choreographer Mark Morris about how music has always been central to his work. The author Carmen Maria Machado reveals ho...
Why Should Tenors Have All the Fun?
Mezzo-soprano Jamie Barton is a rising opera star, performing on some of the world’s most venerable classical music stages. In concert halls from Lond...
American Icons: The tales of Edgar Allan Poe
Edgar Allan Poe’s stories are so familiar they’ve become part of our cultural wallpaper. A raven croaking “nevermore?” An enemy bricked up in a cellar...
Extra: New York Icons: ‘The Bell Jar’
The Bell Jar is often read as a sort of literary suicide note by poet Sylvia Plath. The autobiographical novel memorably follows her first attempt at...