Friday, 21 November 2008

Latest Programming


Open Your Mind Episode 1


Dead Air Episode 1


WNSR News November 18, 2008

Check out these new features, new shows, and up-to-date news on New School Radio!

Open Your Mind

In this premiere episode of the long-form interview program OPEN YOUR MIND, Terik King (Media Studies graduate student and WNSR Program Director) is joined by Neda Sarmast, an Iranian-American filmmaker, to discuss  her documentary Nobody's Enemy, about the youth culture of Iran.

Find more information about Neda, behind the scenes information, and see clips from the film on the OPEN YOUR MIND blog at

www.terikking.com/openyourmind


 

WNSR News: November 18, 2008

The latest news and headlines brought to you by the WNSR News team. 

New School students react to the Presidential reaction; the financial crisis hits The New School; and a profile on a Social Research conference.


Jingles' Jangles: Hunt Club

Ready for the second installment of Jingles' Jangles?  Featured this episode is Hunt Club, who stopped by WNSR studios to record a live set and sit down face to face with Jingles himself.   Here they are in all their glory... WARNING: CONTAINS EXPLICIT CONTENT.

Dead Air 1

"From the twisted, syphillis-ravaged mind of Tony Belletier comes Dead Air, a program destined to enter the annals of radio history" - Diane Rehm
 
"Tony Belletier, recipient of 7 Darwin Awards has brought America and the world a sonically orgasmic treasure. I especially liked the last 20 minutes!"
- Doug Berman,
producer of "Car Talk"
 

DWNTWNsound: Bringing you interviews and sound bites from downtown New York's most culturally important people.

Episode Two: Hanging out with Sonny and Michael Kilfoyle, brother duo of New York City band Blonde Acid Cult. Blonde Acid Cult were recently featured on the CW show Gossip Girl and are releasing their debut single ("Kick the Funk" on Ripe Records) in November. This is Madhattan.

“The New York City-based quartet looks back on eras of musical hybridization and cross-genre mingling (Brooklyn in the 1980s, Manchester in the late-1980s and early-1990s) with adoration, but progresses in its own fashion”
-Anthem Magazine

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