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In this episode, two young Black artists revisit memories to grapple with how they are seen by others, and how they see themselves.
"Letters to a Young Poet" is one of four episodes of Best of the Best (2020), a nationally broadcast radio special produced each year by Third Coast. Each of episode of the series features winning stories from the 20th annual Third Coast / Richard H. Driehaus Foundation Competition.
How to Remember, produced by Axel Kacoutié and edited by Eleanor McDowall for Short Cuts from BBC Radio 4.
Winner of the 2020 Best Documentary: Gold Award
This story is sonically inspired by producer Axel Kacoutié's travels to his home country of Côte d'Ivoire, where belonging and authenticity dominated his mind. This work is an attempt to reconcile and accept (in seven steps/scenes) all the parts of he’s either wrongly internalized or intuitively known to be true.
Borders Between Us, produced by Saidu Tejan-Thomas Jr. and Jay Allison for Transom.org.
Winner of the 2020 Best Documentary: Silver Award
Saidu Tejan-Thomas is a young poet. For a long time, he had a story he needed to tell: an homage and apology to his mother. It's a tragic love story driven by the tangled search for a better life. It's personal for sure, but set against the universal perils of immigration - in Saidu's case, from Sierra Leone in West Africa - but by extension, from anywhere. Borders Between Us uses Saidu's poems as narrative drivers, reveals, and resolutions. These are not easy tasks for poems.
This episode of Best of the Best was produced by Isabel Vázquez.
Keep up with the latest from Third Coast by signing up for our newsletter at thirdcoastfestival.org.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Three stories from 2020 that each paint a unique portrait of survival and hope in the time of coronavirus.
This episode was first published in November, 2020. For the most recent recommendations and information about COVID-19, please visit your local public health website.
"The Great Indoors" is one of four episodes of Best of the Best (2020), a nationally broadcast radio special produced each year by Third Coast. Each of episode of the series features winning stories from the 20th annual Third Coast / Richard H. Driehaus Foundation Competition.
Dat Rona [excerpt], by Dr. Janina Jeff (Host and Executive Producer) and Sam Riddell (Lead Producer), with Chad Milner (Music Producer), Chris Diggins (Creative Director) and Dr. Ashira Blazer (guest medical expert).
Winner of the 2020 Impact Award
Made on March 20, just days after the United States went into lockdown, this episode of the podcast In Those Genes features host and geneticist Janina Jeff speaking with colleagues on the immediate impacts of the coronavirus pandemic, particularly for Black communities in the U.S.
Plus, an interview with the makers of Dat Rona, recorded on November 1st, 2020.
Centenarians in Lockdown [full story], produced by Nellie Gilles, Sarah Kate Kramer, and Joe Richman for Hunker Down Diaries from Radio Diaries and NPR.
Winner of the 2020 Best Documentary: Short Award
When the 1918 flu pandemic broke out, Joe Newman was 5 years old. Today, he's 107 and his fiancée Anita Sampson has just turned 100. Together, they reflect on life, love and lockdown.
Diary of a HomeSchooler [full story], produced by Anayansi Diaz-Cortes for Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX, in partnership with Chalkbeat.
Winner of the 2020 Best News Feature Award
High school student Sarah Ali-Brown finds herself managing several new heightened home responsibilities, in addition to schoolwork, during the pandemic, but she’s determined to stay on track with her future plans.
This episode of Best of the Best was produced by Isabel Vázquez.
Keep up with the latest from Third Coast by signing up for our newsletter at thirdcoastfestival.org.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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In this episode, we meet extraordinary people who are fighting the system, working to make transformative change and seeking a better world, for themselves and for others.
"Towards a Better World" is one of four episodes of Best of the Best (2020), a nationally broadcast radio special produced each year by Third Coast. Each of episode of the series features winning stories from the 20th annual Third Coast / Richard H. Driehaus Foundation Competition.
The Work of Closing a Notorious Jail [excerpt], reported by Carolina Hidalgo and edited by Jen Chien for 70 Million.
Winner of the 2020 Directors’ Choice Award
Five years after Michael Brown’s murder galvanized criminal justice reform activists in St. Louis, Missouri, these folks are gaining serious momentum to shut down the city's notorious Workhouse jail — and we’re brought along to hear how they’ve managed to do it.
Somebody [full episode], narrated by Shapearl Wells, produced by Alison Flowers and Bill Healy, and edited by Sarah Geis for Invisible Institute, Topic Studios, The Intercept and iHeart Radio, in association with TenderfootTV. Mixed by Michael Raphael with sound design by Bart Warshaw and Carl Scott.
Winner of the 2020 Best Serialized Story Award
When Shapearl Wells's son Courtney is found outside a Chicago police station with a fatal bullet wound, Shapearl immediately distrusts the official narrative. So she launches her own investigation into her son’s murder — and teams up with journalists to confront the cops and find out the truth about what happened to her child.
Crosses in the Desert / Cruces en el desierto [short excerpt], written by Catalina May and Dennis Maxwell, edited by Catalina May, sound designed by Martín Cruz and produced by Dennis Maxwell for Las Raras. Scored by Andrés Nusser.
Winner of the 2020 Best Documentary in a Non-English Language Award
Alvaro Enciso, a retired Tucson resident, spends his time methodically placing crosses in the exact places where dead migrant bodies have been found in the Sonoran desert. A story by a talented new artist concerning mental illness, toxic workplace environments, Egyptian Rat Screw, and the nature of infinity.
This episode of Best of the Best was produced by Isabel Vázquez.
Keep up with the latest from Third Coast by signing up for our newsletter at thirdcoastfestival.org.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Three stories grappling with the messiness of the mind, the body, and being a person. This episode is best listened to with headphones and/or in a quiet place!
"Of Bodies and Minds" is one of four episodes of Best of the Best (2020), a nationally broadcast radio special produced each year by Third Coast. Each of episode of the series features winning stories from the 20th annual Third Coast / Richard H. Driehaus Foundation Competition.
Songs of Speculation (excerpt) [abridged], by Jillian Walker and Ben Williams for category-other.com
Winner of the 2020 Audio Unbound Award
Songs of Speculation (excerpt) is a lecture that explodes into multi-form performance, calling on the body, time, and the power of music to reclaim histories forgotten or lost.
Not This Again [excerpt], produced by Allison Behringer with Hannah Harris Green, and edited by Bethany Denton with Cassius Adair & Caitlin Pierce for Bodies from KCRW. It was mixed by Myke Dodge Weiskopf, with music & sound design from Dara Hirsch. Lila Hassan provided translation assistance. The managing producer was Kristen Lepore.
Winner of the 2020 Best Documentary: Bronze Award
Angelina was a journalist living in Brooklyn when she was diagnosed with ALS. She now lives with her parents. How do you stay true to yourself when you rely on others to keep you alive?
A transcript of this story is available at KCRW.com/bodies.
Infinities [full story], produced by Boen Wang.
Winner of the 2020 Best New Artist Award
A story by a talented new artist concerning mental illness, toxic workplace environments, Egyptian Rat Screw, and the nature of infinity.
This episode of Best of the Best was produced by Isabel Vázquez.
Keep up with the latest from Third Coast by signing up for our newsletter at thirdcoastfestival.org.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The entire 2020 Best of the Best series will drop on the Re:sound feed tomorrow!
Gwen Macsai's brand new podcast Rising to the Challenge is available on your podcast app of choice.
To keep up with everything going on at Third Coast, sign up for our newsletter. You can also get in touch by emailing [email protected].
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Best of the Best is Third Coast’s annual ode to audio storytelling, taking listeners on a journey through the full breadth of what’s possible in stories made from sound.
This episode showcases three of the winning stories from the 19th annual Third Coast / Richard H. Driehaus Foundation Competition. Host Gwen Macsai introduces the winners of the Best Serialized Story, Best Foreign Language & Directors’ Choice awards, plus a behind-the-scenes interview with producer Zoha Zokaei.
In The Dark, Season Two — Best Serialized Story Award
by lead reporter and host Madeleine Baran, senior producer Samara Freemark, producers Natalie Jablonski and Rehman Tungekar, reporters Parker Yesko and Will Craft, and edited by Catherine Winter for APM Reports.
In small town Mississippi, a white prosecutor tried a black man six times for the same crime, a quadruple homicide. For 23 years, Curtis Flowers maintained his innocence on death row. This story is a narrative investigation into the case, which uncovered prosecutorial misconduct, false confessions, an alternate suspect, and a pattern of racial bias.
Click here to read the latest on the Curtis Flowers case, and to listen to the rest “In The Dark, season 2.”
Price of Secrecy (Hazineh Razdari) — Best Foreign Language Award
by Zoha Zokaei and edited by Rob Szeliga.
An unexpected turn of events occurs when 15-year-old Tannaz tells the police about being sexually abused by a friend.
Click here to listen to the full story with subtitles.
No Feeling is Final — Directors’ Choice Award
by Honor Eastly, with executive producer Joel Werner, producer Alice Moldovan, writer Graham Panther, and sound engineer Russell Stapleton. Created at ABC Audio Studios under the guidance of managing editor, Kellie Riordan.
Usually when we talk about suicide, we encourage people to "just ask for help". But Honor Eastly knows it’s not that simple. She’s been there and back, and now has years of phone recordings and diary entries which form the basis of her podcast.
Click here to listen to the rest of the series.
You can hear all the winning stories from the 2019 Competition at ThirdCoastFestival.org.
The program is made possible with support from the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation and distributed to public radio stations by PRX.
Music in this hour by Jeevs (“Solace”), Pablo Torri (“Linha”), Monplaisir (“I don’t need to cry but I can do it if you need to” & “on est d’accord on est d’accord on est d’accord on est d’accord on est d’accord on est d’accord”), and Stevia Sphere (“Going Down”).
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Best of the Best is Third Coast’s annual ode to audio storytelling, taking listeners on a journey through the full breadth of what’s possible in stories made from sound.
This episode showcases three of the winning stories from the 19th annual Third Coast / Richard H. Driehaus Foundation Competition. These stories all won different awards (Skylarking, Best News Feature, and Radio Impact), but they all share a theme: investigations.
Punks, produced by Kathy Tu, co-produced by Tobin Low and Matt Collette, sound designed by Jeremy Bloom, edited by Jenny Lawton, and executive produced by Paula Szuchman for Nancy from WNYC Studios.
Winner of the 2019 Skylarking Award
A mystery story about a man, a movie, and a mad-cap adventure to unite the two.
Death in Illinois Prisons: He Didn’t Have The Death Penalty But That’s What He Got, produced by Shannon Heffernan and edited by Rob Wildeboer for WBEZ.
Winner of the 2019 Best News Feature Award
Every year, people die in Illinois prisons. Reporter Shannon Heffernan uncovered that the state hasn’t been keeping detailed records of these deaths, meaning that families couldn’t learn even the simplest details about how and why their loved one died.
Change Intolerance, produced by Sam Fenn and Garth Mullins, co-produced by Lisa Hale, Alexander Kim, and Ryan McNeil for the podcast Crackdown, with editorial support from Laura Shaver and Chereece Keewatin.
Winner of the 2019 Radio Impact Award
In 2014, the province of British Columbia suddenly switched nearly 15,000 methadone patients to a new formulation of the drug called Methadose. Led by a team of Vancouver’s most experienced drug user activists, this story is an investigation into what happened afterwards.
You can hear all the winning stories from the 2019 Competition at ThirdCoastFestival.org.
The program is made possible with support from the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation and distributed to public radio stations by PRX.
Music in this hour by pine voc (“Let Your Household Objects Sing”), Jeevs (“Anesthesia”), VicthorA3 (“Semi Cold Night”), Niteffect (“Selfie”), and Genx Beats.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Best of the Best is Third Coast’s annual ode to audio storytelling, taking listeners on a journey through the full breadth of what’s possible in stories made from sound.
This episode showcases two of the winning stories from the 19th annual Third Coast / Richard H. Driehaus Foundation Competition: the Best Documentary Honorable Mention, Bronze & Silver Award winners, plus a behind-the-scenes interview with producer Neena Pathak.
A Sense of Quietness [Excerpt], produced by Eleanor McDowall for Lights Out, a Falling Tree production for BBC Radio 4.
Winner of the 2019 Best Documentary: Bronze Award
In a beautifully flowing narrative, the stories of four unrelated women in the UK and Ireland connect in unexpected ways, as they discover the quiet power and hidden dangers of speaking out about abortion. Listen to the full piece here.
ROW-cub, produced by Neena Pathak.
Winner of the 2019 Best Documentary: Honorable Mention Award
After Aaji innocently asks if her granddaughter, Mithu, is bringing her "friend" home for the holidays, Mithu struggles to translate her heartache. [Note that this story is bilingual, but it can still be understood by non-Marathi speakers - to view a subtitled version of ROW-cub, go to RadioAtlas.org]
This Is Not A Drill, produced by Jazmín Aguilera with Anna Sussman for Snap Judgment from WNYC. With co-producers John Fecile, Erika Lantz, Nancy López, and Eliza Smith; original score by Renzo Gorrio; sound design by Renzo Gorrio, Leon Morimoto, and Pat Mesiti-Miller; edited by Anna Sussman and Mark Ristich; with executive producer Glynn Washington.
Winner of the 2019 Best Documentary: Silver Award
For exactly 38 minutes on January 13th, 2018, the state of Hawaii was thrown into a state of panic. This story recounts what it was like for residents on that unforgettable morning as they tried to wrestle with impending doom, death and destruction.
You can hear all the winning stories from the 2019 Competition at ThirdCoastFestival.org.
The program is made possible with support from the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation and distributed to public radio stations by PRX.
Music in this hour by Pablo Torri (“Retorno” & “Volta”), Skill Borrower (“Heartstring Hotel”), VicthorA3 (“Los Derechos Se Consiguen En La Calle”), and Aviscerall (“Sanctuary”).
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Best of the Best is Third Coast’s annual ode to audio storytelling, taking listeners on a journey through the full breadth of what’s possible in stories made from sound.
This hour of the program showcases two of the winning stories from the 19th annual Third Coast / Richard H. Driehaus Foundation Competition. Host Gwen Macsai introduces the winners of the Best New Artist Award and the Best Documentary: Gold Award, plus a behind-the-scenes interview with producer Sayre Quevedo.
Mardi Gras Is A State Of Mind, produced by Mara Lazer.
Winner of the 2019 Best New Artist Award
This is a story about the idea of shape shifting, with a friend, via testosterone. What does it mean to be a lesbian separatist who might actually be a man?
The Return, produced by Sayre Quevedo, with editors Marlon Bishop and Sophia Paliza-Carre for NPR’s Latino USA.
Winner of the 2019 Best Documentary: Gold Award
Javier Zamora came to the US at the age of nine and built a life there. But when his Temporary Protected Status was threatened by the Trump Administration, he had no choice but to return to El Salvador for the first time in 20 years.
You can hear all the winning stories from the 2019 Competition at ThirdCoastFestival.org.
The program is made possible with support from the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation and distributed to public radio stations by PRX.
Music by Sieur Bigorneau (“Bleue”), Genki the Producer (“Crossroad”), toupie (“light meter”), Pablo Torri (“Sonho”), and Aviscerall (“Lullabyes”).
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Stories about people who lived to be 100, from the NPR series One Hundred Years of Stories (originally aired in 2000) by producer Neena Ellis.
Hen and Bill Boardman
At an age when most people are simplifying their lives and settling into old age, Helen Boardman was opening a new chapter - traveling to Europe, writing her memoirs, and falling in love (at age 90) with a younger man.
Ruth Ellis
Having no children, and having been shunned by her family for being gay, Ruth Ellis found herself alone in old age. That is, until a brand-new community embraced her, and helped her make the most out of the final years of her life.
Abraham Goldstein
Retirement was never in the cards for Abe Goldstein, who taught law at Baruch College in New York well into his 100s.
Roy Larkin Stamper
Cattle rancher, coal miner and preacher are just a few of the vocations R.L. Stamper pursued over the course of his 100 years. In the last years of his life, R.L. believed the Rapture was imminent and he wanted just one more thing: a wife.
Marion Cowen
Marion Cowen worked in theater and film with some of the great stars of his time and still remembers a few stories, though many memories have faded. Having outlived his entire family and almost all of his friends, Marion's primary end-of-life companion was a beloved 26 year-old cat named Soho.
Anna Wilmot
After her husband died, Anna Wilmot chose not to re-marry, believing "when you've had the best, forget the rest." Although she had many friends who she visited often, she spent most of the last three decades of her life alone. Soltitude didn't bring her down however - on the contrary Anna found many things to love about her life.
This episode of Re:sound was originally produced by Katie Mingle, and updated by Isabel Vázquez.
Find more stories like these in the book If I Live to Be 100: Lessons from the Centenarians by Neenah Ellis, which was rereleased in hardback in 2019.
Cover image by Helena Jacoba.
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This hour, we're bringing you a favorite from our archive... to-do lists, compulsive lists, data lists, lists in literature and a list of firsts!
To find out what these producers have been up to since we first aired the show, visit ThirdCoastFestival.org
The List
by Sean Cole, Ashley Ahearn and Nick van der Kolk (Love & Radio, 2011)
A man sets out to finish an unfinished list.
World's Longest Diary
by David Isay (Morning Edition, 1994)
An all-consuming list of every single little thing.
The Feltron Annual Report
by Roman Mars and Nate Berg (99% Invisible, 2011)
Anaylizing the data of life's minutiae.
They Didn't Get Along
by Rick Moody and Michael Hearst (Third Coast ShortDocs Challenge/Re:sound, 2006)
A list of things that clash.
First Love and 27 Other Firsts
by Whitney Jones (Cowbird.com, 2012)
A love story, in the form of a list.
This episode of Re:sound was produced originally by Katie Mingle, and updated by Isabel Vázquez.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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This hour, we're bringing you a favorite from our archive... Chicago. Hogbutcher to the world, jewel of the Midwest, and everything in-between.
Wild Onion by Gwen Macsai.
Chicago, as all Chicagoans know, means wild onion. Wild, as in feral, unpredictable, fierce, blustery, lunatic. Onion, as in layered, spicy, sometimes stinky, sometimes sweet, and always tear-inducing.
The Chicago Sound Drops:
Couple Two Tree by Sean ColeStuds and Jimmy by Alan HallRiding Through the Summer by Katie Mingle,Elevated (Grand Chicago) by Aaron XimmChicago's Gangster by Heather RadkeBeat Street by Chris SewellThe Big City by Sean HurleyI've Never Lived in Chicago by Jonathan MitchellTripping the Light Fantastic with Abraham Levitan by Delaney Hall and Jacob Anderson.
A visit to Chicago musician Abraham Levitan's apartment, in which he explains the process he goes through to write songs with just a few minutes of preparation.
To find out what these producers have been up to since we first aired the show, visit ThirdCoastFestival.org
This episode of Re:sound was produced by originally produced Delaney Hall and updated by Isabel Vázquez.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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This hour, we're bringing you a favorite from our archive... the Rockettes, the opera, congress, and other spectacles!
To find out what these producers have been up to since we first aired the show, visit ThirdCoastFestival.org
Backstage With the Rockettes
by Dean Olsher and Emily Botein (The Next Big Thing, 2004)
Manhattan has plenty of icons: the Empire State Building, the Statue of Liberty, the Broadway marquee. But come December, there's really only one show in town: the Radio City Music Hall Christmas Spectacular, featuring fireworks, a flying santa, an indoor snowfall, and of course the world-famous Rockettes.
The Tristan Mysteries: The Five-Hour Mystery
by Amy O'Leary and Limor Tomer (WNYC, 2007)
Opera, by its very nature, is synonymous with extravaganza: the huge voices, the sweeping music, the epic story-lines, the performance that lasts hours. Wagner's Tristan und Isolde, a five-hour opera, is no exception and it has one of the most colorful histories around.
Tristan und Isolde Act 1
by Ed Herrmann (2007)
For someone who doesn't like opera, there is nothing worse than sitting through Wagner. For those who just can't take it, here's act one of Wagner's Tristan und Isolde in three minutes, plus a summary of the action.
What Brought Down the House
by Brendan Greeley (2004)
In our country, one of the biggest shows around is a constitutionally mandated annual spectacle starring one of the biggest actors around, the President of the United States. Each year he (or she) is required to give a State of the Union address to Congress. In 2004, producer Brendan Greeley decided to do a brief analysis of the address to see what kind of sentiment got what kind of response.
Saturday Night Klein
by Sean Cole (Weekend America, 2007)
One of the hottest tickets to one of the longest running shows in New York is absolutely free. All you have to do is wait in line. Louis Klein usually arrives at the line for standby seats to Saturday Night Live by Friday afternoon. The tickets are given away at 7 AM the next morning. And he's pretty used to the all-night sitting. He's been waiting on the line since the show was popular enough to merit a line.
This episode of Re:sound was produced by originally produced Roman Mars and updated by Isabel Vázquez.
Image by ChrissyJ, music in this hour by Genki The Producer.
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This hour, stories about family ties, love and loss.
The Birth of Solomon
by Leila Day for The Stoop.
He was the perfect little brown baby. His name was Solomon. Thick curly hair, chubby legs and eyes closed with dark black lashes. Solomon's story is one that affects thousands of Black families whose babies are twice as likely to die before reaching the age of one, and Black mothers are up to four times more likely to die from pregnancy related causes. This story goes deep behind the statistic.
The Being Sound
by Stephanie Rowden for ShortCuts from BBC Radio 4.
Over the years, Stephanie Rowden has been chasing after her son's voice. The timbre and cadence always about to slip away, and into something new. She uses the microphone as a kind of butterfly net. If you're lucky, you catch a tiny miracle or two. Or perhaps one big riddle.
Give His Voice Back to Him
by Audrey McGlinchy for KUT.
In 2016, a black teenager was killed by an Austin Police officer. His name was David Joseph. He was 17 years old. A few months later, his cousin Vanessa Bissereth decided to do something about it.
This episode of Re:sound was produced by Isabel Vázquez.
Tracklist
“Sentimental” Genki The Producer [Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 International]
“The adorned fathomless dark creation” Lee Rosevere and Daniel Birch (Event Horizon)
“Halo” Lee Rosevere and Daniel Birch (Event Horizon)
“Lunar Orbit” Lee Rosevere (Lunar Orbit)
“Airport (no drums version)” Genki The Producer [Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 International]
Image by grahambones.
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This week, three stories by alumni of the Third Coast Radio Residency.
The making of a Chinese American beauty queen
by Hannah Kingsley-Ma; edited by Jen Chien & mixed by Gabe Grabin for KALW.
Every Lunar New Year, Chinese American women from across the country travel to San Francisco to participate in the Miss Chinatown USA pageant — an ethnic beauty pageant that’s been a national event since the late fifties.
Little Wrist Computer
by James T. Green for Welcome to Macintosh.
The Apple Watch sometimes gets a bad rap. Some people complain about it being useless, a dumb, frivolous toy. But one person thinks differently.
Gargling
by Erisa Apantaku (Re:sound debut).
After moving back in with dad, producer Erisa Apantaku notices a strange sound coming from the house.
This episode of Re:sound was produced by Isabel Vázquez.
The 2019 Third Coast Radio Residency begins on May 14. Learn more about this year’s Residents.
Tracklist
“Can You See the Light?” Genki The Producer [Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 International]
“Pulse” Lee Rosevere and Daniel Birch (Event Horizon, 2019)
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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This week, journeys of discovery, from personal identity to mathematical infinity.
Sister, Sister
by Simone Polanen for The Nod from Gimlet Media.
Simone thought she knew her little sister well, until she discovered a major part of her sister’s identity that she knew nothing about. When she confronts her sister, the conversation gets heated.
10 Things That Scare Me
by Starlee Kine for 10 Things That Scare Me from WNYC Studios.
When describing her fears, Starlee Kine finds that the list goes past ten.
The Infinite God
by Joel Werner for Sum Of All Parts from ABC RN
A musician gives up the rock n' roll dream for number theory, and a glimpse of the infinite.
This episode of Re:sound was produced by Isabel Vázquez.
TRACKLIST
“Friday lower” Niteffect (the wage of forgetting, 2019)
“Where is my mind?” Horthy Kristóf
“Going with the Wind” Cool Person (The Sarong and Silent Type: An Mmm Sound Compilation, 2019)
“Blue Ant Mosaico” Alan Gesso (The Sarong and Silent Type: An Mmm Sound Compilation, 2019)
“Take Away Again” CyrroN
“dream away” toupie (Creative Commons 2019)
“Farewell” Genki The Producer [Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 International]
Image by Shanze1
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This week, two specific points on the map with two very different stories.
Six Stories
by Jenny Casas, Robin Amer and Wilson Sayre for The City from USA Today.
Chicago, 1990. A guy with a loud sweater, manicured nails and connections to some very powerful people idles in a limousine near a vacant lot. A fleet of dump trucks unloads literal tons of busted concrete—and keep coming back. Neighborhood residents take action. The mess becomes much bigger than a six-story pile of rubble.
To hear the rest of the story, listen to Season 1 of The City.
Homeless in Googleville
by David Boyer for The Intersection from KALW.
In the heart of Mountainview, California, where Google’s Silicon Valley headquarters are located, there's a row of parked RVs. Meet the Google employees who live there.
Riding Through the Summer
by Katie Mingle
A sonic journey to the lake by bicycle on a hot Chicago day.
This episode of Re:sound was produced by Isabel Vázquez.
Image: "Intersection" by Thomas Hawk.
Music in this episode by Jonas, Hannis Brown, Into Living Void & Broke For Free.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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This hour, a mob of rock fans and an erratic limb.
Disco Demolition Night
by Pat Walters, Julia DeWitt and Emanuele Berry for Undone from Gimlet Media.
One summer night in 1979, thousands of people gathered at a Chicago baseball stadium to put an end to disco once and for all.
Lefty
by John Roche for Yarn.
John's left leg won't bend to his will.
This episode of Re:sound was produced by Isabel Vázquez.
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This hour, family dramas can span across generations ...or just across the hallway.
That You Should Be Happy
by Micaela Blei for Family Ghosts.
Decades after surviving the Holocaust and moving to sunny California, a woman lets her family know exactly what she wants from them. But her granddaughter Micaela has a different idea of what her life will be.
The Sleepers
by Kate Montegue, Mira Burt-Wintonick and Cristal Duhaime for Love Me from the CBC.
A story of love, family and sleep from Australia.
This episode of Re:sound was produced by Isabel Vázquez.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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This hour, an unlikely therapeutic duo and a magical journey through the golden age of radio advertising.
Kintsugi Dog
by Natalie Kestecher for Short Cuts from BBC Radio 4.
A bittersweet story about redundancy, an unwanted dog and the Japanese art of repair.
A 700-Foot Mountain of Whipped Cream
by Clive Desmond for The Organist from KCRW and McSweeney's, with executive producers Andrew Leland and Ross Simonini.
From in utero to the studio, producer Clive Desmond provides a tour of the golden age of radio ads, featuring Frank Zappa, Ken Nordine, Linda Ronstadt, and Randy Newman. Here, each jingle becomes a Proustian madeleine.
This episode of Re:sound was produced by Isabel Vázquez.
TRACKLIST
Moontone - Old Heroes (Free as Can Be, 2018)
Rrrrrrose Wieck - En attendant demain (Fin de la communication, Monplaisir Loyalty Freak Music, 2019)
Glaciære - Floating on the water (Hammock, Stevia Sphere, 2017)
Image by humberama.
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