A student-run radio club at The New School
After Dr. Derald Wing Sue, a professor of psychology and education at Teachers College, spoke at The New School on microaggressions in academia, three students shared their experiences with them. Reported, Produced, & Mixed by Andrew Orellana
I'm Kennedy Whitaker and I'm a fan of getting my nails done. Long, short, fat you name it I'm there, make me look pretty. This project highlights a few moments in today's media that have been showing off nail art and I get to introduce you, listeners, to my nail spot in Harlem. Let's get it going!
Pickles and cultural preservation happenings on the Lower East Side. Reported, Produced, & Mixed by Adina Karp
This podcast discusses impeachment as an element in the constitution and current public opinion on impeachment. It features interviews with Lisa Huestis and Tony Peer. Produced By Isabelle Rosa
USA women's hockey is both an overlooked and underfunded sport, yet despite it's lack of recognition from the public, it has continued to be one of the most successful teams and consistent powerhouses in international tournaments. I spoke with several women's hockey players about their experience playing women's hockey, and also men's league, about the difference it makes to play with other women and the need for more support for the game.
Diversity in representation after death can be found in both obituaries and archives, but it's not something that happens overnight, and it is not something that happens on it’s own. If death as an act is the only thing that transcends all else, then studying its representation in our society and who we choose to remember could be helpful to understanding our country’s long suppression of diversity. I reached out to an obituaries writer at The New York Times and an archive librarian at University of Santa Barbara’s Special Collection Library to learn about the diversity initiatives these two institutions have taken on.
Growing up immersed in both Latin American and American culture, one thing remained the same: the over the top portrayal of Latina women. Not limited to Latinas, American media has created stereotypes of Latinos that places us into one single narrative. (Melanie Valdez)
A meeting with a physic causes an unexpected recollection of the past with a young woman in her early 20s. Produced By Kris Keene
By Jackson Pacheco for WNSR Would rather this remain unlisted for now, until I can go back in and add some more important details and references.
Traveling around Europe with your two best friends can be fun, if you know what you're doing. This is a story about the time I almost got lost in Italy four times.
A young woman attempting to find her place and voice in the film industry.
Examining diversity initiatives within archives and obituaries.
57 Years after the Good Friday Experiment gave 20 christian college students the mystical experience of their lives, one professor decides to pay homage to the site, as a place of sacred and religious significance. Special thanks to Christopher "Doc" Kelley Additional audio provided by: MAPS, from Psychedelic Science Conference, 2013
In recent years, drag culture has become widely recognized in the mainstream culture, being featured everywhere from television to makeup ad campaigns. The evolution of this wide appeal is explored as a once queer subculture emerges into more publicized conversations.
An investigation into people's relationship with nostalgia and how it has come to be affected by social media. I originally began with the idea that that I wanted to talk about nostalgia and the way we make memories. I sat down with some of my high school friends, as well as my mom and sister. After getting, several perspectives it became clear that there has been a shift in the way that memory making happens with the advent of social media. I reference Bo Burnham's 201 6 comedy special, "Make Happy" in which he goes into his relationship and experience with social media and his opinion on the internet generation.
My Uncle Paul was an extraordinary man. Only met him twice, but through the stories at his funeral from family members I developed a connection with a man who lead an amazing life.
Reporting from Elizabeth Warren’s rally in Washington Square Park Produced by Adina Karp, Jay Tobin, Layla Lari, & Omer Soylemez
NONE OF THE MUSIC IN THIS SEGMENT BELONGS TO WNSR. See full (informal) credits below: - Music: (1) Roy Hargrove - Strasbourg St. Denis (2008), (2) Robert Glasper - So Beautiful (2015) - All ambient noise recorded by me, or found at freesound.org. - The New School 2019 Commencement Ceremony Speech by David Van Zandt. - Lecture on “Integrating Technology to Improve Student Comprehension and Production” given at The New School. Published on The New School’s YouTube channel. (2013) - Courses read from the Parsons 2012-2013 catalog, the Eugene Lang 2012 & 2018 Fall catalogs, The New School for Public Engagement 2008 catalog, The New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music Course 2008-2009 catalog. - Short clip from a recording of the lecture series “Gender Studies: What Histories Do We Want to Claim? Session 2: No Longer in Exile: The Legacy and Future of Gender Studies at the New School.” (2010) Found in The New School Archives and Special Collections Digital Archive. - Short clip from footage of “Mobilization Protests and Forum at The New School.” Mark Schmidt collection of Mobilization materials. (1997) Found in The New School Archives and Special Collections Digital Archive.
NONE OF THE MUSIC IN THIS SEGMENT BELONGS TO WNSR. See full (informal) credits below: - Music: (1) Introduction music from the WMAF broadcast of the first American Race Crisis Lecture Series at The New School (1964), (2) Miles Davis Quintet - It Never Entered My Mind (1954), (3) Outro music from the WMAF broadcast of the first American Race Crisis Lecture Series at The New School (1964). - Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s lecture “The Summer of Our Discontent” apart of the American Race Crisis Lecture Series at The New School (1964). - Ambient noise: (1) Recordings of a conversation with members of the Institute for Retired Professionals originally for the podcast New Histories. Provided kindly by TNS Professor of History, Julia Foulkes. (2) “Diverse Voices” of TNS students. Provided kindly by Sarah Montague. (3) All other ambient sounds recorded by myself, or found on freesound.org. - President Nixon’s Cambodia incursion address from April 30, 1970. - Students protesting in Washington D.C. and NYC days after Nixon’s announcement (1970). - Press release announcing the re-opening of the Parsons exhibition at the Graduate Faculty building. Students' Exhibition to Portray Dissent Thru Art. (1970). Found in The New School Archives and Special Collections Digital Archive. Read by Aja Simpson.
NONE OF THE MUSIC IN THIS SEGMENT BELONGS TO WNSR. See full (informal) credits below: - Music: (1) Found in the 1939 New York World’s Fair Newsreel, (2) Aaron Copland- Appalachian Spring (1944). 1939 New York World’s Fair “World of Tomorrow” Newsreel clip. - Almost all ambient street noise found on The Roaring Twenties website, http://vectorsdev.usc.edu/NYCsound/777b.html, other sounds were recorded by myself or found on freesound.org. - News broadcast of the beginning of WWII compiled by KCRW in Santa Monica - Compilation of World War II Radio Broadcasts. Provided by YouTube user Danieljbmitchell. - Alvin Johnson speech on The University in Exile. Found in The New School Archives and Special Collections Digital Archive. Read by Ben Montoya. - Arnold Brecht giving a speech during Alvin Johnson’s birthday celebration in 1963. Provided by The New School Archives. - Reading of the course listings offered for Fall 1945 at The New School for Social Research. Found in The New School Archives and Special Collections Digital Archive. Read by Aja Simpson. - Reading of a George Freedly article in The New York Times from the 1940’s. Found in The New School Archives and Special Collections Digital Archive. Read by Ian Davis.
NONE OF THE MUSIC IN THIS SEGMENT BELONGS TO WNSR. See full (informal) credits below: - Music: (1) The Original Memphis Five - Fireworks (1929), (2) Jim Europe’s 369th Infantry “Hellfighters” Band - Memphis Blues (1919), (3) Louis Armstrong - Chimes Blues (1923). - Almost all ambient street noise found on The Roaring Twenties website, http://vectorsdev.usc.edu/NYCsound/777b.html, other sounds were recorded by myself or found on freesound.org. - Horrace Callen giving a speech during Alvin Johnson’s birthday celebration in 1963. Provided by The New School Archives. - Recorded reading of some sections in the first published “What is The New School?” pamphlet from 1925. Found in The New School Archives and Special Collections Digital Archive. Read by Aja Simpson and Ben Montoya.
Faculty members Zishan Ugurlu and Ulrich Lehmann are celebrating the school’s theatrical past through the work of the émigré director and producer Erwin Piscator. Piscator worked with Bertholdt Brecht, and founded The Dramatic Workshop at the school in 1940.As part of the Centennial celebration, Urgula and Lehmann, along with Drew Lichtenberg and Lloyd Huber, are reviving a rare production of Piscator’s. Ernst Toller’s highly charged political drama, Hoppla, We’re Alive. Ugurlu and Lehmann talk about the project in this feature.
What you’re about to hear is a sound story. A montage of sounds and voices, archival and recreated, that would have been heard, read or experienced at The New School during an important decade for its growth and development. You may hear the streets of Lower Manhattan, the construction of new buildings, the eager chatter of students in the hallway, the readings of pamphlets once distributed to all members of the school, the announcements of new possibilities, the speeches of old presidents, administration or faculty. This is the sounds of The New School. The sounds of change and learning and collaboration and New York City. This is just a sample, expect more to come.
Marissa Vassari, of the Rockefeller Foundation Archive Center & the Refugee Scholars Project, tells us about the organization's Centennial program---a modern-day take on a challenge faced by our school during WW2: the trolley problem of refugee asylum. Music: The Flashbulb - Travelogue
Learn about the critical paths paved by women at The New School during October's Centennial Festival.
Timon McPhearson, Director of New School's Urban Systems Lab, clues us in on what to expect from the USL during October's Centennial festival. Music: The Flashbulb - In The Grass
Producer Ian Farmer hangs out at his neighborhood bodega, where a colorful crowd breakfasts every morning.
The brutal 1998 murder of Matthew Shepard, a gay University of Wyoming student, led to a profound reckoning of American values. As Moises Kaufman, author of The Laramie Project, has written, "In its immediate aftermath, the nation launched into a dialogue that brought to the surface how we think and talk about homosexuality, sexual politics, education, class, violence, privileges and rights, and the difference between tolerance and acceptance." Eugene Lang College's spring theater production of The Laramie Project, playing through Sunday April 28th, is directed by Cecilia Rubino. She talks here about why the play remains powerful, relevant, and catalytic. “Our students felt that the current political climate is fragile, and that in these moments, we need to go back to seminal stories that remind us of why and how a moment can actually instigate a movement.”
Among the events being presented at The Festival of New are under the heading 400 Years of Inequality, and seek to link recognition of the 400th anniversary of the first enslaved African-Americans in Jamestown in 1619 with the New School's celebration of its social justice mission. One of the organizers, faculty member Robert Sember, sees anniversaries as an opportunity to recalibrate our moral compass. He talks about the thinking that led to 400 Years of Inequality.
A comedic profile segment on a close friend, interviewed by a close friend.
Produced by Kaylin Using laughter to work through my memories and mental health. Music: The Lung by Hiatus Kaiyote 2 Seater by Tyler the Creator LoFi Type Beat https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q7e2NEJTpBY Never Catch Me by Flying Lotus
Produced by Jennifer Lu Not a lot of people my age know Taiwanese songs from the 80s and 90s. They are considered "the old people" songs. So how come I know them? Let's find out!
Frats and Sororities are often college students' go-to when it comes to expanding social life and making connections. But what happens when there's no greek life at the school? We'll delve deeper into how social justice groups and organizations become the alternative for many students to make friends and connections.
Produced by Jackson Pacheco Music Credits Permitted by Fair Use: Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Software - Island Sunrise For Your Precious Love - Jerry Butler and The Impressions Shenyang & Pamgaea by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Sasha Berliner introduces and ruminates on the vibraphone, a poignant sound memory of her upbringing and embracing a career as a musician.
Produced by Dave McVeigh Uncovering the truth behind silence by recalling the first time I heard John Cage's 4'33.
A conversation with a conflicted Parsons student.
How do commuter students navigate life on campus while living off campus? Find out here, including and interview with Aaron Brown about his final thesis on the L train shutdown. Intro/Outro Music by Ryan Natsis @LovelyBoyOnline
Produced by Ben Burge Ben discovers a weird fluttering roar he can hardly make sense of. How can we alliterate fear when we cannot connect?
Produced by Jennifer Lu 85-year-old Hisae Vilca tells the story of how she became a restaurateur and her love journey which both started in another country, Japan.
Produced by Michael Andrews We are all exposed to art at some moment in time, but the moment recognize we can live in the world as creatives and contribute to the arts it's a very powerful moment in an artist career. In this profile piece I sit down with my good friend Alex Anez and we talk about her transition from Venezuela to the US when she was 11 years old, her experience in the arts, and the moment she recognized she could peruse the arts as a career choice. Thank you guys so much for listening. Feedback always welcomed!
Produced by Adrian Eng A love story told through music and memory.
Ryan Natsis describes the first time they came into contact with the ASMR phenomenon- and how it changed the way they relax ever since. Music excerpt: “Secrets” - Astron
Produced by Michael Andrews This sound memory is about the first time I experienced an asthma attack. While spending a summer with my grandma in the Dominican Republic I got my hands on what I thought was a bucket of water; causing me to wake up in the middle of the night to a sound and a feeling I had never experienced before. I hope you guys enjoy! Feedback is always welcome, thank you so much for listening!
Could The New School be dong more to educate its students on environmental responsibility? We talked to Sustainable Systems professor Michelle Laporte to find out.
We dig into the space dilemma at The New School from the perspectives of Students of Color and displaced Parsons students.