On the Media

The Peabody Award-winning On the Media podcast is your guide to examining how the media sausage is made. Host Brooke Gladstone examines threats to free speech and government transparency, cast a skeptical eye on media coverage of the week’s big stories and unravel hidden political narratives in everything we read, watch and hear.

https://www.wnycstudios.org/podcasts/otm

Eine durchschnittliche Folge dieses Podcasts dauert 48m. Bisher sind 1035 Folge(n) erschienen. .

Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 25 days 12 hours 28 minutes

subscribe
share






Undercover and Over-Exposed


This week, we consider whether information should ever be off-limits to journalists. It’s a thorny ethical question raised by FBI informants, hacked sources and shockingly intimate personal data. Plus, why a conservative Catholic publication’s outing of


share








 July 30, 2021  53m
 
 

Occupational Hazards


A look at how journalism selectively judges objectivity and bias… Which produces better reporting: proximity to the community you cover? Or distance? Who gets to decide?  1. Joel Simon [@Joelcpj], outgoing executive director of the The Committee to Prote


share








 July 23, 2021  50m
 
 

How a Nightclub Fire Brought Down a Government


In 2015, a tragedy gripped Romanian consciousness when a fire at a popular club in the country's capital killed 27 people, injured nearly 200 more, and sparked national protests about corruption. In the weeks following the fire, 37 of those injured died


share








 July 21, 2021  24m
 
 

As You Like It


As numbers of the vaccinated rise, theaters around the country are once again opening. In celebration, this week’s show is all about Shakespeare, including how the quintessentially English Bard became an American icon, and what a production in Kabul, Afg


share








 July 16, 2021  49m
 
 

Painting for the Future and Talking to the Dead


Hilma af Klint was a Swedish painter born in 1862 who painted big, bold canvases suffused with rich, strange colors denoting masculine and feminine, the gush of life and the serenity of cosmic order. She found inspiration in unorthodox places, including


share








 July 14, 2021  24m
 
 

Blame It On the Booze


Nearly a quarter of American adults reported drinking more at home to cope with their pandemic blues. This week, we take a deep dive into the ancient history of booze, how Americans normalized drinking alone, and how the media shaped the shifting reputat


share








 July 9, 2021  50m
 
 

Aaron Copland's Sound of America


There are many Americas. Nowadays they barely speak to each other. But during the most perilous years of the last century, one young composer went in search of a sound that melded many of the nation's strains into something singular and new. He was a man


share








 July 7, 2021  25m
 
 

The Road to Insurrection


This week marks six months since January 6th, the day a pro-Trump mob stormed the US Capitol. Over 500 rioters have since been arrested, but the legal consequences of what they did are only just beginning to roll in. In this hour, we revisit reporting by


share








 July 2, 2021  49m
 
 

Is 'The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down' a Neo-Confederate Anthem?


It's been noted that Trump’s Big Lie and the violence it produced is reminiscent of the Lost Cause of the Confederacy — a potent narrative of grievance after the Civil War recasting the South’s stand as heroic and patriotic. Undergirded by racism, the Lo


share








 June 30, 2021  19m
 
 

"We Are Putting Out A Damn Paper"


June 28th marks the anniversary of a mass shooting that took place inside a newsroom in Annapolis, Maryland, killing five journalists. On this week's On the Media, an intimate portrait of the staff of the Capital Gazette in the immediate aftermath of the


share








 June 25, 2021  50m