Sunday |
| 12:00 am | AfroPop Worldwide |
 | Hosted By: Georges Collinet
"Afropop Worldwide" is America's first and longest-lived weekly program on the music of Africa and the African Diaspora.
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| 1:00 am | Putumayo World Music Hour |
 | Hosted By: Dan Storper & Rosalie Howarth
Hosted by Putumayo's CEO and Founder Dan Storper and KFOG personality Rosalie Howarth, the Putumayo World Music Hour is an internationally syndicated radio show that takes listeners on a weekly journey through the music of many different cultures.
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| 2:00 am | Blues Before Sunrise |
 | with Steve Cushing
Blues Before Sunrise is the Blues Heritage showcase. Each Saturday night this Chicago-based, public radio program explores, preserves, and popularizes the various eras and genre of Blues Heritage. The focus of the program is in the first fifty years of recorded Blues - from Mamie Smith's CRAZY BLUES, the very first Blues record, recorded in August of 1920, to approximately 1970.
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| 7:00 am | Gospel Outreach |
 | Patti Blue
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| 9:00 am | Weekend Edition |
 | Rachel Martin
Weekend Edition Sunday combines the news with colorful arts and human-interest features, appealing to the curious and eclectic. Weekend Edition Sunday features interviews with newsmakers, artists, scientists, politicians, musicians, writers, theologians and historians. The highlight for many listeners is the regularly scheduled puzzle segment with Puzzlemaster Will Shortz, the crossword puzzle editor of The New York Times.
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| 11:00 am | This American Life |
 | Ira Glass
Built around the innovative personal vision of host Ira Glass, "This American Life," quite literally, pioneered a new kind of radio storytelling. The weekly program explores a theme — fiascos, conventions, the job that takes over your life — through a playful mix of radio monologues, mini-documentaries, "found tape," short fiction and unusual music. The stories presented are engaging, intimate, surprising, funny, disturbing, bittersweet. Glass and his staff have an unusual knack for finding writers and performers whose work hasn't been heard on radio, and producing their stories alongside his own disarming commentary in a way that listeners praise as "riveting," "mesmerizing."
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| 12:00 pm | CarTalk |
 | Tom and Ray Magliozzi
Imagine the Marx Brothers answering questions about automobiles. Picture Monty Python trying to imitate car noises. Think of A.J. Foyt telling someone how to open the car hood. Mix it all up, throw in a little Dr. Ruth and a little Smothers Brothers, and you've got Car Talk, NPR's Peabody Award-winning radio program heard by more than 3 million listeners each week.
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| 1:00 pm | " target=_blank >Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me |
 | Peter Sagal
For a wacky and whip-smart approach to the week's news and newsmakers, listen no further than Wait Wait, Don't Tell Me!, the oddly informative news quiz from NPR.
During each fast-paced, irreverent show, host Peter Sagal leads what might be characterized as the news Olympics. Callers, panelists, and guests compete by answering questions about the week's events, identifying impersonations, filling in the blanks at lightening speed, sniffing out fake news items, and deciphering limericks.
Listeners vie for a chance to win the most coveted prize in radio: having official judge and scorekeeper Carl Kasell record the outgoing message on their home answering machine.
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| 2:00 pm | Etown |
 | Nick and Helen Forster
E-Town is an exciting weekly radio broadcast. Like old-time radio variety shows, every E-Town show is taped in front of a live audience and features performances from many of today's top musical artists as well as conversation and information about our communities and our environment.
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| 3:00 pm | Mountain Stage |
 | with Larry Groce
A two-hour music show taped before a live audience, usually in the Cultural Center Auditorium in Charleston, West Virginia, although it travels to other venues in the United States and Canada several times each year. It has been on the air since 1983. Host Larry Groce's philosophy is that all music is related, so the program showcases very diverse music, from the traditional to the brand new, from roots music to jazz.
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| 5:00 pm | All Things Considered |
 | Hosted By: Guy Raz
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| 6:00 pm | This American Life |
 | Ira Glass
Built around the innovative personal vision of host Ira Glass, "This American Life," quite literally, pioneered a new kind of radio storytelling. The weekly program explores a theme — fiascos, conventions, the job that takes over your life — through a playful mix of radio monologues, mini-documentaries, "found tape," short fiction and unusual music. The stories presented are engaging, intimate, surprising, funny, disturbing, bittersweet. Glass and his staff have an unusual knack for finding writers and performers whose work hasn't been heard on radio, and producing their stories alongside his own disarming commentary in a way that listeners praise as "riveting," "mesmerizing."
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| 7:00 pm | Snap Judgment |
 | Glynn Washington
Snap Judgment tells intriguing stories about extraordinary and defining events in people's lives. The program's raw, intimate, and musical brand of storytelling dares listeners to see a sliver of the world through another's eye. Snap Judgment host Glynn Washington takes listeners on a narrative journey - leaping from one person's frying pan into another person's fire. Deejay-driven musical delivery, paired with lush sound design, drops listeners into the very heart of what matters. Snap Judgment's fast-paced (sometimes dark, sometimes playful) narrative highlights people from across the globe who put everything on the line. Glynn Washington explains, "It's storytelling... with a beat."
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| 8:00 pm | RadioLab/The Moth Radio Hour |
 | Jad Abumrad, Robert Krulwich
Radiolab is an experiential investigation that explores themes and ideas through a patchwork of people, sounds, and stories. In each episode, Radiolab experiments with sound and style allowing science to fuse with culture, and information to sound like music.
Hosted by Jad Abumrad with co-host Robert Krulwich, Radiolab is designed for listeners who demand skepticism but appreciate wonder; who are curious about the world, but also want to be moved and surprised. Radiolab won a Peabody Award in 2011.
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| 9:00 pm | FLPR Specials |
| Each week, WEOS presents special programming from a variety of producers and on a variety of topics. Many are tied to special celebrations, such as Black History Month, Summer, and holidays.
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| 10:00 pm | Whad'Ya Know? with Michael Feldman |
 | Michael Feldman
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| 11:00 pm | Le Show |
| Harry Shearer
For over twenty years, audiences have been enjoying Shearer's gift for satire and sketch material on Le Show which got its start in 1983. It ran under various titles before Le Show was selected through the results of a listener contest. Harry, known for his voice work on The Simpsons, writes the sketches and performs all the voices as he romps through the worlds of media, politics, sports and show business while providing an eclectic array of music along the way.
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Legend:
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NPR programming |
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PRI programming |
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Pacifica and other programs |
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Playlist |
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