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Showing episodes and shows of
Newseum Institute
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Electric Ladies Podcast
Women's Voting Rights - Women Journalists Give Bird's Eye View at The Newseum
Women did not have the right to vote when the U.S. was founded; that's a fact many still do not know. With voting rights under siege again today, listen to the group of prominent women journalists and an historian talk about the women journalists behind the scenes using their stories, influence and access to help the 19th Amendment, which acknowledged women have the right to vote, ratified 101 years ago. Panelists include: Anna Palmer, then of Politico and now Founder of Punchbowl Media, Shawna Thomas then managing editor of Vice News Tonight and now Executive...
2021-07-16
00 min
Poutník
Newseum: historie žurnalistiky v kostce je historií...
Newseum ve Washingtonu patřilo k mým nejoblíbenějším institucím. Je soukromé, nebylo tedy na rozdíl třeba od Národní galerie naproti na druhé straně Pennsylvania Avenue zadarmo. A to mu asi bylo osudným. Prodělávalo a zavřelo na Silvestra 2019. Škoda.
2020-02-19
03 min
Electric Ladies Podcast
Women Journalists Trailblazing for Women's Right to Vote - Newseum Event on the 19th Amendment Centennial with Top Political Reporters
We did it! In case you missed it, the event Joan Michelson and Green Connections Media produced and moderated last week at the Newseum celebrating 100 years of women voting – the centennial of the 19th Amendment – was a big hit! Thank you to the Newseum for being fabulous hosts and to Politico’s Women Rule initiative for supporting us! Thanks to the fascinating and engaging panelists, Anna Palmer of Politico, Shawna Thomas of Vice News and Lori Harrison-Kahan, author of “The Superwoman and Other Writings by Miriam Michelson” about the suffrage journalist who helped bring the 19th Amendme...
2019-07-06
1h 19
Zesty Marketing Podcast
The Newseum: Making the 1st Amendment Great Again with Scott Williams
Scott Williams is the Chief Operating Officer at the Newseum in Washington D.C, (“Traveler’s Choice, Top 25 Museums in the World” by TripAdvisor.com). He manages the teams responsible for sales, marketing and public relations for the Newseum and Newseum Institute, serves on the boards of The DC Chapter of the American Advertising Federation and is a published author. In today’s discussion, Scott and I talk about how to activate museum guests, things he learned from an Elvis tribute artist contest, and a social media campaign the museum promotes annually that gets people to think about a day #wit...
2018-01-09
30 min
What's Working in Washington
What's Working in Washington - Ep 132 Newseum provides first amendment perspective - Scott Williams
Now, more than ever, D.C.s Newseum serves as a hub for the history and importance of journalism. "The mission of the Newseum is to champion the five freedoms of the first amendment," and we do that through exhibits, programs, and education, said Scott Williams, Newseum's chief operating officer. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
2017-08-11
08 min
CDT Tech Talks
SXSW 2017 –– Talking Tech w/ Newseum, American University, EU startups & more!
Host Brian Wesolowski took his show on the road, heading to Austin for this year's SXSW 2017 Interactive Festival. We chatted with the Newseum, American University, the Charles Koch Institute, a variety of EU startups and CDT staff. Listen to get the scoop on what's happening at the cross-sections of tech! FULL LINEUP: Jeffrey Herbst – President & CEO, Newseum Mitch Gelman – Senior Fellow, Media & Tech, Newseum Lindsay Grace – Associate Professor, Founding Director of AU Game Lab & Studio, American University Jordan Richardson – Senior Policy And Research Analyst, Charles Koch Institute Jorge Gomez – CEO & Co-founder, Canard Drones Andre Ramos – Founder, Tripaya Olivier Plante – Co-founder & CEO, Thingthing K...
2017-03-17
33 min
Eye on Travel with Peter Greenberg
Travel Today with Peter Greenberg--The Newseum, Washington, D.C.
This week, Travel Today with Peter Greenberg comes from the Newseum in Washington, D.C.—the amazing interactive museum dedicated to the history, the execution, the challenges, and the legends of the fourth estate (not to mention the first amendment). Joining Peter Greenberg is legendary CBS Correspondent Bill Plante, who talks about his remarkable 52-year career at the network, and his travels along the way—from covering civil rights in Selma, Alabama, the war in Vietnam, his years as the White House correspondent for the network, and many other points in between. Carrie Christoffersen, Curator of the Newseum’s “Louder than Words” e...
2017-01-11
48 min
Inside Media
The Photography of Ted Polumbaum
Judy Polumbaum, daughter of photojournalist Ted Polumbaum, talks about her new book, “Juxtapositions: Images From the Newseum Ted Polumbaum Photo Collection,” the first major volume of selections from the 200,000-image Polumbaum collection, the largest individual photo collection held by the Newseum.
2016-09-10
41 min
Inside Media
The Soundtrack of the Vietnam War
Doug Bradley and Craig Werner talk about their new book “We Gotta Get Out of This Place,” which explores how and why U.S. troops turned to music as a way of coping with the complexities of the war. Through personal stories from Vietnam veterans, the book demonstrates how music was important for veterans of all races, gender and military rank.
2016-08-27
1h 03
Inside Media
Election 2016 Update With The Washington Post’s Aaron Blake
On the eve of the Republican national convention in Cleveland, Aaron Blake of The Washington Post provides an insider’s look at the 2016 elections, with previews of both the GOP and Democratic conventions.
2016-07-16
45 min
Inside Media
CNN Contributor S.E. Cupp
On the opening week of the Newseum’s newest exhibit “1776 – Breaking News: Independence,” CNN contributor S.E. Cupp discusses the role of Colonial journalists in spreading the news about the Declaration of Independence.
2016-07-09
35 min
Inside Media
Courage in Photojournalism
Adriane Ohanesian, winner of the 2016 Anja Niedringhaus Courage in Photojournalism Award, and Paula Bronstein, who received honorable mention, discuss their award-winning work in Africa and parts of Asia. Ohanesian and Bronstein are joined by Heidi Levine, who won the award in 2015, and moderator Elisa Lees Muñoz, executive director of the International Women’s Media Foundation.
2016-06-10
1h 01
Inside Media
James Meredith, the Integration of Ole Miss and the March Against Fear
On the 50th anniversary of the “March Against Fear,” Judy Meredith, wife of civil rights leader James Meredith, talks about the attempted assassination of her husband during the march. The panel discussion also features Sidna Brower Mitchell, who was editor-in-chief of the student newspaper The Daily Mississippian in 1962, and Henry Gallagher, the officer in charge of Meredith’s security detail in 1962 and author of “James Meredith and the Ole Miss Riot: A Soldier’s Story.” William Doyle, who co-authored James Meredith’s memoir “A Mission From God,” moderates.
2016-06-04
54 min
Inside Media
“60 Minutes” Correspondent Lesley Stahl
“60 Minutes” correspondent Lesley Stahl talks about her new book, “Becoming Grandma: The Joys and Science of the New Grandparenting,” which explores how becoming a grandmother transforms a woman’s life.
2016-05-14
38 min
Newseum Podcast
Inside Today’s FBI: Centennial Olympic Park Bombing
Host Sonya Gavankar and exhibits writer Ellie Stanton explore the stories and the artifacts in the Newseum’s FBI exhibit. Today’s episode: How, after evading 200 federal agents over a five-year, $24 million manhunt, Eric Robert Rudolph was arrested for setting off a bomb that killed one person and injured 112 at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta.
2016-05-10
00 min
Inside Media
Protecting the President
Former Secret Service agent Clint Hill talks about his new memoir, “Five Presidents: My Extraordinary Journey with Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, and Ford,” which chronicles an eventful career that witnessed history up close.
2016-05-07
57 min
Newseum Podcast
Inside Today’s FBI: Improvised Explosive Devices
Host Sonya Gavankar and exhibits writer Ellie Stanton explorethe stories and the artifacts in the Newseum’s FBI exhibit. Today’sepisode: How FBI investigators at the Terrorist Explosive DeviceAnalytical Center (TEDAC) examine improvised explosive devices(IEDs) — the weapons of choice for terrorists — to identifybomb-makers by the “signatures” they leave behind. TEDAC’s “bomblibrary” holds more than 100,000 IEDs found in war zones and crimescenes and has identified more than 1,000 people with potentialterrorist ties.
2016-05-03
00 min
Inside Media
The Life of Newspaper Giant Roy Howard
Author Patricia Beard talks about her new book “Newsmaker: Roy W. Howard, the Mastermind Behind the Scripps-Howard News Empire From the Gilded Age to the Atomic Age.” Beard is joined by Pamela Howard, Roy’s granddaughter, wrote the prologue to the book. She discusses her grandfather’s legacy.
2016-05-01
40 min
Inside Media
Spotlight on Freedom
Following the unveiling of the Newseum’s updated press freedom map, reflecting changes in the state of world press freedom in 2015, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Dana Priest moderated a program examining press freedom throughout the world. Panelists included ProPublica president Richard Tofel, award-winning independent journalist Anna Therese Day, Freedom House vice president for analysis Vanessa Tucker and International Consortium of Investigative Journalists reporter Will Fitzgibbon.
2016-04-27
56 min
Newseum Podcast
Inside Today’s FBI: Shutting Down Silk Road
Host Sonya Gavankar and exhibits writer Ellie Stanton explore the stories and the artifacts in the Newseum’s FBI exhibit. Today’s episode: How the FBI infiltrated and shut down Ross (“Dread Pirate Roberts”) Ulbricht’s Silk Road website, a $1.2 billion market that sold illegal drugs and guns in the Internet’s hidden “darknet.”
2016-04-26
00 min
Inside Media
Diane Rehm
Diane Rehm, host of the NPR national radio program “The Diane Rehm Show,” talks about her new memoir “On My Own,” which chronicles her life after the death of her husband, John, from the effects of Parkinson’s disease.
2016-04-23
39 min
Inside Media
The History of the Presidential Primary
Author Geoffrey Cowan talks about his new book “Let the People Rule: Theodore Roosevelt and the Birth of the Presidential Primary.” The book chronicles the story of Theodore Roosevelt’s campaign to challenge his handpicked successor, William Howard Taft, for the Republican Party nomination. To overcome the power of the incumbent, Roosevelt seized on the idea of presidential primaries, telling bosses everywhere to “Let the people rule.”
2016-04-21
1h 02
Inside Media
The Social Election
On the opening weekend of the Newseum’s newest exhibit “CNN Politics Campaign 2016:Like, Share, Elect,” CNN’s Brian Stelter moderates a discussionon how digital and social media have transformed politicalcampaigns.
2016-04-16
51 min
Inside Media
NPR’s Kelly McEvers on Covering Global Conflict
Kelly McEvers, co-host of NPR’s “All Things Considered,” talks about hosting the award-winning afternoon newsmagazine and her past work covering hot spots around the globe. She will also talk about her new podcast “Embedded” which takes stories from the news and takes you to where they are happening.
2016-04-02
40 min
Inside Media
Election 2016 Update With Pollsters Margie Omero and Kristen Soltis Anderson
Margie Omero and Kristen Soltis Anderson, co-hosts of “The Pollsters” podcast, discuss campaign 2016 and the rise of political podcasts.
2016-03-19
48 min
Inside Media
Election 2016 Update With Politico’s Anna Palmer and Jake Sherman
Politico correspondents Anna Palmer and Jake Sherman provide an insider’s view of the 2016 election year and the presidential and congressional campaigns.
2016-03-12
48 min
Inside Media
Oscar Preview With Washington Post Film Critic Ann Hornaday
Washington Post film critic Ann Hornaday previews the 88th annual Academy Awards and discusses some of the biggest hits — and misses — of the year.
2016-02-28
57 min
Inside Media
The Capital Weather Gang
Jason Samenow, Angela Fritz and Kevin Ambrose, members of the Washington Post’s popular blog “The Capital Weather Gang,” will talk about the science of forecasting, current climate trends and why so many of us are obsessed with the weather.
2016-02-13
35 min
Inside Media
CBS News’s Nancy Cordes on Campaign 2016
CBS News congressional correspondent Nancy Cordes discusses the presidential campaign and previews the critical Feb. 9 New Hampshire primary. Cordes also talks about the results of the Feb. 1 Iowa caucuses and the major primaries and debates in the coming months.
2016-02-06
49 min
Inside Media
The Story of the Unabomber
David Kaczynski, brother of Ted Kaczynski, whom the FBI branded the “Unabomber,” talks about his new memoir “Every Last Tie: The Story of the Unabomber and His Family.”
2016-01-31
47 min
Inside Media
100 Years of Pulitzer
Roy Harris Jr. and Doug Pardue will talk about the 100th anniversary of the Pulitzer Prize, journalism’s highest honor that each year recognizes the best in reporting, commentary, criticism and photography.
2016-01-30
46 min
Newseum Podcast
Inside Today’s FBI: Boston Marathon Bombing
Host Sonya Gavankar and exhibits writer Ellie Stanton explore the stories and the artifacts in the Newseum’s FBI exhibit. Today’s episode: How Boston Globe reporter Michael Rezendes went from marathon runner to breaking news reporter in the blink of an eye, and how the FBI tracked the perpetrators of the 2013 bombing.
2016-01-19
00 min
Inside Media
Charlie Hebdo: One Year Later
Pulitzer Prizing-winning editorial cartoonists Ann Telnaes of The Washington Post and Signe Wilkinson of the Philadelphia Daily News will talk about the role of political cartoonists and will reflect on the one-year anniversary of the Charlie Hebdo massacre and the terrorist attacks in Paris in November 2015.
2016-01-09
57 min
Newseum Podcast
Inside Today’s FBI: D.C. Snipers
Host Sonya Gavankar and Newseum curator Carrie Christoffersen explore the stories and the artifacts in the Newseum’s FBI exhibit. Today’s episode: the D.C. snipers who terrorized the greater Washington, D.C., area in 2002, the Bushmaster assault rifle they used to carry out their deadly attacks, and the tarot card they left near one of the shootings in an attempt to communicate with authorities.
2015-12-22
00 min
Inside Media
The U.S. Response to the Syrian Refugee Crisis
Caren Bohan, editor in charge of U.S. Politics for Reuters, and Kathleen Newland, senior fellow and co-founder of the Migration Policy Institute, discuss the Syrian refugee crisis and the U.S. response amid national security concerns.
2015-12-19
52 min
Newseum Podcast
Inside Today’s FBI: 9/11
Host Sonya Gavankar and Patty Rhule, director of exhibit development, explore the stories and the artifacts in the Newseum’s FBI exhibit. Today’s episode: how the 9/11 attacks transformed the FBI into a counterterrorism agency and the car that transported the American Airlines Flight 77 hijackers from San Diego to Dulles Airport in Virginia.
2015-12-15
00 min
Newseum Podcast
Inside Today’s FBI: Surveillance Dinosaurs
Host Sonya Gavankar and exhibits writer Ellie Stanton explore the stories and the artifacts in the Newseum’s FBI exhibit. Today’s episode: how toy dinosaurs, rigged with hidden cameras, helped keep watch over a tense six-day long hostage situation in Alabama in 2013.
2015-12-08
00 min
Newseum Podcast
Eyewitness News with Al Primo
This year marks the 50th anniversary of the Eyewitness News format, which was pioneered by Al Primo in Philadelphia, Pa. In this special episode of the Newseum Podcast, Primo talks about the evolution of broadcast journalism with former TV reporter and Newseum producer, Frank Bond.
2015-12-04
00 min
Newseum Podcast
Inside Today’s FBI: Times Square Car Bomb
Host Sonya Gavankar and exhibits writer Ellie Stanton explore the stories and the artifacts in the Newseum’s FBI exhibit. Today’s episode: The Nissan Pathfinder that nearly became a weapon of mass destruction in New York’s Times Square in 2010. The components of the homemade bomb are on display inside the vehicle in the exhibit.
2015-12-01
00 min
Journalism/Works
Reporting at risk of their lives – every day
Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently (RBSS) is a Syrian citizen journalist group, one of the few independent news sources reporting from inside the Islamic State (ISIS). Newseum Institute COO Gene Policinski spoke with Abdalaziz Alhamza, one of 18 co-founders of the group, and with Courtney Radisch and Sherif Mansour of the Committee to Protect Journalists, about the group’s work. CPJ will present RBSS with its International Press Freedom Award Nov. 24 in New York. Alhamza and colleagues live under constant threat of death from ISIS. This interview was conducted Nov. 20 in the Newseum’s Knight Studio, just days afte...
2015-11-24
36 min
Newseum Podcast
Inside Today’s FBI: Whitey Bulger
Host Sonya Gavankar and exhibits writer Ellie Stanton explore the stories and the artifacts in the Newseum’s FBI exhibit. Today’s episode: The hat that “Most Wanted” crime boss Whitey Bulger was wearing when the FBI arrested him after a 16-year manhunt, and how new media helped the bureau track him down.
2015-11-24
00 min
Inside Media
The Press and Vietnam
Author Theasa Tuohy talks about her new book, “The Five O’Clock Follies,” a fact-based novel about a female journalist covering the Vietnam War. The book is the story of a feisty, pioneering correspondent who dares to invade the male enclave of front-line journalism. Tuohy describes pivotal moments of the war, including the Tet Offensive, the siege of Khe Sanh, soldiers on the line and the injuries they sustained.
2015-11-21
34 min
Newseum Podcast
Inside Today’s FBI: Ghost Stories
Host Sonya Gavankar and exhibits writer Ellie Stanton explore the stories and the artifacts in the Newseum’s FBI exhibit. Today’s episode: The “Ghost Stories” spies who inspired the TV series “The Americans” and the spy camera and shortwave radio they used to collect information and send it to Russia.
2015-11-17
00 min
Inside Media
Today’s FBI
On the opening weekend of the Newseum’s newly updated exhibit, “Inside Today’s FBI: Fighting Crime in the Age of Terror,” former FBI deputy director Timothy P. Murphy and journalist Garrett Graff talk about how the agency is taking on a new generation of international terrorists.
2015-11-14
59 min
Inside Media
Terror in Little Saigon
ProPublica reporter A.C. Thompson and “Frontline” contributing producer Tony Nguyen talk about their new report investigating the reign of terror that led to the assassination of five Vietnamese American journalists during the 1980s.
2015-11-07
35 min
Inside Media
Baseball in D.C.
Sports communications strategist Frederic Frommer and former Washington Senators public address announcer Phil Hochberg talk about the history of baseball in Washington, D.C.
2015-10-17
53 min
Inside Media
The Life of Thurgood Marshall
Best-selling author Wil Haygood talks about his new book, “Showdown: Thurgood Marshall and the Supreme Court Nomination That Changed America.” The book profiles the first African American Supreme Court justice using the contentious five-day Senate hearing to confirm Marshall in 1967 as a framing device for his life story.
2015-10-10
50 min
Inside Media
G-Men and Gangsters
Joe Urschel, executive director of the National Law Enforcement Museum, talks about his new book “The Year of Fear: Machine Gun Kelly and the Manhunt That Changed the Nation.” The book tells the thrilling story of the hunt for notorious gangster George “Machine Gun” Kelly and how it launched the FBI and an obscure federal bureaucrat named J. Edgar Hoover.
2015-09-27
43 min
Journalism/Works
Targeting Corruption in Angola
The Newseum Institute’s Gene Policinski talks with Angolan investigative journalist and human rights activist Rafael Marques, recognized with several international awards for his courageous reporting on conflict diamonds and government corruption. He currently heads the anti-corruption watchdog website Maka Angola. This program was recorded before a live studio audience in the Newseum’s Knight TV Studio.
2015-09-26
54 min
Newseum Podcast
Pulitzer Prize Photography: Homeless in Philadelphia
Tom Gralish won the Pulitzer Prize in 1986 at age 29 for his gritty and honest photo series of homeless people on the streets of Philadelphia. In an interview with the Newseum, he talks about getting to know the subjects of his photos as he recorded their lives on film.
2015-09-22
00 min
Inside Media
Photojournalists on Covering Global Crisis
On the opening weekend of the Newseum’s newest exhibit “40 Chances: Finding Hope in a Hungry World – The Photography of Howard G. Buffett,” Emmy award-winning journalist Ann Curry moderates a panel of photo and video journalists who discuss how their work brings a sharpened focus on critical development issues.
2015-09-19
1h 23
Inside Media
Songs From the Vietnam War Era
Music historian Hugo Keesing talks about and samples songs inspired by the Vietnam War that covered a wide spectrum of viewpoints, from the war’s strongest advocates to its most passionate dissenters. In 2010 Keesing released “Next Stop Is Vietnam: The War on Record, 1961–2008,” a 13-CD box set featuring over 300 songs inspired by the Vietnam War.
2015-09-12
49 min
Newseum Podcast
Pulitzer Prize Photography: Tragedy by the Sea
In the spring of 1954, Los Angeles Times photographer John Gaunt captured a moment of grief on the beach between young parents whose 19-month-old child had just been swept out to sea. In an interview with the Newseum, Gaunt discusses that fateful day and how he captured the poignant and profoundly moving photo, which was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1955.
2015-08-25
00 min
Newseum Podcast
Pulitzer Prize Photography: Texas Cowboys
Erwin Hagler won the Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography in 1980 for his compelling photo series documenting the lifestyle of a cowboy. In an interview with the Newseum, he talks about the unsung heroes of the American West and why he wanted to capture their story at a time when no other newspaper had done so.
2015-08-11
00 min
Inside Media
Covering the Nationals With The Washington Post’s James Wagner
Washington Post sports reporter James Wagner helped kick off the Newseum’s latest exhibit, “Nationals at 10: Baseball Makes News.” The Chips Quinn alumnus talked about his beat covering Washington’s major league baseball team, as well as the impact the Newseum Institute’s Chips Quinn Scholars program had on his career in journalism.
2015-08-01
52 min
Inside Media
Pop Culture Journalist Jen Chaney on the Enduring Legacy of “Clueless”
Pop culture journalist Jen Chaney talks about her new book, “As If! The Oral History of Clueless as told by Amy Heckerling and the Cast and Crew.” The book is an oral history of the making of the iconic film using recollections and insights collected from key cast and crew members.
2015-07-25
32 min
Inside Media
Washington Post Sports Writer Barry Svrluga On Baseball’s ‘Endless Season’
Barry Svrluga, a sports writer for The Washington Post, talks about his new book, “The Grind: Inside Baseball’s Endless Season.” The book captures the frustration, impermanence and glory felt by the players, the staff and their families from the start of spring training to the final game of the year.
2015-07-18
37 min
Inside Media
Cokie Roberts
Cokie Roberts talks about her new book “Capital Dames: The Civil War and the Women of Washington, 1848-1868.” The book profiles the wives, sisters and female friends of the men leading America into, and through, this unprecedented conflict.
2015-07-11
44 min
Inside Media
In Search of Shakespeare’s Greatest Works
Author Andrea Mays talks about her new book, “The Millionaire and the Bard,” which tells the story of the making of William Shakespeare’s First Folio and the obsessive hunt three centuries later by American industrialist Henry Folger to track it down.
2015-06-21
37 min
Inside Media
Radio Talk Show Host Hugh Hewitt
Radio talk show host Hugh Hewitt talks about his new book, “The Queen: The Epic Ambition of Hillary and the Coming of a Second ‘Clinton’ Era.” Chris Cillizza, who writes the politics blog “The Fix” and covers the White House for The Washington Post, moderates the program.
2015-06-20
58 min
Inside Media
“Reporting Vietnam” Opening Weekend
On the opening weekend of the Newseum’s new exhibit, “Reporting Vietnam,” Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund founder and president Jan Scruggs and former UPI photographer Steve Northup share their memories of the Vietnam War.
2015-05-23
38 min
Journalism/Works
Reporting from Southeast Asia – Haney Howell, for CBS News
As the Newseum opens “Reporting Vietnam,” a new exhibit marking the 50th anniversary of the Vietnam War, veteran broadcaster Haney Howell – the last CBS News bureau chief in Saigon before the city fell in 1975 – speaks with the Newseum Institute’s Gene Policinski about what it was like to report in Vietnam and in neighboring Cambodia. Howell, now journalism professor emeritus at Winthrop University, also discusses the differences, both good and bad, in reporting from today’s global conflict zones.
2015-05-21
42 min
Newseum Podcast
Pulitzer Prize Photography: The Oklahoma City Bombing
The latest episode of the Newseum Podcast features an interview with Charles Porter IV, an aspiring journalist who won the Pulitzer Prize for his coverage of the 1995 bombing of a federal building.
2015-03-31
00 min
Inside Media
Newseum Q&A: Charlie Hebdo
Dr. John Watson, director of the journalism division of American University School of Communication, and Corey Saylor, national legislative director of the Council on American Islamic Relations, join the Newseum Institute’s Gene Policinski for a “town hall” discussion about free speech and religious liberty in the wake of the Charlie Hebdo tragedy.
2015-01-18
54 min
Inside Media
1965: Civil Rights at 50
On the opening weekend of the Newseum exhibit, “1965: Civil Rights at 50,” Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton and CBS News White House correspondent Bill Plante talk about their memories of the civil rights movement.
2015-01-17
49 min
Inside Media
Journalists Under Attack
In the wake of the attack on the satirical French newspaper Charlie Hebdo, U.S. director of Reporters Without Borders, Delphine Halgand, joins the Newseum and Nikahang Kowsar, a member of the board of directors of Cartoonists Rights Network International, for a timely discussion about free expression and the dangers journalists face worldwide.
2015-01-11
42 min
Journalism/Works
Women in Sports Media
The Newseum Institute, the Shirley Povich Center for Sports Journalism and the Philip Merrill College of Journalism at the University of Maryland presented an all-star panel of top female sports reporters discussing the evolution of their role in journalism Dec. 6 at the Newseum.
2014-12-06
1h 33
Newseum Podcast
’Yes, Virginia’ Family Day
During the Newseum’s 16th annual “Yes, Virginia” celebration, 8-year-old Mehren O’Hanlon read her great-great grandmother, Virginia O’Hanlon’s, famous 1897 letter to the New York Sun that inspired history’s most reprinted newspaper editorial. Afterward, in a special guest appearance, Macy’s One-and-Only Santa Claus read “’Twas the Night Before Christmas.”
2014-11-29
00 min
Inside Media
Remembering Ben Bradlee
The Newseum looks back at the career and impact on American journalism of legendary Washington Post executive editor Ben Bradlee.
2014-10-26
58 min
Newseum Podcast
Executive Chef Tom Blundell
Frank and Sonya explore a day in the life of Executive Chef Tom Blundell, who oversees Wolfgang Puck Catering and the Food Section at the Newseum.
2014-09-30
00 min
Inside Media
“The Boomer List” Opening Weekend
To mark the opening of the Newseum’s new exhibit “The Boomer List,” photographer Timothy Greenfield-Sanders discussed his large-format portraits of the 19 influential baby boomers who make up the exhibit.
2014-09-27
30 min
Newseum Podcast
The Boomer List
Frank and Sonya explore the newest Newseum exhibit, which opens Friday, Sept. 26, 2014.
2014-09-22
00 min
Inside Media
Witness to History: Investigating the Unabomber
Jim Freeman, Terry Turchie and Donald Max Noel, who were part of the FBI team that captured the Unabomber, talk about their new book “Unabomber: How the FBI Broke Its Own Rules to Capture the Terrorist Ted Kaczynski.” This panel discussion was a co-production of the Newseum and the National Law Enforcement Museum.
2014-09-20
1h 00
Newseum Podcast
Newseum Institute
Frank and Sonya chat with Newseum Institute Chief Operating Officer Gene Policinski about the Institute’s initiatives that educate and engage the public on a variety of First Amendment issues.
2014-09-08
00 min
Newseum Podcast
Wolfgang Puck at the Newseum
Frank and Sonya go behind the scenes with Wolfgang Puck Catering to talk crab cakes, “party-vators,” and memorable special events at the Newseum.
2014-07-25
00 min
Newseum Podcast
Today's Front Pages
Frank and Sonya talk with Online Managing Editor Sharon Shahid about the Newseum’s Front Pages exhibit and the daily Top Ten web feature.
2014-07-18
00 min
Newseum Podcast
Summer Learning at the Newseum
Senior Education Manager Maggie Crawford talks about kid-favorite experiences in the Newseum, resources for teachers, and the Newseum's Kids Free Summer Fun Deal.
2014-07-03
00 min
Newseum Podcast
Freedom Summer
Frank and Sonya chat with Newseum exhibits staffer Patty Rhule about "Civil Rights at 50" and the Newseum's collection of Ted Polumbaum's photos from Freedom Summer in 1964.
2014-06-20
00 min
Newseum Podcast
'1995: The Year the Future Began'
Frank and Sonya welcome author W. Joseph Campbell to the Newseum Podcast to talk about the major stories and decisive moments that made 1995 a big year for news.
2014-06-13
00 min
Newseum Podcast
Tiananmen Square 25th Anniversary
Frank Bond and Sonya Gavankar talk with Newseum exhibit writer John Powell about the events that took place in China's Tiananmen Square 25 years ago and the new section of the Time Warner World News Gallery that examines the protests and response through historic artifacts and powerful images.
2014-06-06
00 min
Newseum Podcast
Covering Tiananmen Square
Frank Bond talks with former journalist and Newseum trustee Bette Bao Lord, who was born in Shanghai and was in China to cover the Tiananmen Square protests.
2014-05-30
00 min
Newseum Podcast
'Inside Tim Russert's Office' Moving to Buffalo
Frank Bond and Sonya Gavankar talk with the Newseum's curator of collections, Carrie Christofferson, about "Inside Tim Russert's Office." The popular Newseum exhibit is closing June 15, and will reopen this fall in its new, permanent home at The Buffalo History Museum in Buffalo, N.Y.
2014-05-23
00 min
Newseum Podcast
'One Nation With News for All'
Frank Bond and Sonya Gavankar discuss the new exhibit "One Nation With News for All," a collaboration between the Newseum and Smithsonian, that tells the dramatic story of how immigrants and minorities used the power of the press.
2014-05-16
00 min
Inside Media
A Life in Architecture
Newseum architect James Stewart Polshek, and journalist and architect Roger Lewis, discuss Polshek's new book, "Build, Memory."
2014-05-10
57 min
Newseum Podcast
"Pictures of the Year"
Frank Bond and Sonya Gavankar explore the Newseum's new photography exhibit and talk about what it's like to interview the winning photographers featured in the exhibit.
2014-05-09
00 min
Newseum Podcast
O.J. Simpson's Suit
Frank Bond and Sonya Gavankar talk with Newseum curator Carrie Christoffersen about a unique item on display at the Newseum and the significance of O.J. Simpson's murder trial in the course of news history.
2014-05-01
00 min
Newseum Podcast
Happy Birthday, Newseum!
In celebration of the Newseum's sixth birthday, Frank and Sonya take a look back and share a few insider stories of what went into opening the museum on Pennsylvania Avenue in 2008.
2014-04-11
00 min
Newseum Podcast
Newseum on Pinterest
Frank Bond and Sonya Gavankar discuss the unique ways the Newseum collects comments in the galleries and how they are shared: http://bit.ly/PNZ6VS
2013-10-18
00 min
Newseum Podcast
A National Archives and Newseum Partnership
Frank Bond and Sonya Gavankar talk about NARA's role in the success of the "JFK" exhibit.
2013-09-27
00 min
Newseum Podcast
The Game Zone
Frank Bond and Sonya Gavankar discuss the Newseum's unique, interactive games with senior vice president Paul Sparrow.
2013-09-05
00 min
Newseum Podcast
The New York Herald
Frank Bond and Sonya Gavankar talk to the Newseum's Kat Wilmot about the museum's complete collection of New York Herald newspapers and the coverage of President Abraham Lincoln's assassination.
2013-07-12
00 min
Newseum Podcast
Creating the FBI exhibit
Frank Bond and Sonya Gavankar discuss how the FBI exhibit went from idea to reality with the Newseum's Cathy Trost.
2013-06-28
00 min
Newseum Podcast
Exhibit Acquisitions
Frank Bond and Sonya Gavankar discuss the process of finding exhibit pieces with the Newseum's Maeve Scott.
2013-06-21
00 min
Newseum Podcast
Behind the FBI artifact vaults
Frank Bond and Sonya Gavankar talk to FBI historian John Fox on the FBI's partnership on one of the Newseum's most popular exhibits.
2013-06-14
00 min
Newseum Podcast
"March to Justice"
Frank Bond and Sonya Gavankar discuss the Newseum's recent "Members Only" program on the film "March To Justice."
2013-06-07
00 min
Inside Media
Whitey Bulger: America’s Most Wanted Gangster
Boston Globe reporters Kevin Cullen and Shelley Murphy talk about their book “Whitey Bulger: America’s Most Wanted Gangster and the Manhunt That Brought Him to Justice.” Cullen and Murphy appeared at the Newseum nine days before Bulger’s federal trial began in Boston. He was apprehended in 2011 after a 16-year manhunt.
2013-06-01
49 min
Newseum Podcast
The Don Bolles Car
Frank Bond and Sonya Gavankar talk with the Newseum's curator of collections, Carrie Christofferson, about the moving exhibit on late Arizona Republic reporter Don Bolles.
2013-05-31
00 min
Newseum Podcast
Newseum's #1 Fan
Frank and Sonya get a tour of the Pulitzer Prize Photograph's Gallery by the Newseum's #1 fan, Mark Pierzchala, on his 101st visit.
2013-04-26
00 min
Newseum Podcast
Creating Camelot: The Photography of Jacques Lowe
Frank Bond and Sonya Gavankar talk about the Newseum's Visual Resources Department's delicate restoration of the only remaining images of the Kennedy family taken by photography Jacques Lowe.
2013-04-12
00 min
Newseum Podcast
The Berlin Wall
Frank Bond and Sonya Gavankar take listeners behind the scenes of one of the Newseum's largest and most popular artifacts — the Berlin Wall. The Newseum's Chris Wells tells Frank and Sonya how the Newseum acquired the eight pieces of the Berlin Wall that are on display, as well as the guard tower that stood near Checkpoint Charlie. They also share their favorite stories of the wall. Here's a hint — one involves actor David Hasselhoff.
2013-04-05
00 min