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  • A Year Inside the Nation's Most Exclusive Police Unit

    We’ve all seen them on the news – Kevlar-clad members of the bomb squad, investigating and exploding suspicious packages. But what is it like to serve on the squad and how do its members deal with the extraordinary pressures they face? Journalist Richard Esposito will take us behind the scenes of the 33-member New York […]

  • Texas Cheese Plate

    Do you take your cheese for granted? You shouldn’t. Cheese is an ancient food, with origins that actually pre-date recorded history. We’ll talk about the more recent history of cheese this hour with three successful local cheese makers. Tonia Ashworth of Chateau de Fromage, Deborah Rogers of Deborah’s Farmstead Goat Cheese, and Paula Lambert of […]

  • The Newspaper Today

    How does a newspaper editor manage and meet the challenges of today’s ever-changing media environment? We’ll find out tonight with Bob Mong, Editor of The Dallas Morning News.Michael Cain, CEO and Artistic Director of the AFI DALLAS International Film Festival, joins us in the Scene segment to preview the festival.

  • The Future of Cars and The Dallas Auto Show

    Considering a new car? The Dallas Auto Show runs this week at the Dallas Convention Center. The 550,000 square feet of new cars, trucks and SUVs will be on display until Sunday, March, 18th. We’ll get a round-up of what’s new, what’s hot and what’s not this hour with David Boldt freelance automotive writer, and […]

  • All the Presidents' Pastries

    Everyone likes good desserts. But when you’re the President of the United States you get really, really good desserts. We’ll spend this hour with Chef Roland Mesnier, who served for 25 years as the White House Pastry Chef. His new memoir is “All the Presidents’ Pastries: Twenty-Five Years in the White House” (Flammarion, 2007).

  • The Middle East and other Global Hotspots

    How do others view the international issues of our time? From Iraq and Afghanistan to Global Warming and humanitarian outreach, it pays to remember that the individual American’s view is not the only view. We’ll get a couple of different perspectives this hour with Bruce Feiler, author of “Where God Was Born” in the first […]

  • MORTIFIED

    Have you been mortified lately? David Nadelberg stumbled upon the sweet angst of public humiliation when he read an old love letter aloud to friends in his mid-twenties. He then made the (not quite so) obvious conclusion that others might be interested in doing the same sort of thing. In 2002, Nadelberg launched “Mortified,” the […]

  • International Philanthropy and The American Red Cross

    What is the status of international philanthropy today? How does a world-wide operation like the American Red Cross get the job done? We’ll spend this hour with Ambassador Bonnie McElveen-Hunter, Chairman of the American Red Cross, who’ll visit North Texas to speak to the DFW World Affairs Council on Wednesday, March 14th and Thursday March […]

  • Women in Prehistory

    What was the role of women in the prehistoric past? Our view of prehistoric society is usually dominated by museum dioramas and movie images of male-focused hunter groups. But according to Dr. J.M. Adovasio and Professor Olga Soffer, this image has very little to do with reality. We’ll examine what can be deduced about the […]

  • A Story of War and Family

    Walter Reed Army Medical Center and the treatment of veterans has been one of the biggest news stories of the past few weeks. Chief White House Correspondent for ABC News, Martha Raddatz, knows about the challenges that American war-fighting families face and their lasting effects. Raddatz will join us to discuss her new book “The […]