The Buzz On Bees
July 9, 2015We’ll talk about the important role that bees play in our ecosystem – and how you can raise your own hive at home – with a panel of North Texas bee experts.
We’ll talk about the important role that bees play in our ecosystem – and how you can raise your own hive at home – with a panel of North Texas bee experts.
We’ll talk about the lasting legacy of Dadaism with Jed Rasula, author of Destruction Was My Beatrice: Dada and the Unmaking of the Twentieth Century.
This hour, we’ll talk about the tricky job of predicting the weather in North Texas with WFAA chief meteorologist Pete Delkus.
Twenty five years ago, Jeanne Bishop’s pregnant sister and brother-in-law were brutally murdered by a teenage assailant. This hour, as part of the Best of Think, we’ll listen back to our April conversation with her, when we talked about how the tragedy spurred her to become a public defender and an outspoken opponent of the […]
This hour we’ll revisit our May talk with Mary Norris, who spent over three decades in The New Yorker’s copy department.
Are Scandinavians really as content as we’re lead to believe? Michael Booth, author of ‘The Almost Nearly Perfect People: Behind the Myth of the Scandinavian Utopia,’ dissects the illusion.
The exhibition “Indigenous Beauty: Masterworks of American Indian Art from the Diker Collection” brings 120 artworks from tribes across North America to the Amon Carter in Fort Worth.
We’ll talk with ‘This American Life’ host Ira Glass and dancer Monica Bill Barnes about their hybrid performance project.
We’ll talk about the line between news and entertainment – and if the nightly news is still relevant – with Charles Ponce de Leon, author of That’s the Way It Is: A History of Television News in America.
We’ll talk to for U.S. Ambassador Robert Jordan about the role he played in building relationships in the Middle East, which he writes about in Desert Diplomat: Inside Saudi Arabia Following 9/11.