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EIGHT FORTY-EIGHT

Audio Library


Audio is generally posted the same day a program airs.

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January 2007

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Eight Forty-Eight—January 31, 2007

 
   
Audio for the Entire Episode
Individual segments are available below.

 
The Betamax of the Future?

MidwestBusiness.com editor in chief Adam Fendelman has been investigating Sprint's plans for WiMAX in Chicago. He helps us sort out the differences and implications.
 
 
Update on Chicago-Area Food Companies

Business contributor David Greising analyzes the ups and downs for Chicago-area food companies.

Music Button: Andy Caldwell, “Warrior,” from the CD Electrolush (Om Records)
 
 
One-on-One with a Couple of Bears

Sports contributor Cheryl Raye-Stout gets up close and personal with Bears special teams man Brendon Ayanbadejo and wide receiver Rashied Davis.

Music Button: Latin Street Dancing, “Chicago Bears Cha Cha”
 
 
Weekend Dance, Dance, Dance

Dance contributor Lucia Mauro highlights two dance companies that have performances this weekend.

The House of Bernarda Alba runs through February 3 at The Ruth Page Center for the Arts. Three Shades of Dark is on stage February 16-17 at the Athenaeum Theatre.
 
 
The Mural Maker



Chicago Public Radio contributor Peter Handler visits Pilsen artist Juan Angel Chavez in his studios.






Music Button: Rodrigo Y Gabriela, “Diablo Rojo,” from the CD Advance Music (Rubyworks Records)
 
 
Rule of Benedict

Chicago Public Radio's Jason DeRose speaks with David Gibson, author of the book The Rule of Benedict: Pope Benedict XVI and His Battle with the Modern World (HarperSanFrancisco, 2006).
 
 
Opera Day

We hear an excerpt from Handel's contata “Armida abbandonnatta,” sung by Mezzo Soprano Nathalie Colas. She was a featured performer at the Chicago Cultural Center's free “Day of Opera.”
 
 
Soupin' It Up

“Eight Forty-Eight's” Jason Marck reflects on the end of National Soup Month.
 
 

Eight Forty-Eight—January 30, 2007

 
   
Audio for the Entire Episode
Individual segments are available below.

 
An Earlier Primary for Illinois?

We talk with Loyola University, Chicago, political science professor Alan Gitelson about the potential for an earlier 2008 presidential primary date for Illinois.

Music Button:
Vert, “Original Oddstep,” from the CD Saint-Germain des Pres Café (Wagram Records)
 
 
Aldermanic Report

We talk with the executive director of The Pilsen Alliance, Alejandra Ibanez, about her research for a report that shows how Chicago aldermen voted on some big issues—and where they got their money.

Music Button: BMR4, “Turning Point,” from the CD Turning Point (Hallway Records)
 
 
Chicago's Celebrity Cuts

Chicago Public Radio's Richard Steele visits the Hyde Park Hair Salon, a barbershop made famous by its clientele, including Barack Obama and Muhammad Ali.

Music Button: BMR4, “Turning Point,” from the CD Turning Point (Hallway Records)
 
 
Alternadad

Author and former Chicagoan Neal Pollack discusses fatherhood and his foray into memoir with his latest book, Alternadad (Knopf, 2007).

Music Button: Red Sparowes, “untitled,” from the CD Every Red Heart Shines Toward the Red Sun (Neurot)
 
 
Mark Twain, Fredrick Galton, Fingerprinting and Genetics

Northwestern University English Professor Bill Savage helps us make the leap from the first fingerprints to modern genetic markers.

Music Button: Tipsy, “Zenith,” from the CD Trip Tease (Asphodel Records)
 
 
A Conversation with David Lynch

Jonathan Miller talks with famed filmmaker David Lynch about his latest film, Inland Empire.
 
 

Eight Forty-Eight—January 29, 2007
Live, Remote Broadcast from the National Museum of Mexican Art

 
Watch Steve Edwards' tour of Pilsen, including interviews with residents concerning the upcoming municipal elections.
 
 
   
Audio for the Entire Episode
Individual segments are available below.



 
Tour of Pilsen


Steve Edwards tours the streets of Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood, and talks with the locals and small business owners.
 
 
25th Ward Candidate Forum


Steve Edwards talks with five of the seven candidates running for the 25th Ward's aldermanic seat. The candidate forum includes Danny Solis, Martha Padilla, Ambrosio Medrano, Juan Soliz and Cuauhtemoc Morfin.
 
 
Latino Politics

The Hispanic Democratic Organization has been front-and-center in the federal investigation of corruption at city hall, and in recent convictions. Chicago Public Radio's Chip Mitchell looks at how the group's decline has contributed to a new energy in Latino politics.
 
 
Ideas for Chicago

The Chicago Reporter’s editor and publisher Alysia Tate shares her thoughts on the city’s tendency to lure its citizens into the campaign office and the voting booth.
 
 
An Ode to Chicago

Local activist, educator and poet Kevin Coval reads an ode to Chicago entitled, “Nelson Algren.”

Kevin Coval is the author of the book, Slingshots: A Hip-Hop Poetica (EM Press, 2005).
 
 

Eight Forty-Eight—January 26, 2007

 
   
Audio for the Entire Episode
Individual segments are available below.

 
Month in Review
Eric Zorn—Columnist, Chicago Tribune
Lester Munson—Associate Editor, Sports Illustrated
Kari Lydersen—Chicago Bureau Reporter, The Washington Post

Our panel of journalists go over the biggest news of the month.

Music Button: Dharma, “Dance to the Drummer’s Beat,” from the CD Dope On Plastic! 8 (React Music)
 
 
Celebrating August Wilson
Chuck Smith—Resident Director, Goodman Theater

Richard Steele talks to Chuck Smith, curator of the  August Wilson Celebration, about the playwright's life and impact on the Chicago theater scene.
 
 
Dueling Critics: Radio Golf

Our dueling critics play a little Radio Golf, onstage now at the Goodman Theater.

Music Button:Mark Colby, “Out of Focus,” from the CD Speaking of Stan (Hallway Records)
 
 
Rethinking Smoking Bans

Palatine's smoking ban took effect just three weeks ago; now some businesses are organizing to overturn the prohibition. Chicago Public Radio's Lynette Kalsnes reports.

Music Button: Link Wray, “Ramble,” from the CD Rumble! The Best of Link Wray (Rhino)
 
 
Dan Whiteis' Chicago Blues

Chicago Public Radio's Dan Bindert talks with author David Whiteis about his new book Chicago Blues: Portraits and Stories (University of Illinois Press, 2006).
 
 

Eight Forty-Eight—January 25, 2007

 
   
Audio for the Entire Episode
Individual segments are available below.

 
Parental Notification Deemed Constitutional

We talk with Lisa Madigan’s Chief of Staff Anne Spillane about the Illinois Attorney General’s decision that a 1995 parental notification law is constitutional and should be upheld.
 
 
Parental Notification and Illinois Minors

Guttmacher Institute senior research assistant Rachel Jones tells us how the new parental notification law might affect young women in Illinois.
 
 
Filmspotting on Sundance

Filmspotting.net's Sam Van Hallgren and Adam Kempenaar are out at Sundance Film Festival, and join us to talk about the event.
 
 
Three to See

Arts editor Edward Lifson shares his top picks for upcoming cultural events.

Nordine—Mother and Son: Sculptures and Paintings
Through March 18
Swedish American Museum Center

Robert Heinecken 1932-2006: Sex and Food, a Memorial Exhibition
Through March 24
Museum of Contemporary Photography

Hope and Renewal—A Photography Exhibit of the Killing Field Survivors
Opens January 28
Cambodian American Heritage Museum
 
 
Studio 312—Paula Poundstone

Drug tests, Abe Lincoln and Paula Poundstone. Jimmy Carrane takes on them all in Studio 312. Poundstone is the author of a new book, There Is Nothing In This Book That I Meant to Say (Harmony, 2006).
 
 
UnderCover: Don Stiernberg takes on James Taylor

In the second installment of our UnderCover Music Series, we're joined by acclaimed mandolin player, Don Stiernberg. He strokes his strings to the sounds of James Taylor's “Something in the Way She Moves.”
 
 
 

Eight Forty-Eight—January 24, 2007

 
   
Audio for the Entire Episode
Individual segments are available below.

 
State of the Union Reaction: Rahm

U.S. Congressman (IL 5-Dist) Rahm Emmanuel reacts to President Bush's State of the Union address.
 
 
State of the Union Reaction: LaHood

U.S. Congressman (IL 18-Dist) Ray LaHood reacts to President Bush's State of the Union address.

Music Button: Tortoise, “Cornpone Brunch Watt Remix,” from the CD A Lazerus Taxon, Thrill Jockey
 
 
Kids in the City

We talk with Chapin Hall Research Fellow Robert Goerge about a new study that shows where Chicago’s children are living.
 
 
Teachers Court

Chicago School District officials are pitching teachers on controversial incentive pay program. Chicago Public Radio’s Jay Field reports.
 
 
Here Comes the Sun

We hear a track from the new CD All Together Now: Beatles Stuff for Kids of All Ages (Little Monster, 2006) featuring Chicago’s own Rachael Yamagata.
 
 
 
Word Loss

We talk with Northwestern University's Dr. Marcel Mesulam about his discovery of a gene implicated in Primary Progressive Aphasia, a disease that affects the ability to remember and understand words.

Music Button: Ohn, “While You Were Sleeping,” from the CD In The End All Things Begin (ill Dough Records)
 
 
Spiral Towers and Olympic Showers for Chicago?

Arts editor Edward Lifson and Architecture Critic Ed Keegan join us for a discussion on the new Calatrava residential tower plans and the proposal for the Olympic stadium.


Music Button: The Shanghai Quartet, “Brahms Quartet in E Flat Major Op. 67,” (Delos Records)
 
 
Danny Newman Takes A Bow
Danny Newman—Publicity Agent, Consultant, and Founding Public Relations Counsel, Lyric Opera of Chicago

The subscription series is a staple of virtually every successful performing arts organization in the world. But it wasn't always that way. We talk with the man who invented the idea, longtime Lyric Opera publicist Danny Newman.

 
 

Eight Forty-Eight—January 23, 2007

 
   
Audio for the Entire Episode
Individual segments are available below.

 
Chicago's Greatest Sports Arguments Put to Rest

Author and Chicago Tribune sports writer John “Moon” Mullin discusses the best arguments in Chicago sports.

Mullin's is the author of The Best Chicago Sports Arguments: The 100 Most Controversial, Debatable Questions for Die-Hard Chicago Fans (Sourcebooks, 2006).

Music Button: Donald Byrd, “Change,” from the CD Mizell: The Mizell Brothers at Blue Note (Blue Note)
 
 
Marathon Man: Lee Flaherty
Lee Flaherty—Founder, Flair Communications and the Chicago Marathon

Thirty years ago, Chicago marketing executive Lee Flaherty came up with the idea to host the first ever Chicago marathon. We talk with him about his own marathon journey from poor Midwesterner to marketing giant.

Music Button: Thievery Corporation, “Lazy Boy,” from the CD DJ Kicks (K7 Records)
 
 
Winning Sounds

We hear an excerpt of “The Mestizo Waltz” By Joyce-Award-winning composer Gabriela Lena Frank.
 
 
Arriving at Abakanowicz

Writer Cherie Caswell Dost contemplates the first time she saw the work of Polish sculptor, Magadalena Abakanowicz.

Music Button: Red Sparowes, “Track 4,” from the CD Every Red Heart Shines Toward The Red Sun (Neurot Records)
 
 
Issues in Faith-Based Health Care

Chicago Public Radio’s Jason DeRose reports on why Advocate Health Care is facing a moral dilemma.
 
 
The Sound of the Silents

We talk with playwright Paul Peditto about his new production of Sounds of Silents, a full-length play about Chicago’s Essanay Studios.

Sounds of Silents is on stage at PROP THTR until February 25.

Related Audio
 

 

1001 Afternoons
Steve Edwards talks with writer Paul Peditto, about the PROP THTR's production based on the life and columns of Chicago writer Ben Hecht.

 
     
 
 

Eight Forty-Eight—January 22, 2007
Richard Steele Guest Hosts

 
   
Audio for the Entire Episode
Individual segments are available below.

 
Chicago Bears Win Ticket to the Big One

Sports contributor Cheryl Raye-Stout brings the best analysis and inside stories from the Bears' big NFC Championship win.

Music Button: Eddie Blazonczyk’s Versatones, “Bear Down Chicago Bears” (Bel-Aire Recordings)
 
 
Planning an Olympic Legacy
Jamil Satchu—Partner and Vice President, A.T. Kearney; a Global Management Consulting Firm

Can a Chicago Olympics revitalize depressed parts of the city? We talk with Jamil Satcho about the importance of planning a social legacy for mega-events.

Music Button: Shark Quest, “Shivers,” from the CD Gods & Devils (Merge Records)
 
 
Continued CTA Woes
Greg Hinz—Columnist, Crain's Chicago Business

Greg Hinz brings us the details of his report into the mounting troubles at the CTA.

Music Button: Cheebacabra, “The Annunciation,” from the CD Exile in the Woods, (Mackrosoft Records)
 
 
Monday Morning Business Update

Business Contributor David Greising discusses the large acquisition deal by north Chicago-based Abbott Laboratories.

Music Button: DJ Mark Farina, “Afro’s Inya,” from the CD Mushroom Jazz 5 (Om Records)
 
 
Going to the Dogs

Chicago Public Radio's Shawn Allee discusses the role of gentrification in his Rogers Park neighborhood.

Music Button:
Retina.It, “anticamera Dei Dubbi,” from the CD History Is Bunk Pt. 2 (Hefty Records)
 
 
Body Worlds 2

Photo by Laura Kwerel 
We hear from visitors to the Body Worlds 2:The Anatomical Exhibition of Real Human Bodies exhibit at the Museum of Science and Industry.
 
 
Deiners—The Real World of Body Dissection

“Eight Forty-Eight's” Gianofer Fields talks with professor Dr. Bruce Manion and lab deiner, Adam Jensen from the Anatomy Lab at Rosalind Franklin University.

Music Button: Six Parts Seven, “Confusing Possibilities,” from the CD Casually Smashed to Pieces (Suicide Squeeze Records)
 
 
David Lynch's Inland Empire

Film contributor Jonathon Miller reviews David Lynch's new film, Inland Empire, opening next Friday at the Music Box Theatre.
 
 

Eight Forty-Eight—January 19, 2007

 
   
Audio for the Entire Episode
Individual segments are available below.

 
Bear Facts About the Team's Super Bowl Chances

Sports contributor Cheryl Raye-Stout previews this Sunday's match-up between the Bears and the New Orleans Saints.

Music Button: Eddie Blazonczyk’s Versatones, “Chicago Cares About the Bears,” (Bel-Aire Recordings)
 
 
Measuring the Line Between the Colts and the Bears

Chicago Public Radio’s Michael Puente investigates the dividing line in Indiana between Bears fans and Colts fans.
 
 
Saints Marching into Soldier Field

New Orleans transplant Michael Tisserand reflects on cheering for his home team in his adopted city.
 
 
Teacher Unions and School Reform

Chicago Public Radio’s Jay Field reports on what some teachers’ unions around the country are doing to reform their schools.
 
 
Tensions Between Teacher Union and School Administrations

We talk with independent historian Connie Goddard about the Chicago roots of struggles between teachers unions and school administrations.

Music Button: Rothko, “Roads Become Rivers,” from the CD Four Tet Remixes (Domino Records)
 
 
Weather Patterns and Climate Change
Reed Scherer—Associate Professor, Department of Geology and Environmental Geosciences, Northern Illinois University

Geologist Reed Scherer tells us what his research in Antarctica can tell us about global warming, and what recent unusual weather patterns have to do with climate change.

Music Button: Mopse, “Cosa Avete Fatto A Solange,” from the CD Ennio Morricone Remixes 2 (Compost)
 
 
Dueling Critics: The Sparrow

Dueling Critics Kelly Kleiman and Jonathan Abarbanel tell us if The Sparrow flies at the House Theater of Chicago. The production is on stage until February 24, 2007.
 
 

Eight Forty-Eight—January 18, 2007

 
   
Audio for the Entire Episode
Individual segments are available below.

 
Tribune Sale

The deadline for bids on the Chicago-based Tribune Company came and went yesterday without much fanfare. Wall Street Journal reporter joins us to discuss what's next for this embattled media conglomerate.
 
 
Fighting for Air

We talk with author and sociologist Eric Klinenberg abouth is new book Fighting for Air (Henry Holt & Company, Incorporated, 2007). His work explores the battle to control America’s media and the role some local news organizations play in the media reform movement.

Web Extra
 

 

Listen to an extended interview with Eric Klinenberg

     

Music Button: Cheebacabra, “Auto-Indexing,” from the CD Exile in the Woods (Mackrosoft Records)
 
 
America's Top 100

The Atlantic Monthly marked its 150th anniversary with an issue devoted to the “100 Most Influential Americans.” Resident Philosopher Al Gini discusses the 100 most significant people in American history as inspired by The Atlantic Monthly's list.
 
 
Audio Books

Chicago writer Bob Hughes explains how moments in traffic can actually transport you to faraway places.
 
 
New Curator in Town
Gregory Dreicer—Vice President, Exhibitions and Programs, Chicago Architecture Foundation

Steve Edwards sits down with Gregory Dreicer to discuss his new role at the Chicago Architecture Foundation.

Music Button: Steve Hillman, “Thirties Thing,” from the CD The World Over (Dreamfast Records)
 
 
Three to See

Arts editor Edward Lifson brings us some of the best in the Chicago area culture scene.

Navy Pier’s “New” Crystal Gardens Lunchtime Concerts: Acoustic Music from Around the World
Thursdays, January 18-March 22
The Crystal Gardens at Navy Pier

From the Trenches to the Street: Art from Germany, 1910s-20s
January 19–March 18
Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art

Breakbone Dance Company's Visions of Light Featuring a World Premiere Solo Performance by Atalee Judy
January 18–19
Hamlin Park Studio Theater
 
 
UnderCover—Occidental Brothers Dance Band International

We present the first in a new segment of exclusive performances by local bands who perform covers of popular songs outside their regular genre. Today, the Occidental Brothers Dance Band International performs New Order’s 1980's dance hit “Bizarre Love Triangle.”

Web Extra
 

 

Listen to the Occidental Brothers Dance Band International's cover of “Bizarre Love Triangle”

 
     
 
 

Eight Forty-Eight—January 17, 2007

 
   
Audio for the Entire Episode
Individual segments are available below.

 
Obama's Presidential Positioning

Chicago Public Radio's Ben Calhoun reports on the Illinois junior senator's next step toward running for president.
 
 
Race and the Presidency
Melissa Harris Lacewell—Associate Professor of Politics and African-American Studies, Princeton University

Is Obama too black to win the presidency? Or is he not black enough? Melissa Harris Lacewell discusses the racial politics behind the Senator's increasingly likely bid.

Music Button: Kahil El’ Zabar’s Ritual Trio, “Crumb-Puck-U-Lent,” from the CD Big M: A Tribute to Malachi Favors (Delmark)
 
 
Cook County Budget to the Board
Forrest Claypool—Cook County Commissioner

Forrest Claypool joins us in studio to share his reaction to Todd Stroger's 2007 budget proposal.

Music Button: MANDY vs. Booka Shade, “Body Language,” from the CD Electrolush (Om Records)
 
 
Driving Lesson

“Eight Forty-Eight's” Gianofer Fields finds out if she has the skills behind the wheel when she takes a ride with Auto Metro Driving School instructor Damian Koziel.

Music Button: Tommy Guerrero, “Badder Than Bullets,” from the CD From the Soil to the Soul (TVT Records)
 
 
Architecture Alert
Jonathan Fine—President, Preservation Chicago

We talk with Jonathan Fine about the organization’s latest watch list of endangered Chicago buildings.
 
 
Marcus Sakey's The Blade Itself

Writer Marcus Sakey joins us to discuss his acclaimed debut novel, The Blade Itself (St. Martin's Minotaur, 2007).

Sakey signs his book tonight at 7 as part of “Local Authors Night” at The Book Cellar in Lincoln Square.
 
 

Eight Forty-Eight—January 16, 2007