Podcasts

Podcasts

Podcasts

Tuesday, October 7, 201410/07/2014

Christiana Hena

In Charlottesville Right Now, 4pm – 6pm

Christiana Hena spoke with Dori Zook about the effects of Ebola in Libera at the Panel discuss held at University of Virginia.

Tuesday, October 7, 201410/07/2014

Jody Kielbasa

In Charlottesville Right Now, 4pm – 6pm

Jody Kielbasa, Vice Provost for the Arts at UVA and Director of the Virginia Film Festival, unveils the schedule for the Virginia Film Festival.

Tuesday, October 7, 201410/07/2014

Matt Thornhill

In Charlottesville Right Now, 4pm – 6pm

Matt Thornhill, Founder & President Boomer Project and GenerationsMatter, joins Les Sinclair to discuss the coming age shift. He talks about the effect will it have on Charlottesville and what we need to do to prepare.

Tuesday, October 7, 201410/07/2014

Evan Steinberg

In Charlottesville Right Now, 4pm – 6pm

Evan Steinberg is a friend of Hannah Graham and joins Les Sinclair to talk about their friendship.

Tuesday, October 7, 201410/07/2014

Hour 2: Gary Aldrich, Charles T. Rubin, Stephen Jimenez

In The Schilling Show, Noon – 1pm

Gary Aldrich talks about bureaucratic failures in dealing with national threats, Charles T. Rubin discusses his book, Eclipse of Man: Human Extinction and the Meaning of Progress, and Stephen Jimenez talks about his book, The Real Story of Matthew Shepard.

Tuesday, October 7, 201410/07/2014

Hour 1: Bob Fenwick, Victoria Cobb

In The Schilling Show, Noon – 1pm

Bob Fenwick gives a Belmont Bridge update and Victoria Cobb talks about Herring’s unlawful abortion ruling and the marriage ruling.

Monday, October 6, 201410/06/2014

Evan Steinberg

In Charlottesville Right Now, 4pm – 6pm

Evan Steinberg is a friend of Hannah Graham and joins Les Sinclair to help us know the missing young woman a little better.

Monday, October 6, 201410/06/2014

Tammy Arnette

In Charlottesville Right Now, 4pm – 6pm

Tammy Arnette, AAA Mid-Atlantic joins Les Sinclair with tips, for East-West commuters, on how to drive safer with the sun lower in the sky, this time of year.

Monday, October 6, 201410/06/2014

Andrew Cohen

In Charlottesville Right Now, 4pm – 6pm

Andrew Cohen, CBS Legal Analyst, joins Les Sinclair to explain the latest developments in same-sex marriage. The Supreme Court has decided not to hear any of the cases in question.

Monday, October 6, 201410/06/2014

James Sawyer

In Charlottesville Right Now, 4pm – 6pm

James Sawyer, the new Blue Ridge PACE director, joins the program in-studio.

Latest Stories

5 hours ago in Trending, World

SpaceX stock soars in debut and makes Elon Musk the first trillionaire

Elon Musk became the world's first trillionaire after shares of his rocket company SpaceX soared in Wall Street's biggest initial public offering of stock.

12 hours ago in Sports

Tarik Skubal, the Cleveland Browns and other athletes credit a tiny new scope for faster recoveries

Several top pro athletes and their surgeons say a modern version of an old tool is shaving weeks off the recovery time for certain injuries. And some top doctors think this is only the beginning.

12 hours ago in Sports

Hurricanes’ top-line performers come through as Carolina moves within a win of claiming Stanley Cup

Carolina Hurricanes coach Rod Brind'Amour spent weeks answering the same question about needing more goal-scoring pop from top-line forwards Andrei Svechnikov and Sebastian Aho.

12 hours ago in Entertainment, Music, Trending

Taylor Swift becomes the youngest woman inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame at age 36

Taylor Swift became the youngest woman ever inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame Thursday night at age 36. "It was instinctual. No one taught me how to do it," she said of songwriting through a raspy voice she attributed to screaming along to the night's performances and Wednesday night's historic NBA game between the New York Knicks and the San Antonio Spurs.

1 day ago in National

Man pleads guilty to killing a top Minnesota Democrat and her husband while posing as an officer

A Minnesota man who pounded on Democratic lawmakers' doors in the middle of the night while posing as a police officer, killing the state House speaker and her husband and wounding a state senator and his wife, pleaded guilty to murder Thursday so that federal prosecutors would not seek the death penalty.