News Clip7:44
PBS

How The First Black Head Of A Major Publishing House Wants To Change The Industry

12th - Higher Ed
In the wake of protests against systemic racism in the U.S., many industries are reexamining past practices and facing questions about their own racial biases. One new effort puts a spotlight on the world of publishing. Jeffrey Brown...
News Clip6:50
PBS

Rapper Common, Rev. Moss On Helping Chicago Heal And The ‘Plot’ Against Black America

12th - Higher Ed
Homicides in Chicago were up 56% in 2020 compared to the year before. But efforts are underway to address the city's systemic issues. Award-winning rapper Common and his pastor, Rev. Otis Moss III, discussed some of their ideas for...
News Clip6:14
PBS

To control kids' asthma, this program clears the air at home

12th - Higher Ed
For most of the roughly 25 million people in the U.S. with asthma, the disease can be controlled. But uncontrolled asthma can lead to expensive medical interventions. Special correspondent Cat Wise reports on a California program that...
News Clip6:09
PBS

Garbage to plate dining

12th - Higher Ed
What happens to the little ends of cucumber that get cut off by big-time food processors to make pickles? At the Michelin-starred Manhattan restaurant Blue Hill, chef Dan Barber has tried turning that food waste into cuisine, an...
News Clip13:43
PBS

Founding Fathers (July 5, 2004)

12th - Higher Ed
Ray Suarez speaks with three historians, Richard Brookhiser, Ron Chernow and Jan Lewis, about what the founding fathers might have thought of America today.
News Clip7:38
PBS

Economics Is Not a Morality Play': Paul Krugman on Managing Financial Crisis

12th - Higher Ed
Economics correspondent Paul Solman sits down with economist Paul Krugman to discuss the provocative bestseller "The Great Deformation" by David Stockman and the government's role in mediating economic meltdowns. (see David Stockman June...
News Clip9:34
PBS

Henry Louis Gates - 'The Bondwoman's Narrative' (July 23, 2002)

12th - Higher Ed
Henry Louis Gates, Jr. discusses "The Bondwoman's Narrative," which is described as an autobiographical novel written in the 1850s by a female slave who called herself and her main character Hannah Crafts. The manuscript was found at an...
News Clip9:32
PBS

Justice Scalia Writes How-to Read Guide for Interpreting the Law (August 9, 2012)

12th - Higher Ed
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia says the key factor for a judge's ruling is finding where the balance resides in a case. Margaret Warner interviews Justice Scalia about his new book, "Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal...
News Clip7:31
PBS

Mysteries of Food Cravings

12th - Higher Ed
Health correspondent Betty Ann Bowser talks to author Dr. David Kessler about overeating and what is behind people's cravings, the subject of his new book, "The End of Overeating."
News Clip2:59
PBS

Light Side of a "Dismal Science'"

12th - Higher Ed
Economics isn't exactly a side-splitting discipline, but at a recent economics convention in Atlanta, self-proclaimed "stand-up economist" Yoram Bauman showed it's possible to infuse the sober science with monetary mirth.
News Clip6:28
PBS

White Americans Feel Ceiling Effect

12th - Higher Ed
A new study shows that since 2006 whites have grown more pessimistic about their economic outlook while African-Americans and Latinos have grown more optimistic. Ray Suarez talks with Matt Barreto of Latino Decisions and Ellis Cose,...
News Clip8:54
PBS

Robert Dallek (Author Interview) (May 27, 2007)

12th - Higher Ed
Book: Partners in Power: Nixon and Kissinger
News Clip7:04
PBS

People in recovery find the recipe for a fresh start in cooking career training

12th - Higher Ed
Blocks from the White House, DC Central Kitchen is the nation's largest community kitchen, putting out 5,000 meals a day to homeless shelters, schools, halfway houses and other nonprofits. But the kitchen's other output is training men...
News Clip5:48
PBS

Sen. Duckworth writes of resiliency, healing in her book that’s a ‘love letter’ to America

12th - Higher Ed
Sen. Duckworth Writes Of Resiliency, Healing In Her Book That Is A ‘Love Letter’ To America
News Clip4:15
PBS

Veteran graffiti artist RISK on his evolving art form

12th - Higher Ed
"For more than 30 years, Los Angeles-based artist RISK has made the world his canvas, creating colorful murals on everything from highway overpasses -- known ..."
News Clip9:33
PBS

#MeToo: Gretchen Carlson

12th - Higher Ed
Former FOX News host Gretchen Carlson, who filed a sexual harassment lawsuit against her then-boss Roger Ailes, was recently appointed chair of the Miss America Organization’s board of directors. She describes her efforts to change...
News Clip14:34
PBS

Michael Beschloss: Taking Charge

12th - Higher Ed
Book: Taking Charge: The Johnson White House Tapes, 1963-1964
News Clip4:04
PBS

Author Lauren Wilkinson Answers Your Questions About ‘American Spy’

12th - Higher Ed
Lauren Wilkinson, author of our June pick for the NewsHour-New York Times book club, Now Read This, joins Jeffrey Brown to answer reader questions about “American Spy.”
News Clip7:54
PBS

Congo Basin’s Endangered Wildlife Find Unlikely Guardians In Indigenous Hunters

12th - Higher Ed
The Congo Basin is home to the world’s second-largest rainforest and a unique array of biodiversity. But the ecosystem's remote location cannot protect it from the threat of poaching. Special correspondent Monica Villamizar and...
News Clip9:11
PBS

Andy Card And Rahm Emanuel On What Trump Is Doing Right — And Wrong

12th - Higher Ed
Governing in a crisis like the novel coronavirus pandemic can define a presidency. What lessons does history have to offer as a guide? Judy Woodruff reports and talks to former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who was President Obama’s chief...
News Clip6:08
PBS

This Philadelphia Art Exhibit Pushes The Envelope With Designs For The Future

12th - Higher Ed
What will the future look like? That’s the big question posed by a new exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Eighty designers from around the world have put their imaginations to work, leveraging both anxiety and excitement over...
News Clip8:09
PBS

Wall St. millionaire brings healthy food to those in need

12th - Higher Ed
Sam Polk was making millions on Wall Street when he had a life-changing revelation: he wanted to help those in need. His focus became so-called "food deserts," regions with limited access to healthy food. Polk founded Everytable to serve...
News Clip7:28
PBS

For Great Sioux Nation, Black Hills Can't Be Bought for $1.3-Billion (August 24, 2011)

12th - Higher Ed
Nine Sioux tribes have been locked in a land dispute since 1877, when the government broke a treaty setting aside the Black Hills as part of their reservation. However, there is a chance that the Great Sioux Nation's long struggle to...
News Clip9:09
PBS

How U.S. Immigration Policy Affects Fate Of Migrants Braving The Deadly Darien Gap

12th - Higher Ed
The remote Darien Gap cuts across Central America, serving as a critical but perilous path for migrants desperate to make the journey to North America. Many people fleeing poverty, persecution and violence feel it’s their only option....