Today On WNHH Radio

Lucy Gellman Photo

Lasley.

Marsh.

The Great Give marathon is over and WNHH radio programming is back to normal! Today’s programs delve into the daily duties of Connecticut’s secretary of the state, ask what performative film looks like in the year 2016, tease out the difference between contemporary and classical dance, and more.

On Dateline New Haven,” Connecticut’s secretary of the state describes ways to improve elections and involve more people in government.

Tom Breen talks with curator Selby Nimrod, filmmaker Sarah Lasley, and No Pop gallery co-director Laura Marsh about BODY DOUBLES, a one-night screening series of short, experimental movies about the body, on Deep Focus.” For the second segment of the show, Breen chats with Yale librarian David Gary and grad student Nicholas Forster about the Terror on Tape symposium, an academic conference dedicated to VHS. To listen, click on or download the audio above, or subscribe to WNHH’s WNHH Arts Mix” podcast on Soundcloud or iTunes.

On Book Talk,” host Cyd Oppenheimer talks to author Adam Haslett about his new novel Imagine Me Gone. During the second part of the episode, Oppenheimer speaks with fellow readers Kate Kincaid and Alice Baumgartner, and gets an update on activities at the New Haven Free Public Library. To listen, click on or download the audio above, or subscribe to WNHH’s WNHH Arts Mix” podcast on Soundcloud or iTunes.

At the Moment” host Sharon Benzoni speaks with Kellie Ann Lynch, co-founder and artistic director of the Elm City Dance Collective, about the work that the ECDC is doing, and some of the organization’s newest projects. To listen, click on or download the audio above, or subscribe to WNHH’s WNHH Arts Mix” podcast on Soundcloud or iTunes.

It’s a community-focused Culture Cocktail!” Host Alisa Bowens previews the Westville Art Walk with weekly in-studio guests Dallas Davis and Tonisha Dawson, and call-in guest Lizzy Donius. To listen, click on or download the audio above, or subscribe to WNHH’s Elm City Lowdown” podcast on Soundcloud or iTunes.

On This Day in New Haven Toadstool-Eating History, hosts Allan Appel and Jason Bischoff-Wurstle time-travel back to a hungry spring day in 1905 when Italian immigrants foraged for greens and just about anything else edible growing on city lots, arousing the unappetitzing comments of some opinion writers in that era’s newspapers. To listen, click on or download the audio above, or subscribe to WNHH’s Elm City Lowdown” podcast on Soundcloud or iTunes.

Today’s episode of Dateline New Haven” was made possible in part thanks to financial support from Yale-New Haven Hospital.

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