Fresh Air

Weekdays, 3pm - 4pm
Terry Gross

Fresh Air opens the window on contemporary arts and issues with guests from worlds as diverse as literature and economics.  Terry Gross hosts this multi-award-winning daily interview and features program.  The veteran public radio interviewer is known for her extraordinary ability to engage guests of all dispositions.  Every weekday she delights intelligent and curious listeners with revelations on contemporary societal concerns.

Visit here for more information.

Genre: 
Composer ID: 
51828979e1c86da0522d65b5|51828966e1c86da0522d659e

Pages

Television
10:39 am
Tue December 13, 2011

Louis C.K. Reflects On 'Louie,' Loss, Love And Life

In the FX TV series Louie, comic Louis C.K. plays a divorced father of two struggling to balance his comedy career with being a single dad. The show, which has just been picked up for a third season, is often based on events that have happened to C.K. in his own life.

Read more
Television
11:37 am
Mon December 12, 2011

Michael C. Hall: Playing A Killer Role On 'Dexter'

Credit Showtime
Michael C. Hall plays Dexter Morgan, a forensics expert for the Miami Police Department who harbors a deep secret: He's a serial killer who channels his murderous impulses by hunting other serial killers.

Originally published on Mon December 12, 2011 10:00 am

On Dec. 18, the Showtime drama Dexter presents its sixth-season finale. The show stars Michael C. Hall — who played the repressed mortician David Fisher on HBO's Six Feet Under — as Dexter Morgan, a serial killer who kills other serial killers, and who also works for the Miami police as a blood-spatter expert.

Read more
Fresh Food
10:04 am
Mon December 12, 2011

Losing Virginity: Olive Oil's 'Scandalous' Industry

Credit IFP / iStockphoto.com

Originally published on Mon December 12, 2011 10:30 am

Extra-virgin olive oil is a ubiquitous ingredient in Italian recipes, religious rituals and beauty products. But many of the bottles labeled "extra-virgin olive oil" on supermarket shelves have been adulterated and shouldn't be classified as extra-virgin, says New Yorker contributor Tom Mueller.

Read more
Fresh Air Weekend
10:02 am
Sat December 10, 2011

Fresh Air Weekend: 'Test Kitchen,' Dustin Lance Black

Credit iStockphoto.com
Christopher Kimball offers several suggestions for making your fries deliciously crispy.

Fresh Air Weekend highlights some of the best interviews and reviews from past weeks, and new program elements specially paced for weekends. Our weekend show emphasizes interviews with writers, filmmakers, actors, and musicians, and often includes excerpts from live in-studio concerts. This week:

Read more
Movie Reviews
10:17 am
Fri December 9, 2011

Spies Like Them: 'Tinker, Tailor' And Other Odd Ilk

Most people will find the first 20 minutes of Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy difficult to follow — I did, and I've read John le Carre's novel and seen the haunting 1979 BBC miniseries starring Alec Guinness, although decades ago.

The movie is chopped up into short scenes featuring people we don't know working for a circus — what? — and for someone called "C," and talking about a woman called Karla? Meanwhile, the star, Gary Oldman, doesn't say a word for the first 18 minutes.

Read more
Movie Interviews
9:21 am
Fri December 9, 2011

Herzog's Doc Brings Prehistoric Paintings To Life

This interview was originally broadcast on April 20, 2011. The Cave of Forgotten Dreams is now available on DVD and Blu-ray.

In 1994, three French cave explorers discovered hundreds of prehistoric paintings and engravings on the walls of the Chauvet Cave in southern France.

Carbon dating has since shown that the depictions of rhinoceroses, lions, cave bears, horses, bison, mammoths and other animals are between 30,000 and 32,000 years old.

Read more
The Fresh Air Interview
9:00 am
Fri December 9, 2011

Fresh Air Remembers Soul Singer Howard Tate

Credit Brian Branch-Price / AP Photo
Soul singer Howard Tate died last Friday after a battle with cancer. He was 72.

Originally published on Sun February 5, 2012 6:28 pm

This interview was originally broadcast on October 27, 2003.

Soul singer Howard Tate, who rose to prominence in 1967 with the hit "Get It While You Can," died on Friday. He was 72.

Read more
Music Reviews
11:38 am
Thu December 8, 2011

The Black Keys: A Reinvention On 'El Camino'

Careening into your ears like the theme to a bank-heist flick is "Lonely Boy," the first single from El Camino. Except the lyric tucked inside the roaring, curve-hugging melody isn't about anything so action-packed as robbing a bank or making a getaway. Instead, Dan Auerbach sings about stasis: "I got a love that keeps me waiting." And, being the sensible raucous rocker that he is, Auerbach is willing to wait out his love, because he knows in his heart that she's worth it.

Read more
Fresh Food
10:43 am
Wed December 7, 2011

Tried And True Tricks From 'America's Test Kitchen'

Credit iStockphoto.com
Want the perfect pie crust? Christopher Kimball from America's Test Kitchen says the secret is to substitute half of the recipe's water with vodka, for a dry, flaky crust.

The mission of America's Test Kitchen is simple: to make "recipes that work." The syndicated PBS cooking show, hosted by Christopher Kimball, simplifies recipes in ways that home chefs can easily replicate with a fairly high degree of success.

Making sure amateur chefs can recreate recipes designed by professional chefs is of utmost importance, Kimball tells Fresh Air's Terry Gross.

Read more
Movie Interviews
10:50 am
Tue December 6, 2011

Dustin Lance Black: Crafting The Story Of 'J. Edgar'

Originally published on Tue December 6, 2011 12:17 pm

In the first part of his career, J. Edgar Hoover was often hailed as a hero. As a young man, he helped reorganize the cataloging system at the Library of Congress. Later on, after Hoover became the first director of the FBI, he introduced fingerprinting and forensic techniques to the crime-fighting agency, and pushed for stronger federal laws to punish criminals who strayed across state lines.

And he did all of this before 1940.

Read more
Music Reviews
10:09 am
Tue December 6, 2011

Thelonious Monk And More: 'Jazz Icons' In Kinescopes

Credit Erich Auerbach / Getty Images
On the sixth Jazz Icons DVD series, Thelonious Monk plays a rare solo piano gig in 1969.

Originally published on Fri August 3, 2012 1:18 pm

Jazz has long been a staple of European television programming. American musicians on tour frequently turn up on the tube, caught live or in a studio. That's partly because such shows are relatively cheap to produce, and because jazz makes for good cultural programming.

Read more
Fine Art
10:43 am
Mon December 5, 2011

At MoMA, A Look At De Kooning's Shifts In Style

In 2010, the Museum of Modern Art was criticized for its skimpy representation of the Dutch-American painter Willem de Kooning in its huge abstract expressionist show. The museum has now made up for that with an astounding de Kooning retrospective, the first of its kind: some 200 paintings, drawings, prints and sculptures that trace de Kooning's career beginning at age 12, when he was working for a graphic designer in his native Rotterdam and painting remarkable imitations of Cezanne, Picasso, Matisse, Miro and Gorky.

Read more
Author Interviews
10:34 am
Mon December 5, 2011

'Times' Advice Guru Answers Your Social Q's

Need advice on when it's appropriate to break up with someone over email? Want to know how to react if your dinner companion whips out a cellphone midway through a meal? What about how to deal with your annoying relatives during the holidays?

Read more
Fresh Air Weekend
1:43 am
Sat December 3, 2011

Fresh Air Weekend: Danny Burstein, Michio Kaku

Credit Andrea Brizzi / Doubleday
Michio Kaku is an author and the Henry Semat Professor of Theoretical Physics at the City University of New York. His books include Hyperspace, Visions and Beyond Einstein.

Fresh Air Weekend highlights some of the best interviews and reviews from past weeks, and new program elements specially paced for weekends. Our weekend show emphasizes interviews with writers, filmmakers, actors, and musicians, and often includes excerpts from live in-studio concerts. This week:

Read more
NPR Story
11:31 am
Fri December 2, 2011

'Lost In A Dream': Low, Loose And Slow

Fresh Air begins its remembrance of drummer Paul Motian with an archived review of his trio album. (The original review is below.)

Copyright 2011 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Pages