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Think: Episode Archives


  • The Making of a Successful Screenplay

    What goes into a successful screenplay? What does it take to create award-winning fiction that holds a readers attention and sells millions of books? We’ll talk this hour with Pulitzer Prize-Winning writer Larry McMurtry and his long-time collaborator Diana Ossana. They won an Academy Award for their “Brokeback Mountain” screenplay and will speak to the […]

  • Summer Movies

    What were your favorite movies this summer? We’ll talk picks and pans this hour with Chris Vognar of the Dallas Morning News and Christopher Kelly of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

  • The Erosion of Attention

    Are you having trouble staying focused? Join the club. Our guest this hour argues that with millions of resources just a mouse click away, and almost constant interruptions, our lives are becoming more fragmented by the minute. We’ll talk with Maggie Jackson, author of “Distracted: The Erosion of Attention and the Coming Dark Age” (Prometheus […]

  • The Real Impact of the Olympics

    Does the Olympic Movement achieve its goal of “a peaceful and better world” as the Olympic Charter states? Not necessarily, according to John Hoberman, whose article “Think Again: The Olympics” appears in the July/August issue of Foreign Policy Magazine. We’ll talk to Hoberman this hour.

  • SOLDIER

    Why is it so challenging for combat troops to re-adjust to home life? We’ll talk to one such veteran this hour. Matt Cook, who began basic training on September 11th, 2001, writes about his experience in the piece “SOLDIER” which appears in the July issue of Texas Monthly Magazine.

  • A True Story of the Great Art Hoax of the 20th Century

    How do art experts “know” that an artwork is genuine? How do the forger’s fool them? We’ll find out this hour with journalist Edward Dolnick. His new book is “The Forger’s Spell: A True Story of Vermeer, Nazis, and the Greatest Art Hoax of the Twentieth Century” (Harper Collins, 2008).

  • The 1960 Olympics in Rome

    How have the Olympics affected your life? We’ll look back at a critical turning point in the Olympic Movement with Pulitzer Prize-Winner David Maraniss, whose new book is “Rome 1960: The Olympics that Changed the World” (Simon and Schuster, 2008).

  • Ethics for the Real World

    What’s reasonable about “doing the right thing?” And why is an ethical compromise often so easy for many people? We’ll talk this hour with Clinton D. Korver, co-author of the new book “Ethics: {for the real world}” (Harvard Business Press, 2008).

  • The Economy: How North Texans are Coping and What We Can Expect

    How is the current economy affecting your life? How are other North Texans dealing with the pinch and what might the future hold? We’ll talk this evening with Professor Michael L. Davis of SMU’s Cox School of Business and Angela Shah, staff writer for The Dallas Morning News.

  • The Struggle for the Soul of a New China

    Chinese citizens will have the world stage during next month’s Olympic Games. But how are they coping with a rapidly-changing capitalist society that is still strictly controlled by a Communist government? We’ll explore a changing China this hour with Philip P. Pan, former Washington Post Beijing bureau chief and author of the new book “OUT […]