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Think: Episode Archives


  • A Year of Food Life

    Is “local” the new “organic?” Barbara Kingsolver’s new book “Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life” chronicles her family’s year-long effort to eat locally-produced food. In the process, she, her husband, and two daughters learned to raise many of their own plants and animals. We’ll spend this hour with Kingsolver and her husband Steven […]

  • The Hidden History of the Kennedy Years

    What was it really like in the Kennedy White House and how did Robert Kennedy cope with the aftermath of his brother’s assassination? According to journalist David Talbot, RFK never believed the Warren Commission’s conclusions and hoped to re-open the investigation if elected president in 1968. Talbot will join us this hour to discuss his […]

  • Scenes from the Class Struggle in Farmers Branch

    This Saturday is Election Day and one local community will be in the spotlight for an anti-illegal immigrant ordinance on its ballot. Craig Hanley looked into the Farmers Branch referendum and the motivations of supporters and opponents for the May issue of D Magazine. He’ll join us this hour to discuss his article “Scenes from […]

  • The Unconventional Wisdom of Economics

    Can economics be “sexy?” Steve E. Landsburg, who writes the “Everyday Economics” column for Slate Magazine, is doing his best to make it so. His new book is “More Sex Is Safer Sex: The Unconventional Wisdom of Economics” (Free Press, 2007). Landsburg, who also teaches at the University of Rochester, will join us for the […]

  • Jamestown: The Real Story

    Four hundred years ago this month, 104 English colonists arrived in Jamestown, Virginia to establish the first permanent English settlement in North America. Despite incredible hardship and terrible odds, they (or at least a few of them) survived. We’ll explore the environmental changes they wrought and how these changes led to their ultimate success on […]

  • Where is Dallas Headed?

    What does the future hold for Dallas Mayor Laura Miller and where does she think the city is headed? We’ll spend the first segment of tonight’s program with Mayor Miller. Sarah Jane Semrad, Executive Director of the La Reunion artist residency program getting started in Dallas will join us for the Scene segment of the […]

  • Homelessness in North Texas

    According to a census conducted on January 25th, there are 5,163 homeless persons in Dallas and 4,042 homeless in Forth Worth. These totals represent a decrease from the 2006 homeless population across North Texas. We’ll spend this hour discussing the issue of homelessness and what’s being done to help the homeless with Mike Rawlings, homeless […]

  • A Portrait of Harper Lee

    Who was Harper Lee? The author of what is arguably one of America’s most popular works of literature, “To Kill a Mockingbird,” has long remained a mystery. We’ll learn a little more about Lee and her life this hour with Charles J. Shields, author of her first full-length biography “Mockingbird: A Portrait of Harper Lee” […]

  • The Power of Networks – Forbes 90th Anniversary

    The term “networking” has long been used to describe the good business practice of making and maintaining solid contacts. Today the term can mean so much more. Forbes Magazine celebrates its 90th Anniversary with an issue dedicated to “The Power of Networks.” This hour, we’ll explore the rapidly expanding networks that link us all with […]

  • A History of Collective Joy

    Is the desire for collective joy innate in human beings? Acclaimed writer Barbara Ehrenreich thinks so. Her latest work “Dancing in the Streets: A History of Collective Joy” (Metropolitan Books, 2007) explores the origins of what was in the past expressed in ecstatic rituals and festivities – activities that are disappearing from the human experience. […]