Fresh Air on WUKY

7 - 8 pm, Weekdays
Terry Gross

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Music Reviews
12:25 pm
Tue April 10, 2012

Bonnie Raitt's 'Slipstream': A Barnstorming Good Time

Credit Courtesy of the artist
Bonnie Raitt.

Originally published on Tue April 10, 2012 4:39 pm

The warmth and vigor of Bonnie Raitt's voice throughout her new album Slipstream, even when she's covering an oldie such as Gerry Rafferty's "Right Down the Line," is vital and fresh — urgent, even. Raitt has always possessed a gift for taking a familiar phrase and rendering it in a manner that compels a listener to think anew about what the words really mean.

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Sports
11:54 am
Tue April 10, 2012

'Winding Up' As The Mets' Knuckleball Pitcher

Credit courtesy of the author
R.A. Dickey currently plays for the New York Mets. He was previously with the Seattle Mariners, Minnesota Twins, Texas Rangers and Milwaukee Brewers.

Most pitchers in the majors stick to fastballs, curveballs, sliders and change-ups when facing batters at the plate.

But not New York Mets right-hander R.A. Dickey. Dickey is currently the only knuckleball pitcher in a current rotation. At 37, he's also one of the older pitchers in the league and has seen his career — and life — mimic the erratic trajectory of the difficult pitch he throws game after game.

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Religion
11:10 am
Mon April 9, 2012

'When God Talks Back' To The Evangelical Community

Originally published on Mon April 9, 2012 11:00 am

While attending services and small group meetings at The Vineyard, an evangelical church with 600 branches across the country, anthropologist T.M. Luhrmann noticed that several members of the congregation said God had repeatedly spoken to them and that they had heard what God wanted them to do.

In When God Talks Back, which is based on an anthropological study she did at The Vineyard, Luhrmann examines the personal relationships people developed with God and explores how those relationships were cemented through the practice of prayer.

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Fresh Air Weekend
9:15 am
Sat April 7, 2012

Fresh Air Weekend: Paul McCartney, Aziz Ansari

Credit Courtesy of the artist
Paul McCartney.

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:

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Sports
11:37 am
Fri April 6, 2012

Behind The Plate, A Baseball Catcher Tells All

This interview was originally broadcast on August 18, 2011.

Brad Ausmus has spent most of his career in a squatting position. As a major league catcher, he crouched behind home plate for roughly seven months a year while playing with the San Diego Padres, the Detroit Tigers, the Houston Astros and the Los Angeles Dodgers.

How did he practice for games? Even more squats.

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Music Reviews
11:35 am
Fri April 6, 2012

Finding And Curating The Roots Of Soul Music

Some years back, I was driving across the South with a German friend, leaving early Sunday morning from Athens, Ga., and heading to Louisiana. I turned on the radio and found a black church service in progress, and a woman with a remarkable voice singing. "Who's that?" my friend asked. I told him I had no idea. "But with a voice like that, she must be famous," he said. Some miles down the road, when the station had faded out, he still didn't believe me.

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Movie Reviews
11:14 am
Fri April 6, 2012

A Sublime, Impressionistic 'Deep Blue Sea'

Terence Davies' films aim for and often achieve a state of music, the camerawork in harmony with the soundtrack, the images connected by emotion rather than narrative.

Adapting Terence Rattigan's 1952 play The Deep Blue Sea, he throws out the drama's tidy structure and much of the dialogue, and shows the events through the eyes of the adulterous Lady Hester Collyer, played by Rachel Weisz.

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Book Reviews
12:02 pm
Thu April 5, 2012

Lionel Shriver's Not-So-'New Republic'

Lionel Shriver's new novel, called The New Republic, is actually an old manuscript with a star-crossed history. As Shriver explains in a prefatory note, this satire on (among other things) terrorism was finished in 1998, but, back then, publishers weren't interested. That was five years before Shriver's break-through novel, We Need to Talk About Kevin. Then, Sept. 11 happened: sincerity was in; irony was out. Publishers wouldn't touch this story that offered an ironic take on violent extremism.

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Music Reviews
11:11 am
Tue April 3, 2012

There's Only 'One Direction' For This Boy Band: Up

The callow croon over a pulsating beat, the massed harmonies in the chorus, the lyrics about partying that name-check Katy Perry and include a wistful wish for a nameless girl to kiss the singer — this is boy-band music at its newest and its most timeless. The five young guys who comprise One Direction are single-minded.

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Pop Culture
10:53 am
Mon April 2, 2012

Aziz Ansari's Latest Is 'Dangerously Delicious'

Credit Courtesy of Aziz Ansari
Aziz Ansari dissects a variety of topics in his latest comedy special, Dangerously Delicious.

Aziz Ansari is about to hit the road. The 29-year-old comedian and star of Parks and Recreation is embarking on a multicity comedy tour, where he'll be riffing on what he calls the "fears of adulthood."

You know, babies. Marriage. That kind of stuff.

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