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    Newseum Podcast

    Hosts Frank Bond and Sonya Gavankar take listeners behind the scenes of some of the Newseum's most popular artifacts and exhibits and share details about the production of many of the museum's award-winning films.
    en90 Episodes

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    Episodes (90)

    Inside Today’s FBI: Centennial Olympic Park Bombing

    Inside Today’s FBI: Centennial Olympic Park Bombing

    Host Sonya Gavankar and exhibits writer Ellie Stanton explore the stories and the artifacts in the Newseum’s FBI exhibit. Today’s episode: How, after evading 200 federal agents over a five-year, $24 million manhunt, Eric Robert Rudolph was arrested for setting off a bomb that killed one person and injured 112 at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta.

    Newseum Podcast
    enMay 10, 2016

    Inside Today’s FBI: Improvised Explosive Devices

    Inside Today’s FBI: Improvised Explosive Devices

    Host Sonya Gavankar and exhibits writer Ellie Stanton explorethe stories and the artifacts in the Newseum’s FBI exhibit. Today’sepisode: How FBI investigators at the Terrorist Explosive DeviceAnalytical Center (TEDAC) examine improvised explosive devices(IEDs) — the weapons of choice for terrorists — to identifybomb-makers by the “signatures” they leave behind. TEDAC’s “bomblibrary” holds more than 100,000 IEDs found in war zones and crimescenes and has identified more than 1,000 people with potentialterrorist ties.

    Newseum Podcast
    enMay 03, 2016

    Inside Today’s FBI: Shutting Down Silk Road

    Inside Today’s FBI: Shutting Down Silk Road

    Host Sonya Gavankar and exhibits writer Ellie Stanton explore the stories and the artifacts in the Newseum’s FBI exhibit. Today’s episode: How the FBI infiltrated and shut down Ross (“Dread Pirate Roberts”) Ulbricht’s Silk Road website, a $1.2 billion market that sold illegal drugs and guns in the Internet’s hidden “darknet.”

    Newseum Podcast
    enApril 26, 2016

    Pulitzer Prize Photography: Suicide Bombing

    Pulitzer Prize Photography: Suicide Bombing

    Afghan photographer Massoud Hossaini was on the scene when a suicide bombing in Kabul killed more than 70 people in 2011. Hossaini’s Pulitzer Prize-winning photo of the attack’s aftermath showed a 12-year-old girl, bloodied and screaming, among the survivors and the dead.

    Newseum Podcast
    enFebruary 09, 2016

    Inside Today’s FBI: Boston Marathon Bombing

    Inside Today’s FBI: Boston Marathon Bombing

    Host Sonya Gavankar and exhibits writer Ellie Stanton explore the stories and the artifacts in the Newseum’s FBI exhibit. Today’s episode: How Boston Globe reporter Michael Rezendes went from marathon runner to breaking news reporter in the blink of an eye, and how the FBI tracked the perpetrators of the 2013 bombing.

    Newseum Podcast
    enJanuary 19, 2016

    Pulitzer Prize Photography: Final Salute

    Pulitzer Prize Photography: Final Salute

    Todd Heisler spent a year photographing the funerals of Colorado Marines who died in Iraq and the officer whose job it was to notify families of each Marine’s death. The haunting series won the 2006 Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography.

    Newseum Podcast
    enJanuary 05, 2016

    Pulitzer Prize Photography: Operation Lion Heart

    Pulitzer Prize Photography: Operation Lion Heart

    Deanne Fitzmaurice captured the emotional and physical journey of a severely injured Iraqi boy who was nearly killed by an explosion, but who was eventually saved by American doctors after traveling to California. Her photos earned her the Pulitzer Prize in 2005.

    Newseum Podcast
    enDecember 29, 2015

    Inside Today’s FBI: D.C. Snipers

    Inside Today’s FBI: D.C. Snipers

    Host Sonya Gavankar and Newseum curator Carrie Christoffersen explore the stories and the artifacts in the Newseum’s FBI exhibit. Today’s episode: the D.C. snipers who terrorized the greater Washington, D.C., area in 2002, the Bushmaster assault rifle they used to carry out their deadly attacks, and the tarot card they left near one of the shootings in an attempt to communicate with authorities.

    Newseum Podcast
    enDecember 22, 2015

    Inside Today’s FBI: 9/11

    Inside Today’s FBI: 9/11

    Host Sonya Gavankar and Patty Rhule, director of exhibit development, explore the stories and the artifacts in the Newseum’s FBI exhibit. Today’s episode: how the 9/11 attacks transformed the FBI into a counterterrorism agency and the car that transported the American Airlines Flight 77 hijackers from San Diego to Dulles Airport in Virginia.

    Newseum Podcast
    enDecember 15, 2015

    Inside Today’s FBI: Surveillance Dinosaurs

    Inside Today’s FBI: Surveillance Dinosaurs

    Host Sonya Gavankar and exhibits writer Ellie Stanton explore the stories and the artifacts in the Newseum’s FBI exhibit. Today’s episode: how toy dinosaurs, rigged with hidden cameras, helped keep watch over a tense six-day long hostage situation in Alabama in 2013.

    Newseum Podcast
    enDecember 08, 2015

    Eyewitness News with Al Primo

    Eyewitness News with Al Primo

    This year marks the 50th anniversary of the Eyewitness News format, which was pioneered by Al Primo in Philadelphia, Pa. In this special episode of the Newseum Podcast, Primo talks about the evolution of broadcast journalism with former TV reporter and Newseum producer, Frank Bond.

    Newseum Podcast
    enDecember 04, 2015

    Inside Today’s FBI: Times Square Car Bomb

    Inside Today’s FBI: Times Square Car Bomb

    Host Sonya Gavankar and exhibits writer Ellie Stanton explore the stories and the artifacts in the Newseum’s FBI exhibit. Today’s episode: The Nissan Pathfinder that nearly became a weapon of mass destruction in New York’s Times Square in 2010. The components of the homemade bomb are on display inside the vehicle in the exhibit.

    Newseum Podcast
    enDecember 01, 2015

    Inside Today’s FBI: Whitey Bulger

    Inside Today’s FBI: Whitey Bulger

    Host Sonya Gavankar and exhibits writer Ellie Stanton explore the stories and the artifacts in the Newseum’s FBI exhibit. Today’s episode: The hat that “Most Wanted” crime boss Whitey Bulger was wearing when the FBI arrested him after a 16-year manhunt, and how new media helped the bureau track him down.

    Newseum Podcast
    enNovember 24, 2015

    Inside Today’s FBI: Ghost Stories

    Inside Today’s FBI: Ghost Stories

    Host Sonya Gavankar and exhibits writer Ellie Stanton explore the stories and the artifacts in the Newseum’s FBI exhibit. Today’s episode: The “Ghost Stories” spies who inspired the TV series “The Americans” and the spy camera and shortwave radio they used to collect information and send it to Russia.

    Newseum Podcast
    enNovember 17, 2015

    Pulitzer Prize Photography: Veterans Day Edition

    Pulitzer Prize Photography: Veterans Day Edition

    Photojournalist Craig Walker talks about his 2010 and 2012 Pulitzer Prize-winning photo series. The first, “Ian Fisher: American Soldier,” is an intimate profile of a young man who joins the Army during the height of insurgent violence in Iraq. “Welcome Home” follows Scott Ostrom, a soldier returning home from Iraq, and highlights his personal and professional challenges living with PTSD.

    Newseum Podcast
    enNovember 10, 2015

    Pulitzer Prize Photography: Central American Migrants

    Pulitzer Prize Photography: Central American Migrants

    Los Angeles Times photojournalist Don Bartletti discusses his 2003 Pulitzer Prize-winning photo series about young Central American migrants and their journey to the United States aboard a network of Mexican freight trains informally known as “La Bestia.”

    Newseum Podcast
    enNovember 03, 2015

    Pulitzer Prize Photography: War and Peace in Afghanistan

    Pulitzer Prize Photography: War and Peace in Afghanistan

    Former New York Times picture editor Margaret O’Connor recalls the newspaper’s photographs of people enduring protracted conflict in Afghanistan and Pakistan. The Times’ 2001 photo series attempted to educate readers on a culture that they felt was largely unknown to America at the time and won the Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography the following year.

    Newseum Podcast
    enOctober 27, 2015

    Pulitzer Prize Photography: Crisis in Haiti

    Pulitzer Prize Photography: Crisis in Haiti

    Carol Guzy won the second of her four Pulitzers – more than any other journalist – photographing the tumultuous restoration of democracy in Haiti in September 1994, when jubilation over the possible return of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide was punctuated with violence.

    Newseum Podcast
    enOctober 20, 2015
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