Author: PBS NewsHour
Series: Apartheid's People
Narrator: PBS NewsHour
Unabridged: 0 hr 23 min
Format: Digital Audiobook
Publisher: Findaway
Published: 09/30/1985
A profile of a black township called Kwa Thema. It's near the all-white town of Springs, an hour and a half from Johannesburg. More than 30 people have died in Kwa Thema in the last two months in clashes.
Jeffrey Brown continues the conversation with Philip Glass online with a few more questions.
One of the most prolific and influential investigative journalists of her generation, Marie Brenner has brought countless fascinating people—politicians, activists, journalists, and private citizens—to life through her writing. Now, for ...
With each passing day the potential reach of a single false news story—and its ability to negatively impact all of us—grows in both size and scope. Although politicians, activists, and ordinary citizens regularly complain about deceptive...
More of Jeffrey Brown's conversation with jazz musician Wynton Marsalis.
Jeffrey Brown speaks with musician Elvis Costello about how his approach to recording albums has evolved over three decades.
Throughout a long career as a special and foreign correspondent for major Italian publications and the state-owned broadcaster RAI, Marco Lupis has been up close and personal with many of the people who have shaped the world as we know it. In t...
A 1977 interview with the Shah of Iran in which he discusses relations with the United States. Originally broadcast on The MacNeil/Lehrer Report.
33 Ways Not to Screw Up Your Journalism is a succinct, authoritative and encouraging handbook of practical and inspiring tools, techniques and values that journalists, whether they're students or newsroom veterans, need more than ever in our fractur...
Jeffrey Brown talks to master lyricist Stephen Sondheim about his new book, Finishing the Hat.