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#294 The Stephen Foster Story w/ Richard Blanton, Donna Phillips & Johnny Warren

The Road to Now

Release Date: 01/15/2024

#307 Music and Mind with Renée Fleming and Dan Levitin show art #307 Music and Mind with Renée Fleming and Dan Levitin

The Road to Now

We guarantee you will feel better after listening to the Road to Now this week. We are joined by world-renowned soprano and arts/health advocate Renée Fleming and neuroscientist, cognitive psychologist and the best sell author of This is Your Brain on Music, Dan Levitin. We are discussing Renée’s new book Music and Mind about how to harness the arts to improve health and wellness. The book is a collection of essays from leading Doctors, scientists, researchers, as well as artists Yo-Yo-Ma, Rhiannon Giddens, and Rosanne Cash. Renée and Dan join Bob to discuss the history of the study of...

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Swept Away w/ John Logan and John Gallagher show art Swept Away w/ John Logan and John Gallagher

The Road to Now

This fall, the musical Swept Away, which is based on the music of Bob Crawford’s band The Avett Brothers is coming to broadway, and to celebrate, we’re re-sharing our conversation with writer, John Logan, and lead actor, John Gallagher Jr.   This conversation was recorded just after Swept Away premiered at the Berkeley Repertory Theater in Berkeley, CA in January 2022, and when you hear the passion from the folks who brought the musical to life, you’ll understand why the show has been such a great success (and why you should go see it).   is Swept Away’s writer whose...

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#306 The Wide Awakes: The Forgotten Force that Elected Lincoln and Spurred the Civil War w/ Jon Grinspan show art #306 The Wide Awakes: The Forgotten Force that Elected Lincoln and Spurred the Civil War w/ Jon Grinspan

The Road to Now

Jon Grinspan has done something remarkable: in his new book, , he tells a thoroughly researched and brilliantly crafted story that may change your understanding of the origins of the American Civil War. In this episode, Jon joins us for a conversation about the Wide Awakes, the anti-slavery youth movement that played an instrumental role in electing Abraham Lincoln in 1860 and took part in some of the first acts of violence between pro and anti-slavery Americans in 1861. Jon also discusses the ways that the past and present interact in powerful ways, and how politics can evolve, step-by-step,...

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Why Bushwick Bill Matters w/ Charles Hughes show art Why Bushwick Bill Matters w/ Charles Hughes

The Road to Now

You might know Bushwick Bill as a member of the iconic Houston rap group The Geto Boys, but his contributions to rap music, his role in the debates over free speech in the 1990s, and his overall influence are far more substantial than you probably realize. In this episode, we welcome Charles Hughes back to the show to discuss his new book and to get a better understanding of the challenges and triumphs that shaped one of rap history’s most influential artists.   is the Director of the Lynne and Henry Turley Memphis Center at Rhodes College. His previous books include  Country...

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#305 A Conversation w/ Jonah Goldberg – Recorded Live at Word of South Festival 2024 show art #305 A Conversation w/ Jonah Goldberg – Recorded Live at Word of South Festival 2024

The Road to Now

Jonah Goldberg is one of America’s most well-known conservative intellectuals, with a resume that includes more than two decades at The National Review, twelve years as a commentator on Fox News, and two New York Times Bestsellers. In recent years, however, the changing definition of “conservative” in American politics has put Jonah at odds with the party that they once called home. In this episode, recorded live at Word of South Festival in Tallahassee, Florida, Jonah joins Ben & Bob for a discussion that ranges from the history and politics of the Supreme Court, to the...

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#304 National History Day w/ Cathy Gorn & Don Wildman show art #304 National History Day w/ Cathy Gorn & Don Wildman

The Road to Now

Can learning the skills required to do good history serve as an antidote to conspiracy theory? & Don Wildman think so, and in this episode they join us to discuss their work to teach those skills in the 6th-12th grade classroom through National History Day, a program that reaches more than half a million students and tens of thousands of teachers each year. We agree with them and think National History Day is an American treasure, so we hope you enjoy this conversation about what goes into creating good history, how we can better teach that to the public, and how your kids can get...

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The Harlem Globetrotters w/ Ben Green show art The Harlem Globetrotters w/ Ben Green

The Road to Now

Ben and Bob are heading to Tallahassee on April 27 for a live recording at Word of South Festival and the show is free! The Harlem Globetrotters are one of those great parts of American culture that almost everyone knows and loves. For most of us today, the Globetrotters are outstanding entertainers. But did you know that in the mid-20th century the Globetrotters were probably the single best basketball team on the planet? Did you know that they did travel the globe as agents of the US Department of State during the Cold War, but that they are not, in fact, from Harlem? If you want to know...

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#303 The Election of 2016 (and Ever After) w/ John Heilemann (Third Party Series #8) show art #303 The Election of 2016 (and Ever After) w/ John Heilemann (Third Party Series #8)

The Road to Now

The election of 2016 was a lot of things. It was a showdown between two candidates who had been household names for decades. It was the second time in five elections where the winning candidate lost the popular vote. And, most relevant here, it was eight years ago and one of the candidates in that election is running again in 2024, so we’ve still got a long time before we can see the full impact it had on US history. For now though, we can say that the narrow margin by which Donald Trump defeated Hillary Clinton has already cast third parties- both candidates and outside actors- as central...

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#302 The Election of 2000 w/ Doug Heye (Third Party Series #7) show art #302 The Election of 2000 w/ Doug Heye (Third Party Series #7)

The Road to Now

Hear the extended version of this episode by supporting The Road to Now on Patreon!   On December 13, 2000, Democratic Candidate Al Gore conceded that year’s Presidential Election to Republican George W. Bush. Gore’s concession speech marked a dramatic conclusion to an election that had been contested for more than a month, with partisans from both major parties flocking to Florida to recount ballots in hopes that the few hundred votes that separated the candidates would fall in their favor. Ultimately, however, the final decision on the election came from the Supreme Court, which...

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#301 The Election of 1992 w/ Julian Zelizer (Third Party Series #6) show art #301 The Election of 1992 w/ Julian Zelizer (Third Party Series #6)

The Road to Now

In 1992, President George Bush’s bid for a second term did not go well. Despite taking 79% of the electoral vote in 1988, holding office during the collapse of communism in Europe, and serving as commander-in-chief during the US victory in the first Iraq War, Bush found himself flanked by a smooth talking former Arkansas governor and a Texas businessman armed with a personal fortune and a lot of charts. When it was all over, Bush had garnered about ten million fewer votes than he had four years earlier and a 12-year run of Republican Presidents was over.   How did Bill Clinton manage to...

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Stephen Foster was America’s first great published musician. He wrote some of America’s great folk songs, including “Oh, Suzanna,” “Camptown Races” and “Hard Times Come Again No More,” and his music was the inspiration for Paul Green’s play “The Stephen Foster Story,” which is performed every summer in Bardstown, Kentucky. In this episode we speak with two of the artists involved in that play- Donna Phillips and Johnny Warren- as well as My Kentucky Old Kentucky Home State Park Mansion Supervisor, Richard Blanton, to learn more about Foster’s life, their work in preserving his memory, and how it all can help us understand our past.

 

If you’re traveling through Kentucky, make sure to check out dates for “The Stephen Foster Story” and visit My Old Kentucky Home Mansion!

 

This episode was edited by Gary Fletcher.