Podcasts: Bill Newman

Bill Newman

The Bill Newman Show. Weekdays at 9AM. Join Bill & Monte Belmonte as they talk with news-makers, elected officials, authors, artists, poets, and ‘fish wrap’ about the day’s headlines.

Recent guests include authors Senator Elizabeth Warren (Persist); Larry Tye (Demagogue: The Life and Long Shadow of Senator Joe McCarthy); Daniel James Brown (Facing the Mountain); Chuck Collins (The Wealth Hoarders and Born on Third Base).

Here Comes The Sunrise Movement

8.6.19 The Sunrise Movement in Western Massachusetts with movement leaders from ARHS Allison Brau and See-Ho Lee and former gubernatorial candidate and Democratic activist Bob Massie; Wendy Sawyer, from the Easthampton-based Prison Policy Initiative on PPI’s new study on women being freed from prison — the numbers and information is astounding.

Is This Who We Are Now?

8/5: State Senator Jo Comerford on the recent gun violence; Black in the Valley with special guest Anika Lopes.

A Convict or an Addict?

8/2: Section 35: Massachusetts Prisoners Legal Services attorney Bonnie Tenneriello on committing people who have committed no crime to jail for treatment; Northampton Association of School Employees President Sadie Cora on yesterday’s contract agreement with the City; MTA Veep Max Page on the Massachusetts legislature’s action and inaction on education; ArtBeat with Donnabelle Casis.

Monte & A Constitutional Quiz Crisis

8/1:  The mess we’re in—take the quiz (this is fun!) along with Monte and Judges Cynthia and Sanford Levinson, co-authors of “Fault Lines in the Constitution: The Framers, Their Fights, and the Flaws that

Affect Us Today;”  then, Rev. Peter Ives and Pastor Laura Dalton on Northampton’s First Churches (plural, one church).

This Is Your Brain on Sex

7/31: First “How Dinosaurs Go to School” the theatrical adaptation of Jane Yolen’s fabulous kids book —G rated—with the always wonderful Paint Box Theater players and director; then, G-string rated “Sex Matters” with Dr. Jane Fleishman –what your brain is doing while you are canoodling.

Lessons of Humanity

7/30: Lessons of Humanity with amazing musician Samite, originally from Uganda, coming to perform in Amherst; “The Making of a Democratic Economy: Building Prosperity for the Many, Not Just the Few” with Ted Howard, cofounder and president of the Democracy Collaborative.

A Movement and Some Movies

7/29: Cool Films with Larry Hott and Billy Wimsatt, Movement Voter Project founder and Executive Director.

The Good News/Bad News Budget

7/26: Representative Mindy Domb is joined by MTA Vice President Max Page; Art Beat with Eva Fierst.

Alex Morse v Richie Neal

7/25: Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse on his race against Congressman Richard Neal; the Chaplain and the Pastor: Smith College chaplain Matilda Cantwell and Haydenville Church pastor Dawn Orluske.

Because Internet

7/24: Gretchen McCulloch, author of “Because Internet: Understanding the New Rules of Language;” from the KO Festival Debo’rah Eliezer, author of and actor in “(dis)place]d], the story of her father—
an Iraqi Jew, member of the Zionist underground, refugee, spy, and immigrant.

Recent Headlines

16 hours ago in National

Government shutdown could be the longest ever, Speaker Johnson warns

Republican Speaker Mike Johnson predicted Monday the federal government shutdown may become the longest in history, saying he "won't negotiate" with Democrats until they hit pause on their health care demands and reopen.

22 hours ago in Trending, World

Living hostages and Palestinian prisoners are released as part of ceasefire in Gaza

All 20 remaining living hostages held in Gaza and hundreds of Palestinian prisoners held by Israel walked free Monday as part of a ceasefire pausing two years of war that decimated the Gaza Strip and killed tens of thousands of Palestinians.

4 days ago in National

Blast at a Tennessee explosives plant leaves 19 people missing and feared dead, sheriff says

A blast that leveled an explosives plant Friday in rural Tennessee left 19 people missing and feared dead, authorities said.

4 days ago in National

National Guard set to patrol Memphis but blocked in Illinois for 2 weeks

National Guard troops were expected Friday to begin patrolling in Memphis, a day after a federal judge in Illinois blocked the deployment of troops in the Chicago area for at least two weeks.

4 days ago in National

Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt, Loyola Chicago’s beloved chaplain, dies at 106

Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt, the chaplain for the men's basketball team at Loyola Chicago who became a beloved international celebrity during the school's fairy-tale run to the Final Four of the NCAA Tournament in 2018, has died, the university announced Thursday night. She was 106.