Nina Porzucki

Marco Werman in the studio on the right-hand side facing Ai Weiwei

Host Marco Werman’s favorite interviews of 2018

From artist Ai Weiwei, to the coach of Afghanistan’s national women’s team Kelly Lindsey, host Marco Werman shares his favorite interviews of 2018.

A Royal Childhood: What’s in Store For the Royal Newborn?

Arts, Culture & Media

The Language of Love: One Aussie Teen’s Short Film on Unrequited Love

Global Politics

Downtown Boston After the Marathon Bombing

Arts, Culture & Media

Join the Army, Speak a Language and Become a Citizen

Arts, Culture & Media
The World

Hurricane Sandy Sends Cars Floating Through Brooklyn’s Immigrant Communities

Environment

Immigrant communities on the eastern seaboard are among those bearing the brunt of Hurricane Sandy. Konstantin Dubyago tells host Lisa Mullins how his neighborhood’s large Russian community is coping in the storm’s aftermath.

The World

Hebrew Immersion Charter School in New York

Global Politics

A Hebrew immersion charter school in New York has attracted students from a diversity of backgrounds. But some educators worry that schools like this one are too narrow in their appeal.

Wheat Can Be Kindness and Other Political Candidates

Arts, Culture & Media

Some California candidates have chosen to use auspicious Chinese names to attract votes.

The World

Cantonese: a Dialect in Peril?

Arts, Culture & Media

In official China, Mandarin is favored over all other dialects. That has had a knock-on effect here in the US, where Cantonese used to be the dominant Chinese language. Reporter Nina Porzucki reports from New York on how Cantonese is faring.

Marilyn Chin

The World in Words 74: Words your grandmother taught you in Chinese, Dutch and Yiddish

The World in Words

Many people learned their first foreign words from their grandmothers. Marco Werman learned a Dutch curse. Nina Porzucki learned a Yiddish word that speaks to a certain Jewish mindset. Poet Marilyn Chin learned insults, puns and tongue twisters.