50 episodes

From WNYC, New York Public Radio, join WNYC's cultural attaché Sara Fishko for her personal radio essays on music, art, culture and media.

Fishko Files from WNYC WNYC Studios

    • Arts
    • 4.8 • 123 Ratings

From WNYC, New York Public Radio, join WNYC's cultural attaché Sara Fishko for her personal radio essays on music, art, culture and media.

    Vast Wasteland

    Vast Wasteland

    On May 9th, 1961, a still-celebrated speech rocked the world of broadcast television. In it, FCC Chairman Newton Minow zeroed in on television's vapid programming landscape, and the words "vast wasteland" became a contemporary catchphrase. More from WNYC's Sara Fishko in this edition of Fishko Files.

    This is the final edition of Fishko Files at WNYC. The episodes will live online and in the WNYC archives. You can find more extended Fishko work on our website.

    • 7 min
    Empire State: Going Up

    Empire State: Going Up

    Tomorrow, May 1st, marks the 90th anniversary of the opening of the Empire State Building. As WNYC's Sara Fishko tells us, the building's rise to its 102-story height is only one of the ways it towered over all the rest. More, in this episode of Fishko Files.

    • 7 min
    Stanwyck & Co.

    Stanwyck & Co.

    In honor of this weekend's Oscars: WNYC's Sara Fishko with this Fishko Files from the archive, filled with the award-winning voices of some of the great women of Hollywood's Golden Age. (Produced in 2013)

    • 7 min
    Poets' Voices

    Poets' Voices

    In honor of April, National Poetry Month, WNYC's Sara Fishko asks the question: what's the connection between poets' speaking voices, and the poems they create? (Produced in 2012)

    • 6 min
    Peter and the Wolf

    Peter and the Wolf

    The celebrated children's tale with music, Peter and the Wolf - as WNYC's Sara Fishko tells us - was first heard in Moscow in the spring of 1936, an ominous time in the Soviet Union. Everywhere it went after that, it thrilled a listenership of kids. More, in this episode of Fishko Files.

    • 7 min
    Bernstein, Made for TV

    Bernstein, Made for TV

    When we produced a feature on the celebrated Leonard Bernstein concert-broadcasts known as the Young People's Concerts (1958-1972), we were thrilled to find Roger Englander, the celebrated producer and director of the broadcasts, still alive. The interview is contained in this Fishko Files, which we replay in honor of Englander - who died recently at the age of 94. 

    Read more on Roger Englander’s life and work in his New York Times obituary.

Customer Reviews

4.8 out of 5
123 Ratings

123 Ratings

Money $teve ,

Realizes Podcasting Potential

This podcast enriches my cultural awareness in a unique way. I would say that I wish more podcasts would deliver similar content except that Sara Fishko has produced an output so much better than others as to be a difference of kind not a difference of degree. So it really seems like this podcast is unique by design and so beyond replication.
So instead of pleading for others to duplicate Sara’s technique I would instead ask Sara to preserve her vision at all costs.

Outstanding work, Sara.

LAURAVEJA ,

Always learning

Me too, I love this podcast and I think of it as a walking library of knowledge!
So compact and yet so enriching.

Kathleen@ ,

Love this podcast

I love love love this podcast. Fishko files helps you remember why artists and art are so critical to our culture. I always learn something new. The delivery is so understated, it lets the stars shine brightly.

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