
Tuesday, May 20th TV listings for CUNY NYC TV HD
Ed-Cast Earl Monroe Renaissance Basketball High School HS: The Power of a Ball and a Book
The Earl Monroe Basketball High School believes in the power of a book and a ball to change the world. This new Bronx charter school harnesses students' love of basketball, not to create new players, but as both a teaching tool and as a pathway.
Italics Edward E. Boccia & Best of 2024
Hosted by Anthony Tamburri.
Puerto Rican Voices Women in Sports
Gigi Fernandez, Learn how winning the gold medal in tennis doubles changed her life; Monica Puig's historic gold medal for Puerto Rico; Carla Cortijo made history as the first Puerto Rican-born player to play for a WNBA.
Roosevelt House Public Policy Institute at Hunter College Derek Leebaert - Unlikely Heroes: Franklin Roosevelt, His Four Lieutenants, and the World They Made
Hunter College presents an event hosted by Roosevelt House-The first in a new series Speaking of Justice: Protest as a Path to Progress: Making Black Lives Matter Introduction by: Hunter President Jennifer J. Raab. Panelists: Dr. D'Weston Haywood.
Keeping Relevant with Ronnie Eldridge Primary Election 2025 and Ranked Choice Voting - Helen Rosenthal
Ranked Choice Voting (RCV), a relatively new way for New Yorkers to vote in municipal elections is outlined and discussed. RCV is different and it's complicated, and important in anticipation of the June 2025, Primary Election, to select a candidate.
City Works Captive Labor: Forcing Prisoners to Work
On this episode of City Works, host Laura Flanders speaks to Calvin John Smiley, Associate Professor of Sociology at Hunter College, and Bianca Tylek, Founder and Executive Director of Worth Rises, to talk about what some have labeled the last.
An independent news program features international journalists, grassroots leaders, independent analysts, as well as ordinary people directly affected by world events and U.S. policy.
Bob Herbert's Op-Ed.TV College Life Today - The Humanities Re-Visited - Katina Rogers/Matthew Gold
Bob and guests, education consultant Katina Rogers and CUNY Professor Matt Gold, discuss college life - TODAY - asking, why go to college - for a better job? better pay? the costs, the quality of education and, of course, what to study: Tech, STEM.
CUNY Graduate Center Presents Underground Empire: How America Weaponized the World Economy - Henry Farrell and Abraham Newman in C
CUNY Uncut Breaking the Cycle of Poverty
On this episode of CUNY Uncut, Queen College Urban Affairs MA student Aziza Sumler sits down with host David Horn to discuss how marginalized communities can attack systemic problems head on, starting with education. Recorded: 12/9/2025.
Let It Rip Mass Deportations
Latest political and news coverage.
The Breakthrough Meredith Wega Perez, Founder/Belle Fleur
On this episode of the Breakthrough host Ana Ceppi Had A Great Conversation With Meredith Wega Perez The Founder of Belle Fleur. A Floral Design Studio Specializing in Gifts and Bouquets. Recorded: 10/16/2023.
Book It The Note With Alafair Burke
CUNY Laureates Harold Schonberg, Annie Baker, And Howard Sackler
On this episode of CUNY Laureates, we profile another three Pulitzer Prize winners who graduated from the City University of New York. First, Harold Schonberg devoted his life and his writing to the thing he loved most: music. Annie Baker rewrites .
Journalist Sheryl McCarthy talks with newsmakers about their sources of inspiration. She has private conversations about public affairs issues with the people who report on them and those who ARE the story. The subjects range from global warming...
An independent news program features international journalists, grassroots leaders, independent analysts, as well as ordinary people directly affected by world events and U.S. policy.
Interviews and investigative reporting on the people and movements driving positive systemic change.
Black America Finding My Voice with Frederick Joseph
New York Times bestselling author Frederick Joseph joins us to dive into his powerful new book, This Thing of Ours. We meet Ossie Brown, a teenage basketball star whose injury sidelines his athletic dreams and leads him to a writing program where he.
A news magazine program that addresses issues affecting the Asian American communities nationwide.
Tinabeth Piña celebrates the women of the LatinX community.
Nueva York Angela Mondragon, Angelo Cabrera, Somos Cumbia, Somos Familia
Angela Mondragon faced harsh realities of our immigration system. Angelo Cabrera, immigrant student advocate, leads the City College Immigrant Student Center. Karla Florez's Somos Cumbia, Somos Familia featured at the Museum of the City of New York.
Sustainability Matters The Road Ahead: Climate & Sustainability with Andrew Revkin
Veteran environmental journalist Andrew Revkin joins us to reflect on three decades of covering the climate crisis-and how communication can unite us to drive meaningful change. Recorded: 3/14/2025.
Conversations with Jim Zirin What Were John Singer Sargent's Greatest Works?
Jean Strouse tells Jim about her fascinating book describing the extraordinary relationship between a wealthy British art dealer Asher Wertheimer, his large family, and John Singer Sargent, the iconic portraitist of the 19th and 20th centuries.
An independent news program features international journalists, grassroots leaders, independent analysts, as well as ordinary people directly affected by world events and U.S. policy.
Quicksand (1950)
A garage mechanic (Mickey Rooney) robs the till for a date with a gold digger (Jeanne Cagney), then sinks even lower.
National Gallery of Art Henri Rousseau: Jungles in Paris
Profile of a French painter, Henri Rousseau (1844-1910), a post-impressionist. Specializing in jungle scenes.
A variety of short films on the arts.
A variety of short films on the arts.
ATW's Working in the Theatre Setting the Stage
Guests: David Rockwell, Jerry Mitchell and Jack O'Brien.
Both Sides of the Bars Debunking the Myth: Why Mass Incarceration Doesn't Mean Less Crime.
[Sponsored] In the last decade, nearly all 50 U.S. states have declined in both crime and mass incarceration rates, but according to a recent report by The Sentencing Project (TSP), there's a startling disconnect between the two. This report expos...
Day at Night Joan Baez, Singer-Songwriter
Joan Baez discusses motherhood and performs Spanish selections. Host: James Day. Classic public television talk program from 1973-74. Original tape date: April 20, 1974.
African-American Legends David Paterson, American Politician and Attorney
In this edition, David A. Paterson, American politician and attorney talks to the host Dr. Roscoe C. Brown about his reflections of the legislature and about his seventeen year experience in the NY Senate. Taped: 10/15/2002.
This Is America & the World South Korea Today - Jinkwansa (Buddhist) Temple
HyeJu Sunim, director of the Jinkwansa temple's Meditation Center in South Korea, discusses the core principles of Buddhism and the fundamentals of meditation.
Zicklin Talks Business Artificial Intelligence: Where is it Taking Us?
What is generative AI? How might it be used in creative works, and what are the implications for intellectual property? How could it be used in finance, businesses, and the workplace in general? Are there ways that young people use AI that might...
CUNY Forum Trump and the City
This episode of CUNY Forum explores the impact of Trump-era policies on NYC's housing, immigration, and services, stressing the need for proactive solutions and youth activism. It urges political leaders to offer a positive.