
Monday, July 7th TV listings for CUNY NYC TV HD
EdCast Embracing the Science of Reading
Does the science of reading hold the key to helping children learn to read? To boost reading scores, NYC schools must now choose among three curriculums based on the science of reading. Dr. Linda Hirsch discusses these with Professor Katie P. Miles.
Italics Joseph Tusiani Collection & ILICA
On this episode of Italics we visited at Lehman College the recent Joseph Tusiani collection curated by Marguerite Zappa and we attended the celebration of 20 years of ILICA (Italian Language Intercultural Alliance) at Tribeca 360.
Puerto Rican Voices Puerto Rico, Puerto Ricans
Puerto Rico, Puerto Ricans: The Center for Puerto Rican Studies held its first regional diaspora summit to bring together various members of the Puerto Rican diaspora interested in the island's debt crisis, specifically what the situation is exact...
Roosevelt House Public Policy Institute at Hunter College Kai Bird - American Prometheus, The Inspiration for the Major Motion Picture Oppenheimer
A discussion of the monumental, Pulitzer Prize-winning biography American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer by Kai Bird and the late Martin J. Sherwin. Author Kai Bird is in conversation with Hunter College Professor...
Keeping Relevant with Ronnie Eldridge Robert Polner: An Irish Passion for Justice
Ronnie talks with Robert Polner, writer with Michael Tubridy, of An Irish Passion for Justice, discussing the life and career of Paul O'Dwyer, an Irish immigrant, remembered by many as an attorney advocating for social justice. Recorded: 12/11/2024.
Highlighting the vast array of workers across New York City.
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 David Baluante/Law School
Bob Herbert's Op-Ed.TV is a weekly half-hour program featuring interviews with significant men and women from a variety of fields: officeholders and activists, economists, labor leaders, writers and artists. Herbert, a longtime journalist.
CUNY Graduate Center Presents When the City Stopped: Stories from NY's Essential Workers
When the City Stopped tells story of the COVID-19 lockdown in the words of ordinary New Yorkers, illuminating the fear and uncertainty of life in the early days of the pandemic, as well as the solidarity that sustained the city.
CUNY Uncut Balling Through Disabilities
Join Hannah Kavanagh, CUNY senior and film major, on the first ever CUNY student podcast where she talks about anything and everything uncensored, unedited and uncut.
Let It Rip is an unapologetic progressive news and commentary program delivering fact-based information on the issues that are impacting our everyday lives. Convening distinguished academic scholars, notable .
Brown & Black Afro-Latinos with guests Judith Anderson, Eric Velasquez and Yasser Tejeda
Co-Hosted by Jack Rico and Mike Sargent, the series Brown & Black looks at race and pop culture through a brown and black lens. In this episode we take in-depth examination into the rise Afro-Latinos in mainstream media and entertainment.
Book It with CA is a bi-monthly series featuring interviews with today's hottest authors and their latest books.Each episode, host Carol Anne Riddell will talk to them about their work, their lives and everything in between. Covering a wide range of.
CUNY Laureates The Pulitzer Prize, Angela Hill, And Oscar Hijuelo
On this episode we learn about the Pulitzer Prize and profile two winners who graduated from CUNY: Angela Hill, who explored one of America's most controversial weapons, and Oscar Hijuelos, the first Latino author to win a Pulitzer Prize in fiction.
One to One Susan Brownmiller - Author My City Highrise Garden
Author Susan Brownmiller.
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 Kerry Coddett
Black America is an in-depth conversation that explores what it means to be Black in America. The show profiles Black activists, academics, business leaders, sports figures, elected officials, artists and writers to gauge this...
Asian American Life What's Old is New: Chinatown's Next Generation
New York City's Chinatown is cultural hub for the Asian community. It remains a popular tourist destination. However gentrification is slowly changing the landscape...
UrbanU CUNY Stories February 2025
CUNY took 30 Dreamers to Mexico on an emotional study abroad trip-more relevant than ever amid immigration crackdowns; a Myanmar student fled repression and went from Queensborough to a Ph.D. at The Grad Center.
LATiNAS Celebrating Pride: June 2025
On this episode of Latinas - we celebrate PRIDE with the Liberty Girls - a #Queer and #Afrolatina skate crew who use their roller-skating skills to build community and reclaim space. We also get to meet Barbara Herr.
Nueva York Fernando Traves?, Hennessy Garcia, BuenaVistaSocialClub Cast
Join us to celebrate Pride Month, environmental justice & the power of Cuban music on Broadway: Fernando Traves?, dir. of Center for Transitional Justice, Hennessy Garcia and the Sane Energy Project, and the Tony-winner cast of Buena Vista Social.
Sustainability Matters Earth Panel: Water
Recorded at the CUNY Graduate Center, this special Earth Day episode marks 10 years of the Futures Initiative with a powerful conversation on water-its crises, stories, and its role in building a more just, sustainable world. Recorded: 5/19/2025.
Conversations with Jim Zirin Could the Democrats Have Changed the Outcome of the 2024 Election?
Trump ran in 2024 with more negatives than any candidate in American history. Yet, he won the election over Kamala Harris who should have easily beaten him...
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.
The Great Rupert (1950)
Rupert, a dancing squirrel, is left to fend for himself on the streets after his master turns bankrupt; unsuited for the hard life, Rupert devises a scheme to raise his master's family from poverty.
National Gallery of Art Eduardo Vuillard
Art History.
A variety of short films on the arts.
A variety of short films on the arts.
ATW's Working in the Theatre Leading Ladies 2009
Panel: Laura Benanti, Beth Leavel, Bebe Neuwirth, and Alice Ripley. Moderator: Howard Sherman.
Both Sides of the Bars Supporting the Children of Incarcerated People.
[Sponsored] The arrest of a parent can be traumatic for many children. The removal of a mother or father from a child's life forces that child to confront emotional, social, and economic consequences.
Day at Night Art Buchwald, Newspaper Columnist
African-American Legends Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture
Howard Dodson, curator of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.
This Is America & the World Amb. Sonia Guzmán (Dominican Republic) Pt. II of II
Sonia Guzmán, the Dominican Republic's Ambassador to the U.S., explores the essence and values of democracy, its importance to the Dominican Republic and her country's relationship with the U.S.
Zicklin Talks Business Silicon Valley Bank:The Canary in the Coal Mine?
CUNY Forum New York's Mental Health Dilemma: Costs & Consequences
Featured guests: Hon. Karines Reyes, Member, New York State Assembly 87th District; Carolyn Reinach Wolf, Executive Partner, Abrams Fensterman, LLP Director, Mental Health Law Practice; Chris Norwood, Founder and Executive Director Health People..