Wednesday, February 11th TV listings for CUNY NYC TV HD
Ed-Cast Excellence in Teaching: Celebrating New York City Flag Award Winners
Great teachers are one of education's most important forces. Dr.Linda Hirsch speaks with three winners of the prestigious Flag Award for Excellence in Teaching. Their teaching, dedication, and insights remind us of the power...
Italics Cafe Mars and Civita
In this episode of Italics, we visit Cafe Mars, a Brooklyn restaurant reimagining Italian cuisine with creativity and a contemporary touch.
Centro Diasporican Art in Motion - Block 3
Featuring topics of interest to the Hispanic community.
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 Ronald E. Richter: JCCA - Children's Welfare, A Calling
The number of children in foster care has decreased, yet JCCA'S Ronald Richter says kids entering foster care have little-or-no dental or medical care, lack stability, family violence and are candidates for prison. Cuts in their Medicaid.
City Works Food Justice: The Fight for Access and Fairness
On this episode of City Works, host Laura Flanders speaks with New York State Assembly Member Khaleel Anderson, and Executive Director of Community Food Advocates Liz Accles about the ongoing crisis of food access in marginalized communities.
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.
Program featuring interviews with men and women from a variety of fields with Bob Herbert.
CUNY Graduate Center Presents Annual Jose Munoz Award: Angela Y. Davis
Angela Y. Davis, professor emerita of history of consciousness and feminist studies at University of California, Santa Cruz, will be honored with the 9th Annual Jose Munoz Award. Davis has been at the forefront of 20th.
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 .
A LA LATINA Araceli Lewis, Global Account Executive, Dell Technologies
We welcome the incredible Araceli Lewis, a powerhouse global sales executive at Dell Technologies. With a deep expertise in cybersecurity, cloud solutions, AI, and managed services, Araceli serves as a Global Account Manager, leading a team focused.
Book It An Exercise in Uncertainty with Jonathan Gluck
This month on Book It... we chat with author Jonathan Gluck about his powerful memoir An Exercise in Uncertainty, which looks back at how he has lived with incurable cancer for more than 20 years; and Isabel Ortiz speaks with Zenda Walker...
CUNY Laureates John Yao, Sol Yurick, And Lisa Corinne Davis
On this episode we profile three Guggenheim Fellows from CUNY: John Yao, who turns intimate moments into big band music, Sol Yurick, whose gritty novels inspired cinema gold, and Lisa Corinne Davis.
Journalist Sheryl McCarthy (Newsday) talks with newsmakers and the people who report public affairs.
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.
Cafe Con Felo Artificial Intelligence
Longform interview program hosted by CUNY Chancellor Felix V. Matos Rodriguez, featuring political, business, and civic leaders, to discuss how CUNY lifts New York.
Black America explores the black experience in America with discussions led by prominent black figures, hosted by journalist Carol Jenkins.
A news magazine program that addresses issues affecting the Asian American communities nationwide.
UrbanU CUNY Reconnect; Emergent City; And More!
This month: CUNY Reconnect; Hunter College Professor - and Chair of the Film Department - Kelly Anderson on her film Emergent City; 50 Under 50 Alum Walter Randolph; Baruch College's WBNB Radio; and Made in BMCC: Ken Dai. Recorded: 1/20/2026.
Tinabeth Piña celebrates the women of the LatinX community.
Nueva York Padre Fabian Arias, Felipe Leal, Juan Carlos Pinto
Father Fabian of Saint Peter's Church shares how they support immigrants facing legal uncertainty; writer Carmen Boullosa interviews architect Felipe Leal on humane cities; artist Juan Carlos Pinto reflects on identity through MetroCard portraits.
This program explores New York's response to climate change and the shift to renewable energy; leading experts discuss sustainable innovations and new green career paths for a cleaner future.
Conversations with Jim Zirin What is Glenn Lowry's Valedictory?
Glenn Lowry just stepped down as the sixth Director of New York's iconic Museum of Modern Art after a 30-year run in which he was acknowledged as one of the greatest museum directors in the world.
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.
Song of Freedom (1936)
A longshoreman descended from slaves becomes a famous concert singer and decides to return to the land of his roots.
National Gallery of Art 20th-Century American Art: The Art of Romare Bearden
Art History.
A variety of short films on the arts.
A variety of short films on the arts.
ATW's Working in the Theatre Reinterpreting Musicals
Rob Ashford, Ted Chapin, Scott Ellis.
Both Sides of the Bars The Impacts of Credible Messenger Mentorship.
[Sponsored] Mentorship plays a powerful role for young people involved in the juvenile and criminal legal systems. Mentors offer young people steady and positive support during a critical stage of their lives. Mentors help youth meet court mandates..
Day at Night Agnes De Mille, Choreographer.
Choreographer Agnes DeMille discusses her early years as a dancer in London and the incidents that led to her present career. Topics spoken about are her books on dancing, her changing dance preferences, and the impact her dancing has had on America.
African-American Legends Guest: Ted Shaw
On this episode of African American Legends, Dr. Brown is joined by Columbia University Law Professor, Ted Shaw, as they talk about the most memorable Civil Rights cases Professor Shaw has handled over the years, the effects those cases have had...
Irish Writers in America Colum McCann, Conan O'Brien
Colum McCann talks about the complexities of his identity as an Irishmen living in New York, that a comfortable upbringing can drive one to write as much as a difficult one, and that inhabiting the other is paramount in his approach to writing.
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 Zohran Mamdani and the Future of New York Politics
CUNY Forum explores Zohran Mamdani's historic win as NYC's first Muslim and South Asian mayor, seeing it as a generational shift toward affordability, inclusion, and grassroots power, with hope for a more united, community-driven city government.
