Skip Navigation Return to the home page for KJZZ 91.5 FM

Programs

Morning Edition

Arizona Highways Special Holiday Issue
Arizona Highways Magazine is trying something new in its December/Holiday issue this year - the 84yr old magazine is featuring an all-photography edition, a first for the magazine.

KJZZ's Morning Edition Host, Dennis Lambert spoke with Arizona Highway's Editor Robert Stieve on how the idea of this picture postcard volume came about.
This links opens to further resources Full Story
SMoCA's "Dogged" Exhibit
William Wegman is well-known for his prints of dogs, but a new exhibit at the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Arts shows there's more to his work than his four-legged friends. KJZZ's Mark Brodie reports.
This links opens to further resources Full Story
Topics from the Most Recent Show
  • Reality TV, Iraqi Style: Giving Leaders An Earful
    One of the most popular programs on Iraqi TV these days is <em>Hotline,</em> a call-in show that allows viewers to take their problems directly to the highest government officials. It offers an unprecedented chance for ordinary Iraqis to confront their government.
  • Rare Darwin Book Found In Guest Bathroom
    Charles Darwin's revolutionary book <em>On the Origin of Species</em> turns 150 on Tuesday. It's the book where Darwin introduced the theory of natural selection and survival of the fittest. To mark the publishing milestone, Christie's will be auctioning a recently discovered treasure: a rare first edition. It had been on a shelf in the guest bathroom of a family in Oxford, England.
  • Capitol Corridor Runs Cleaner-Burning Diesel Train
    One of the busiest passenger rail trains in the nation is getting a new engine &mdash; a greener engine. In California, Amtrak's Capitol Corridor, which runs between San Jose and Sacramento, is starting to use a cleaner-burning diesel engine. The new technology cuts harmful emissions in half.
  • Ambassador Vexed At Hollywood's British Vampires
    The vampire romance <em>The Twilight Saga: New Moon</em> was No. 1 at the movie box office over the weekend. It's not just tween girls who are paying attention. Vampire flicks are having an impact on trans-Atlantic relations. Britain's ambassador to the U.S. Sir Nigel Sheinwald tells Renee Montagne he takes issue with so many British actors playing what he calls "the unholy ranks of the silver screen's undead."
  • Cities Use Cash To Encourage Carpooling
    Washington D.C. has launched a pilot program to reduce road congestion and pollution: It is paying commuters $2 a day to carpool. It's based on programs in Atlanta, Los Angeles and other cities. The assumption is that after a few months of being paid, people will evolve into full-time carpoolers without a cash incentive.
  • Turan's Book Spotlights Theater Producer Joe Papp
    There's a new book out about legendary theater producer Joseph Papp. Kenneth Turan's book is called <em>Free for All: Joe Papp, the Public, and the Greatest Theater Story Ever Told.</em> Papp founded the New York Shakespeare Festival and the Public Theater. He also produced works like <em>Hair</em> and <em>A Chorus Line.</em>
  • Certain Digital Readers In Short Supply
    Barnes & Noble says shoppers who have pre-ordered its new digital reader may not receive it until January. Sony says one of its new e-readers also is in short supply. Analysts say the companies underestimated the demand. Amazon is in a good position. The online retailer had shortages of its reader last year, but this year it says it has plenty in stock.
  • N.Y. Tavern To Offer 100-Proof Thanksgiving Turkey
    The owner of O'Casey's Tavern in Midtown Manhattan will unveil on Thanksgiving what he says is the nation's first 100-proof turkey. The bird will be infused with fruit-flavored and 100-proof vodka for three days before roasting. The meat will have hints of peach, raspberry, cherry and apple. The gravy also will be laced with liquor.
  • Charity Tries Texting To Make Up For Donations
    Like many charities, donations are significantly down to the United Way in Charlotte, North Carolina. In June, it announced cuts to nearly every member agency. The problems have continued. Now the United Way is trying a new way to raise money: texting.
  • The Last Word In Business
    Renee Montagne has the Last Word in business.
  • Final Health Bill May Be Out Of Reach For Democrats
    Democrats united on Saturday to advance health care legislation in the Senate. Several Democratic senators have made it clear that they will not vote for a final health care proposal without big changes to the bill.
  • 'Teach For America' Teachers Learn On The Job
    Tim Cooper, 26, is a new teacher at Isaac Bildersee Middle School in Brooklyn, N.Y. Cooper has his own classroom after a brief six-week training program with Teach for America. TFA says it has raised the standards for teachers by recruiting the best and the brightest and giving them hands-on experience. But some question whether the program's training regimen is adequate.
  • Unexploded Bomb May Shatter N. Ireland Peace
    In Northern Ireland, a 400-pound car bomb failed to detonate over the weekend. It was placed outside police headquarters in Belfast, and that has residents wondering if dissident factions of the IRA are intent on stepping up violence.
  • Chicago Teens Encourage Non-Violent Actions
    The brutal killing of a Chicago teenager in September brought U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder and Education Secretary Arne Duncan to the city to speak out about youth violence. Now that the cabinet members are back in Washington, what is happening in the effort to stop youth violence? Some Chicago teenagers are taking on the issue themselves.
  • GlobalPost: A New Experiment In Foreign Coverage
    In recent years, budgets for permanent foreign staffs have been slashed in all but a handful of newsrooms. GlobalPost, an upstart online news outlet that relies on a network of more than 70 part-time contributors in 50 countries, is making the case for a new for-profit model for covering the world.