Best Podcasts to Listen to While traveling Home for the Holidays
Newsweek lists the best podcasts to listen to while traveling home for the holidays, including Assistant Professor Chenjerai Kumanyika’s Civil War podcast “Uncivil."
Mates, A. W., Mikesell, L., & Smith, M. S. (Eds.). (2010). Language, Interaction and Frontotemporal Dementia: Reverse Engineering the Social Mind. Equinox.
Newsweek lists the best podcasts to listen to while traveling home for the holidays, including Assistant Professor Chenjerai Kumanyika’s Civil War podcast “Uncivil."
The Partnership for a Drug-Free New Jersey (PDFNJ) reports that a study by Associate Professor Itzhak Yanovitzsky reveals that the media campaign PDFNJ ran did motivate New Jersey residents to take "action steps to prevent opioid abuse in their homes and communities."
Gannett New Jersey writes about a Feeding Middlesex County initiative launched in a Rutgers School of Communication and Information classroom by graduate students in the Service Leadership Impact class.
The LA Times reports that activists are lying in wait to protest should President Trump fire Robert Mueller, quoting Professor of Journalism and Media Studies and History David Greenberg.
Indiwire ranks "Uncivil's" episode titled "The Soldiers" as number 16 on its list of the 50 best podcasts of 2017. "Uncivil" is co-hosted by Assistant Professor Chenjerai Kumanyika.
Gimlet Media's podcast "Uncivil," co-hosted by Assistant Professor Cherenjai Kumanyika, is included in The New Yorker's list of the Best Podcasts of 2017.
In this article about Gimlet Media's Podcast "Uncivil," co- hosted by Assistant Professor Chenerjai Kumanyika, The New York Times writes, "The podcast is sturdily grounded in historical fact, never the argumentative whim of its hosts. The tension and drama come from the fact that the real history of the war, slavery, and race in America is constantly being relitigated and rewritten by politically motivated actors."
Professor of Journalism and Media Studies and History David Greenberg writes an op-ed for The Star-Ledger on the politicization of holiday greetings.
In this article Professor of Journalism Media Studies and History David Greenberg, authored, he wrote, "If we’re not attentive to the history implicit in the “Me Too Moment” phrase—the reality that people and the press viewed aberrant sexual behavior differently in other eras—we risk misinterpreting the past."