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The Culture Show Podcast
GBH News
550 episodes
1 day ago
A Boston-based podcast that thrives in how we live. What we like to see, watch, taste, hear, feel and talk about. It’s an expansive look at our society through art, culture and entertainment. It’s a conversation about the seminal moments and sizable shocks that are driving the daily discourse.  We’ll amplify local creatives and explore  the homegrown arts and culture landscape and tap into the big talent that tours Boston along the way. 
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Society & Culture
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All content for The Culture Show Podcast is the property of GBH News and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
A Boston-based podcast that thrives in how we live. What we like to see, watch, taste, hear, feel and talk about. It’s an expansive look at our society through art, culture and entertainment. It’s a conversation about the seminal moments and sizable shocks that are driving the daily discourse.  We’ll amplify local creatives and explore  the homegrown arts and culture landscape and tap into the big talent that tours Boston along the way. 
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Society & Culture
Episodes (20/550)
The Culture Show Podcast
January 5, 2026 - Samuel Barber's "Vanessa," Steve Sweeney's "Townie," and Jane Eaglen on Pavarotti
Samuel Barber’s Vanessa is a psychologically charged American opera centered on denial, obsession, and self-deception. Premiered at the Metropolitan Opera in 1958, the work earned composer Samuel Barber the Pulitzer Prize for Music. The Boston Symphony Orchestra, in collaboration with Boston Lyric Opera, will be performing Vanessa for the first time in BSO history, conducted by Andris Nelsons, with mezzo-soprano Samantha Hankey appearing as Erika. Tony Fogg, BSO’s  Vice President of Artistic Planning, and Samantha Hankey join us for an overview. “Vanessa” will be performed January 8 and January 10 at Symphony Hall. To learn more go here. Boston comedian and actor Steve Sweeney joins The Culture Show to talk about his new film “Townie,” which is drawn directly from his Charlestown upbringing. Known for comedy rooted in working-class Catholic culture, Sweeney uses the neighborhood as a lens on loyalty, memory, and what it means to stay put as a place — and a city — changes. You can catch a screening of “Townie,” on January 16 at The Cut in Gloucester. To learn more go here. Grammy-winning soprano Jane Eaglen returns for the Culture Show’s recurring feature AI: Actual Intelligence. A veteran of the world’s major opera stages, Eaglen is on the faculty at New England Conservatory and serves as President of the Boston Wagner Society, bringing a performer’s perspective to questions of tradition, audience, and the future of classical music.
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12 hours ago
55 minutes 32 seconds

The Culture Show Podcast
January 2, 2026 - Stephen Greenblatt, Jill Lepore and Nicholas Boggs
Pulitzer Prize–winning author Stephen Greenblatt joins The Culture Show, to talk about his latest book, “Dark Renaissance:The Dangerous Times and Fatal Genius of Shakespeare’s Greatest Rival.”  It traces the meteoric rise and violent end of Christopher Marlowe—playwright, poet, spy, and heretic—whose genius endures today.   From there, Harvard historian and New Yorker staff writer Jill Lepore  discusses her new book, “We the People." Published on the occasion of the 250th anniversary of the nation’s founding—the anniversary, too, of the first state constitutions—"We the People" offers a wholly new history of the Constitution. Finally writer Nicholas Boggs joins The Culture Show to talk about his book, “Baldwin: A Love Story.” It's the first major biography of James Baldwin in three decades, revealing how the writer’s personal relationships shaped his life and work. 
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3 days ago
55 minutes 30 seconds

The Culture Show Podcast
January 1, 2026 - Dennis Lehane, Joy Behar and Hank Phillippi Ryan
Dennis Lehane, known for writing literary crime novels such as “Mystic River,” “Gone, Baby, Gone,” and “Shutter Island,” joins The Culture Show to talk about his latest collaboration with Apple TV+, the  crime series “Smoke.”  Created by Dennis Lehane, the nine-episode drama – inspired by true events – follows an arson investigator who teams up with a police detective to stop two serial arsonists. Lehane also serves as writer and executive producer.  From there it’s “My First Ex-Husband,” an adaptation of true stories by Joy Behar, writer, comedienne and co-host of The View.  The play explores the messy, hilarious truths of love, sex, and relationships.  Joy Behar joins The Culture Show to talk about creating this work. Finally, bestselling author Hank Phillippi Ryan joins The Culture Show to talk about her latest thriller, “All This Could Be Yours,”  The book centers on debut sensation Tessa Calloway. She’s on a whirlwind book tour for her instant bestseller, But there's a chilling problem—she soon discovers she is being stalked by someone who's obsessed not only with sabotaging her career, but also with destroying her perfect family back home. 
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4 days ago
55 minutes 26 seconds

The Culture Show Podcast
December 31, 2025 - Gish Jen, Sam Kissajukian and Gesine Bullock-Prado
Author Gish Jen discusses her novel, “Bad Bad Girl.” In this witty and deeply personal work, Jen blends fiction and autobiography to imagine her mother’s life and explore the distance between them — uncovering how storytelling can bridge what family history leaves unsaid.  From there we’re joined by Sam Kissajukian. In 2021 the Aussie comedian quit stand-up, rented an abandoned cake factory, and became a painter. Over the course of what turned out to be a six-month manic episode, he created three hundred large-scale paintings, unknowingly documenting his mental state through the process. He turned this experience into his one-man show “300 Paintings.” Finally, pastry chef and author Gesine Bullock-Prado talks about her cookbook “My Harvest Kitchen: 100+ Recipes to Savor the Seasons.”  From Hollywood lawyer to Vermont baker, she shares how cooking with what’s close at hand — and in season — can feed both body and spirit. 
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5 days ago
55 minutes 28 seconds

The Culture Show Podcast
December 30, 2025 - James Sullivan, Aisha Muharrar and Richard Russo
James Sullivan,  a journalist, author and longtime contributor to the Boston Globe, joins The Culture Show to talk about his book Which Side Are You On?: 20th Century American History in 100 Protest Songs. From there Aisha Muharrar joins The Culture Show to talk about her debut novel “Loved One.” She’s an Emmy Award–winning writer and producer who has worked on “Hacks,” “Parks” and “Recreation,” and “The Good Place.” Finally,  Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Richard Russo joins The Culture Show, to talk about his new book "Life and Art.”  It’s a COVID-era meditation on his  childhood, adulthood and what it means to be an artist.
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6 days ago
55 minutes 30 seconds

The Culture Show Podcast
December 29, 2025 - Sally Mann, Jeremy Sewall and being Henry David Thoreau
First up, Sally Mann. In 2015 renowned photographer Sally Mann published her memoir “Hold Still,” an inquiry into family history, the American South and the nature of creativity. Now, comes her book  “Art Work: On the Creative Life.”  It is laugh-out-loud funny. It’s irreverent. And it’s refreshingly practical as she guides the reader through her experience and process of being an artist.  From there Jeremy Sewall, Chef and Owner of Row 34, shares recipes and stories from his new  “Everyday Chef: Simple Dishes for Family and Friends,” which illustrates how restaurant expertise can translate into simple, satisfying meals at home. Finally, Richard Smith. For more than a quarter century he embodied Henry David Thoreau—donning the waistcoat and straw hat, walking the paths of Concord, and giving voice to one of New England’s most enduring thinkers. Now, after 26 years of living deliberately in another man’s shoes, Smith has stepped  away from the role. Closing a chapter that made Thoreau’s world vividly real for thousands who visited Walden Pond.
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1 week ago
55 minutes 24 seconds

The Culture Show Podcast
December 26, 2025 - Robert Reich, Marianne Leone, and Sam Waterston
Robert Reich served  in three presidential administrations, including as Secretary of Labor under President Bill Clinton. As a professor he has been the ultimate explainer about rising inequality. As a public intellectual he pulls no punches–calling out the bullies:  anyone and any institution that threatens democracy and human decency.  It’s a life’s work on which he reflects in his book “Coming Up Short: A Memoir of My America.”  He joins The Culture Show to talk about it.  From there Marianne Leone is an actress, author, and screenwriter. She joins The Culture Show to talk about her novel “Christina The Astonishing," a coming-of-age story about Christina Falcone and her desire to break free from Catholic school nuns, Italian mothers, and small-town Massachusetts.  Finally, Emmy-winning and Oscar-nominated actor Sam Waterston joins The Culture Show to talk about the role that launched his career, Nick Caraway in the 1974 film adaptation of “The Great Gatsby.” 
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1 week ago
55 minutes 29 seconds

The Culture Show Podcast
December 24, 2025 - Two Scoops of Scrooge, Blue Heron, Dickens' home away from home
It’s a story for the past, present  and future: Charles Dickens’  “A Christmas Carol.”  Though it was a reflection of Dickens’ times, the struggle between selfishness and  selflessness endures. In Ebeneezer Scrooge, Dickens created both an antagonist and protagonist  who went from being a covetous curmudgeon to a repentant man. Today we’re serving up two scoops of Scrooge  with actors David Coffee and Karen MacDonald about what it takes to the iconic character. From there we hit the pause button on the Santaland soundtrack to make room for Blue Heron. The vocal ensemble takes us back to 15th century England with medieval music that will put you in the holiday spirit of yore. And Susan Wilson, the official house historian of the Omni Parker House, takes us inside Charles Dickens’s remarkable 1867 residency at Boston’s Omni Parker House — the hotel where he rehearsed, wrote, and prepared for readings that sent the city into a literary fervor. She traces how Boston became a temporary home for Dickens and why “A Christmas Carol" still resonates here during the holidays.  
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1 week ago
55 minutes 28 seconds

The Culture Show Podcast
December 23, 2025 - Ron Chernow, Tara Roberts, and a Victorian Gothic Thriller
Ron Chernow―prizewinning author of seven books, including the National Book Award winner “The House of Morgan,” the Pulitzer Prize winner “Washington: A Life,” and the George Washington Book Prize winner “Alexander Hamilton”―joins The Culture Show to talk about his new biography “Mark Twain.”     From there we talk to National Geographic Explorer  in Residence Tara Roberts. She joins The Culture Show to talk about her book “Written in the Waters: A memoir of History, Home and Belonging.”  Finally, author JM Varese joins The Culture Show to talk about his latest novel, a Victorian Gothic thriller that is rooted in the real-life Victorian scandal when arsenic was used  to make decorative wallpaper. JM Varese is Director of Outreach for The Dickens Project at UC Santa Cruz. 
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1 week ago
55 minutes 34 seconds

The Culture Show Podcast
December 23, 2025 - BONUS EPISODE: Keith Lockhart Waxes Rhapsodic on "Bohemian Rhapsody"
The United States has a National Recording Registry— a list of more than 600 recordings that have been deemed culturally, historically or aesthetically significant by the Library of Congress. GBH’s The Culture Show is digging deep, one recording at a time, with our recurring segment SOUND FILES.  In this edition, Keith Lockhart with the acclaimed orchestra Boston Pops waxes operatic about his love of Queen’s 1975 masterpiece “Bohemian Rhapsody.”“Twenty-five years ago, there were all these things that everybody knew how to sing,” Lockhart said. “These days, our audience is fragmented enough — from the younger people to the older people — that there’s only one song I can think of that pretty much everybody in every audience we ever play for knows. And that is ‘Bohemian Rhapsody.’”  In 2022, it was inducted into the Library of Congress’ National Recording Registry. In its induction essay, musical artist Don Breithaupt describes it as something of a musical and technological miracle and said, simply, “it is now in a class by itself.”  On its initial release back in 1975, literally millions of people across the globe bought the record. One of those buyers was a gifted 15-year-old clarinetist in Poughkeepsie, N.Y. That, of course, was Keith Lockhart.  “The first rock album I bought — the first LP I bought — was Night at the Opera in the fall of 1975,” Lockhart said. “I’d heard ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ in airplay on the radio, and I thought, ‘How did they do this?’”  Holiday Pops is on through December 24th. To see Keith Lockhart live, learn more here.
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1 week ago
20 minutes 23 seconds

The Culture Show Podcast
December 22, 2025 - Gerald Charles Dickens, The Feast of the Seven Fishes, Mrs. Claus
In the Victorian era, Charles Dickens was more than a famous author — his public readings of A Christmas Carol turned literature into live spectacle. His great-great-grandson, Gerald Charles Dickens, carries that tradition forward with a one-man performance of the holiday classic. Touring internationally since the early 1990s, he joined The Culture Show to talk about literary inheritance, live storytelling, and decades spent bringing Dickens’ ghosts to life onstage. To learn more about Gerald Charles Dickens go here. On Christmas Eve, Italian-American tables overflow with seafood for the Feast of the Seven Fishes — a tradition shaped by Catholic practice, regional custom, and availability rather than strict rules. But debates endure: why seven dishes, what counts, and how much tradition should bend? We talked with Domenic Strazzullo and The Boston Guido about how memory, argument, and improvisation have become part of the celebration itself. Susan Roberts spends the holiday season performing as Mrs. Claus — a role that blends warmth, quick thinking, and emotional awareness. Working public events and private visits, she helps manage high expectations and big feelings that come with the season. She joined The Culture Show to talk about becoming Mrs. Claus, the craft behind effortless cheer, and why the woman in red is stepping into the spotlight. To learn more about Susan Roberts go here.
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2 weeks ago
55 minutes 28 seconds

The Culture Show Podcast
December 19, 2025 - Week in Review: The Oscars on YouTube, Rob Reiner, and Santa's beard
On this edition of The Culture Show, Culture Show co-hosts Jared Bowen, Callie Crossley and Edgar B. Herwick III go over the latest headlines on our arts and culture week-in-review. First up, Hollywood’s biggest night is getting a new home. The Academy Awards will leave broadcast television and stream exclusively on YouTube beginning with the 101st Oscars in 2029, ending a more than five-decade run on ABC and signaling a major shift in how global audiences gather for live cultural events. Plus the entertainment industry gets its annual checkup. UCLA’s Hollywood Diversity Report tracks who holds power on screen and behind the camera — and finds progress remains uneven, with representation still lagging behind the diversity of today’s audiences. Then, a long-overdue honor for Donna Summer. The Queen of Disco was posthumously inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame, recognized for writing and co-writing the hits that reshaped pop and dance music, from “I Feel Love” to “She Works Hard for the Money” and “Bad Girls.” And, a farewell to Rob Reiner. From playing “Meathead” on All in the Family to directing films like This Is Spinal Tap, The Princess Bride, and When Harry Met Sally…, Reiner’s work reshaped comedy, romance, and character-driven filmmaking. Finally, we split hairs over splitting hairs – from year-round whiskered Santas and organized beard-natural groups to professional Santas investing in hyper-real yak-hair wigs, the debate over whether Santa should grow his own beard or wear one is very much alive.
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2 weeks ago
55 minutes 32 seconds

The Culture Show Podcast
December 18, 2025 - Imari Paris Jeffries, Mary Grant, and Cocktail Guru Jonathan Pogash
Imari Paris Jeffries, President and CEO of Embrace Boston and co-chair of Everyone 250, joins us for his recurring segment AI: Actual Intelligence — a space for original, human insight. This month Jeffries discussed how history, memory, and civic responsibility are shaping current cultural conversations in Greater Boston and beyond. He also previewed Everyone250’s 2026 events to confront erasure and reclaim America’s story. To learn more go here.  Then Mary Grant, President of Massachusetts College of Art and Design, discusses the mass shooting at Brown University and how colleges are grappling with fear, safety, and institutional responsibility while trying to preserve the independence that defines campus life. She also shared her top list of  the memorable arts and culture events of 2025. And we topped things off by topping one off with Cocktail Guru Jonathan Pogash. He returned for his annual holiday visit — offering festive cocktail and mocktail ideas, plus practical advice for stocking a bar and hosting with confidence during the season. Jonathan Pogash is President and Owner of The Cocktail Guru. These are the cocktails he made today  Hanukkah Harry  Nonalcoholic : POM wonderful pomegranate juice, aquafaba, lemon, turmeric, honey  Winter Spice Old Fashioned - Mad River maple cask Rum, home-made winter spice grenadine, bitters  Jonathan’sFamous Eggnog - A classic nog w/ Mozart white chocolate, sherry, and Mad River bourbon 
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2 weeks ago
55 minutes 30 seconds

The Culture Show Podcast
December 17, 2025 - Wednesday Watch Party: A Christmas Carol!
Today we commune with the ghosts of Christmas past, present and future. Jared Bowen,  Callie Crossley, and Edgar B. Herwick III co-host this month’s Wednesday Watch Party and revisit all the screen lives of  “A Chistmas Carol.”  Dickens’ tale has been adapted hundreds of times — from silent films and mid-century classics to animated versions, musicals, and comic riffs. The hosts ask listeners what versions resonate the most with them and who is their favorite Scrooge.
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2 weeks ago
50 minutes 55 seconds

The Culture Show Podcast
December 18, 2025 - Imari Paris Jeffries, Mary Grant, and holiday cocktails with Jonathan Pogash
Imari Paris Jeffries, President and CEO of Embrace Boston and co-chair of Everyone 250, joins us for his recurring segment AI: Actual Intelligence — a space for original, human insight. This month Jeffries discussed how history, memory, and civic responsibility are shaping current cultural conversations in Greater Boston and beyond. He also previewed Everyone250’s 2026 events to confront erasure and reclaim America’s story. To learn more go here.  Then Mary Grant, President of Massachusetts College of Art and Design, discusses the mass shooting at Brown University and how colleges are grappling with fear, safety, and institutional responsibility while trying to preserve the independence that defines campus life. She also shared her top list of  the memorable arts and culture events of 2025. And we topped things off by topping one off with Cocktail Guru Jonathan Pogash. He returned for his annual holiday visit — offering festive cocktail and mocktail ideas, plus practical advice for stocking a bar and hosting with confidence during the season. Jonathan Pogash is President and Owner of The Cocktail Guru. These are the cocktails he made today 1) Nonalcoholic  Hanukkah Harry: POM wonderful pomegranate juice, aquafaba, lemon, turmeric, honey Winter Spice Old Fashioned - Mad River maple cask Rum, home-made winter spice grenadine, bitters and Jonathan’s Famous Eggnog - A classic nog w/ Mozart white chocolate, sherry, and Mad River bourbon 
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2 weeks ago
55 minutes 30 seconds

The Culture Show Podcast
December 16, 2025 - Nadya Tolokonnikova, Stefan Jackiw, and Julia Swanson
Conceptual performance artist and activist Nadya Tolokonnikova is the creator of Pussy Riot. She joins The Culture Show to discuss “Police State” — a museum installation that recreates the conditions of her incarceration through constant surveillance and confinement. The project draws directly from her imprisonment following Pussy Riot’s 2012 protest inside Moscow’s Cathedral of Christ the Savior. Tolokonnikova’s new book, also titled “Police State” documents the installation and reflects on power, punishment, and resistance. To learn more about her new book, “Police State,” go here. Internationally acclaimed violinist Stefan Jackiw joins us  ahead of his chamber music concert this Thursday at the Allen Center in Newton, 7:30 PM, presented by Cherry Street Music. A Boston native who made his professional debut at age 12 with the Boston Pops, Jackiw has built a career spanning major orchestral stages and intimate chamber collaborations. To learn more about this Thursday’s concert go here.  Culture Show contributor Julia Swanson returns for her monthly Public Service Arts Announcement, asking whether holiday decorations — lights, inflatables, ice sculptures, and storefront windows — can cross the line from seasonal display into public art. Swanson is a multidisciplinary artist and award-winning photographer, and the creator of The Art Walk Project, a series of self-guided micro tours of public art across Greater Boston.
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2 weeks ago
55 minutes 26 seconds

The Culture Show Podcast
December 15, 2025 - Is This A Room, Marina Abramović, and remembering Rob Reiner
Tina Statter’s  “Is This A Room” uses the verbatim FBI transcript of Reality Winner’s 2017 interrogation to turn everyday language into gripping drama. Actor Parker Jennings, who plays Reality Winner, and actor Cristhian Mancinas-García, who plays Special Agent R. Wallace Taylor, join The Culture Show to discuss this production, which is now onstage at Apollinaire Theatre Company through January 18th. To learn more go here. For more than five decades, Marina Abramović has made endurance, vulnerability, and moral responsibility central to performance art. She joins The Culture Show to discuss her new BBC Maestro course, “The Marina Abramović Method: Performance and Presence.” To learn more go here. Boston Globe TV and pop culture critic Chris Vognar remembers actor and director Rob Reiner, he’ll also cut through December’s viewing overload, highlighting holiday films that still deliver, and unexpected titles worth your time. 
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3 weeks ago
55 minutes 33 seconds

The Culture Show Podcast
December 12, 2025 - Week in Review: Golden Globe nominations, Australia's social media ban, and Charlie Brown
Jared Bowen, Callie Crossley and Culture Show contributor Lisa Simmons host our arts and culture week-in-review. First up, the Golden Globe nominations are out, offering a snapshot of where Hollywood’s center of gravity is shifting. The awards bypassed the supposedly gravity-defying Wicked: For Good, while One Battle After Another surged ahead with nine nominations. In a nod to how audiences consume storytelling now, the Globes also introduced a podcast category for the first time. From there we’re off to Australia, which  has passed one of the world’s most sweeping efforts to limit kids’ access to social media, banning anyone under 16 from holding an account. Platforms will be required to identify and remove underage users or face steep fines. The move reflects growing concern over cyberbullying, addictive design, and the mental-health toll of digital culture. Then we remember Napoleon Jones-Henderson, a founding member of the AfriCOBRA collective, leaves behind a towering legacy in Afrocentric art. Working across textiles, sculpture, and mixed media, his vibrant, community-rooted work helped define the visual language of the Black Arts Movement. His death marks a profound loss for art, design, and cultural history. Plus a Nativity scene in Dedham has sparked a loud debate over artistic and political expression. The traditional Holy Family has been replaced by a stark sign reading “ICE was here.” The Archdiocese and ICE officials want the display removed, while the parish priest is holding off — for now. Finally, those unmistakable Vince Guaraldi piano notes are turning 60. What began as a scrappy, low-budget TV special has become the gold standard of holiday storytelling. A Charlie Brown Christmas remains a cultural touchstone, proving that sincerity can outlast spectacle.
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3 weeks ago
55 minutes 32 seconds

The Culture Show Podcast
December 11, 2025 - "Annie" at the Wheelock Family Theatre, 10 million seeds at the Native Plant Trust, and Pedro Alonzo
The Wheelock Family Theatre brings new life to “Annie,”  the classic musical rooted in the 1924 comic strip “Little Orphan Annie.” Set against Depression-era New York, the show blends breadlines, political intrigue, and a young girl’s unwavering belief in “tomorrow.” Featuring Sky Vaux Fuller as Annie and De’Lon Grant as Oliver Warbucks, they join us to talk about how this production explores resilience, hope, and what it means to rise to the moment. “Annie” is onstage through December 21. To learn more go here. At the Native Plant Trust in Wayland, more than 10 million seeds from rare and endangered New England plants are now preserved—an unprecedented milestone for the nation’s oldest native-plant conservation organization. Sourced from meadows, wetlands, shorelines, mountain slopes, and even military training grounds, these seeds safeguard biodiversity against development, invasive species, and climate threats. Director of horticulture Uli Lorimer joins the show to discuss how this growing seed bank helps protect the region’s ecological future. Uli Lorimer is the author of “The Northeast Native Plant Primer: 235 Plants for an Earth-Friendly Garden.” Culture Show contributor and independent Curator Pedro Alonzo takes us inside the museums of Glasgow and the transformed Frick Collection in New York. After a five-year, $330 million renovation, the Frick has reopened with expanded galleries, restored architectural splendor, and unexpectedly intimate encounters with masterpieces by Vermeer and Rembrandt. Alonzo shares how these spaces balance tradition and reinvention—and what visitors can expect from their renewed cultural impact.
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3 weeks ago
55 minutes 33 seconds

The Culture Show Podcast
December 10, 2025 - Lt. Governor Kim Driscoll and BSO's Chad Smith, remembering Frank Gehry, and Martin Puryear: Nexus
We continue our “Countdown to 2026” series with a preview of  next July’s  Boston Pops Fireworks Spectacular. It will  headline the Commonwealth’s celebration of America’s 250th birthday. Lieutenant Governor Kim Driscoll and Boston Symphony Orchestra Julian and Eunice Cohen President and CEO Chad Smith join us to talk about what this expanded Fourth of July tradition will mean for the Esplanade and beyond. Frank Gehry, who died at 96, was one of the most influential architects of his generation, responsible for landmarks like the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, Walt Disney Concert Hall, and MIT’s Stata Center. Boston Architectural College president Mahesh Daas joins us to reflect on Gehry’s legacy and how his sculptural buildings changed the conversation around architecture. Mahesh Daas is the  author of four books including “Towards A Robotic Architecture” and “I, Nobot,” a graphic novella exploring relationships among artificial intelligence, robotics, and cities.  Martin Puryear, one of the most important American sculptors — and one of the most significant Black sculptors working today — is known for large, hand-built forms in wood, metal, and wire. The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston’s exhibition, “Martin Puryear: Nexus” gathers major works from six decades. Ian Alteveer, Beal Family Chair, Department of Contemporary Art,  joins The Culture Show for an overview.  “Martin Puryear: Nexus”  is on view through February 8, 2026, to learn more go here.
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3 weeks ago
55 minutes 30 seconds

The Culture Show Podcast
A Boston-based podcast that thrives in how we live. What we like to see, watch, taste, hear, feel and talk about. It’s an expansive look at our society through art, culture and entertainment. It’s a conversation about the seminal moments and sizable shocks that are driving the daily discourse.  We’ll amplify local creatives and explore  the homegrown arts and culture landscape and tap into the big talent that tours Boston along the way.