"I Felt Like a Filmmaker, Not Like a Refugee:" FRONTLINE's 'Exodus'

“When we were in the back of a van crossing Hungary to Vienna, the driver was drunk and all the smugglers had AK-47s... and I remember my cousin looking at me like, I hope you're not filming. But I was secretly holding the camera.”

Exodus’ subject Hassan Akkad on filming himself, and Director James Bluemel on collecting these important stories.

Zoe Chace on Asking Tough Questions and Reporting for This American Life

“There's something spectacular about audio. There's something so intimate about being you know in between those two ears and it's it's been transformational for me... And we're just so lucky that audio happened at this moment when people were craving it. “

NYT The Daily’s Michael Barbaro talks about audio’s appeal with This American Life’s Zoe Chace in a conversation moderated by Prof Daniel Alarcon.

Investigating the Military's Mental Health Crisis with NPR's Danny Zwerdling

We spoke to Daniel Zwerdling, NPR journalist extraordinaire, who has spent years reporting on veterans’ rights. He spoke to us about the parallels between journalism and psychology, his best interview techniques, reporting short news stories versus year-long investigations of the government. 

Filmmaker Nanfu Wang on Government Surveillance, Immersive Filmmaking and "Hooligan Sparrow"

Professor Betsy West spoke to filmmaker Nanfu Wang about her film "Hooligan Sparrow," which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2016. The film follows Ye Haiyan, more widely known as “Hooligan Sparrow," a Chinese activist protesting the case of six young girls who had been sexually abused by their school principal.