Frank Stasio

Credit Diane Douglass Photography
Host, "The State of Things"

Longtime NPR correspondent Frank Stasio was named permanent host of The State of Things in June 2006. A native of Buffalo, Frank has been in radio since the age of 19. He began his public radio career at WOI in Ames, Iowa, where he was a magazine show anchor and the station's News Director.

From there he went to National Public Radio, where he rose from associate producer to newscaster for All Things Considered. He left that job in 1990 to help start an alternative school in Washington, DC. Frank returned to NPR as a freelance news anchor, guest host of Talk of The Nation and other national programs, and host of special news coverage.

He also presents audio theater workshops for children and teachers and conducts radio journalism workshops for broadcasters in former Soviet-bloc countries. He lives in Durham.

Pages

The State of Things
12:47 pm
Fri April 29, 2011

The Space Rangers

The Space Rangers

  • The band joins host Frank Stasio to play live in the studio and talk about touring the U.S.

The third annual InstroSummit - an all instrumental music festival - returns to North Carolina this weekend. Bands from all along the East Coast will descend on Chapel Hill with three days of lyric-free performances. The line-up includes The Space Rangers, a 4-piece surf rock band from Ulm, Germany.

Read more
The State of Things
12:26 pm
Fri April 29, 2011

Who Wrote The Bible?

Bart Ehrman - ''Forged''

  • Host Frank Stasio talks with Bart Ehrman, head of the Department of Religious Studies at UNC Chapel Hill.

Most Biblical scholars recognize that many books of the Bible were not written by the authors commonly attributed to them. But academics often excuse this because they believe writing in the name of another was a commonly accepted practice in the ancient world. In his latest book, "Forged" (HarperOne Publishers/2011), Bart D. Ehrman argues that forgery was not sanctioned in the ancient world.

Read more
The State of Things
11:53 am
Fri April 29, 2011

MerleFest 2011

MerleFest 2011

  • Host Frank Stasio talkS with musician John Cowan.

Each year MerleFest brings some of the best names in traditional music to North Carolina. It began in 1988 as a way to honor the memory of Doc Watson’s son, Eddy Merle Watson, and it raises money for Wilkes Community College in Wilkesboro near where the Watson family lives.

Read more
The State of Things
12:19 pm
Thu April 28, 2011

Community Chorus Project

  • Lauren Hodge, Terry Rhodes and Pat Parker join host Frank Stasio to talk about the magic of group performance.

Lauren Hodge is an unapologetic fan of the television show “Glee.” She cheers whenever those plucky kids decide to put on a show and she thinks the show's success is based on the sense of community and belonging that kids feel when they work together to stage a performance. Hodge’s enthusiasm for young people working in concert also drives her newest effort called the Community Chorus Project. She and her collaborators, Terry Rhodes and Pat Parker join host Frank Stasio to talk about the magic of group performance.

Read more
The State of Things
12:07 pm
Thu April 28, 2011

Art's New Place

Raleigh Contemporary Art Museum

  • Host Frank Stasio talks about the CAM's past and its hopes for the future.

Raleigh will get a little bit hipper this weekend when the Contemporary Art Museum - CAM Raleigh - opens in the downtown warehouse district. The organization behind the museum has been around for a couple of decades, but their new building marks a new era.

Read more
The State of Things
11:58 am
Thu April 28, 2011

Hurricane Prediction

Hurricane Ivan

Scientists are predicting up to 16 major storms this hurricane season. But what happens once a hurricane does develop is much more difficult for scientists to predict. Gary M. Lackmann, a professor in the Department of Marine, Earth, and Atmospheric Sciences at North Carolina State University has found a way to calculate the severity of a hurricane using a sophisticated forecast system that gives more details about the eye of the storm.

Read more
The State of Things
12:16 pm
Wed April 27, 2011

North Carolina’s Nuclear Near Miss

  • Now a retired newspaper editor, Rouse joins host Frank Stasio with his memories from the night of the crash.

Just after midnight on a winter’s day in 1961, an Air Force plane crashed in Faro, North Carolina. Aboard the B-52 were eight military crewmembers and two nuclear weapons, which fell to the ground from thousands of feet in the air. Fortunately, the weapons caused no damage, but some of the nuclear remnants remain buried in the town of Faro, just outside Goldsboro. Michael Rouse was a young reporter for the Goldsboro News-Argus in 1961.

The State of Things
12:03 pm
Wed April 27, 2011

The Future Of Nuclear

  • Host Frank Stasio examines the role that nuclear energy will play in powering the future.

Twenty-five years after the devastating nuclear accident at Chernobyl, the world’s attention is again focused on nuclear energy and the risks associated with nuclear technology. The massive damage to Japan’s Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant is contributing to growing fears over the safety of such facilities. But are those fears misplaced? How safe is nuclear power? Experts remain divided over the risks and benefits.

Read more
The State of Things
12:59 pm
Tue April 26, 2011

Two Tar Heel Retirements

Woody Durham

  • Host Frank Stasio talks with Dave DeWitt, WUNC’s Raleigh Bureau Chief and education reporter, about these two men and the posts they are leaving.

This morning, longtime Raleigh mayor Charles Meeker announced that he will not be running for re-election. Meeker’s retirement could signal the start of a new political era for North Carolina’s rapidly-growing capital city. In other retirement news, Woody Durham, “The Voice of the Tar Heels,” stepped down as Carolina’s play-by-play announcer after 40 years of calling UNC’s football and basketball games.

Read more
The State of Things
12:49 pm
Tue April 26, 2011

Mental Health Disorder

  • Host Frank Stasio will talk about housing for the mentally ill.

Mentally ill residents in North Carolina don't have a lot of housing options if they can't make it on their own. There is a good chance they will end up in an adult care home. These facilities are usually reserved for the elderly, and they don’t offer mentally ill residents much in the way of services or rehabilitation. The U.S. Department of Justice is investigating North Carolina to see if its reliance on adult care homes violates the Americans with Disabilities Act.

Read more

Pages