Carthage head men's volleyball coach JW Kieckhefer and two of the stars of his national championship team: Matt Slivinski and Zach Buthuis.
The Morning Show
Racine Native Dalen Instenes talks about the year he just spent playing professional volleyball in Sweden.
We preview this weekend's Kenosha Symphony concert with conductor Robert Hasty and concert pianist Wael Farouk.
Susan Hartman, author of "City of Refugees: The Story of Three Newcomers who Breathed Life into a Dying American Town."
Rob Rapley, director/producer of the American Experience documentary "Flood in the Desert." Part 2- Steve Binder, director/producer of Elvis Presley's 1968 comeback TV special.
Dr. Art Cyr, Clausen Distinguished Professor of Political Economy and World Business, comments on current events and issues.
CNN anchor Zain E. Asher, author of a memoir titled "Where the Children Take Us: How One Family Achieved the Unimaginable."
Dr. Yuri Maltsev, Professor of Economics at Carthage College, offers his observations about the war between Russia and Ukraine.
Part 1: Sylvia Earle, author of "Ocean: A Global Odyssey." Part 2: Ali Noorani, author of "Crossing Borders: The Reconciliation of a Nation of Immigrants."
A preview of RTG's "Akeelah and The Bee" with Actress Saniah Carter. In part two, Sylvain Neuvel, author of "Until the Last of Me."
No Morning Show broadcast because of the holiday. (A podcast of the Morning Show will be available.)
Listen to The Morning Show with Greg Berg Podcast Here:
Nan Calvert, pays her monthly visit to the Morning Show to talk about the environment. With her will be Kathleen Thompson to talk about Mushrooms.
Bryan Albrecht, the president of Gateway Technical College. With him will be Tatjana Bicanin, Executive Director of Building Our Future.
Dimitri Shapovalov and Ed Kawakami - Carthage Music Department - about this weekend’s all-Mendelssohn concert.
Kathryn Allamong Jacob, author of “King of the Lobby: The life and Times of Sam Ward, Man-About-Washington in the Gilded Age.”
Waldo Mellon (screenwriter Steve Adams), author of "What's What and What to do about it: Answers you didn't know you wanted to Questions you didn't know you had."
Robin Gerber, author of "Barbi and Ruth: The Story of the World's Most Famous Doll and the Woman who Created Her." In Part Two, Robert Weintraub, author of "The Divine Miss Marble: A Life of Tennis, Fame and Mystery." The book is about tennis legend Alice Marble.
Josef Benson and Doug Singsen, faculty colleagues at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, and the co-authors of "Bandits, Misfits, and Superheroes: Whiteness and its Borderlands in American Comics and Graphic Novels."
A penetrating conversation about loneliness in our modern world with Ryan Jenkins and Steven Van Cohen, co-authors of "Connectable: How Leaders Can Move Teams from Isolated to All In."
Dr. Art Cyr, Clausen Distinguished Professor of Political Economy and World Business at Carthage College.
John Oller, author of "American Queen: The Rise and Fall of Kate Chase Sprague: Civil War 'Belle of the North' and Gilded Age Woman of Scandal.
Clayton Trutor, author of "Loserville: How Professional Sports Remade Atlanta - and how Atlanta Remade Professional Sports."
James Schatzman talks about the 35th anniversary of the Choral Arts Society of Southeastern Wisconsin
Meredith Ochs, author of 'Aretha Franklin: The Queen of Soul." Also, a tribute to Ms. Franklin from Dr. James Kinchen.
A Preview of Kenosha Symphony Orchestra's "Jazzy: American Moods;" A Look at UW-Parkside Play "Indecent"
Bryan Albrecht, president of Gateway Technical College - with Lindsey Kosman, Student Life Coordinator
Seth Weidmann, Assistant Athletic Director and Head Men's Swimming and Diving Coach at Carthage College.
Amir Hussain, a professor from Loyola Marymount University in California. Also, Fatih Harpci, who is a religion professor at Carthage.
Pagination
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