The Bomb
This week in Studio 360, the Cold War is over -- but the atomic bomb still has a hold on us. Kurt Andersen talks with historian Richard Rhodes about how living with the threat of the bomb has changed us and our culture, high and low.
Physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer led a team of thousands to create the first nuclear weapon. He was immediately hailed as an American hero, but after speaking out against the use of the bomb he was condemned as a traitor and maligned as a Communist spy. WNYC's Sara Fishko examines how the epic and tragic arc of his life has turned Oppenheimer into a modern American myth.
Stanley Kubrick set out to make a serious drama about an accidental nuclear war, and ended up making the blackest comedy ever, Dr. Strangelove. Studio 360's Arun Rath explains how the bizarre, over-the-top parody of Dr. Strangelove was actually closer to reality than any of us would care to believe.
The days of USO shows with Bob Hope and chorus girls are long gone -- but the armed forces are still hard at work entertaining the troops. Sometimes, they even get the troops to entertain each other. Adam Allington caught up with an Army unit that performs challenging dramas for their fellow soldiers.
Justin Torres is a record nut, the kind who combs through stacks of dusty LPs looking for obscure gems. Torres told Studio 360's Chris Roose that he became obsessed with finding an R&B crooner named Daron "Darondo" Pulliam. Darando wasn't just a forgotten singer -- the man had apparently disappeared.
Special Guest
Historian Richard Rhodes has been researching and writing about nuclear weapons and the nuclear age for more than 19 years. He won the Pulitzer Prize in 1988 for The Making of the Atomic Bomb. His books also include Dark Sun, about the making of the hydrogen bomb, and Masters of Death, about a Nazi task force that executed over 1.5 million people. Rhodes is currently working on a history of nuclear issues since the end of the Cold War.
Studio 360 is a co-production of
Public
Radio International and
WNYC New York Public Radio, and is funded in part by
Ken and Lucy Lehman, the
National Endowment for the Arts, the Lily Auchincloss Foundation, and
DK Eyewitness Travel. Studio 360's American Icons series is supported in part by the
National Endowment for the Humanities. Our series on creativity and science is supported in part by the
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. Our series on Underground Heroes is supported in part by the New York State Music Fund, established by the New York State Attorney General at Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors. ![]()