CoastLine show

CoastLine

Summary: CoastLine ​, a call-in, variety news show airs Wednesdays and Thursdays from 12pm - 1pm on WHQR. Every week, we’ll look into issues that matter in the Cape Fear Region. Host Rachel Lewis Hilburn will interview expert guests and invite you to join the conversation. Tell us what topics you would like discussed on CoastLine . Email thoughts and suggestions to coastline@whqr.org . You can now subscribe to our CoastLine podcast on iTunes . Search WHQR-FM: CoastLine to hear our most recent shows. Remember, this is a LIVE broadcast so please call or email comments and questions to: CoastLine phone: 910.343.1138 Email: coastline@whqr.org !function(d,s,id){var js,fjs=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0],p=/^http:/.test(d.location)?'http':'https';if(!d.getElementById(id)){js=d.createElement(s);js.id=id;js.src=p+"://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js";fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js,fjs);}}(document,"script","twitter-wjs");

Podcasts:

 CoastLine Candidate Interviews: H2GO Board of Commissioners | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2992

Brunswick Regional Water and Sewer H2GO, popularly known as H2GO, is a water and sewer utility in Brunswick County that serves the northeast portion of the County including Leland, Belville, parts of Navassa, and some customers located outside of these municipal boundaries. H2GO serves over 10,000 water customers and nearly 6,000 sewer customers.

 CoastLine: Judy Girard on the Food Network, Gender Gaps in the Board Room and Classroom | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2993

This episode first aired on April 21, 2016. August 25, 2017 update: Judy Girard serves as Vice Chair of the GLOW Academy School Board which is now open. Judy Girard started her television career in the late 1960s and worked her way through the halls of NBC in New York – where she developed shows such as Maury Povich, Jenny Jones, and Jerry Springer. Her decision to move the Phil Donahue show to New York helped solidify it as the pre-eminent talk show in the country. After joining the Food

 CoastLine: The Link Between Prostitution and Human Trafficking | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2989

This episode first aired on May 26, 2016. August 25, 2017 update: Lindsey Roberson now serves as a Trial Attorney in the Human Trafficking Prosecution Unit, Civil Rights Division, at the U.S. Department of Justice.

 CoastLine: Confederate Monuments -- Teaching Tool Or Symbol Of White Supremacy? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2996

Read the Transcript Here . Read the Emails Here . Within the City of Wilmington, statues and street names honoring key members of the Confederacy pepper the landscape. At the entrance to downtown Wilmington, on one corner stands a statue of George Davis, Confederate Attorney General. At a nearby intersection, a monument honoring soldiers of the Confederacy stands. Just last week, vandals splattered red paint on both statues. It appeared, according to the Wilmington Police Department, that

 CoastLine: Ocean Plastic is Beyond Garbage Patches and Part of Human Food Chain | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2998

When you use a disposable diaper, some scientists would tell you the plastic in that diaper actually stays in the environment for hundreds of years. The plastic bag you brought home from the grocery store? Estimates vary, but some put the number of years it takes to decompose as high as one thousand. Whether those numbers are accurate or more research needs to be done doesn’t change what we know about how plastics are showing up in oceans all over the world – and not only harming marine life –

 CoastLine: Teen Suicide Is Going Up, Not Down, Despite The Fact We Know More | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2989

13 Reasons Why – first a book, then a Netflix series, tells the story of Hannah Baker, a high school student who dies by suicide. But before she carries it out, she creates old-school cassette tapes – each one telling the story of a particular person who hurt her which add up to the 13 reasons why she decided to die. They’re various injuries, small and large, including her rape by a classmate. In April of this year, the National Association of School Psychologists (NASP) put out a statement

 CoastLine: Fall Planting Season Is Almost Here (Despite The Current Tropical Soup) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2991

With the region’s latest heat wave and the tropical soup that’s spawned Hurricane Gert and three other potential systems in the North Atlantic, it’s hard to think about getting outside and planting anything that isn’t zoned for a humid, subtropical climate. But fall will be here before you know it, and in southeastern North Carolina and northeastern South Carolina, fall is a great time to plant. We find out why on this edition of CoastLine from our experts, and we hear about the latest garden

 CoastLine: Zooplankton Mortality From Seismic Airgun Shocks Scientific Community | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2991

Jump to Transcript. Jump to Related Links. President Donald Trump signed an executive order in late April to expand energy exploration drilling in the Arctic and Atlantic Oceans. The order puts in place a new five-year program, 2019-2024, that will supersede the earlier one – essentially reversing the Obama Administration’s decision to remove the mid-Atlantic region from consideration for offshore drilling. What’s different about this issue compared to so many other national points of debate –

 CoastLine: Fraud - An American History From Barnum To Madoff | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2991

There are crooks, criminals, and hucksters out there trying to get your money through investment scams, retail fraud, identity theft, and they’ve been there since commerce began. But are there degrees of hucksterism? What’s the line between an enthusiastic entrepreneur with a brilliant, albeit untested idea versus a good, old-fashioned snake oil salesman who doesn’t really care if what’s in the bottle he’s selling doesn’t work? His goal: to make the sale and move on. How has the regulatory

 CoastLine: Aesthetics of Hollywood Film | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2997

If you’ve ever marveled at the artistry of Citizen Kane or sneered at the 1990s cult film Starship Troopers or decided that Raging Bull is the greatest film of all time, then today’s discussion is for you. We explore why films give us pleasure.

 CoastLine: Shakespeare in the Cape Feare | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2996

There’s an old saying about Shakespeare plays: they’re a lot more fun to act in than they are to watch. However, there are efforts in town that are shaking apart that old idea and building a whole new paying audience for Shakespeare. We’re seeing this most notably with Dram Tree Shakespeare and Alchemical Theatre, whose productions are associated with the Theater Department at the University of North Carolina Wilmington. Guests: Tony Rivenbark, Executive Director of the Thalian Hall Center for

 CoastLine: Hemingway's Suicide Incorrectly Attributed To Alcoholism And Bipolar Disorder | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2996

On July 2, 1961, Ernest Hemingway rose quietly, so as not to disturb his wife. He put on his bathrobe and slippers, walked down to the basement of his Idaho home, and unlocked his gun case. He climbed the steps to his foyer, placed his favorite shotgun to the roof of his mouth, and blew the top of his head off.

 CoastLine: Marti Peterson, The Widow Spy | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2996

It was 1975 when Martha Peterson’s plane landed in Moscow and launched her assignment as an American case officer for the CIA inside Russia.

 GenX: Gov. Cooper Says No Permit, More Science, More Support | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 90

Governor Roy Cooper says Chemours will have to turn off the faucet. The DuPont spin-off will not get a permit to discharge GenX into the Cape Fear River. Cooper made that vow at a meeting yesterday in Wilmington with local and state officials.

 CoastLine: Satan in Popular Culture | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2997

Five women hanged during the Salem witch trials in Massachusetts were memorialized Wednesday, July 19th on the 325th anniversary of their deaths. Sarah Good, Elizabeth Howe, Susannah Martin, Sarah Wildes, and Rebecca Nurse might sound like familiar names -- either from history class or the Arthur Miller play, The Crucible , which was based on the Salem Witch Trials. Twenty people were killed during that 17th century witch hunt. On this edition of CoastLine , we take a closer look at how cultures

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