
All Sides with Ann Fisher
Weekdays 10 a.m. to noon and on 8 to 10 p.m. 89.7 NPR News, also available as a podcast.
All Sides with Ann Fisher is a two-hour, daily public-affairs talk show designed to over time touch upon all sides of the issues and events that shape life in central Ohio. Listeners participate via telephone, e-mail, Facebook and Twitter to add to the conversations. As always at WOSU, the coverage is fair and balanced with a civil tone.
Watch the video stream of All Sides, weekdays from 10 a.m. to noon.
Call in with a question or comment to All Sides at 614-292-8513.
Tips for calling All Sides with Ann Fisher
If you have a disability and would like a transcript or other accommodation you can request an alternative format.
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Gaetane Verna is the newly appointed Executive Director of the Wexner Center for the Arts. You’ll meet her on this morning’s All Sides Weekend.
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Move to Prosper is a first of its kind in the nation program piloted at The Ohio State University.
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Millions of children must walk through metal detectors or take part in active shooter drills that have them imagine and then respond to a gun-wielding intruder in their school.
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We will look at how women are still able to have a big influence on the economy, why they are not seeing marriage as a necessity to reach their financial goals and what can be done to close the gender pay gap.
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Radon is present in one out of every 15 American homes and it’s the second leading cause of lung cancer.
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One bill would ban gender-affirming care for minors. Another is touted as a parents' bill of rights, requiring schools to inform parents about their students’ health, well being and instructional materials with sexually explicit content.
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The rocket, known as Terran 1, met several objectives, even though the rocket fell far short of orbit.
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We look at the causes of the rising cost of senior care and how it could be remedied.
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Roughly 100 million adults in the U.S. are burdened with medical-related debt totaling some $200 billion.
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Their plan would require at least 60 percent of voters to pass an amendment, and that ballot campaigns gather voter signatures from all 88 counties, instead of the current 44 to get on the ballot.