Join Dr. Handy as he explores medical controversies such as substance abuse and men's sexuality. Call in and find out what YOU want to know. Listeners can call in to our studio operator or ask their question live on the air.
Get the best of NPR news for two hours every weekday. All Things Considered hosts Robert Siegel, Michele Norris, and Melissa Block present the program's trademark block of news, interviews, commentaries, reviews, and off-beat features.
Art Speaks is a cognitive reaction that is specifically directed at the individual viewer that it often can say more than any written word. Art is language, communication, and sensory movement.
WEHC is proud to bring our listeners Building Power as a part of the connection with the Virginia Organizing Project. Your host, Brian Johns, will interview local guests and figure out what special things people do to improve their communities so that you can help improve yours.
Gluten-free Guru Kristi Slaughter, host of Beyond Wellness, brings you a program that is meant to inspire, motivate, and educate you to live your life to the fullest potential.
WEHC is pleased to present the church services of Emory First United Methodist Church on a one week delay. Sermons can be heard from Pastor David Jackson as well as Chaplin Mary K. Briggs.
WEHC is proud to bring you Do The Right Thing, a show in connection with the Emory & Henry College Philosophy Department. Do The Right Thing, hosted by Emory & Henry professor Dr. Brynn Welch and former Emory & Henry professor Dr. Ed Damer, is a program that will take on issues that could be current, controversial, ethical, political, and complex and provide discussion and rational thought to help guide us towards doing the right thing.
Join host Matthew Chapman as he guides you through Biblical text that you can relate to everyday life and activities.
There are issues all throughout the nation and state, but the issues here are the large ones that effect us. Freelance writer Debra McCown, host of Mountain Sunlight, tackles the issues going on in Southwest Virginia. Whether it is political, social, or economical, Mountain Sunlight will bring you the information you need to stay updated with Southwest Virginia issues.
Minding Your Brain is a weekly radio show on WEHC that is dedicated to promoting brain health and wellness.
A weekly exploration of all things paranormal. You will hear interviews, news, reviews and events dealing with everything beyond what we expect in the natural world. It is a look into the storytelling, myth and science that captures our thoughts, challenges the way we think, and leaves us entertained.
Rabbit Hole is a weekly radio show here on WEHC where host Dr. Mary Buck explores children's stories and examines the values they present and the meanings they have in our lives today.
WEHC is pleased to present Religion For Life with your host Dr. John Shuck. Religion For Life examines how religion intersects with our community and connects with social justice and public life.
WEHC brings you your weekly half hour of news, information, stories and fun from one of America's oldest and most respected theatres, Barter Theatre, in Abingdon, Virginia.
Teresa Keller, General Manager of WEHC and Carnegie Foundation/CASE Virginia Professor of the Year, introduces a program where it's time to talk. On This Conversation, audiences will get to meet fascinating people with interesting stories to tell. Ranging from a local or someone across the globe, you're guaranteed to be intrigued in whatever conversation is happening.
Thrive is a show about life and health and about feeling well and being better.Your hosts will discuss various mental health issues and feature guests to discuss behavioral and mental health. Thrive is brought to you by Highlands Community Services, in Abingdon, Virginia.
Your Weekly Constitutional is a show about the Constitution produced in partnership with the Home of the Constitution, James Madison's Montpelier. Your host, Stewart Harris, talks about the hot-button issues you see in the media every day, from gay rights to gun rights. Stewart interviews interesting people in plain English, and he's always up for a good story or a humorous ancedote. But the issues are serious, and Stewart discusses them with authority: a graduate of Princeton University and the University of Pennsylvania Law School, he teaches Constitutional Law at the Appalachian School of Law, where he has won multiple awards for teaching and scholarship. He has also taught at the University of Tennessee College of Law's summer session for a number of years. Please join him for a lively constitutional conversation.
