© 2026. The Trustees of Indiana University
Copyright Complaints
1229 East Seventh Street, Bloomington, Indiana 47405
News, Arts and Culture from WFIU Public Radio and WTIU Public Television
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Studying the Work of Radiolab Founder Jad Abumrad

The United States of Jad class. From left, Indermohan Virk, Jad Abumrad, Prof. Brenda Weber, Violet Lampey, Laura Eaken, Alexandra Weiss, and Anoushka Jha. Prof. Gardiner Bovington is seated.
The United States of Jad class. From left, Indermohan Virk, Jad Abumrad, Prof. Brenda Weber, Violet Lampey, Laura Eaken, Alexandra Weiss, and Anoushka Jha. Prof. Gardiner Bovington is seated.

Radiolab founder Jad Abumrad will be visiting the Indiana University campus the week of April 1, through the Patten Foundation and the College Arts and Humanities Institute. Radiolab showed how radio could be a form for the exploration of big ideas as rigorous and engaging as film or print.

In preparation for his visit, a class on the IU campus has been studying Jad’s work.

I visited the class recently. The class had just listened to the Radiolab episode “Cities,” which is about what gives a city its character. Early in the episode, Jad and Robert talk with a psychologist who measured talking and walking speed in different cities, then a couple physicists who’ve found a strong correlation between walking speed and the size of the city, average wages, number of libraries. Much more than you’d expect. The class talked about that episode, and what they’ve gotten from listening to Radiolab for the past few months. Here are a few excerpts from that conversation, which I think gives a sense of the richness of what Radiolab can spark.

Alex Chambers runs WFIU’s arts desk, and produces and hosts WFIU’s Inner States, a weekly podcast and radio show about arts, culture, and ideas from southern Indiana and beyond. He’s the co-creator of How to Survive the Future, a podcast about the present, produced in partnership with Indiana Humanities. He has a PhD in American Studies, with a dissertation called Climate Violence and the Poetics of Refuge, and a book of poems called Bindings: A Preparation, about domestic life and empire. In his spare time, he teaches audio storytelling at the IU Media School. When he’s not in the woods gathering sound, you might see him out for a run on the streets of Bloomington.