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To The Best Of Our Knowledge

So-called "outsider art" has been hot for a while now. What the art crowd calls it has changed, from l'art brut to self-taught art to vernacular art.

Whatever you call it, the work of some these artists will join the cream of the contemporary art crop at the Venice Biennale this summer.

One of the largest collections of vernacular art is right here in Wisconsin. Producer Sara Nics talks with the woman who helped create the collection: Ruth Kohler. 

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

New York Magazine columnist Jonathan Chait recently published a critique of political correctness, arguing that it was being used to stifle crucial debate. He sees political correctness as a tool to censor critics of far-left political groups.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Ian Baker describes his eight separate trips to find the hidden waterfall at the end of the Tsangpo Gorge. It's the legendary gateway to Shangri-La.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

James Lasdun talks about his book, "Give Me Everything You Have: On Being Stalked."

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

For much of her early life, rock critic Jessica Hopper was an ardent fan of punk rock. But despite her passion, she never felt like she quite fit in. That began to change once she started seeing female fronted bands performing onstage. She says the experience convinced her that there was a place for her in music. The discovery set her on a quest to uncover the countless other ways women are excluded from music, which she writes about in her book, "The First Collection of Criticism By A Living Female Rock Critic." She spoke to producer Craig Eley about the various forms of sexism she encountered in her decades-long career as a music journalist.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

How did the rich get richer while the American middle class got poorer?  Yale political scientist Jacob Hacker outlines the political policies that led to historic levels of income inequality.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Ingrid Betancourt was abducted by Marxist rebels and held captive in the jungle for 6 years. She tells the story of her ordeal in a book called "Even Silence Has an End."

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

James Hughes is a practicing Buddhist who believes that the future may present radically new possibilities for death, including a potential end to the end of life.

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