
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


On this week's Labor Heritage Power Hour: how labor art and history illuminate both the dignity and danger of work.
In our first segment, photojournalist and union organizer David Bacon talks with photographer Jim Brozek about his exhibit Honest Work at the Museum of Wisconsin Art. Brozek captured working life from the inside — as a crew member, ranch hand, and farm worker — documenting labor’s rhythm, camaraderie, and physical toll from 1976 to 1985.
Then, we turn to Deadly Deception: The Asbestos Tragedy in McLean County, an award-winning exhibit at the McLean County Museum of History in Bloomington, Illinois. David LeGrande, former Occupational Safety and Health Director for the Communications Workers of America, interviews Mike Matejka about the hidden cost of corporate greed and the community’s ongoing fight for justice.
From ships and fields to factory floors, these are stories of workers’ courage, creativity, and solidarity.
Broadcast on October 30 on WPFW 89.3FM in Washington, DC and stations across the country.
By Christopher Garlock5
44 ratings
On this week's Labor Heritage Power Hour: how labor art and history illuminate both the dignity and danger of work.
In our first segment, photojournalist and union organizer David Bacon talks with photographer Jim Brozek about his exhibit Honest Work at the Museum of Wisconsin Art. Brozek captured working life from the inside — as a crew member, ranch hand, and farm worker — documenting labor’s rhythm, camaraderie, and physical toll from 1976 to 1985.
Then, we turn to Deadly Deception: The Asbestos Tragedy in McLean County, an award-winning exhibit at the McLean County Museum of History in Bloomington, Illinois. David LeGrande, former Occupational Safety and Health Director for the Communications Workers of America, interviews Mike Matejka about the hidden cost of corporate greed and the community’s ongoing fight for justice.
From ships and fields to factory floors, these are stories of workers’ courage, creativity, and solidarity.
Broadcast on October 30 on WPFW 89.3FM in Washington, DC and stations across the country.

91,069 Listeners

10,157 Listeners

87,552 Listeners

38 Listeners