
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


As World War Two was ending in the mid 1940s, John Huston began to make a film for the US Army on veterans who’d been psychologically damaged in battle. As WNYC’s Sara Fishko tells us, the film “Let There Be Light” was filled with gripping footage of ailing veterans. But the film never saw the light of day until thirty-five years later. Here is this Fishko Files (first aired in April 2012)…
By WNYC Studios4.8
123123 ratings
As World War Two was ending in the mid 1940s, John Huston began to make a film for the US Army on veterans who’d been psychologically damaged in battle. As WNYC’s Sara Fishko tells us, the film “Let There Be Light” was filled with gripping footage of ailing veterans. But the film never saw the light of day until thirty-five years later. Here is this Fishko Files (first aired in April 2012)…

43,961 Listeners

6,808 Listeners

9,201 Listeners

1,571 Listeners

7,716 Listeners

14,442 Listeners

6,481 Listeners

16,629 Listeners

16,401 Listeners

1,187 Listeners

3,388 Listeners