Science Friday

Science Friday
Other names SciFri
Running time ca. 110 min.
Country United States
Languages English
Syndicates NPR
Hosts Ira Flatow
Creators ScienceFriday, Inc.
Directors Charles Bergquist
Exec. producers Ira Flatow
Recording studio New York, New York
Air dates since October, 1991
Audio format Stereophonic
Website www.sciencefriday.com
Podcast iTunes

Science Friday (known as SciFri for short) is a weekly call-in talk show that is part of NPR's Talk of the Nation radio program.[1][2] SciFri is hosted by award winning science journalist Ira Flatow and was created and is produced by ScienceFriday, Inc. . The program is divided into two, one-hour programs. The focus of each program is nature, science, and technology and the news and information. Each week 1.3 million listeners tune into the program.

Science Friday is also available in a podcasting format and is one of the most popular iTunes downloads, frequently in the top 15 downloads each week. SciFri podcasts are downloaded over 23 million times per year and over 1.3 million listeners tune in each week to hear the program. It is also carried via Sirius/XM satellite radio. In addition to the program, SciFri creates original videos and educational materials, all available on its website.

Twitter name: @scifri

"Science Friday" free iTunes app can be downloaded from the iTunes store. It gives you the choice of listening to the audio podcasts or watching the videos. An Android version will be available soon

The program's slogans are “Making Science User Friendly” and "Making Science Radioactive."

SciFri broadcasts excerpts from the annual Ig Nobel Prize ceremony on the Friday after Thanksgiving.[3]

Science Friday maintained an island (Science Friday Island) in Second Life, including an open air theater with live audio and video feeds of the broadcast. But that venue is no longer in operation.

Science Friday non-profit, 501(c)(3) partner is the Science Friday Initiative which helps create educational materials and finds underwriting for the program. The Science Friday Initiative does accept tax-deductible donations on behalf of the radio program.

Contents

Funding

Science Friday is funded by the NPR member stations that broadcast the program, by individual donors, and by foundation and corporate underwriters including the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the US National Science Foundation, the Noyce Foundation, the S.D. Bechtel Jr. Foundation, and the Smart Family Foundation.

History

SciFri was created when the National Science Foundation agreed to fund a weekly science talk-show on NPR. After the Gulf War in 1991, NPR created a daily talk show called Talk of the Nation, and incorporated Science Friday into it. Science Friday is not produced "in-house" at NPR but is licensed from ScienceFriday, Inc.

References

External links