Wisconsin Life

Informações:

Sinopsis

Wisconsin Life celebrates what makes Wisconsin unique through the diverse stories of its people. Our award-winning producers travel Wisconsin to introduce you to the people who uniquely contribute to and shape what it means to live in or be from Wisconsin.

Episodios

  • The circus, clowns and calliopes: A day at Baraboo’s Big Top Parade

    21/06/2024

    Circus fans from across the country came to Baraboo recently for the 65th Big Top Parade, formerly known as the Great Circus Parade. Spectators witnessed historic wagons, a calliope pulled by miniature horses, and clowns riding in a convertible. WPR’s Robert D’Andrea caught up with some of the circus fans along the parade route.

  • From Peru to Wisconsin: How Ana Torres of Las Milpas built community in Baraboo

    19/06/2024

    Ana Torres came to Baraboo as a teenager and fell in love with the city. Now she owns Las Milpas, a restaurant and Latino grocery store. As Wisconsin Life’s Maria Brunetta tells us, it’s more than a business…Torres strives to make it a place that strengthens the community.

  • Artist Harry Whitehorse honored with new wood sculpture festival in Monona

    14/06/2024

    Harry Whitehorse of Monona, Wisconsin was a prolific artist who painted and created mixed media and wood sculptures for almost 90 years. That’s why a new festival, the Harry Whitehorse International Wood Sculpture Festival, is named in his honor.

  • ‘Home is where I am safe’: Appleton’s Mai Lo Lee for ‘Home Is Here’

    12/06/2024

    Home means different things to different people. Home can be the house you grew up in, a quiet spot in the woods, or right beside your favorite person. For Mai Lo Lee of Appleton, defining her home is complicated. She shares her story as part of the “Home Is Here” project, which amplifies the voices of the growing number of Black, Asian, Native American and Hispanic residents who call northeastern Wisconsin home. The project is part of the NEW News Lab – a local news collaboration in northeastern Wisconsin made up of six news organizations.

  • Northwoods League expands to softball, bringing Night Mares to Madison

    05/06/2024

    Sports fans across Wisconsin can spend their summers watching college baseball players compete in the Northwoods League on teams like the La Crosse Loggers and the Madison Mallards. This summer, that league is expanding to add softball teams, like the La Crosse Steam and the Madison Night Mares. WPR’s Jenny Peek joined some Night Mares players at the ballpark to get a sense of what to expect from their inaugural season.

  • Don’t know what to do with your old trophies? One Madison company will recycle them.

    31/05/2024

    When someone downsizes their home, they have to think about what stays and what goes. But what do people do with relics from their life that carry deep meaning, like old trophies, that can’t make the transition into a new space? At the Nationwide Trophy Recycling program in Madison, Wisconsin, staff and volunteers take old trophies for a fee and recycle the parts. Then, they rebuild new trophies and give them away for free to nonprofits nationwide. Alexandra Salmon takes us on a tour of the shop.

  • These Wisconsin volunteers are opening up their homes to wild animals

    29/05/2024

    Spring is peak season for baby animals in Wisconsin. It’s also the busiest time of year for wildlife rehabbers, as they’re flooded with calls about wounded or orphaned critters. As WPR’s Sarah Lehr tells us, one group of humans in south central Wisconsin is bringing wildlife into their homes…to care for those animals until they can fend for themselves.

  • Wisconsin Airman Killed In Afghanistan Remembered By Mom, Brother

    24/05/2024

    For those who have fought and died in the U.S. Armed Forces, they leave with their families the weight of their sacrifice. Holly Higgins of Sun Prairie, Wisconsin, lost her son, Daniel Johnson, while he served in the U.S. Air Force in Afghanistan in 2010. Higgins talks about dealing with the loss with her other son, Erik Johnson, a Specialist in the Wisconsin Army National Guard. They shared their experience as part of StoryCorps’ Military Voices Initiative, which is made possible by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

  • ‘All I have to do is dream’: Remembering iconic songwriters Felice and Boudleaux Bryant

    22/05/2024

    Wisconsin isn’t typically thought of as being at the heart of country music, but did you know that half of one of country’s greatest songwriting duos is from Milwaukee? As Justin Barney tells us, Felice and Boudleaux Bryant are members of the Country Music Hall of Fame, and co-wrote “Rocky Top,” the state song of Tennessee. But first, they met in a dream in Milwaukee.

  • Remembering when The Fendermen took Stoughton to the top of the charts

    17/05/2024

    What are some of your early rock ‘n’ roll  memories? For Stoughton’s Bill Amundson, his hit REALLY close to home — when Stoughton’s very own “One Hit Wonders,” The Fendermen, rehearsed in a garage down the street from his home. WPR’s Brad Kolberg produced this story.

  • Meet the real John Wick of Mazomanie, Wisconsin

    15/05/2024

    You know the action movie character John Wick? The assassin who avenges the death of his dog? Well, did you know the real John Wick lives in Wisconsin? Matt Geiger introduces us to him.

  • Motherhood: Reigniting a love for bedtime stories one book at a time

    10/05/2024

    In a tribute to one of her favorite activities as a new mom, WPR’s Jenny Peek gives us an ode to the bedtime story. She tells us how becoming a mom reignited a love for children’s books she has been missing since she was little.

  • From Elvis to NASA: Reliving unique childhood memories with The Fahertys

    08/05/2024

    There are memories that you hold dear to your heart, knowing you’ll never experience those often simple moments again. Change can feel so gradual that when you look back, you forget just how drastic it can really be. Pat Faherty of Milwaukee talked with husband, Dennis, about those kinds of memories, from life as a kid in cities like Memphis and Jacksonville, Florida. The couple talked about their experience with StoryCorps.

  • Little known truths about lilies of the valley

    03/05/2024

    Lilies of the valley are often considered a beautiful, yet high-maintenance plant. For writer Nancy Jorgenson, they will forever connect her to her beloved grandmother, who found virtue in caring for them. Caregiving was deeply rooted in her grandmother, who dreamed of being a nurse. But, society had different plans for a woman of her era. Jorgenson reflects on her grandmother’s devotion to her family, dreams, and flowers.