翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ To the Moon and Back (song)
・ To the Moon and Beyond
・ To the Morning
・ To the Nameless Dead
・ To the nines
・ To the nines (disambiguation)
・ To the Nines (Hatesphere album)
・ To the Nines (novel)
・ To the Nines (Only Crime album)
・ To the One
・ To the One of Fictive Music
・ To the Pain
・ To the People of Texas & All Americans in the World
・ To the People of the United States
・ To the Person Sitting in Darkness
To the Point
・ To The Point (TV series)
・ To the Power of Three
・ To the Queen
・ To the Quiet Men from a Tiny Girl
・ To the Races
・ To the River Otter
・ To the Rose upon the Rood of Time
・ To the Sea
・ To the Secrets and Knowledge
・ To the Shores of Hell
・ To the Shores of Iwo Jima
・ To the Shores of Tripoli
・ To the Sky
・ To the Sky (Tijana song)


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To the Point : ウィキペディア英語版
To the Point

''To the Point'' is an hour-long public affairs radio program co-produced by KCRW in Santa Monica, California and Public Radio International. The program originates at KCRW at 1 pm Pacific Time each weekday. Award-winning journalist Warren Olney hosts the show; it is syndicated nationwide by PRI and currently airs in 15 states and Washington, D.C. by Public Radio International. KCRW also podcasts the program.
==Format==
The program begins with its theme music, a clip from John Coltrane's ''A Love Supreme.'' Olney then introduces the topics for the day's program, followed by a break for carrier stations to play syndicated news headlines, typically provided by NPR.
In the opening segment, Olney discusses a recent or breaking news development with a guest, typically a newspaper journalist. The journalist joins Warren by phone, and the segment lasts about 10 minutes.
The following segment, which occupies most of the show, features a roundtable discussion of a topic of national or international interest, including issues of politics, policy, war, and science. Unlike most news programs, which tend to interview newsmakers, ''To the Point'' instead interviews "experts" – typically think tank members, professors in related fields, or observers from non-profit groups, who have comprehensive understandings of the events. Olney moderates the discussion, beginning with one guest and adding one every few minutes; typically, three commentators eventually join Olney during this main segment, all by phone. The segment is split in half by Miles Davis's "Blue in Green."
During the program's final segment, called "Reporter's Notebook," Olney interviews a newspaper or magazine journalist by phone about an ongoing story, allowing the reporter to give a thorough narrative of the events. This occupies the last eight to 10 minutes of the show.
The show closes with Olney crediting the show's rotating cast of producers and engineers, thanking the Coltrane family, and signing off with, "This has been ''To the Point'' from Public Radio International."

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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