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WGLT's Sound Ideas
WGLT's Sound Ideas
Author: WGLT
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© 2025 WGLT
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Sound Ideas is WGLT's flagship news program. Every weekday, WGLT reporters go beyond soundbites for deeper conversations with Bloomington-Normal newsmakers, musicians, artists, and anyone with a story to share. This 30-minute newsmagazine is produced Monday through Friday.
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As downtown Bloomington’s art galleries prepare for a milestone Art Walk, one of the event’s founders unveils an exhibition that is both new, and decades in the making. Angel Ambrose first debuted Reckoning Home this summer at Foster Gallery, a division of First United Methodist Church of Peoria. A version of the exhibition is on view for a month in the Monroe Building, where Ambrose has had her studio for more than two decades.Support the show: https://donate.nprstations.org/wglt/wglt-choose-donationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The McLean County Behavioral Health Coordination Department hosted its annual Behavioral Health Forum Thursday at Bone Student Center on the Illinois State University campus. Among the more than a dozen presenters was Jen Woodrum, Bloomington-Normal mental health counselor, who gave a talk on self-regulation.Support the show: https://donate.nprstations.org/wglt/wglt-choose-donationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On today's episode, could funding approved for public transit in Chicago come at the expense of road construction downstate, the annual McLean County behavioral health forum examines how to build stronger connections, plus a look at how the downtown Bloomington art walk came to be 25 years ago.Support the show: https://donate.nprstations.org/wglt/wglt-choose-donationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Rep. Chung says advocates for medical aid in dying convinced her to support the right to die. Support the show: https://donate.nprstations.org/wglt/wglt-choose-donationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ryan Pedon was in college when the Illinois State men’s basketball team last won the Missouri Valley Conference. The ISU head coach has gone from playing in Division III [Wooster] to coaching in the Big Ten [two years as an assistant coach at Illinois and five years at Ohio State] to leading a mid-major program that's hoping this is finally the year.Support the show: https://donate.nprstations.org/wglt/wglt-choose-donationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Trump administration trade and regulatory policy initially hurt electric vehicle maker Rivian. Changes in the administration stance may now help some.Support the show: https://donate.nprstations.org/wglt/wglt-choose-donationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On today's episode, tariffs aren't hitting Rivian as hard as they were, plus a wide-ranging interview with ISU men's basketball coach Ryan Pedon.Support the show: https://donate.nprstations.org/wglt/wglt-choose-donationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
State Rep. Sharon Chung helped defeat a bill that would have enabled the state to regulate homeowners insurance rates. Support the show: https://donate.nprstations.org/wglt/wglt-choose-donationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In a time where the number of mental health professionals is going down and patient demand is going up, AI might be where people turn when they need professional mental health assistance.Support the show: https://donate.nprstations.org/wglt/wglt-choose-donationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The head of electric vehicle maker Rivian says the future is not just EVs, it’s artificial intelligence and autonomous vehicles. And it’s coming sooner than you might think.Support the show: https://donate.nprstations.org/wglt/wglt-choose-donationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On today's episode, Rivian is ready to dive into A-I to make self-driving vehicles, mental health experts worry A-I therapy may only have short term benefits and a Bloomington state lawmaker wants the governor to back off efforts to regulate insurance rates.Support the show: https://donate.nprstations.org/wglt/wglt-choose-donationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Support the show: https://donate.nprstations.org/wglt/wglt-choose-donationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Illinois Symphony opened its 2025-26 season last month with a pops concert dedicated to music from Star Wars, with guest conductor Vince Lee at the podium. Music director Taichi Fukumura leads the first concert of his second year in Bloomington-Normal on Saturday, Nov. 8, with a trio of masterworks by Beethoven, Béla Bartók and Miklós Rózsa.Support the show: https://donate.nprstations.org/wglt/wglt-choose-donationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On today's episode, the town of Normal pushes through tax increases for a long-awaited Uptown underpass in a matter of days after a decade of fits and starts, and the Illinois Symphony's music director returns to the podium for the first time this season with Hero's Journey.Support the show: https://donate.nprstations.org/wglt/wglt-choose-donationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The new adaptive playground at Stevenson Elementary School opened Monday, giving the surrounding community a chance to celebrate and remember.Support the show: https://donate.nprstations.org/wglt/wglt-choose-donationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The St. Vincent De Paul food pantry has seen more and more families come to its doors since the government shutdown began last month, putting SNAP benefits in jeopardy.Support the show: https://donate.nprstations.org/wglt/wglt-choose-donationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Bloomington Township plans to offer financial relief to SNAP recipients whose benefits are being suspended or reduced during the federal government shutdown.Support the show: https://donate.nprstations.org/wglt/wglt-choose-donationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On today's episode, as Normal consider two taxes increases to pay for an uptown Underpass, two Uptown business owners have a problem with the plan and how it's been rolled out, a Bloomington food pantry sees longer lines as SNAP benefits are cut during the government shutdown, Bloomington Township looks to offer emergency relief to those who lost food assistance, and a Bloomington grade school dedicates a new inclusive playground in honor of a former student who died in a car crash last year.Support the show: https://donate.nprstations.org/wglt/wglt-choose-donationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
During a visit to WGLT ahead of its Radio Faces fundraiser on Thursday, NPR CEO Katherine Maher expressed optimism about public media's future but cautioned there are many challenges ahead.Support the show: https://donate.nprstations.org/wglt/wglt-choose-donationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Fans of the cult classic independent film The Room have the chance to say, “Oh, hi Mark” to Mark, played by actor Greg Sestero, at Normal Theater on Nov. 8.Support the show: https://donate.nprstations.org/wglt/wglt-choose-donationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.




