The World from PRX

Sruthi PinnamaneniSP

Sruthi Pinnamaneni

I am a freelance radio and video journalist based in New York and Vienna.I graduated from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism with honors, while assisting at the BBC-NY Bureau and a documentary production company, where I worked on the award-winning feature film, Kumare.  As the audio/video correspondent at The Economist, I taped political stories in the marble halls of the United States Senate and the baptism pools of brassy Harlem churches. In India, I traveled between cities and villages to produce an Economist video series on rural education and the informal economy in slums.  I've worked on stories that have aired at various shows, including MarketplaceFreakonomicsRadiolab and Studio 360. I have produced pieces about poison squads, pop-up books and a band whose musical performance depends one live molecule.  In 2013, I won a PRX STEM grant, supported by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.
Arts, Culture & Media
The Rick Rubin Word Association Game
Arts, Culture & Media
Neil Gaiman’s Portal to the Lost Knowledge of Childhood
Arts, Culture & Media
Jennifer Lopez, Pink Floyd, and other Celebrity Bugs
Arts, Culture & Media
Psychedelic Paper Art or High-Level Math?
Arts, Culture & Media
Seeing Math: A New Language for Geometry
Arts, Culture & Media
Mark Mothersbaugh Is Happy to Be Co-Opted
Arts, Culture & Media
Juliette Binoche to Hollywood: Been There, Done That
Arts, Culture & Media
A Painter Makes Peace with Working in the Kitchen
Arts, Culture & Media
Juliette Binoche Plays the Older Woman
Arts, Culture & Media
Lydia Loveless Leaves the Country Behind
Christopher Nolan
Culture
Interstellar explores both the cosmic scale of space and the intimacy of family bonds
Mathematician Oliver Byrne published "The Elements of Euclid" in 1847, updating the ancient geometry text with colorful design language.
Books
A colorful, innovative take on Euclid finally gets its due