© 2024 KGOU
News and Music for Oklahoma
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
Snap Judgment
Snap Judgment
Fridays 8 - 9 p.m. and Sundays 11 a.m. - 12 Noon

Snap Judgment is "storytelling with a beat". Host Glynn Washington was a  winner of the Public Radio Talent Quest contest and before creating Snap Judgment, he worked as an educator, diplomat, community activist, actor, political strategist, fist-shaker, mountain-hollerer, and foot stomper.

More from the archives

Latest Episodes
  • Adam Linn went to the Louisiana Center for the Blind in search of life skills — but what he got was so much more.
  • What happens when the machines start turning on you — but you're half-machine yourself? We've got answers in this radio play adapted from Delaney Nolan's original story, with all the bright lights on.
  • What happens when you spend your life savings on a dream house, and find out someone else's family already lives there? Explore the full story in Kathleen McConnell's book, Don't Call Them Ghosts.
  • It's not easy to scare a fifth-degree black belt and professional martial arts instructor — but it can be done.
  • Lee kept seeing things, and hearing voices and noises late into the night. As Lee slowly lost his grip on reality, a Chinese mystic (thousands of miles away) lent a helping hand.
  • What happens when the world around you starts to burn? Performed by Josh Healey at Snap Judgment LIVE! in San Francisco's Nourse Theater.
  • The wanted ad said "Mortuary Assistant Required. Prior Experience An Advantage, But Not Essential." No one bothered to apply, except for Simon...
  • Leigh Sprague is a lawyer in Moscow working for a billionaire. He figures he can hold himself above his peers, make some money and get out. Leigh soon finds out that there is no honor among thieves.
  • Just because Keith Ford was homeless didn't mean he was unpopular with the ladies. This story was adapted from Kaitlin Prest's show Audio Smut.
  • Charles Farrell knew everything there was to know about the sport of boxing — but he still had a lot to learn about the business.