Nashville Public Radio
Curious Nashville
In Curious Nashville from Nashville Public radio, we answer your questions about the city and region. Listeners decide which question we should investigate and answer next.
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Nashville Public Radio
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Podcast website
Latest episode
Jun 20, 2026
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Episodes
Why is there a tiny typo on the Tennessee driver's license? 20.06.2026 19:06
Have you ever looked closely at your Tennessee driver’s license? There might be something surprising in the fine print. Curious Nashville listener Sam Barocas used his microscope to find it. And then he asked: Why is there a microscopic typo on the Tennessee driver’s license? In some instances — likely on millions of licenses — a thin ribbon of text reads “The VolunDeer State.” With a ‘d.’ Among t...
How did kudzu vines first get introduced to Tennessee? 13.06.2026 10:59
Kudzu is a woody, hairy vine with distinct three-pronged leaves. During the blooming season in late summer, the plant produces grape-smelling purple flowers. And, always, it has a way of crowding out other plants. "Kudzu is like a glamorous villain ... ‘the vine that ate the South,' " says Ben Nanny, the conservation director at Ijams Nature Center. This ubiquitous vine prompted this question: How...
Why is a Nashville middle school named after a racist segregationist? 30.05.2026 12:55
J.T. Moore Middle School in Nashville is named after John Trotwood Moore, an author and prominent landowner. He was also openly racist, a proponent of lynching, and an apologist for the "Old South". This sparked a question to Curious Nashville: Please help us understand why schools in Metro are named after people with such heinous records and what can be done to correct this. The answer, in part,...
How did WeGo’s electric buses end up as urban decay? 18.05.2026 1:52
There’s a piece of infrastructure in downtown Nashville that is about to go away. When it does, there may not be any clues left from a fascinating — and brief — chapter in the city’s transportation history. Do you remember when WeGo had a fleet of super-quiet all-electric buses running for free throughout downtown? Bus commuter Joe Pagetta does. He wrote to Curious Nashville with this question: In...
Why do buried treasures turn up in our backyards? 03.05.2026 41:36
It all starts with a question: “I live in East Nashville, on Sharpe Avenue. We adopted a hound mix and she digs up bizarre trash. Did people bury their trash? Was there no trash pick up? Auto parts, beer bottles, air gun cartridges, porn videos. Others in East have described similar experiences.” We’ve learned this is not an isolated experience. You folks are obsessed with what you find in the dir...
What would it take to bury the power lines in Nashville? 25.04.2026 11:53
There's a hot topic after the ice storm response this winter, and guest Wade Sexton has 30 years of experience working in the utility industry. He's here to answer a question that’s been on our minds: What would it take to put electrical lines underground? And, would it even be worth it? This segment was produced by WPLN's Cynthia Abrams and hosted by Blake Farmer.
What happened to the ancient Mississippian town beneath the Brentwood Library? 28.03.2026 31:36
Much of Middle Tennessee’s important Native American history has been disturbed by development. This has prompted listeners like Kelly Cannon to wonder what’s been lost. She asked Curious Nashville about something she’d heard about the Brentwood Library: “A colleague recently told me that when the Brentwood Library was built remains were found of ancient Mississippian people, along with evidence o...
Unearthing the secrets of a grassy mound at Nashville's airport 28.02.2026 10:17
We got a question about a grass-covered mound — or building? — at the corner of Thompson Lane and Vultee Boulevard, near Nashville's airport and the iconic gold box of a building known as International Plaza. Educator and sixth-generation Nashvillian Sonia Fernandez LeBlanc is a big Curious Nashville fan — such a fan that she knew we had slowed down on answering questions in the last few years. Bu...
What are those gleaming golden portraits on Nashville's historic courthouse? 14.02.2026 1:29
What are the pictures on the front of the Metro Courthouse that appear to be outlined in gold? Are they ever going to be restored? This question came to Curious Nashville way back — in 2016 — during the first year of the project. As the series is now marking 10 years of answering your questions, it's finally time to tackle this answer. And we're getting research help from Harpeth Hall "Winterim" i...
Best of 10 years of Curious Nashville 28.01.2026 49:58
It’s the 10-year anniversary of Curious Nashville and we’re revisiting some of the weirdest and most surprising questions you’ve asked. This means we're going underground to a fallout shelter, to the top of a skyscraper, and in between we’ll visit beehives, talk about dump trucks, and revisit some infamous pranksters. And you get to go behind the scenes of the reporting with WPLN Metro Reporter Cy...
Why did a Nashville bank release a Christmas album? 16.12.2025 23:23
Today we shine a light on an obscure album recorded in Nashville more than 50 years ago that features a Christmas choir performing inside the lobby of a downtown bank. Local listener Matthew Bond came across the vinyl record two decades ago and wondered: Why did a bank form a choir? And what were their performances like? To figure this out, we dive into the city's banking history, glean clues from...
Grand Ole Opry: What does it take to be an Opry member? 29.11.2025 11:37
The Grand Ole Opry has elevated Nashville and its country music to a global stage and turns 100 years old this week. That much you've probably heard (WPLN has lots of Opry 100 coverage online.) But a Curious Nashville listener has a question that hits at the foundation of the Opry: What does it mean for an artist to be a “member” of the Opry? WPLN’s daily talk show, This Is Nashville , dove deep i...
Bonus: Still hungry for gyro facts 25.11.2025 6:12
Some listeners could not get enough of Curious Nashville's reporting about gyros. When we broadcast the story on WPLN’s This Is Nashville program — and opened up the phone lines — some called in with first-hand intel about Chicago-Style Gyros and founder Joey Kahn.
Why are 'Chicago-style' gyros everywhere in Nashville? 18.11.2025 32:29
Our question today: What is a "Chicago-style gyro," and why are there so many shops with that name in Nashville? Little did we know that trying to figure this out would take us way beyond Nashville and lead us to uncover the very creation of the gyro as we know it. And reporter Justin Barney is taking you along as he crisscrosses the country, plunges into culinary history, hits the factory floor,...
Curious Nashville returns! 01.11.2025 37:43
WPLN is reviving Curious Nashville . The recipe is simple: Listeners ask questions and we find the answers. Learn more about the comeback in this interview between WPLN's Tony Gonzalez and Blake Farmer.
Coming Soon: "Making Noise" — How a Sunday night party changed Nashville 01.02.2024 2:29
"Making Noise" is a four-part series by Nashville Public Radio about how the music promotion company Lovenoise has changed the music landscape of Nashville. The best way to listen is in the WNXP Podcasts feed. Subscribe now!
You might also like: The Kids of Rutherford County 20.10.2023 2:19
A juvenile court in Rutherford County was illegally jailing and detaining kids for 16 years before a former juvenile delinquent-turned-lawyer came up with a plan to take it on. This four-part narrative podcast builds on a joint investigation by WPLN Nashville Public Radio and ProPublica and is produced by The New York Times and Serial Productions. “The Kids of Rutherford County” reveals how this s...
For sale: one beach. How did this sandy triangle come to be in downtown Nashville? 16.06.2023 4:08
Something new has hit Nashville’s hot real estate market: a beach, right smack in the middle of downtown Nashville. But, until it’s sold, Nashvillians driving through the intersection of Lafayette, Division and 4th Avenue may wonder: What is that sandy triangle doing there? One listener directed this question to our Curious Nashville project, so we took a brief “vacation” to SoBro to find the answ...
Who cares for Centennial Park’s bee colony? 20.05.2023 4:14
On a small island in the middle of Centennial Park’s Lake Watauga stand five towers of beehives. One of our listeners spotted the hard-to-reach hives and inquired about the bees: Who cares for them? What happens to the honey? Do other parks have hives?
Searching for the 'space capsule' in rural Hickman County 04.04.2023 23:07
In 2017, a listener wrote to ask: “On Sulphur Creek Road, in Coble, Tennessee, we saw what appeared to be a ‘space capsule’ with a NASA logo on the end. What is it?” Now, for the first time anywhere, Curious Nashville has the story for the Hickman County space capsule. Credits: Curious Nashville is a project of Nashville Public Radio. Tony Gonzalez is executive producer, and Paula Ramirez reported...
Reverse Curious Nashville: Can YOU help us answer this question about a Bob Dylan song? 14.03.2023 5:00
Curious Nashville turns the tables and asks you to help us solve a mystery. It involves Bob Dylan, John Cale, and Edie Sedgwick — and a song that brings them together. This intriguing tale comes to us from Justin Barney, assistant program director for WNXP , the music discovery station that Nashville Public Radio launched in 2020.
What’s with these cryptic cement markers around Tennessee? 24.02.2023 4:38
Alongside some Tennessee roads, you might notice knee-high cement markers — usually quite weathered — that have this inscription: “H’Y R.W.” In learning what those are all about, Curious Nashville also revisits a fascinating saga from local history. To see photos that accompany this podcast, visit www.wpln.org/curious .
Burials, lawn pranks and other answers about the Tennessee State Capitol 21.01.2023 5:47
Lawmakers are back in Nashville for session, and it’s busy again inside the Tennessee State Capitol . But all year round, the historic building draws interest and provides tours — and it has prompted several questions to Curious Nashville that we’re answering in a batch today. You can see photos related to this story, and learn more, at this story on WPLN.org .
Update: No progress adding languages to Tennessee’s driving test, but pressure is growing 30.12.2022 2:58
Earlier this year, Curious Nashville looked into why Arabic isn’t offered on Tennessee’s driving test. (You can read that story here .) Half a year later, a new coalition is pushing the state for changes.
How Nashville became a destination for Kurdish families, and how the community is evolving 10.09.2022 23:59
Many Nashvillians are aware that the city is home to “Little Kurdistan,” which is the largest Kurdish community in America. However, it’s easy to know that fact without really understanding these neighbors. We unpack how Nashville became a destination for Kurdish refugees starting in the late 1970s and hear from local Kurds about their future hopes and ambitions. To hear more stories of Nashville...
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