Help Keep Our Podcast Free
This American Life on iTunes
Episode Archive Need Help?

Episode Archive

Free Podcast

Find Your Station

Our Favorites


2010
2009|2008|2007|2006|2005|2004|2003|2002|2001|2000
1999|1998|1997|1996|1995
2009      Jan |Feb |Mar|Apr |May |Jun |Jul |Aug |Sep |Oct |Nov |Dec
03.06.2009

Originally aired 02.29.2008

30-second Promo
Full Episode
  Email to a Friend
  Permalink
350: Human Resources

The true story of little-known rooms in the New York City Board of Education building. Teachers are told to report there instead of their classrooms. No reason is usually given. When they arrive, they find they've been put on some kind of probationary status, and they must report every day until the matter is cleared up. They call it the Rubber Room. Average length of stay? Months, sometimes years. Plus other stories of the uneasy interaction between humans and their institutions.

The Rubber Room story was produced by Joe Richman and the good people at Radio Diaries.

Note: we're doing the Rubber Room story with some filmmakers who are making a feature-length documentary about the Rubber Room. Learn more here.


Prologue.

Host Ira Glass talks with a veteran Human Resources administrator about what it's like to fire people, and why it helps if you don't actually use the word "fire." (7 minutes)

Act One. Rubber Room.

We hear from New York City school teachers about a secret room in the New York City Board of Education building. Teachers are told to report there, and when they arrive, they find out they're under investigation for something. They have to wait in this room all day, every day, until the matter is cleared up. They call this bureaucratic purgatory "the rubber room." Some teachers have been stuck in it for years.

This story was produced by Joe Richman, Samara Freemark, and Anayansi Diaz Cortes of Radio Diaries.

We first heard  about the rubber room from a documentary by Jeremy Garrett. There's a trailer at rubberroommovie.com. Jeremy's looking for funding to finish the film, and a distributor. (23 minutes)

Song: "Waiting Room," Fugazi


Act Two. The Plan.

American cities have gone through a massive wave of gentrification in the last few decades. To some people, it's not a natural ebb and flow of the real estate market, but a plot, by rich, mainly white people, to take over the neighborhoods of poor, mainly black people. This American Life producer Jon Jeter reports on how, in neighborhoods all over the country, the plot has a name, "The Plan," and most people you talk to know about it. (11 minutes)

Song: "Don't Worry about the Government," Talking Heads


Act Three. Almost Human Resources.

Reporter Charles Siebert talks with Ira about retirement homes for Chimpanzees. Yes, retirement homes for Chimpanzees. There are thousands of aging chimps in the US: retired chimp actors, ex-research subjects, abandoned pets. They can't be put back in the wild since they don't know how to survive there. Charles Siebert visited many of the facilities where they're housed, often in rooms, with TV's and 3 meals a day. He's writing a book about his experiences called Humanzee. (11 minutes)

Song: "Monkey in a Zoo," Daniel Johnston




FAQ   |   Press   |   Contact Us   |   Facebook   |   MySpace   |   YouTube    Copyright © 2008, Chicago Public Radio and Ira Glass