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On the show
Recent episodes
Previewing Bard SummerScape 2026
Jun 21, 2026
24m 32s
No Pride This Year? Three Red Hook Teens Decided to Fix That
Jun 13, 2026
21m 14s
Red Hook neighbors push back on a major expansion to the Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome
Jun 5, 2026
26m 39s
Following the money in the Rhinebeck supervisor primary
May 29, 2026
21m 39s
Rhinebeck Town Supervisor Democratic Forum 2026, Full Audio
May 22, 2026
1h 54m 18s
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| Date | Episode | Description | Length | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/21/26 | ![]() Previewing Bard SummerScape 2026 | The Daily Catch's new arts and entertainment reporter Matt Moment joins Emily Sacker to preview Bard SummerScape 2026. He looks ahead to comedian James Austin Johnson at the Spiegeltent, a six-decade retrospective from dance pioneer Lucinda Childs, who turns 86 on opening night, and the world premiere of Suddenly Last Summer, a new opera by Courtney Bryan based on the Tennessee Williams play. Moment also previews his Upstate Art Weekend roundup and an upcoming piece on the painter Uman, whose survey opens at Bard's Hessel Museum. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 24m 32s | ||||||
| 6/13/26 | ![]() No Pride This Year? Three Red Hook Teens Decided to Fix That | Three Red Hook High School juniors heard there'd be no Pride celebration in their village this year, so they built one themselves. Ada, Harper, and Violet join Emily Sachar to talk about Red Hook Youth Pride, the day they pulled together that drew hundreds of people for a parade, live music, food, and community booths in the Village municipal lot. They get into the parts nobody warns teenagers about, like wrangling event insurance without an organization to back them, partnering with the local community center, and handing off the music to a friend who runs Red Hook DIY. They also talk about what it felt like to watch a plan they'd scribbled on paper turn into a crowd, why Pride still matters in a small town, and what they'd say to any adult who underestimates what high schoolers can get done. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 21m 14s | ||||||
| 6/5/26 | ![]() Red Hook neighbors push back on a major expansion to the Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome | Daily Catch reporter Athan Yanos has been covering the growing controversy surrounding a proposed expansion at the Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome, and he joins Walter Mullin this week to discuss. The aerodrome, a beloved Hudson Valley institution that has drawn aviation enthusiasts from around the world for nearly seven decades, is seeking approval from the Red Hook Planning Board to nearly double its building footprint — replacing 11 existing structures with six new, modern ones. Director Tara Grieb insists the project is purely about preserving and sustaining what the aerodrome already does, just with better facilities. But at a packed planning board meeting, close to 30 residents submitted letters in opposition, with concerns ranging from traffic on the area's narrow residential roads to noise, light pollution, and the visual impact of large modern buildings on a quiet rural neighborhood. Critics also pointed to language in earlier versions of the master plan, references to maximizing "other site uses," hosting weddings and galas, and renting hangar space to private aircraft. That disappeared from later drafts, raising questions about the aerodrome's true intentions. Yanos and Mullin break down what's being proposed, why the planning board declined to vote, and what comes next — including a continuation of the public hearing on June 15th and the possibility of legal challenges on the horizon. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 26m 39s | ||||||
| 5/29/26 | ![]() Following the money in the Rhinebeck supervisor primary | The Daily Catch reviewed the latest campaign finance filings in the Rhinebeck Democratic primary for town supervisor, and reporter Claire Greenberger joins Emily Sacker to explain what the records show heading into the June 23rd primary. Amanda Miller reported a little over $15,000 in contributions to Debbie Hecht's roughly $8,700, but Miller is largely self-funding through herself, her husband, and her law firm. Narrow it to registered Rhinebeck Democrats who can actually vote in June, and Hecht holds the edge, about $1,800 to Miller's $850, with more small-dollar local donors. Greenberger also explains the $5,000 donation to Hecht from artist and philanthropist Carolyn Marks Blackwood, which exceeded New York's $1,000 individual limit by $4,000. Hecht's treasurer had told her there were no limits; once Greenberger confirmed the rule, Hecht returned the excess within the hour and hand-delivered the check. Miller's campaign called it a leadership and experience problem, Hecht pushed back on Miller's spending, and the exchange marked the first real edge in a race that had stayed civil. Plus: where the out-of-town money is coming from, what the donors care about, and why fundraising totals is not likely to predict the winner. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 21m 39s | ||||||
| 5/22/26 | ![]() Rhinebeck Town Supervisor Democratic Forum 2026, Full Audio | The complete audio of the Rhinebeck Town Supervisor Democratic forum, recorded live Sunday, May 17 at Rhinebeck High School in partnership with the Rhinebeck High School Student Council. Editor Emily Sachar moderates a two-hour conversation with the two Democratic candidates, Debbie Hecht and Amanda Miller. Topics include housing and the proposed community housing fund, Rhinebeck schools, tourism and hospitality growth, the Six Senses lawsuit, the future of Linwood, the Starr Library shortfall and the recusal debate, conflicts of interest, development along the 9G corridor, full-time versus part-time supervision, village-town relations, the Amtrak Rhinecliff station, property assessments, and the 2009 comprehensive plan. Plus a lightning round on books, dogs, hobbies, and favorite places, and three-minute closing statements from each candidate. For a recap with analysis, see episode 56 of The Catch Up Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 1h 54m 18s | ||||||
| 5/22/26 | ![]() Forum Recap: Hecht and Miller on Where They Agree and Where They Don't | Some 280 people packed Rhinebeck High School Sunday afternoon for the first forum between Debbie Hecht and Amanda Miller, the two Democrats running for Rhinebeck Town Supervisor. Emily Sachar, who moderated, joins Walter Mullin in the studio for a recap: tourism and hospitality growth, the Six Senses lawsuit, the future of Linwood, two very different housing proposals, the Starr Library funding shortfall and recusal debate, village-town relations, the Amtrak station, and questions of temperament and qualifications. There are also areas the candidates agreed. The full forum audio is available as a separate bonus episode, 57. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 31m 10s | ||||||
| 5/16/26 | ![]() Rhinebeck, Rhinecliff, Red Hook: A Forum, a Hotel, and a Bard Reset | Walter Mullin and Emily Sachar cover three stories. The Daily Catch hosts its first candidates forum Sunday, May 17, at Rhinebeck High School, with Debbie Hecht and Amanda Miller facing questions ahead of the June 23 Democratic primary for town supervisor. The historic Rhinecliff Hotel signs a 10-year lease with Michaela Carpenter and Barry Dobesh, who plan to open this summer and reopen the renovated rooms in spring 2027. At Bard College, the board lays out a two-year transition plan to replace retiring president Leon Botstein, longtime chairman James Cox Chambers steps down from the board of trustees, and CNN's Fareed Zakaria is named commencement speaker for May 23. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 17m 35s | ||||||
| 5/8/26 | ![]() Botstein Steps Down | Leon Botstein is leaving Bard. After almost 51 years as president, he announced his retirement one day after the board got WilmerHale's review of his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein. Walter Mullin and Daily Catch editor Emily Sachar talk through what the report says, what Botstein had told the public before, and why those two stories no longer match. The report includes a line Botstein gave investigators that the board chose to highlight: "I would take money from Satan if it permitted me to do God's work." It also says he visited Epstein's townhouse 25 times, made a two-day trip to Little St. James, and was around women later identified as Epstein's victims. The Daily Catch had already reported on the 2013 helicopter visit to Bard, when Epstein arrived with several young women and Botstein walked them around campus. Emily walks through what the board did and did not know, including the 2014 Leon Black donation that came at Epstein's direction. She talks about the senior faculty member who warned Botstein off, the level three sex offender designation that anyone could have looked up in 2012, and the consulting fees Botstein took from an Epstein entity in 2016. She and Walter weigh the Bard that Botstein built against the choices he made, and look at what comes next: an interim leader, a national search, and whatever role Leon Botstein still holds at the college he ran for half a century. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 32m 18s | ||||||
| 5/1/26 | ![]() Voters Approved It. The Town Didn't Collect It. Inside Starr Library's $82K Shortfall | This week, editor Emily Sachar takes you inside Monday night's Rhinebeck Town Board meeting, where a discussion about Starr Library's budget turned into a shouting match between Town Supervisor Elizabeth Spinzia, library leaders, and a packed room of more than 40 residents. Beat reporter Eloise Goldsmith joins Emily to explain how voters approved an $82,000 tax increase for the library on Election Day, only to have the higher amount left out of the Town's budget documents, leaving Starr $82K short. Eloise walks through the timing rules under state education law, the conflicting accounts of who dropped the ball, and the divided vote that ended with the Town loaning, not gifting, $72,000 to the library over three years, interest-free. To close the show, publisher Walter Mullin joins Emily with some good news: The Daily Catch took home five first-place awards from the New York Press Association, including first place for this podcast and for investigative reporting on the Red Hook wastewater treatment plant by Claire Greenburger and Jack Whitman. The paper finished third in the state overall, going up against the largest newsrooms in New York. Walter and Emily talk about the work behind the wins, and the pressure of doing it again next year. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 29m 49s | ||||||
| 4/24/26 | ![]() Back in the Pews: A Hudson Valley Catholic Revival | The Catch-Up host Walter Mullin sits down with Daily Catch reporter Athan Yanos to unpack his in-depth feature on a quiet but striking reversal: Catholic churches in Red Hook and Rhinebeck are filling up. Yanos spent weeks embedded in the parish community at St. Christopher's and Good Shepherd, interviewing seven congregants whose returns to faith trace back not to headlines or trends, but to grief, dislocation, and a search for something solid. The conversation ranges from local parking-lot overflow to global forces, from Pope Leo to the legacy of the clergy abuse crisis, and from CYO basketball to the role TikTok may be playing in a new Catholic revival. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 34m 50s | ||||||
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| 4/17/26 | ![]() Hammertown Is Closing and Joan Osofsky Has a Lot to Say About It | For more than 40 years, Joan Osofsky built something rare: a store that felt like a home. Hammertown, which began in a Pine Plains barn in 1985, grew into one of the Hudson Valley's most beloved design institutions, defining a regional aesthetic that became known as "modern country." Now, after six years of searching for a buyer, Joan has made the bittersweet decision to close. In this conversation with Emily Sachar, Joan reflects on what it took to build Hammertown from scratch, the instincts and luck that guided her, what she's heard from the community as the doors close, and what comes next. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 30m 58s | ||||||
| 4/9/26 | ![]() New Film Captures the Hudson's Beauty and the Battle to Protect It | Daily Catch Publisher Walter Mullen sits down with producer Carolyn Marks Blackwood and director Jon Bowermaster to talk about The Keeper, a documentary that follows John Lipscomb, the longtime patrol captain for Riverkeeper, and his deep, complicated bond with the Hudson River. Walter asks about the Riverkeeper's mission, what drew Blackwood to Lipscomb's story, and the challenge of convincing a very private man to open up on camera. Bowermaster talks about his need for a human anchor to make the river's story accessible, and describes four to five years of filming from New York Harbor to Albany, finding both the Hudson's beauty and the lasting damage left by decades of pollution. Clips from the film feature Lipscomb on the gap between the river's health for humans versus fish, and a call to action urging viewers to get involved locally, defend environmental protections, and support organizations like Riverkeeper. The Keeper screens at Upstate Films in Rhinebeck on Sunday, April 12 at 7:00 PM. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin. Executive Producer Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio. Additional editing by Esther Martel. | 16m 49s | ||||||
| 4/4/26 | ![]() Red Hook School Vote: Bus Garage Expansion, New Welding Program & Fleet Planning | Walter Mullen and reporter Claire Greenberg break down what Red Hook Central School District voters will decide on May 21, including the operating budget, two open school board seats, and multiple propositions. Voters will consider $1.1 million to upgrade the high school welding facility to launch an in-house career and technical education pathway, a $14.7 million renovation and expansion of the aging bus garage, and $530,000 to purchase six vehicles (three hybrid SUVs, two gas buses, and a maintenance plow truck), plus two separate library budget propositions. The discussion covers why the bus garage and welding projects were unbundled after community feedback, concerns about the bus garage cost and neighborhood impacts, how state aid influences renovation vs. rebuilding, and how gas bus purchases relate to New York’s mandate for fully electric fleets by 2035/2037 amid limited funding for electric buses. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 18m 20s | ||||||
| 3/28/26 | ![]() Red Hook's New Trustees Inherit a Broken Sewer and a Skeptical Public | Red Hook beat reporter Athan Yanos joins Emily Sachar to break down a closely watched village board election that brought two political newcomers to power. Perry Allen and Craig Rothstein unseated incumbent Anthony Maccarini, with Rothstein winning by just 17 votes after a recount. Yanos walks through what drove the results, from a meticulously run grassroots campaign to the outsized role of trustee Frances Uku's endorsement, and explains why the troubled wastewater treatment plant became the defining issue of the race. The conversation also covers the potential shift in board dynamics under Mayor Karen Smythe, the stakes of a planned fourfold expansion of the village sewer system, a new zoning study for the village's northeast quadrant, and the steep learning curve awaiting two trustees with just one-year terms and a full agenda. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 36m 01s | ||||||
| 3/20/26 | ![]() Clinton Vineyards Owner Wants to Turn Old Barn Into a Restaurant. Neighbors Aren't Sure. | Walter Mullen and reporter Claire Greenberger take up a proposal from Clinton Vineyards owner Barry Milea to convert a former tasting-room barn on Schultzville Road into an 80-seat fine-dining restaurant with a limited events component. The plan has landed before the Clinton Planning Board, where traffic concerns have taken center stage: a new study projects peak hourly vehicle counts could jump from roughly 25 to around 60, more than doubling, on a narrow, winding road with constrained sight lines. Nearby residents are also worried about what a busy restaurant would do to the road's quiet, rural feel. Milea frames the project differently, arguing it would keep the land in agriculture and head off residential development, and he points to a 2023 town law permitting farm restaurants under certain sourcing rules. The Planning Board has paused the hearing pending revised plans; a review is expected in April, with the hearing set to resume after that. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 20m 00s | ||||||
| 3/13/26 | ![]() What Love Requires When Alzheimer's Moves In | Emily welcomes Betty Olson, 82, who shares what it means to become the sole caregiver for her husband of decades. Peter Olson, 84, was diagnosed with Alzheimer's — symptoms that came into sharp focus following a kidney transplant in July 2023. Betty traces the arc of their life together: meeting in a scuba class, their complementary strengths, building a home in Clinton. She describes the early signs of cognitive decline, the practical challenges of managing a household when familiar tools and simple directions become obstacles, and the emotional weight of watching someone you know completely change. The conversation includes moments of unexpected humor, honest fears about the cost of in-home care, and Betty's determination to hold onto her own identity through church, choir, volunteering, and an upcoming shoulder replacement. This episode was Sponsored by Hudson Solar and Battery Solutions. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 19m 58s | ||||||
| 3/6/26 | ![]() An Interview with the Bard Observer Reporters Who Sat Down with Botstein | Emily Sachar of The Daily Catch hosts The Catchup, sponsored by Hudson Solar and Battery Solutions, and sits down with Bard Observer co-editors Luc Redgate and Mica Rajakumar, who have been leading student coverage of Bard College President Leon Botstein since DOJ documents tied to Jeffrey Epstein named him. The editors walk through their exclusive interview with Botstein and a Feb. 12 open house at his campus home that drew 60 to 80 people and grew tense, with some students pushing for his resignation. Botstein stayed composed but kept returning to the same points: he won't step down, calling that a decision for the board; he should have cut ties with Epstein in 2015; and he's proposed a $400,000 fund, drawn from Epstein-linked money, to address sexual violence. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 23m 09s | ||||||
| 2/27/26 | ![]() Rhinebeck's Open Supervisor Race Is Already Getting Competitive | Host Emily Sachar and Rhinebeck beat reporter Eloise Goldsmith dig into a brewing Democratic primary for town supervisor, one that got interesting fast after Supervisor Elizabeth Spinzia announced she won't seek reelection and threw her support behind Deputy Supervisor Debbie Hecht. Hecht, a relative newcomer to the area and co-founder of Beck Hook Pride, says she came up through the work: attending meetings, handling communications, learning the town from the inside out. But she's got company. Attorney and former First Vice President of Rhinebeck Chamber of Commerce Amanda Miller is running on a reform platform, term limits, a streamlined planning code, and a harder look at what she calls closed-door governance, pointing to the Six Senses lawsuit as Exhibit A. Town board members aren't taking the criticism lying down, pushing back on Miller's claims about proposed parking penalties and the Amtrak station project. Petitioning runs through April 2, with a June primary to follow. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 27m 45s | ||||||
| 2/20/26 | ![]() Linwood's Future: Rhinebeck's Historic Hudson River Compound Up for Sale | Host Walter Mullen speaks with Rhinebeck reporter Eloise Goldsmith about Linwood, a 51-acre historic compound overlooking the Hudson River. Established as an estate in 1774 and later given to the Sisters of St. Ursula, the property is now for sale via a formal RFP process developed with the Town of Rhinebeck. The discussion covers the site's restrictive HP-20 zoning, the town's openness to variances for the right project, preservation requirements tied to the property's historic designations, and questions about transparency and public input. Proposals are due April 17, with a preferred buyer expected by June and a sale anticipated in July, though any development would likely take years. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 15m 09s | ||||||
| 2/13/26 | ![]() A Moment of Reckoning for Bard College as the Epstein Files Reveal How Fundraising Blurred the Lines for Botstein | Walter and Emily examine the recently released Jeffrey Epstein files and what they reveal about Bard College president Leon Botstein's connections to the disgraced financier. They look at Botstein's decades-long leadership of Bard, the achievements, the institution-building, the outsized reputation, and then at the uncomfortable details now coming to light, from fundraising ties to campus visits. What does this mean for Bard? How should colleges vet their donors? Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 27m 25s | ||||||
| 2/3/26 | ![]() Navigating Memory Loss in Marriage: Part One | In this episode of The Catch Up, Emily talks with reporter Maggie Baribault to examine the quiet transformation that occurs when memory loss enters a marriage. Through conversations with three couples navigating different stages of dementia and Alzheimer's, we witness how love adapts when the architecture of shared history begins to crumble. These intimate portraits reveal both the weight of caregiving and the surprising moments of connection that persist, small acts of creativity, flashes of recognition, the muscle memory of devotion. What emerges is not a clinical study but a deeply human exploration of what remains when remembering becomes impossible, and how couples forge new ways of being together even as the past slips away. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 20m 46s | ||||||
| 1/27/26 | ![]() Rhinebeck Fire Funding Fight Exposes Deeper Political Tensions Between Town and Village | Walter Mullen, publisher of The Daily Catch, delves into the growing tension between the town and village of Rhinebeck over the cost and transparency of firefighting and EMS services. Town Supervisor Elizabeth Spinzia raises concerns about the village's budget transparency and the town's annual contribution, totaling nearly $280,000. Village Mayor Gary Bassett argues that the town is getting excellent service at a competitive price. Beat reporter Eloise Goldsmith breaks down the situation, including the 2024 contract specifics and broader political tensions between local leaders. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 12m 32s | ||||||
| 1/22/26 | ![]() Red Hook Approves Groundbreaking Education Programs for 2026-27 | Schools and education reporter Claire Greenberger joins editor Emily Sachar to talk about some major changes coming to Red Hook High School. The district just approved a slate of new courses for the 2026-27 school year that's getting people excited, including a three-course Race Car Program, an In-House Welding Pathway, AP Cybersecurity, and a new IB Literature and Performance option. These programs move beyond traditional classroom learning, giving students hands-on experience and real-world skills. Claire and Emily discuss what these courses mean for students and the broader community, including the costs, safety measures, and community backing needed to make them happen. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 19m 31s | ||||||
| 1/13/26 | ![]() Rhinebeck's Democratic Primary: Three Village Trustee Candidates Share Their Visions for the Community | On this episode of The Catch Up, host Emily Sachar sits down with all three Democratic candidates competing in the January 27th primary for Rhinebeck Village Board of Trustees. Incumbent Eleanor Pupko reflects on her first term and what she hopes to accomplish next, while challengers Mimi Joh-Carnella and Jennifer Neufeld explain what's driving them to run and their priorities for the village. The conversation covers everything from environmental policy and village governance to community engagement and local development. Also: Walter and Emily remind everyone to fill out The Daily Catch's 2026 audience survey. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 34m 54s | ||||||
| 1/8/26 | ![]() Rhinebeck Divided: Chamber and Town Clash Over Occupancy Tax | Welcome to the first episode of 'The Catch Up' for 2026! The main focus of this episode is the recent tensions in Rhinebeck between the town board and the Chamber of Commerce over a proposed 3% occupancy tax on short-term stays. Rhinebeck reporter Eloise Goldsmith provides give the background on the letters exchanged, the key figures involved, and the interpersonal conflicts between supervisor Elizabeth Spinzia and Chamber president Luciano Valdivia. Produced by Emily Sachar, Walter Mullin, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud at the Radio Free Rhinecilff studio | 16m 06s | ||||||
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