Schools

Buffalo State College: Buffalo State Student A Finalist In NPR's Student Podcast Contest

A panel of judges from NPR and NPR-member stations selected the finalists in the initiative meant to get younger voices and stories on t ...

Laurie Kaiser

April 6, 2021

Find out what's happening in Buffalofor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Growing up in New York City, Buffalo State College senior Bennett Cook became an expert at navigating the subway system. He also developed a deep fascination with public transportation—the mechanisms inside the trains, the way a subway system so expertly ties a city together, and recently, the music some subway trains create.

An urban and regional planning major, Cook channeled this observation into a four-minute podcast called Subway Symphony that was named a finalist in National Public Radio (NPR)’s Student Podcast Challenge.

Find out what's happening in Buffalofor free with the latest updates from Patch.

A panel of judges from NPR and NPR-member stations selected the finalists in the initiative meant to get younger voices and stories on the airwaves. Two grand-prize winners were announced on April 6, and NPR will feature their stories on the weekday shows Morning Edition and All Things Considered.

The radio network started the podcast contest in 2019 for middle school and high school students and opened it up this year to college students. To participate, students submitted a podcast on any topic between three and eight minutes in length.

“I’d been wanting to make a podcast, and when I heard about the contest, I thought it was the perfect time,” said Cook, who transferred to Buffalo State in January from Dean College in Franklin, Massachusetts, near Boston.

Cook, who describes himself as a neurodiverse student who processes information differently, developed a strong affinity for all things transit at a very young age.

“I began by building models of trains with LEGO blocks and creating hand-drawn transit map designs,” he said. “Both evolved into graphic renderings of the world’s transit systems and digital 3D renderings of various trains.”

This affinity and talent landed him a spot at the June 2017 “Genius Transit Challenge” conference in New York City, sponsored by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, and coverage in the New York Times.

Throughout his youth, he also rode subways in San Francisco, California; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Washington, D.C.; and London, England, and studied others. It was while commuting in Boston, however, that he began pondering whether subway trains make music.


This press release was produced by Buffalo State College. The views expressed here are the author’s own.

More from Buffalo