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Playlist: Tuesday Night Special

Compiled By: David Boyer

Caption: PRX default Playlist image
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Living on the Edge: Voices of Poverty in America

From Humankind | Part of the Humankind Specials series | 52:59

Over a third of Americans lack sufficient savings to handle a $400 emergency. In this revealing public radio documentary, we consider the plight of tens of millions living on the edge of poverty in the United States. They may be among your family members or neighbors. Produced by David Freudberg in association with WGBH/Boston.

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Over a third of Americans lack sufficient savings to handle a $400 emergency. In this revealing public radio documentary, we consider the plight of tens of millions living on the edge of poverty in the United States. They may be among your family members or neighbors.

Most of us hold misconceptions about who is struggling to get by on low income, and whether the social safety net — intended to safeguard people who fall on hard times — is actually adequate.

We visit food pantries to discuss these conditions with patrons who line up for a limited supply of groceries — among them young mothers, older adults, the working poor and people with disabilities. The number of folks using these services has noticeably increased as the Covid-19 crisis has tapered off. At the same time, emergency benefits for many families have been scaled back.
 
You’ll hear from Mark Rank, author of The Poverty Paradox and professor of social work at Washington University in St. Louis; Kisha Davis, MD, the Health Officer for Montgomery County, Maryland; members of the Poor People’s Campaign, who testified before Congress, including Rev. William Barber II; and brief excerpts from powerful movies dramatizing this theme.

And we listen back to how government aid to low-income Americans has been politicized from the enactment of Social Security in 1935 to the debate over newer protections in the Affordable Care Act.

Shake It Up

From Smithsonian | Part of the Sidedoor series | 23:53

Transforming things we take for granted: an astronomer who has turned the night sky into a symphony; an architecture firm that has radically re-thought police stations; and an audiophile who built a successful record company on underappreciated sounds.

Side_door_logo_640x640_small Transforming things we take for granted: an astronomer who has turned the night sky into a symphony; an architecture firm that has radically re-thought police stations; and an audiophile who built a successful record company on underappreciated sounds.

EP 6 — Beer: Crafting a Better Economy

From Robert Raymond | Part of the Upstream series | 58:01

How is the new economy embodied in a pint of beer? This is the question that guides us in our Craft Beer episode. From ancient times to the modern day craft beer explosion, we travel around the globe looking at some of the most innovative and interesting examples of brewers and breweries.

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Once an important life-force of early civilization and an ancient crafter of community, beer was, like many things under our current economic system, disfigured and twisted by the forces of the market and the drive for profit.

In this episode, we take a close look at this story, starting in ancient Mesopotamia and tracing the history of beer up through the giant consolidations of the 20th century to the birth of the craft beer revolution in the 1970s and 80s. Brew expert and award-winning author Randy Mosher guides us through this history, telling great stories and exploring ancient beer mythology along the way.

But the story doesn't end there -- the beer revolution is really just beginning. Craft beer has begun to bring back many of the most important values and characteristics of beer that were lost for so long, going far beyond just taste.

How is the new economy embodied in a pint of beer? This is an important theme that Rob Hopkins, the co-founder of the Transition Town movement and founder of New Lion Brewery, explores throughout the episode. How is craft beer beginning to stitch back together the economies of towns and cities that have been torn apart by globalization and an obsession with growth? How can beer demonstrate the concept of the circular economy? These are important questions explored in depth through Rob’s expertise.

There are many other incredible stories of brewers and breweries that are radically changing the landscape of the beer industry. Throughout the episode you’ll meet a wide variety of folks, from a brewery in London that makes beer out of surplus bread, to the first cooperatively owned brewery in California. After listening to this episode, you may never look at a bottle of beer in the same way.

Disclaimer: listening to this episode may cause you to crave a dark, chocolatey stout. Or a piney, hoppy IPA. Or a nutty brown ale. Or a fruity saison. Or a tangy farmhouse ale. Or...well you get the point: you may want to listen to this episode over a pint.

Featuring
​Rob Hopkins - Founder of New Lion Brewery, Co-Initator of the Transition Town Movement
Randy Mosher - Author of Tasting Beer: An Insider's Guide to the World's Greatest Drink
Bart Watson - Chief Economist, Brewers Association
Tom Stainer - Head of Communications, CAMRA
Julie Prebble - Business Development Manager, Toast Ale
Vanesa de Blas - Brewer, Temple Brew House
Andrew Gilhespy - Grower at The Almond Thief
Emy Mendoza - Umunhum Brewing

Music by:
​Maude Gun
Lanterns 
Antwon
Pele

Many thanks to Bethan Mure for the background/cover art.

The Civic Standard

From Atlantic Public Media | Part of the The Transom Radio Specials series | 58:59

"The Civic Standard" chronicles the making of a unique theater production in Hardwick, Vermont. "Developed to Death" is a play about Hardwick and written by people in Hardwick. It stars the people of Hardwick and it is mostly just for the people of Hardwick — even those who have never been to a play. It is part murder mystery, part social science project, and its primary goal is to give people reasons to know and trust their neighbors across cultural divides.

240the-selectboard-credit-terry-j-allen_small It's no secret that Erica Heilman and Transom have a bond. She credits Transom with getting her into radio/audio. We look to her for inspiration on how to create artistic work that really matters: to her own small community and to listeners everywhere. That's quite a trick, and one we have always cared about, and are investing in for the future.

This new episode of Rumble Strip (available here and on Transom.org ) is a great example. Erica embedded with her friends for six months as they put on a play, a play about the town they live in, starring the people in the town. It's a murder mystery.

But more than that, it's a trick to get people to hang out, every kind of person in the area, even if they hold opposing beliefs, and make sure they all have a good time together. Because they are neighbors and neighborly connections matter. They may even be key to our survival. And if a mystery dinner theater production helps, terrific.

For more visit https://transom.org/2023/the-civic-standard




Transom.org  channels new work and voices to public radio, with a focus on the power of story, and on the mission of public media in a changing media environment. Transom won the first Peabody Award ever granted exclusively to a website. Transom.org is a project of Atlantic Public Media which ran the Transom Story Workshops and founded WCAI, the public radio station in Woods Hole, Mass.

Support for this work comes from National Endowment for the Arts  

 

National Endowment for the Arts
       

‘That Rotten Spot’

From Distillations | Part of the Innate series | 51:34

When the plague broke out in San Francisco in 1900, the public health department singled out Chinatown—as if Chinatown were the problem.

Innate_podart_240 When the plague broke out in San Francisco in 1900, the public health department poured all of its energy into stopping the spread of the deadly disease in Chinatown—as if Chinatown were the problem. This episode reveals why they did it, what it has to do with race science, and what it tells us about the history of public health.

Smackdown: City Hall vs Big Oil

From Claire Schoen | 58:59

Richmond California is a working class town that grew up in the shadow of a Chevron refinery. The company ran both the economy – and the local government – for more than a century. But times are changing. Climate champions have flipped City Hall to their side. What happens when an oil company decides to fight back?

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Post-Punk San Francisco

From KZUM | Part of the Polley Music Library series | 28:23

On this episode of the Polley Music Library show, we discussed the book "Who Cares Anyway: Post-Punk San Francisco and the End of the Analog Age" by Will York, which documents the wild underground music coming out of the Bay Area in the 1980s and 90s. We listened to some examples of music from the scene, too.

Polley_logo_small On this episode of the Polley Music Library show, we discussed the book "Who Cares Anyway: Post-Punk San Francisco and the End of the Analog Age" by Will York, which documents the wild underground music coming out of the Bay Area in the 1980s and 90s. We listened to some examples of music from the scene, too.

This Asian American Life

From Mateo Schimpf | 59:00

How are Asian-Americans fighting back against accusations of divided loyalties and the sense of “perpetual foreignness”?

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Trade wars, tension over Taiwan and spy balloons have sunk US-China relationship to a new low, and it’s stirring up anti-AAPI sentiment across the country. How are Asian-Americans fighting back against accusations of divided loyalties and the sense of “perpetual foreignness”?
This week, we hear from World Affairs President and CEO Philip Yun and California Assemblymember Alex Lee about the next generation of Asian American political leaders. Then, we revisit the story of Wen Ho Lee, a Taiwanese-American scientist who was falsely accused of spying for the Chinese government and persecuted in a time of national crisis, with guests Helen Zia and George Koo.

Stories of the Coast - How the California Coast was Saved (Series)

Produced by KRCB 104.9

Most recent piece in this series:

Stories of the Coast - The Monterey Bay Trail

From KRCB 104.9 | Part of the Stories of the Coast - How the California Coast was Saved series | 11:14

P1020086_small The untold story of the how the Coastal Commission took on the Southern Pacific Railroad in Monterey to prevent the sale of their abandoned railroad tracks to luxury home developers. Instead, the Coastal Commission won the right to create the popular multi-use public trail along the edge of Monterey Bay.

Duncans Mills and Cazadero

From KRCB 104.9 | Part of the WONDERLAND RADIO HOUR series | 57:30

1894 Cazadero train wreck, Gaye Lebaron on Black Bart, the restoration of Duncans Mills, the History of Pole Mountain Lookout, and more!

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Citizen archivist, Jim Berry, leads a tour through Cazadero’s past, beginning with the Kashia who called the area, Kabebateli, or Big Rock Place. Next, settle down inside the hundred year old McKinley Cabin and listen in on a conversation among a number of long time Cazadero residents reminiscing about how the creeks and trains bound their lives together. Historian and newspaper columnist, Gaye LeBaron, recounts local lore about the infamous, but locally beloved, bandit, Black Bart. Musical Duo, Mike Campbell & John Norris of the band Puffinhorn, perform two ballads, “Cazadero Train Wreck” and “Black Bart.” In these rural enclaves, The General Store still serves as a center of community life and for Cazadero and Duncans Mills, the same family with deep roots serves both towns. Founded in the late 1800’s, when the Duncan Brothers floated their sawmill upstream to its current location, Duncans Mills thrived until the lumber ran out and what was left of it was completely destroyed in the 1906 earthquake. But in the 1970s “Swede” Wallen acquired the town and the family got busy with the restoration of this historic village. Third generation, Paul Casini tells how his granddad’s dairy farm became a popular family campground all because of a single fishing hole. Wildfires are a constant concern all along the Russian River region. Pole Mountain Lookout remains the only active fire lookout in Sonoma County. Cameras now do the bulk of the work, but a partnership with Sonoma Land Trust has opened the area up to the hiking public and to the shared goal of restoring the fire tower Cazadero Music Camp is known around the globe for its summer programs, and there’s no better person to tell us about it than Casey Jones who has been a camper a staffer and a music teacher there.
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