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Crosscurrents

Crosscurrents is KALW Public Radio's award-winning news magazine, broadcasting in the Bay Area Mondays through Thursdays on 91.7 FM. We make joyful, informative stories that engage people across the economic, social, and cultural divides in our community.

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Episodes

Home Baked: How pot brownies brought relief during the AIDS epidemic (rebroadcast)

Over the last two years we’ve brought you stories about Covid-19, but today we’re reaching into our archives and going back a few decades, when the Bay Area and the world faced another public health crisis, AIDS. The federal government was slow to respond to that epidemic and the community had to step-in to take care of each other. We’re going to meet Meridy Volz, she provided relief to people who were dying with an unexpected source of comfort.

Jan 25, 202225 min

Filmmaker Morgan Schmidt-Feng / City pigeons / New Arrivals: Shruti Swamy

Today, Berkeley filmmaker Morgan Schmidt-Feng tells us about his latest documentary, “Anton: Circling Home.” It follows an 80-year-old New York artist and his love for pigeons. Then, we’ll learn about pigeons themselves, the often misunderstood urban animal. And, we’ll hear a reading from San Francisco author Shruti Swamy.

Jan 21, 202223 min

Mental Health SF / Indigenous California History / New Arrivals: Beth Lee

Today, we talk about a new center in the Tenderloin that's focused on helping people who are struggling with drugs and mental health. Then, we examine Sacramento’s historic Sutter’s Fort. And, we listen to San Jose cookbook author Beth Lee as she reads about Jewish baking.

Jan 19, 202220 min

The Spiritual Edge: Becoming Muslim - Sofie

Sofie Lovern is a Latina convert and comedienne who learned the difficulty of trying to merge two very different cultures in a marriage, even when their religions were the same. Her struggle with marriage is not uncommon with new convert women who are often rushed into marriage. Her marriage fails, but her comedy brings her through it all. She emerges unmarried but still Muslim.

Jan 14, 202222 min

Free school meals / Lunchtime at Burton High School / New Arrivals: Alexis Fajardo

Today, we hear how Bay Area Schools are now funded to give students two free meals a day, and that means schools are feeding a lot more kids. So we decicded to check in with school chefs and students to see how it’s going. Then, we keep it on the topic of school meals and also very close to home with a visit to the Burton High School cafeteria for lunch. And, we hear a reading from Santa Rosa graphic novelist Alexis Fajardo's latest work.

Jan 13, 202225 min

Living Downstream: The Salton Sea / New Arrivals: Alex Harris

Today, we’re bringing you an episode of a new podcast from Northern California Public Media called Living Downstream, looking at environmental justice issues around the world. Last week, we brought you an episode about air pollution in West Oakland. This time, we’re going to the biggest lake in California, which is now starved of water. We hear how it impacts the health of the people who live around it. We begin with Adriana Torres, who lives in a rural community there, an area called North Shor...

Jan 11, 202225 min

The Spiritual Edge: Becoming Muslim - Aaron and Raul

The story of two men who work to reconcile their identity as Latinx—with their identity as Muslims. One has dedicated his life to helping the Latino Muslim community in his city, the other still isn’t even sure being in a community as a Latinx Muslim is possible.

Jan 07, 202224 min

2022 Covid update / Workers under smoke / New Arrivals: Rupa Marya

On the first day of this year, San Francisco Chronicle reporter Jill Tucker called up the Bay Area’s top Covid experts. We’ll hear what they said. Then, we learn about an investigation into California’s failure to protect outdoor workers from wildfire smoke. And, we listen to Dr. Rupa Marya as she reads from her book.

Jan 06, 202225 min

Living Downstream: Diesel death zone pt. 2

Today, it's the second part of a special from the environmental justice podcast Living Downstream, from Northern California Public Media. West Oakland residents breathe and suffer from pollution caused by toxic diesel exhaust. In part two of this story reporter, Sarah Holtz takes us into the issue with community organizer Margaret Gordon and the Director of Clean Air Advocacy, Will Barrett.

Jan 05, 202223 min

Living Downstream: Diesel death zone pt. 1

Today, we're bringing you a special from the environmental justice podcast Living Downstream, from Northern California Public Media. For decades, community members and allies have complained about the diesel truck traffic around the Port of Oakland. People who live in this neighborhood have elevated instances of asthma and shorter life spans than others in the county. We meet the activists who are trying to change this reality.

Jan 04, 202221 min

CCSF Students Organize To Save Cantonese / Poet Christine No / New Arrivals: Conrad Benedicto

Students at San Francisco’s City College started organizing this past spring to preserve the school’s language classes. Today, we hear the story behind the movement Save Cantonese at CCSF. Then, Bay Area poet Christine No writes about her personal journey of trying to understand love. And, San Francisco author Conrad Benedicto reads from his first novel.

Dec 17, 202122 min

The Spiritual Edge: Becoming Muslim — Tyson

One Black man works to connect his faith to his community, and to his fallen leaders. A new story from The Spiritual Edge series Becoming Muslim looks at a path to Islam that means walking in the footsteps of Black Revolutionaries.

Dec 16, 202121 min

Uncuffed Holiday Special (rebroadcast)

Today, we'll hear stories about how people in prisons get through the holidays, even when they can’t see their families. It's a special episode from KALW's podcast, Uncuffed.

Dec 14, 202127 min

The Spiritual Edge: Freedom in prison

Convicted of first-degree murder and sent to Folsom State Prison, Wendell El-Amin James gravitated towards the Muslim prisoners out of a need for protection. But ultimately his conversion restructured his life to one of education and purpose.

Dec 09, 202123 min

Unhoused LGBTQ+ / The Stoop: 40 acres and a question

LGBTQ+ people experiencing homelessness are a vulnerable population within an already vulnerable group. Then, as reparations for African Americans inch closer to being a reality, we ask, who should get reparations?

Dec 07, 202125 min

The Spiritual Edge: The Nation of Islam

As a student at the at Berkeley in the 1960s, Abdul Raoof Nasir joined the Nation of Islam. In the years that followed, he was forced to make a choice: stay with the Nation or go with one of the groups that splintered away.

Dec 03, 202123 min

Operation Pest Patrol, pt. 3

The story of when Japan gifted cherry trees to the U.S. And, how those trees became connected to the country’s immigration debate with strange parallels with how we handle pests and pesticides.

Dec 02, 202125 min

Operation Pest Patrol, pt. 1 / What's in a name?

We’re heading to the California border, where state agents patrol for pests that could wipe out the state’s agriculture. Then, what do you do when people pronounce your name wrong?

Nov 30, 202125 min

The Spiritual Edge: Women leading prayer

A Muslim convert feels her access to God was being limited by men. She was searching for a spiritual home, then decided to build one for herself.

Nov 24, 202125 min

The Spiritual Edge: Searching for the 'real' Islam

Diana Demchenko converted to Islam as a college sophomore. But since she didn’t grow up around the religion, she had to learn what the real Islam is and searched - online, in local mosques, and eventually abroad.

Nov 17, 202125 min

Uncuffed: Suitable for parole

After over 20 years of incarceration, Uncuffed producer Nate McKinney is going home. Like other lifers in the system, he could have been incarcerated for life. But recently, the Board of Parole Hearings found him suitable to re-enter society. In today's episode, stories of facing the board — and wishes for a friend heading back into the big wide world.From the podcast Uncuffed:Nate's Going Home

Nov 16, 202125 min

The trauma of unrest from afar / Singer Essie Thomas / New Arrivals: Alice Waters

When there’s unrest in their home countries, immigrants here feel the pain from thousands of miles away. We’ll hear about the diaspora trauma of people from Sudan. Then, one Bay Area artist was so determined to perform, she turned a grocery store parking lot into her stage. And, chef and author Alice Waters will read from her new book.

Nov 09, 202125 min
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