St. Louis On The Air

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 1492:10:18
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Sinopsis

St. Louis on the Air creates a unique space where guests and listeners can share ideas and opinions with respect and honesty. Whether exploring issues and challenges confronting our region, discussing the latest innovations in science and technology, taking a closer look at our history or talking with authors, artists and musicians, St. Louis on the Air brings you the stories of St. Louis and the people who live, work and create in our region.

Episodios

  • ‘Skwäd Goals’ is just the beginning of Anthony Lucius’ quest to unite St. Louis and the Metro East

    15/08/2025 Duración: 24min

    The Mississippi River is only 1,800 feet wide between St. Louis, Missouri, and East St. Louis, Illinois, but the “us versus them” mentality can be felt throughout the region. Anthony Lucius is determined to create connection between the two cities through music. His latest album, “SKWAD Goals Vol. 1,” brings musicians together from both sides of the river. Lucius gives a behind the scenes look at the making of “SKWAD Goals” and talks about his plans for Vol. 2.

  • St. Louis artists bring the heat in these new songs you need to hear

    15/08/2025 Duración: 26min

    On this month’s music round-up, DJ KC Mackey joins St. Louis on the Air’s Miya Norfleet and Elaine Cha to discuss their favorite new releases from local artists. Songs like “Come Back” by Paige Alyssa ooze sensuality and swag while Daemon and Trackstar the DJ challenge the state of the world on the powerful “Red Pill 84”.

  • Stream local music with St. Louis County Library’s ‘Listen Up STL’

    14/08/2025 Duración: 17min

    A library card is a gateway to countless universes of storytelling, visual art and audio. St. Louis County Library aims to introduce local musicians to new fans with Listen Up STL. Sarah Kuntz Jones of the Glaize Branch shares how musicians within the St. Louis County Library network can get their original music to the ears of library patrons.

  • In ‘Catching Bullets,’ a cycle of hope, violence and mentorship unfolds in St. Louis

    14/08/2025 Duración: 32min

    A documentary that chronicles years of efforts to prevent violence in St. Louis will hit streaming services on August 15. “Catching Bullets” follows the story of activist Darren Seals. Decades after his career as a drug dealer in Walnut Park, Seals returned in 2018 to buy a condemned church. Seals transformed the church into a site for youth mentoring called the Sankofa Unity Center. Seals, director Ben Scholle and producer Derrick Phillips discuss the film’s creation and how young people in St. Louis become trapped in a cycle of violence and revenge.

  • New book explains why Missouri and Illinois prairies vanished

    13/08/2025 Duración: 49min

    The American prairie once stretched across Missouri and Illinois, a vast grassland teeming with wildlife and rich biodiversity. Today, less than 1% of that prairie remains — disappearing even faster than the Amazon rainforest. Environmental journalists Dave Hage and Josephine Marcotty discuss how prairies were destroyed, why their loss is one of the world’s greatest ecological disasters, and what it will take to bring it back. Hage and Marcotty are authors of the new book, “Sea of Grass: The Conquest, Ruin and Redemption of Nature on the American Prairie.”

  • Demographer warns St. Louis could face early consequences of America’s falling birth rate

    12/08/2025 Duración: 48min

    The U.S. birth rate has dropped to a historic low — and demographer Ness Sandoval warns St. Louis will be one of the first major cities to feel the economic and social fallout. He shares what needs to happen for St. Louis to avoid more loss and why the city should take cues from Detroit to incentivize young families to live and work in the region. Action St. Louis Executive Director Kayla Reed also joins the conversation to discuss the May 16 tornado’s displacement of north St. Louis residents and why temporary housing programs are so important to keep affected families as close to their homes and communities as possible.

  • The hidden toll of unsolved homicides in St. Louis

    11/08/2025 Duración: 20min

    When a murder is committed in the City of St. Louis, it usually doesn’t get solved. An investigation by St. Louis Public Radio, APM Reports and the Marshall Project found that detectives solved fewer than half of the nearly 2,000 homicides committed in the past decade. While these cases are unsolved, the victims of these crimes should not be forgotten. Ivy Scott, engagement reporter for The Marshall Project-St.Louis, discusses her findings from multiple interviews with the families of homicide victims. We also meet Erica Jones, mother of Whitney Brown, who was shot and killed on August 13, 2015 in an unsolved homicide.

  • Banned from serving, a trans soldier in Illinois fights for an honorable discharge

    11/08/2025 Duración: 30min

    Four members of the Missouri National Guard and twelve members of the Illinois National Guard are seeking voluntary separations from the military because they are transgender. Specialist Dahlia Dahl enlisted three years ago. She’s now one of thousands of troops who have to make the decision to leave or face the possibility of investigation and removal after the the Department of Defense ruled transgender people can no longer serve in the armed forces. On St. Louis on the Air, Dahl told her story of her gender journey and how that intertwined with her decision to enlist in the Illinois National Guard.

  • Missouri Democrats bracing for U.S House redistricting special session

    08/08/2025 Duración: 23min

    President Trump is pushing Republican-led states like Missouri and Texas to redraw their congressional districts ahead of the 2026 midterm elections to keep his party’s slim majority in the U.S. House. But Missouri Democratic state Sen. Patty Lewis of Kansas City says the plan could backfire, and she lays out why during an appearance on the Politically Speaking Hour on St. Louis on the Air.

  • When Missouri voters say ‘yes’ — and lawmakers say ‘no’

    08/08/2025 Duración: 27min

    Missouri voters have repeatedly approved ballot measures — from protecting abortion rights and expanding Medicaid to raising the minimum wage and legalizing marijuana. But lawmakers haven’t always honored those decisions, rolling back mandated paid sick leave and gutting a 2012 measure that gave St. Louis’ mayor control of the police. GOP political consultant David Barklage explains the Republican strategy, and STLPR statehouse and politics reporter Sarah Kellogg looks at what’s next for paid sick leave advocates.

  • Want to know what public employees make? So does this data journalist

    07/08/2025 Duración: 23min

    The salary of many public sector employees in our region is just a click away. That includes mayors and judges, teachers, cops and professors. For nearly a decade, St. Louis Post-Dispatch data journalist Josh Renaud has worked to produce the paper’s massive, annual database of public salaries. The latest edition went live just a couple weeks ago. Renaud takes us inside the herculean effort of data-collection and how it impacts governments large and small. He also discusses the factors behind the City of St. Louis’ “glacial” 100 days to produce the records.

  • Want to know what public employees make? So does this data journalist

    07/08/2025 Duración: 23min

    The salary of many public sector employees in our region is just a click away. That includes mayors and judges, teachers, cops and professors. For nearly a decade, St. Louis Post-Dispatch data journalist Josh Renaud has worked to produce the paper’s massive, annual database of public salaries. The latest edition went live just a couple weeks ago. Renaud takes us inside the herculean effort of data-collection and how it impacts governments large and small. He also discusses the factors behind the City of St. Louis’ “glacial” 100 days to produce the records.

  • A new comic book series embraces the intersection of Queer identity and the horror genre

    07/08/2025 Duración: 26min

    Halloween is just around the corner, but for comic book and horror content fans the “spooky vibes” exist all year-round. St. Louis comic book artist Lorry Jamison joins “St. Louis on the Air” to discuss their new series the “Nightshade Anthology,” and how their love for horror media like “Goosebumps” and “Seed of Chucky” has influenced their storytelling by using monsters as a metaphor for battles fought in the LGBTQIA+ community. Through the use of color and creative storytelling Jamison blends genres with comedic moments, scary villains, and wholesome queer protagonists.

  • How a St. Louis-based tutoring program helps Black students achieve beyond systemic biases

    06/08/2025 Duración: 21min

    A growing and significant body of research suggests that students benefit from having a teacher of the same race or ethnicity. Yet most teachers in the U.S. are white women. St. Louis entrepreneur Angelica Harris founded Top Tutors for Us to pair Black high school students with tutors who look like them. In this encore episode, she shares how their services have led to improved test scores and higher college acceptance rates of their students.

  • How a firefighter’s frustration led to better technology to fight fires

    06/08/2025 Duración: 27min

    About 15 years ago, Jason Cerrano was working for the Pattonville Fire Protection District when he conceptualized a way to make it more efficient for firefighters to put out fires. He wanted to automate how a fire truck selects its water source and pumps water, and allow pump operators to pay attention to other critical firefighting tasks. In this encore episode, Cerrano, a graduate of Missouri S&T, discusses how he invented the SAM Control System that more than 120 fire departments employ. We also hear from Chief Hans Mueller of the Freeburg Fire Protection District in Illinois about his department’s use of the technology.

  • How culture, trauma and social media add up to create the ‘Gen Z Stare’

    05/08/2025 Duración: 32min

    Commentary about the Gen Z Stare has gone viral on social media and has garnered the attention from the New York Times, NBC News and NPR. Ashley Wilkinson, clinical site supervisor at Provident Behavioral Health joins “St. Louis on the Air” to discuss how cultural influences, modern parenting styles and neurological development all play a role in how older generations engage with the newest generation in the workforce.

  • Here’s what St. Louis restaurants opened and closed in July

    05/08/2025 Duración: 17min

    Sauce Magazine was recently acquired by STL Bucket List. But the publication’s cofounder and previous owner alleges in a lawsuit that she’s still owed money from when she sold it to the man who just sold the publication. We break down what the sale means with STLPR digital editor Jessica Rogen and Sauce Magazine executive editor Lauren Healey. We also talk through the latest in St. Louis dining, including the opening of Fordo’s Killer Pizza in the Grove, Bel Air Social in the Central West End, and Pierce Creek in Creve Coeur. Plus, we say goodbye to Pho Long’s original location and El Burro Loco.

  • Replanting trees means emotional and environmental healing for north St. Louis

    04/08/2025 Duración: 50min

    Losing tree canopy has consequences far beyond an aesthetic change for a neighborhood. For the St. Louis residents affected by the May 16 tornado, the sudden loss of thousands of trees may have longstanding effects on their physical and mental health. Community organizations share how they are helping the city replace trees lost to the storm — and their efforts to help residents learn about proper tree care and heal from tree-related trauma.

  • The fight to ban hair discrimination in Missouri

    01/08/2025 Duración: 22min

    Hair discrimination disproportionately targets Black women, and lawmakers have sought to ban the practice with the CROWN Act. CROWN stands for “Create a Respectful and Open Workplace for Natural Hair,” and the first act of its kind was passed in California in 2019. Since then, other states and municipalities have adopted their own measures, including the City of St. Louis in 2021. A statewide measure took effect in Illinois in 2023. In July, Missouri Governor Mike Kehoe signed a law banning race-based hair discrimination in the state. In this encore presentation from 2023, Vice President of the St. Louis chapter of NABJ Gabrielle Hays and Frizzy by Nature CEO Leslie Hughes talk about local and statewide efforts to pass the CROWN Act and ways Black women are relearning how to embrace their curls.

  • Parole is a key step to freedom after prison. Missourians face a ‘draconian’ system to get there

    01/08/2025 Duración: 26min

    Thousands of people move in and out of Missouri’s parole system every year. That includes Norman Brown, who was released in 2022 after serving 31 years in prison for a crime he committed at 15. Brown joins the MacArthur Justice Center’s Amy Malinowski for a critical discussion of the state’s parole system, its flaws and areas for improvement. The system is under scrutiny for improvements pending official recommendations from a “working group” created by an executive order issued this year by Gov. Mike Kehoe. We also hear from Terrell Robinson, who, in an interview from prison, describes the parole system as “draconian, cruel and severe.”

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