Partying During COVID, and Why Can't I Get The Shot?

Partying During COVID, and Why Can't I Get The Shot?

We are almost reaching the year mark when it comes to how long many of us have been stuck inside at home. And if you live with roommates, that space can feel smaller and smaller as time goes on. But what happens when roommates have different ideas about what it means to be safe during COVID? That’s the question KQED’s Adhiti Bandlamudi has been wrestling with. She usually reports on Silicon Valley, but today she brings us a first-person account of what it’s like being a Millennial with roommates she never imagined she’d be stuck with in a pandemic. Plus, changes to the state's vaccine rollout, and a 9-year-old poet brings us a message of hope. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Episoder(426)

'Amazing Grace' and Seeing Myself in Kamala: Inauguration Strikes a Hopeful Note

'Amazing Grace' and Seeing Myself in Kamala: Inauguration Strikes a Hopeful Note

In his inauguration speech, President Joe Biden called for bringing unity to what we all know is a deeply hurt, deeply divided country. Right after the president spoke, country music star Garth Brooks sang “Amazing Grace.” KQED’s Arts and Culture Reporter Chloe Veltman spoke to a number of California artists with strong ties to the song about its enduring power. Plus, we drop in on a family excitedly watching the inauguration of Vice President Kamala Harris with their two young daughters who see themselves in her. And we visit a school in Watts — Locke College Preparatory Academy — that has been looking for ways to empower students in the aftermath of the violence in Washington. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

23 Jan 202130min

'Kamala is My Fairy Godmother', Bridging a Language Divide, Remembering CA's Food Pioneers

'Kamala is My Fairy Godmother', Bridging a Language Divide, Remembering CA's Food Pioneers

The whole world will be watching next week as Kamala Harris is sworn in as our next Vice President. But there’s one person who will be tuning in who says he owes his life to her. Plus, the pandemic has been making things more challenging for schools that serve some of the newest Californians: Guatemalan immigrants who speak a Mayan language called Mam. And reporter Lisa Morehouse joins us to memorialize three Californians who passed away last year, each with a connection to agriculture. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

16 Jan 202130min

After a Week of Chaos, Hanging on to the Promise of Renewal

After a Week of Chaos, Hanging on to the Promise of Renewal

This week we bring you four stories; about hope, stewardship, compassion, and community. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

9 Jan 202130min

The Health Care Workers, Teachers, Firefighters and Activists Who Inspired Us in 2020

The Health Care Workers, Teachers, Firefighters and Activists Who Inspired Us in 2020

2020 will forever be the year of COVID-19 – and wildfires, police shootings, school over Zoom. So much heartbreak. But all year long, there were people who stepped up, sacrificed so much and kept going. As we ring in a new year, we revisit some of our favorite stories about the people who inspired us in 2020. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

1 Jan 202129min

From Jewish Mambo to 'Nimble' the Elf, Our Favorite Holiday Stories

From Jewish Mambo to 'Nimble' the Elf, Our Favorite Holiday Stories

The California Report is celebrating our 25th year on the air, so this holiday weekend, we’re digging into our archives to bring you some of our favorite stories from the season. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

25 Des 202032min

A Fresh Look at the Donner Party

A Fresh Look at the Donner Party

As we officially head into winter – and hopefully snowy weather in the Sierra Nevada – we bring you the tale of the Donner Party; the version you may not have heard before. You might be familiar with the ghoulish CliffsNotes version of this story: about a band of people traveling over the Sierra in covered wagons, trapped in the snow and forced to turn to cannibalism to survive. But behind the Donner Party legend, there’s another story: one about prejudice, injustice and murder. KQED reporter Carly Severn tells us what happened when those 81 people were stuck in the mountains back in 1846, and how this disaster came to represent everything California wanted to forget. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

18 Des 202037min

Home Baked: How Pot Brownies Brought Some Relief During the AIDS Epidemic

Home Baked: How Pot Brownies Brought Some Relief During the AIDS Epidemic

We’re all bracing ourselves for a surge in hospitalizations, for more people lost to COVID-19, for more closures and lockdowns. So we’re reprising one of our documentaries about another time we all faced a public health crisis. A time when the federal government was slow to respond, so the community had to step in to take care of each other. Lisa Morehouse brings us the story of a woman who became an unexpected source of comfort to people suffering from AIDS in the early 1980s. Her baking business, Sticky Fingers Brownies, provided gooey marijuana-filled brownies to people dying from the disease in San Francisco. Pot brownies weren’t going to save anyone’s life over the long term, but Meridy Volz says they brought some relief, and there wasn’t a lot of relief in those days.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

12 Des 202032min

‘A Butterfly With My Wings Cut Off’: A Transgender Asylum Seeker’s Quest to Come to California

‘A Butterfly With My Wings Cut Off’: A Transgender Asylum Seeker’s Quest to Come to California

When she turned 15, Luna Guzmán, like many girls in Guatemala, celebrated with a quinceañera. But it was a secret party, with a borrowed dress, because her family couldn't fathom her as a transgender girl. So she put her soccer jerseys back on and tried to pass as the boy she knew she wasn’t inside. Even as she dealt with brutal violence, she decided to take a terrible risk and leave everything behind in Guatemala, to try to find a life in California: the one place in the world where she could imagine being safe. Being herself. Host Sasha Khokha has followed Luna Guzmán over the last two years, reporting from a migrant shelter in Tijuana, an ICE detention center in San Diego, and a tiny drag bar in Modesto. Her story says a lot about how U.S. immigration policy fails when it comes to recognizing people who live outside the gender binary, how the epic backlog of asylum cases in the U.S. can add to their trauma, and how transgender migrants at the border are particularly vulnerable to COVID-19. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

4 Des 202043min

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