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Crosscurrents

KALW

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...

Location:

San Francisco, CA

Networks:

KALW

Description:

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.

Twitter:

@KALWNews

Language:

English

Contact:

500 Mansell Street San Francisco, CA 90140 (415) 264-7106


Episodes
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SHOW: A Golden State Storm is Brewing

5/13/2026
Today, we hear about a new women’s tackle football team has touched down in Oakland. Then, the past, present, and future of women’s basketball in the Bay.

Duration:00:26:43

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Women, non-binary players tackle America's Game

5/13/2026
Football is the most popular sport in America. But, that love doesn’t necessarily extend to athletes who aren’t cisgender men. And old, out-dated attitudes about who can (and should) play football, aren’t stopping athletes from making their mark on the sport. At Oakland’s Laney College, there’s a storm brewing… The Golden State Storm to be exact! It’s the newest women’s tackle football team in the Women's National Football Conference. Kris Grimes is the team's star running back. KALW's Jordan Karnes spoke to Grimes about their move to the Bay Area, and the effort to help the Storm build a competitive team.

Duration:00:12:20

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BOUNCE: The Golden State Valkyries season two tip-off party

5/13/2026
Last year, here at KALW, we rebooted our sports podcast, BOUNCE to follow the Valks progress through their first season in the Bay. And BOUNCE will be back following the second Valks season that just started. So recently we hosted a live event celebrating the launch: a tip off party. The event featured a panel discussing Valkyries, and explored the past, present and future of women’s basketball in the Bay Area.

Duration:00:11:22

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SHOW: The Mother Of It All Podcast - LIVE!

5/12/2026
Oakland is at a crossroads with its policies on homelessness. Today, we hear a conversation with Oaklandside housing and homelessness reporter Natalie Orenstein. But first, why it used to be an uphill battle to publish poetry about motherhood. A special live recording of “The Mother Of It All, podcast.” Plus, a reading from a local author.

Duration:00:26:50

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Bay Made Showcase: The Mother of it All (LIVE)

5/12/2026
Leading up to Mother’s Day, KALW’s show Bay Made, our series that features local audio storytellers, has been airing episodes of the podcast “The Mother Of It All.” The show dives into the different aspects about being a mother, with candid conversations about everything from pregnancy in the digital age, parenting trans children and even the cult of Dr. Becky. The hosts Sarah Wheeler and Miranda Rake capped off their week-long run of episodes on KALW by hosting a live taping of their podcast at our San Francisco live event space at 220 Montgomery. For their guest, they brought Rachel Richardson, the co-founder of Left Margin Lit, a literary arts community in Berkeley and the author of the poetry book “Smother.” In this excerpt, Richardson describes why she opens her book with a quote from J.D. McClatchy, the former editor of the Yale Review. McClatchy has written that he “automatically rejects any poem with the word mother in it." To wrap up the live taping Richardson read a piece she wrote about a tree-planting she took her kids too after the 2013 Rim Fire, here is her poem “After Fire.” Rachel Richardson will be speaking at the Bay Area Book Festival on May 30th.

Duration:00:08:15

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Oakland toughens crackdown on homeless encampments

5/12/2026
Life is going to get tougher for Oakland's homeless population. Last month, the city council approved a new law on encampment sweeps that gives new powers to conduct sweeps, no longer requiring the city to provide housing for those who are displaced. At the same time, Mayor Barbara Lee has established a new office on homeless affairs, pushing against this policy of removing encampments without offering temporary housing options. Natalie Orenstein is a senior reporter with The Oaklandside, who's been covering the story. She spoke to KALW's news editor Sunni Khalid to explore the tensions with two policies that seem at odds.

Duration:00:11:26

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New Arrivals: Caroline Paul and 'Why Fly?'

5/12/2026
Today, a segment from New Arrivals- our pocket sized book tour with Bay Area authors. In her book ‘ Why Fly? San Francisco author and pilot Caroline Paul takes us into the cockpit for the harrowing seconds and quick decisions that need to be made during/ an engine failure.

Duration:00:02:17

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SHOW: CA Attorney General Rob Bonta on KALW's Climate Break (LIVE)

5/11/2026
California is suing the federal government to save our Clean Air Act. Today, a conversation with our Attorney General Rob Bonta. Then, the lead singer of the band Electric Ex explains the process behind their new album Analog Therapy. Plus, authors read from their books about nature, and humanity.

Duration:00:26:50

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Climate Break (LIVE): California Attorney General Rob Bonta

5/11/2026
Right now, the state of California has a very litigious relationship with the federal government. Currently our state is actively working on 67 separate lawsuits against Trump’s administration. The legal disputes range from tariffs, public housing funding, sanctuary city policies, ICE agents wearing masks and even birth right citizenship. And, something notable is that almost a quarter of all the lawsuits are related to protecting our environment. Staying on top of all the litigation is the job of our state's Attorney General Rob Bonta. A few weeks ago he visited our live event space in downtown San Francisco to talk with Ethan Elkind, the host of KALW’s show Climate Break. Bonta spoke about one of the most crucial climate lawsuits that is in the court system right now, the fight for our state’s Clean Air Act. Nearly half of our carbon emissions come from transportation, but last year the US Senate voted to block California’s mandate to phase out gas-powered cars by 2035. In this excerpt, Bonta gives an update on how the lawsuit to protect the Clean Air Act is progressing…

Duration:00:10:33

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Earth, Air, Fire, Water... and Bay FC on Treasure Island

5/7/2026
Treasure Island is changing fast — and a new professional women’s soccer facility is part of that transformation. Today, how it’s bringing opportunity, and uncertainty. Then, the artists behind a climate inspired art show in Downtown San Francisco.

Duration:00:26:49

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Reshaping Treasure Island — with Bay FC and more

5/7/2026
Treasure Island redevelopment is underway. For months, construction crews have been building new housing, parks, and roads, transforming the island from a quiet, low-income community into one of San Francisco’s biggest new neighborhoods. The city hopes to bring thousands of new residents to the Island /as part of its plan to expand housing across San Francisco. Reporter Grace McCarty takes us to the island to share progress on one of the new developments: a training facility for Bay FC, the Bay Area’s newest professional women’s soccer team.

Duration:00:08:40

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Earth, Air, Fire, Water: A climate week art exhibition at the Mills Building

5/7/2026
For the past couple of years KALW has had a second home at the Mills Building on Montgomery Street in Downtown San Francisco. Besides making great radio here, and training new journalists, we host lots of live events for listeners… like you! Recently one of those events brought guests deeper into the building… to a curated installation inside the halls of the Mills Building: Earth, Air, Fire, Water. It's a multimedia exhibition featuring Bay Area artists that focus on climate change and elemental forces, and invites viewers to consider climate change as an ongoing condition embedded in everyday life. The evening was hosted by KALW’s Ben Trefny in partnership with the Swig company. In this excerpt we hear from the curator of this exhibit, Carey Hurtado, and artists Tanya Geis and Andrew Owen. First, Ben asks Carey - what’s the exhibit all about?

Duration:00:14:48

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Real Ways Artificial Intelligence is Changing Our World

5/6/2026
Today, a conversation about how AI is rapidly shaping, and changing, journalism. Then, we hear how more and more people are turning to AI chatbots to help with grieving.

Duration:00:26:51

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The Bay Agenda: AI and Journalism

5/6/2026
Nowadays, there is a good chance you have heard - or been in conversations about- all the different ways that artificial intelligence is changing the landscape of work. And it’s real. U.S. hospitals have doubled their adoption of AI in two years. Finance companies now execute 70% of equity trades through AI algorithms. And Amazon deployed over 1 million warehouse robots that have boosted productivity per worker by more than 20 times. But journalism is still figuring out what it means. In a recent survey of over 70 countries, nearly 80% of newsrooms had no formal AI policy. KALW is no exception, we are still having very active discussions about the ways AI can or cannot fit into our set of values. To better understand this rapidly changing tool, our live events team put together a panel of people working in different media organizations facing the same question. The panelists were, Katherine Ann Rowlands, who leads Bay City News Foundation, /Ernesto Aguilar of KQED, who oversees content innovation /and Griffin Gaffney, CEO and co-founder of The San Francisco Standard. They were in conversation with KALW’s Executive Producer Ben Trefny. In this excerpt, we begin by hearing Gaffney explaining how The Standard is addressing AI in their newsroom.

Duration:00:08:49

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The business of never letting go

5/6/2026
Artificial intelligence is not just changing how we get our information, but also in some cases, how we emotionally process a major life event, like death. When loved ones die we find ways to hold on — through photos, stories, and keepsakes. Now, things like AI memorial platforms and companion chatbots offer digitized connection with the dead. But with these technologies becoming more common, what are the benefits, and costs, of grieving with a chatbot? KALW’s Artificial Intelligence reporter NeEddra James brings us the story.

Duration:00:16:48

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SHOW: Raising their voices

5/5/2026
One mariachi ensemble in the Bay Area is reframing traditions. Today, we bring you the art and music of Mariachi Femenil. Then, we hear how seven thousand stranded passengers in a small Canadian town inspired a broadway musical.

Duration:00:24:51

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Mariachi Femenil Orgullo Mexicano raise their voices and sing “Llegaron Las Mujeres”

5/5/2026
Today is Cinco de Mayo! And for the Bay Area that means lots of events featuring mariachi! Many of the songs are sung from the men’s perspectives, and they sometimes carry machismo messages. Mariachi Femenil Orgullo Mexicano is changing that narrative.

Duration:00:12:43

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The Sights and Sounds Show: 'Come From Away' play

5/5/2026
How seven thousand stranded passengers in a small Canadian town inspired a broadway musical.

Duration:00:09:17

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SHOW: The long road from homelessness to housing

5/4/2026
This month, a transitional housing program for unhoused people in Oakland is closing. Then, how poetry can invite us to celebrate the threads that connect us to one another.

Duration:00:17:10

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SHOW: The Brass Liberation Orchestra

4/29/2026
Today, we’re going to feature some of the musicians who have provided a soundtrack for Bay Area protests, the Brass Liberation Orchestra.

Duration:00:24:10