Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

Search results for

  • An NPR investigation found that since the Capitol riot, the election denial movement has moved from the national level to hundreds of grassroots events across the country. Here are four key takeaways.
  • Join BELOVED San Diego for a Christmas Story Wonder! Slow down and make some space for Christmas peace for your family amid the hustle and bustle of the holiday season! You're invited to a 1-hour experience of story, mindfulness, and hands-on creative exploration designed especially for children (preschool through elementary) and parents or guardians. Materials provided to build a family kit for mindfulness practice and Christmas story-telling at home. 🌟 Practice self-calming and focus through child-friendly mindfulness exercises 🌟 Deepen family connection through shared wondering 🌟 Expand imagination through mindful story play 🌟 Follow your child through a variety of hands-on exploration stations 🌟 Grow confidence with take-home kit for family-based sacred storytelling Date: Dec. 18, 2021 Time: 10:30am-11:30am Location: Carmel Valley Library (Community Room) Cost: Free For more information on this event please visit HERE!
  • NPR's Scott Simon reflects on bogus buskers who fake violin virtuosity with recorded music tracks and ask for money to help with rent or medical bills.
  • Today on KPBS Investigates, Aaron Harvey’s journey from wrongful gang charges to UC Berkeley graduation. In the summer of 2014, a swarm of police arrested Aaron Harvey near where he was living outside Las Vegas. Harvey is from San Diego, and was charged as a test case by San Diego District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis using a law that had never been used before. It said someone could be charged for conspiracy for gang shootings, even if that person had nothing to do with the shootings at all. That was the case for Harvey. He was charged because he was in social media pictures wearing gang colors and making gang signs. A judge dismissed the charges against him, but not before he spent seven months in jail. Now, Harvey has done something that when he was in jail seemed like an impossible dream: graduating from UC Berkeley. This KPBS Investigates episode was reported and written by Claire Trageser. Emily Jankowski is the director of sound design. Kinsee Morlan is Podcast Coordinator. This episode was edited by Megan Burke. Lisa Morissette is operations manager and John Decker is the interim associate general manager of content. Stay tuned for more episodes of KPBS Investigates right here in your podcast feed.
  • After nearing a lockdown-induced bankruptcy, millions of people around the world now follow this Australian candy shop on social media.
  • The San Diego City Council announced the names of the women appointed to serve on the newly revived Commission on the Status of Women.
  • How we work, when we work, how much we work – it's all shifting on a scale not seen in decades.
  • The field of the top 10 races most likely to flip finds Republicans making serious runs at five Democratic-controlled seats and Democrats contending in the other five.
  • Donald Trump returns to the Conservative Political Action Conference in Dallas on Saturday. Some attendees worry the controversy following him could be a liability in the next presidential campaign.
  • In their new album, "Shattered," San Diego's Glass Spells offers lush synth pop with work-from-home style, best listened to at night. The band will play an album release show at Soda Bar on Aug. 14, 2021.
1,197 of 4,003