Thank you to the Latinx Arts Network STL for selecting The Delmar Loop location for their Building Bridges mural. This amazing mural celebrating diversity is now completed and you can view it at 5875 Delmar. Read more about the artists and artwork on St. Louis Public Radio’s website.
A mural near the Delmar Loop highlights the connection between African Americans and Latinos. The artists hope it will spark conversations about the similar struggles of African Americans and Afro Latinos.
As the St. Louis Chamber Chorus returns to the stage after 20 months, artistic director Philip Barnes discusses choirs in the age of COVID-19 and masks you can actually sing in.
As of 2020, more people are dying than being born in Missouri. St. Louis University professor Ness Sandoval explains how we got here and what it will take to rebound from that decline.
The Native American Rights Fund donated 20 acres of ancestral Osage lands in Lafayette County, Missouri, to the Osage Nation this month. Andrea Hunter, the director of the Osage Nation Historic Preservation Office, discusses the gift, and the sale of Picture Cave, in this episode.
This weekend on Cherokee Street, you'll find a thrift store grand opening, a beauty pop-up, a comedy open mic and curbside concerts by all-stars like Beth Bombara and Sweetie & the Toothaches.
If you're looking to get out this weekend in St. Louis, there is no shortage of festivals and celebrations – but you might have trouble picking which ones to go to.
Frustration over the media’s coverage of autism, myths surrounding the disability, and policies shaped by society’s misconceptions have prompted a journalist to try to change perceptions. We’ll speak with Eric Michael Garcia, author of “We’re Not Broken: Changing the Autism Conversation.”
If you’ve been to a beer garden around St. Louis today, it’s hard to imagine the scene of shady tables and chatting friends provoking a violent outburst. While they aren’t so hotly debated today, a battle over beer gardens was raging in the mid-1800s. As thousands of German immigrants came to St. Louis, they brought their old world cultures …
Continuing St. Louis Public Radio political correspondent Jason Rosenbaum's partnership with Left Bank Books, Rosenbaum talks with journalist Eric Michael Garcia about his new book "We're Not Broken: Changing the Autism Conversation." The two discuss how the politics of autism have changed, how the vaccine panic of the 1990s and 2000s sowed the seeds of COVID-19 vaccine misinformation — and how pop superstar Sia screwed up royally with how she portrayed nonverbal autistic people.
Simple tacos make a quick and easy weeknight supper! Just make sure you have a delicious sauce to serve along side it! These ultra healthy cauliflower tacos are not just...
In this week’s “Communities Forward” podcast, we have Opal Jones, President and Chief Executive Officer of DOORWAYS, an interfaith non-profit organization in St. Louis, Missouri that provides housing and related supportive services to people living with HIV/AIDS. DOORWAYS assists over 3,200 individuals annually in 132 counties in Missouri and Illinois. As the lead executive, Opal […]
Michael Politte was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole for allegedly murdering his mother as a 14-year-old. Attorneys and advocates explain the growing body of evidence that he’s actually innocent — and Politte tells his story.
Missouri public school districts can still issue mask orders to slow the spread of COVID-19. That’s after a judge denied Attorney General Eric Schmitt’s effort to immediately block the mandates throughout the state.
The Legal Roundtable digs into litigation around mask mandates and how Zoom testimony affects the right to confront your accuser — and the panelists disagree as to whether they’d settle with the NFL and Stan Kroenke or take their chances at trial.