2,000 episodios

Forum tells remarkable and true stories about who we are and where we live. In the first hour, Alexis Madrigal convenes the diverse voices of the Bay Area, before turning to Mina Kim for the second hour to chronicle and center Californians’ experience. In an increasingly divided world, Mina and Alexis host conversations that inform, challenge and unify listeners with big ideas and different viewpoints.

Want to call/submit your comments during our live Forum program Mon-Fri, 9am-11am? We'd love to hear from you! Please dial 866.SF.FORUM or (866) 733-6786 or email forum@kqed.org, tweet, or post on Facebook.

KQED's Forum KQED

    • Noticias
    • 2.0 • 1 calificación

Forum tells remarkable and true stories about who we are and where we live. In the first hour, Alexis Madrigal convenes the diverse voices of the Bay Area, before turning to Mina Kim for the second hour to chronicle and center Californians’ experience. In an increasingly divided world, Mina and Alexis host conversations that inform, challenge and unify listeners with big ideas and different viewpoints.

Want to call/submit your comments during our live Forum program Mon-Fri, 9am-11am? We'd love to hear from you! Please dial 866.SF.FORUM or (866) 733-6786 or email forum@kqed.org, tweet, or post on Facebook.

    Miranda July Wrestles with the Female Midlife Crisis in ‘All Fours’

    Miranda July Wrestles with the Female Midlife Crisis in ‘All Fours’

    In Miranda July’s new novel, “All Fours,” a 45-year-old artist embarks on a solo roadtrip to New York from her Los Angeles home. She makes it as far as Monrovia, a small town a half-hour from L.A., and waits out the rest of her trip in a motel room while pursuing an infatuation with a Hertz rental car employee. The novel, which shares similarities with July’s own life, explores themes of marital ennui, the fear of sexual irrelevance and the contours of the female midlife crisis. July grew up in Oakland and is known for her performance art, her films “Me and You and Everyone We Know” and “Kajillionaire,” and her fiction “No One Belongs Here More Than You” and “The First Bad Man.” We talk to her about her new novel and why she describes it as “closer to the bone.”

    Guests:

    Miranda July, actor, screenwriter, director and author - She’s known for her films “Me and You and Everyone We Know” and “Kajillionaire,” and her fiction includes “No One Belongs Here More Than You” and “The First Bad Man”. Her new novel is "All Fours"

    • 55 min
    Rachel Khong’s Novel ‘Real Americans’ Questions the Limits of Identity

    Rachel Khong’s Novel ‘Real Americans’ Questions the Limits of Identity

    What it means to be American and who gets to claim that identity are questions that animate Rachel Khong’s newest novel “Real Americans.” The book follows three generations of a Chinese American family, and grapples with not just race, but class and genetic identity. Khong is a former editor of the food magazine “Lucky Peach” and the founder of The Ruby, a work and event space in the Mission for women and nonbinary writers. We talk to Khong about her book and work.

    Guests:

    Rachel Khong, author, "Real Americans" - Khong is also the author of "Goodbye, Vitamin," which won the 2017 California Book Award for First Fiction. She founded The Ruby, a work space in San Francisco's Mission district for women and nonbinary writers.

    • 55 min
    ‘My Octopus Teacher’ Filmmaker on Connecting to Our Wild Selves

    ‘My Octopus Teacher’ Filmmaker on Connecting to Our Wild Selves

    Craig Foster may be best known for “My Octopus Teacher,” the Oscar-winning documentary about his tender relationship with a wild female octopus who inhabited the kelp forests off the coast of South Africa. He’s now written a new book called “Amphibious Soul,” which invites us along on his underwater excursions and shows us how, through techniques like tracking, we can connect with creatures and our wild selves. Is there a wild animal or place that you’ve built a connection with?

    Guests:

    Craig Foster, author, "Amphibious Soul: Finding the Wild in a Tame World," natural history filmmaker, creator, "My Octopus Teacher," co-founder, Sea Change Project

    • 55 min
    State Supreme Court to Decide Fate of Prop. 22 … and the Gig Economy

    State Supreme Court to Decide Fate of Prop. 22 … and the Gig Economy

    The gig economy, as it has been known, was built around a controversial idea — that an Uber driver, for instance, did not work for Uber. These apps, instead, were merely making a market for workers, which a user could access to hire someone. Many labor leaders rejected this idea, and it has led to fights in the legislature, courts and over Proposition 22 in 2020, when voters handed the gig economy a huge win. The constitutionality of Prop. 22 is now before the California State Supreme Court, and we’ll go over the arguments, which the court heard this week, and discuss how gig workers have fared since it became law.

    Guests:

    Levi Sumagaysay, economy reporter, CalMatters

    Ken Jacobs , co-chair, Center for Labor Research and Education at UC Berkeley

    John Mejia, rideshare driver and member of California Gig Workers Union

    David Lewis, dasher, Doordash

    Molly Weedn, spokesperson, Protect App-Based Drivers & Services coalition

    • 55 min
    Shefali Luthra on the ‘Undue Burden’ of Post-Roe Reproductive Care

    Shefali Luthra on the ‘Undue Burden’ of Post-Roe Reproductive Care

    “It’s difficult to think of a public health crisis more inevitable than the impending end of Roe v. Wade,” writes journalist Shefali Luthra, “and yet, on June 24, 2022, the country was profoundly unprepared.” Luthra argues that we’re now in the midst of that public health crisis, as millions of Americans seeking abortions face overwhelming obstacles to care, and as abortion providers reach a “breaking point to attempt to meet demand.” Luthra’s new book “Undue Burden” chronicles what she calls the human stories of abortion access — the patients with medically complex pregnancies who spend life savings on out-of-state care, the doctors who work under fear of legal reprisal and the lawmakers who struggle to respond. We talk to Luthra about the personal and systemic impacts of the loss of the constitutional right to abortion, nearly two years after Dobbs.

    • 55 min
    All You Can Eat: Yes, the Bay Area Does Have a Late Night Dining Scene

    All You Can Eat: Yes, the Bay Area Does Have a Late Night Dining Scene

    If you’re looking for a great meal after midnight, you’re unlikely to find a wealth of options in downtown San Francisco. But expand your search to the Bay Area’s suburban communities, and you’ll find a late-night dining scene that’s brimming with hot pot restaurants, noodle shops, taco carts, and 24-hour casino buffets. Nocturnal noms are the subject of a new collaborative series from KQED’s food editor Luke Tsai and illustrator Thien Pham, called “Midnight Diners.” On the next edition of All You Can Eat, we’ll talk about the local restaurants that keep us fed when we’re staying up late and whether the Bay Area deserves its early-to-bed reputation.

    • 55 min

Reseñas de clientes

2.0 de 5
1 calificación

1 calificación

Top podcasts en Noticias

Aristegui
CNN en Español
Podcast Factum
Factum
WSJ Tech News Briefing
The Wall Street Journal
Conclusiones
CNN en Español
Por Favor No Se Enoje
Por Favor No Se Enoje
DW Noticias
DW

También te podría interesar

KQED's The California Report
KQED
The Bay
KQED
Political Breakdown
KQED
City Arts & Lectures
City Arts & Lectures
Bay Curious
KQED
Fresh Air
NPR

Más de KQED

The Bay
KQED
SOLD OUT: Rethinking Housing in America
KQED
The Political Mind of Jerry Brown
The Political Mind of Jerry Brown
Rightnowish
KQED
KQED Newscast
KQED News
Truth Be Told Presents: She Has A Name
American Public Media