348 episodes

Every week, The California Report Magazine takes you on a road trip for the ears: to visit the places and meet the people who make California unique. The in-depth storytelling podcast from the California Report.

The California Report Magazine KQED

    • News
    • 4.6 • 121 Ratings

Every week, The California Report Magazine takes you on a road trip for the ears: to visit the places and meet the people who make California unique. The in-depth storytelling podcast from the California Report.

    Parents (and Teachers) Just Don't Understand

    Parents (and Teachers) Just Don't Understand

    It's Youth Takeover week here at KQED, a time when we hand the mics over to local high school students. This year, we hear from teens at Fremont High School in in East Oakland. They talk about the challenges they face right now and tell us why they feel so misunderstood.
    And we visit the San Fernando Valley, where high school seniors have taken over one of the most anticipated rights of passage: prom. LAist's Mariana Dale discovered a program at Sylmar Charter High School where students don’t just choose the theme and set up decorations: they actually grow and arrange the flowers for the big event. 
    Plus, why doesn't California have more school buses? How kids get to and from school is a big part of the school experience for many kids. But if you’ve been looking closely you may have noticed there aren’t as many school buses as there are in other states. Katrina Schwartz, who’s a producer with KQED’s Bay Curious podcast, set out to figure out why.
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    • 29 min
    After Parole, ICE Deported This Refugee Back to a Country He Never Knew

    After Parole, ICE Deported This Refugee Back to a Country He Never Knew

    After escaping genocide in Cambodia, Phoeun You’s family settled in Long Beach. But after being bullied as a teen, You joined a gang. He ended up shooting and killing a teenager. You served 25 years in California prisons and tried to turn his life around while he was behind bars. He thought he'd gotten that chance when he was granted parole, but upon release, he was deported to a country he had never really known. Producer Mateo Schimpf brings us his story.
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    • 29 min
    Why Italians in California Were Treated as 'Enemy Aliens' During WWII

    Why Italians in California Were Treated as 'Enemy Aliens' During WWII

    Within months of the attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941, as more than 100,000 Japanese Americans were being sent to incarceration camps, other ethnic groups also became the target of new wartime security measures. Italian citizens living near California’s coastline and military sites — some 10,000 of them — were forced to leave their homes and find somewhere else to live.  It was just one of many government measures meant to protect the West Coast from an enemy invasion that never came. Reporter Pauline Bartolone brings us this story from the Bay Curious podcast.
    Plus, we look at the labor behind reality television. From blind dates to tiny homes, the genre has exploded in recent years But some workers say the success of the industry hasn't translated into stability for people behind the scenes. Guest host Bianca Taylor talks to KCRW's Megan Jamerson, who's talked to some reality TV workers who say they’re being overworked and underpaid.


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    • 29 min
    Making a Home in Fire Country

    Making a Home in Fire Country

    As journalists, we don’t often tell our own stories. We separate ourselves from the issues we cover. But sometimes, the story hits close to home. This week, we’re featuring a story from Erin Baldassari, KQED’s Senior Editor for Housing Affordability. Growing up in California's Sierra Nevada foothills, wildfire has always been part of her consciousness. Her earliest memory is fleeing a fire as it bore down on her childhood home. As she and her family consider moving back, she wanted to learn how people there are adapting to the rising risk of wildfires due to climate change.
    Erin’s story comes to us from the KQED podcast, Sold Out: Rethinking Housing in America.
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    • 29 min
    A Queer Journalist Reflects on the Legacy of the Proposition 8 Tapes

    A Queer Journalist Reflects on the Legacy of the Proposition 8 Tapes

    Proposition 8 's Lessons for One Queer Journalist
    In November 2008, California voters passed Proposition 8, taking away the right to marry from same-sex couples. But two years later, two same-sex couples sued the State of California in federal court. Prop 8 was eventually overturned. That landmark trial was videotaped, but the recordings were never released to the public. Until a few years ago, when KQED sued for access to the tapes and won. The U.S. Supreme Court allowed them to be unsealed in October 2022. KQED’s community engagement reporter Carlos Cabrera Lomeli, spent hours watching those tapes. As a queer journalist covering California’s gay marriage journey, Carlos says he learned a lot about himself in the process.
    Plus, we head to Santa Cruz where Judi Oyama first learned to ride a skateboard in the 1970s. Today, 50 years into a groundbreaking career, she's considered of the best skateboarders in the nation. In fact, Judi recently qualified to race at the World Skate Games in Rome this fall. At 64, she says she’s the fastest she’s ever been. KAZU’s Erin Malsbury brings us her story.

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    • 29 min
    'Racist Trees' Uncovers Little Known History of Palm Springs' Black Community

    'Racist Trees' Uncovers Little Known History of Palm Springs' Black Community

    Today Palm Springs is known for mid-century modern architecture and queer-friendly culture. But a new documentary on PBS's Independent Lens explores the history of racist housing practices in the city that effectively hid a black neigborhood behind a wall of trees. “Racist Trees” covers the fight to remove those trees decades after they were planted, and asks the question: 'Who takes responsibility for the wrongdoing of the past?' Directors Sara Newens and Mina T. Son join Sasha Khokha to talk about the film.
    Plus we visit San Francisco's Prelinger Library, a treasure trove of ephemera from books of soil samples to zines. In the 1990s, libraries started to become digital and began clearing out their catalogs. A network of like-minded librarians brought the “discards” to Rick and Megan Prelinger’s attention. The husband and wife, already collectors of print and text items, opened their library in 2004 and say 'it's available to any and everyone who believes our past can pave a path to a better future.' 
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    • 29 min

Customer Reviews

4.6 out of 5
121 Ratings

121 Ratings

MarcAlexander7 ,

Loved the Mixed! Series

Wonderful and beautiful job done on the Mixed race series. I loved every episode and am so glad how y’all approached this topic :)

jen98a ,

Love learning about CA but reporters intentionally willfully ignorant

I love learning about California since I live here, but it’s very frustrating to listen to these reporters with purported “in depth” reporting purposely neglect certain aspects of episodes. I just listened to a show on how the native peoples land was stolen and they’re slowly buying it back. The very next episode played on how black Americans settled Allensworth. In neither episode did they mention that even these black Americans were on stolen land. Why purposely ignore this fact? One needs to bring it up. If you’re stating that these African-Americans were wrongfully treated/removed, you need to bring up that the land was all original native land. This is the same issue with Bakers beach. Everyone ignores the fact that before the Baker family owned it, it was native peoples land. it’s like NPR doesn’t want to touch the subject, and it needs to be addressed. I want to know how people reconcile this fact. Like ask the people they are interviewing what do they think about being on stolen land? Every time NPR reports on land, they should state historically what tribe was on that land. There’s other issues like when talking about the homeless, they always neglect to ask where these homeless people originally arose from. Some people come out to California for a dream and yes they have housing when they get here, but they lose their housing. Ask them where they graduated high school and how long ago was it. They may have only been here a few months, and only come with money that’s in their pocket & easily become homeless because they weren’t prepared. Or about Japanese internment camps left empty housing and the African migration south took that opportunity to move in those homes & take those jobs that were left open by the removal of the Japanese. No one talked about or asked anyone what they thought about that aspect. It’s like the reporters want to remain willfully ignorant or maybe they just lack the critical thinking skills needed to figure out these questions need to be asked. These stories are not “in depth” like the show summary states.

J*Learner ,

Mixed race episode was spot on

I’m a new listener and thoroughly enjoyed the discussion with Kip Fulbeck on mixed race identity. Being mixed race myself, I identified with the discussion of the hosts and guests. I look forward to the next episodes teased and hope one of them includes a spotlight on UCSB’s class mentioned in this episode. I took the class in the 90s and it was phenomenal. Great podcast and I enjoyed the content and pace from the hosts in this 11/5/21 episode.

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