California Sun Podcast

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 140:06:52
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Sinopsis

The California Sun presents conversations with the people that are shaping and observing the Golden State

Episodios

  • Joan Didion talks about California

    28/01/2021 Duración: 17min

    Upon the occasion of the publication of a new collection of works by Joan Didion, "Let me Tell You What I Mean," I share a conversation I had with her in 2016 about California, its history, and its many crises. Because of her deep and broad vision, it’s as relevant today as on the day we spoke.

  • Casey Newton on tech platforms as the new town square

    21/01/2021 Duración: 24min

    Casey Newton, a long-time Bay Area-based tech journalist, and the author of the Platformer newsletter looks at our social media platforms and how they have become the foundation of political speech. He discusses the role they should play in our democracy and if they really have become too powerful.

  • Hank Sims on the success of local journalism in Humboldt County

    14/01/2021 Duración: 23min

    Hank Sims, the editor of Lost Coast Outpost, extols the virtues of Humboldt County and explains how his online newspaper has defied the odds faced by most local and regional newspapers.

  • Kathryn Olmsted talks California unions, from farm to Google

    07/01/2021 Duración: 19min

    Kathryn Olmsted, a historian, author, and former chair of the history department at UC Davis talks about California's long history of farm labor union organizing and how that history affects the efforts at Google, Uber, and other Silicon Valley companies.

  • Heather Knight on the ups and downs of San Francisco

    16/12/2020 Duración: 22min

    The San Franciso Chronicle columnist Heather Knight keeps her finger on the pulse of City Hall. Her twice-weekly stories have exposed issues around education, political corruption, homelessness, and public accountability, with attention to how they impact the lives of everyday people.

  • Tracy L. Chandler on photography, memory, and connection

    09/12/2020 Duración: 19min

    Tracy L Chandler is a photographic artist based in Los Angeles. She talks about her work, which explores fringe communities and addresses themes of seeing and being seen. She examines photography and images as a way to engage the world.

  • Daniel Lurie and Sam Cobbs on the fight against poverty in the Bay Area

    02/12/2020 Duración: 32min

    Daniel Lurie, the founder of Tipping Point Community, and Sam Cobbs, its CEO, discuss the grant-making organization's efforts to fight poverty in the Bay Area by putting private dollars to work for the public good.

  • At 25, Alex Lee is California’s youngest state legislator

    19/11/2020 Duración: 18min

    What were you doing at 25? Assembly member-elect Alex Lee, a Democrat from San Jose, is thinking about what he’ll do on his first day in the Assembly. The youngest state legislature in nearly a century, he embraces a progressive agenda and thinks 16 might be reasonable voting age.

  • Gary Kamiya, Paul Madonna, and an unknown city by the bay

    10/11/2020 Duración: 38min

    Gary Kamiya, a San Francisco columnist and bestselling author, and Paul Madonna, an award-winning artist, talk about their new illustrated book "Spirits of San Francisco: Voyages Through the Unknown City," a love letter to the hidden places that capture the soul and heart of the city.

  • Chronicle journalists on Propositions 22 and 19

    05/11/2020 Duración: 25min

    Carolyn Said and Kathleen Pender, both San Francisco Chronicle journalists, look at the real world impacts of Proposition 22, which classifies app-based drivers as as independent contractors, and Proposition 19, which would alter property taxes.   Said noted the vast financial return that Uber and Lyft have already gained on their record campaign spending.   Pender called Proposition 19 the most complicated measure we’ve ever had to vote on.

  • Peter Lunenfeld reimagines Los Angeles

    29/10/2020 Duración: 32min

    Peter Lunenfeld, vice-chair of UCLA’s Department of Design Media Arts, appreciates Los Angeles as one of the world’s supercities. Even amid Covid, politics, and competition for the future from Silicon Valley, he sees a city thriving with reinvention. The metropolis he depicts in his book "City at the Edge of Forever" is certainly not your father's Los Angeles.

  • Esther Mobley on days of wine and smoke

    21/10/2020 Duración: 31min

    Esther Mobley never thought that being a wine writer would involve covering land use, migrant worker issues, wildfires, and climate change. The San Francisco Chronicle wine critic looks at the lasting impact of these issues on the future of the Napa Valley and the $40 billion California wine industry.

  • Kendra Atleework's "Miracle Country"

    15/10/2020 Duración: 18min

    Kendra Atleework's memoir "Miracle Country" is inspired by the work of writers like Mary Hunter Austin and Reyner Banham in capturing the harsh beauty of life in the arid Eastern Sierra. Having grown up in the Owens Valley, she returns amid the 2015 Round Fire to absorb the area's history and celebrate the harsh and majestic environment that lies at the cutting edge of climate change and defines what it means to really appreciate California.

  • James Thebaut’s lens on California's watershed

    08/10/2020 Duración: 19min

    James Thebaut is a Los Angeles ecological documentarian and long-time environmental activist. He argues in his latest documentary, "On The Brink: California’s Watershed," now airing on PBS, that the intensity of California's wildfires is due as much to bad policy as it is to climate change. He talks about the state of California's forest system and how both water scarcity and forest clearing practices are impacting the watershed and the ability of forests to absorb water or resist fires.

  • Davie Pina and Johnny White: Inside their personal firefight

    01/10/2020 Duración: 28min

    Davie Pina and Johnny White, vineyard managers in the Napa Valley, say that every fire teaches them something new. With firefighting resources spread thin, they and their colleagues have had to take on more personal responsibility for fighting fires. They shared the story of how they have faced the threat of repeated wildfires and where the future of private firefighting might be headed in California.

  • Nick Neely takes a walk through time

    23/09/2020 Duración: 27min

    Nick Neely walked for 12 weeks and 650 miles from San Diego to Palo Alto. Recreating the journey taken by the Spanish explorer Gaspar de Portola in 1769, he became immersed in the history, people, and topography of the Golden State. Writing about both the natural and built landscape along the way for his book "Alta California," one of our premier environmental writers short-circuited time and made yesterday's history today's reality.

  • Leon Panetta: A life of public service born in California

    15/09/2020 Duración: 31min

    Leon Panetta ascended to the highest of jobs in Washington, but he never lost sight of his California roots. The former congressman, Office of Management and Budget director, White House chief of staff, CIA director, and defense secretary reminisces about growing up in Monterey, building the Panetta Institute on the campus of Cal State Monterey, and a remarkable life journey.

  • Jeffrey Tumlin attempts the impossible

    10/09/2020 Duración: 27min

    Jeffrey Tumlin took a job that almost no one wanted. The head of San Francisco’s Metropolitan Transportation Agency was facing the impossible before the pandemic. Since then, public transportation and increased traffic have become unsustainable. Still, Tumlin hopes to find a way to make his city a model for the nation.

  • Buffy Wicks in her own words

    03/09/2020 Duración: 21min

    Assemblywoman Buffy Wicks wanted to make sure legislation on housing and family and medical leave had her vote. When she was denied a request to vote by proxy, she drove with her 1-month-old girl in tow from her home in Oakland to the State Capitol in Sacramento. What happened next has become a rallying point for working women.

  • Geoffrey King: Vallejo Police Department on the brink

    24/08/2020 Duración: 30min

    Geoffrey King, an attorney and native of Vallejo, cared deeply about his city. He said he could no longer stand by and watch the underreported killings of civilians by one of the most violent police forces in the nation. So he launched Open Vallejo, a nonprofit newsroom focused on local accountability journalism. He details why he felt it was so important to shine a light on a police department that uses more force per arrest than that of any other police force in California's major cities.

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