Synopsis
Media that helps build a movement
Episodes
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The Power of Poetry
01/10/2014 Duration: 28minMaking Contact partnered with the 2014 National Poetry Slam to produce this special open mic highlighting the power of thoughtful, truth telling, community focused poetry. [one_half]Featuring Poets: Chris Cuadrado Lindsay Stone Jared Paul Caitlin Clark Queen T More information, photos and the full 3 hour open mic at: Making Contact
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Healthy Messages: Reproductive Health and Pop Culture
24/09/2014 Duration: 28minOne in three women will have an abortion in her lifetime, yet in pop culture accurate portrayals of real people s stories are rare. In this show we hear about representations of abortion and reproductive decision-making in popular culture, and why those stories really matter.
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Shh! Life in a State of Surveillance
17/09/2014 Duration: 29minWho's watching you? Nowadays it seems everyone wants to get their hands on our personal data. From the FBI to the welfare department, to some of the country's biggest retailers. On this edition, we take a closer look at the world of surveillance. Featuring Hasan Elahi, artist and Associate Professor at the University of Maryland Charles Duhigg, New York Times journalist and author of “The Power of Habit” Jodie Berger, public benefits lawyer John Gilliom, Professor of Political Science at Ohio University Kaaryn Gustafson, welfare lawyer and University of Connecticut teacher
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Not My War: The Military Deserters' Dilemma
09/09/2014 Duration: 28minMore than 150,000 people sign up for the US military every year. Their reasons for joining vary widely, from those hoping for financial help through college, to others looking to follow in the footsteps of parents or grandparents. In recent years getting into the military has gotten harder, with criminal records and low academic scores proving the biggest barriers. As hard as getting into the military might be, getting out may be harder still. On this edition of Making Contact we’ll hear radio adaptations of Michelle Mason’s film, “Breaking Ranks,” produced by Screen Siren Pictures and the National Film Board of Canada and of “Deserter” by Rick Rowley, from Big Noise Films and PM Press. Featuring: Jeremy Hinzman, Kyle Snyder, Joshua Key, Ryan Johnson, Brandon Hughey, US military personnel who refused to return to Iraq. Sergeant Brian Jensen, military recruiter.
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Concussions: Your Brain or the Game?
03/09/2014 Duration: 28minThey say a smart athlete will use their head. But what if using your head cost you everything? That’s a question being asked in locker rooms the world over. Whether it’s boxing, hockey, or soccer, it seems that head injuries are finally being taken seriously. In the United States, lawsuits brought by players, as well as a body of scientific evidence, has lead to growing awareness about the impact American football has on players’ brains. And now a similar debate has kicked off across the Atlantic among players and fans of the sport that American football evolved from: rugby. On this special edition of Making Contact, producer Luke Eldridge brings us to the UK to hear how rugby is dealing with the issue of head injuries. Featuring: Lewis Moody, former rugby player Dr Michael Grey, motor neuroscience physiologist at the University of Birmingham Peter Robinson, father of Ben Robinson David Barnes, Rugby Director of the Rugby Players’ Association in England
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Pesticides on the Playground
27/08/2014 Duration: 28minIs your children’s schoolyard routinely sprayed with pesticides? How safe your children are might depend on where you live. Today we hear about how and why one pesticide has been banned for household use, but affects the health of farmworkers and their children. Children’s health is especially fragile–so why aren’t we protecting them? Featuring: Kim Harley, Center for Environmental Research in Children’s Health associate director Isabel Arrollo, El Quinto Sol de America organizer Jennifer Sass, Natural Resources Defense Council senior scientist Tracey Brieger, Californians for Pesticide Reform co-director Marina Gomez, Brian Jimenez-Gomez, CHAMACOS research participants Margaret Reeves, Pesticide Action Network senior scientist Valerie Bengal, family physician and UC San Francisco clinical professor Brett Knupfer, Ohlone Elementary School principal Marcy Mock, Ohlone special education teacher Casimira Salazar, Ohlone migrant education teacher Cynthia Fernandez, Ohlone 2nd grade teacher Brett McFadden, Pa
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All the President's Bankers
20/08/2014 Duration: 28minNomi Prins, journalist and a former managing director of Goldman Sachs, discusses her book All the Presidents’ Bankers, the hidden alliances that drive American power. Prins retraces the relationship between American financiers and presidents stretching more than a century. From family friends, trusted confidants to the present day; how the relationship has deteriorated and presidents have lost control of the economy. Special thanks to Pirate TV for the original recording from June 17, 2014. Featuring: Nomi Prins , journalist and author of All the Presidents’ Bankers, the hidden alliances that drive American power.
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Ya Basta: How Zapatismo has influenced the US
13/08/2014 Duration: 28minThe Zapatistas are a group in the southern state of Chiapas, Mexico working to bring democracy to their country and their local communities. 20 years after their founding, the group’s influences has spread far beyond Mexico’s border through music and art. On this edition of Making Contact producer Alejandro Rosas explores how Zapatismo has influenced those in the U.S. –including himself. Special thanks to Claire Schoen and the University of California Berkeley, School of Journalism. Featuring: Hector Flores, Las Cafeteras member Margaret Chowning, University of California at Berkeley professor of Mexican history Emory Douglas, former Black Panther Party Minister of Culture
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Scorched Earth: The Legacy of Agent Orange
06/08/2014 Duration: 28minThe official Day to Commemorate Agent Orange victims is August 10th and marks the start of the US military’s decade of massive chemical warfare in Vietnam in 1961. Combat, chemicals, and corporations. We’ll look at the legacy of Agent Orange, a toxic defoliant. Featuring:Ngo Thanh Nhan, co-coordinator Vietnam Agent Orange Relief and Responsibility Campaign; Fred Wilcox scholar and author: Waiting for An Army To Die and Scorched Earth; Vietnamese victims of Agent Orange featured in the KQED segments
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Fighting Goliath Part 2
23/07/2014 Duration: 28minOn last week’s show we brought you to Idaho and Montana, where hundreds of trucks were routed to haul gigantic mining equipment to the Tar Sands oil fields of Alberta Canada, but an alliance of citizens and community groups was able to block the transport through environmentally sensitive land. This week we continue the saga of the megaloads heading to the Tar Sands through the Pacific Northwest and Northern Rockies. We also follow two more tendrils of the Tar Sands project stretching from Alberta to the coast of British Columbia. This is the second of a two part special, on the growing resistance to the tar sands, produced by Barbara Bernstein. Listen the the first part here. Featuring: Kevin Lewis, Idaho Rivers United conservation director Linwood Laughy, writer & historian Borg Hendrickson, Clearwater Country co-author Andrew Nikiforuk, Tar Sands: Dirty Oil and the Future of a Continent author Bob Skinner, Canada School of Energy and the Environment interim director Annick Smith, A River Runs Through
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Fighting Goliath (Part 1)
15/07/2014 Duration: 28minThe Canadian Tar Sands is the largest industrial project on earth. And the potential environmental consequences have brought together citizens from across borders, to fight its rippling effects. This is the first of a two part special, on the growing resistance to the tarsands, produces by Barbara Bernstein. Featuring: Kevin Lewis, Idaho Rivers United conservation director Linwood Laughy, writer & historian Borg Hendrickson, Clearwater Country co-author Andrew Nikiforuk, Tar Sands: Dirty Oil and the Future of a Continent author Bob Skinner, Canada School of Energy and the Environment interim director Annick Smith, A River Runs Through It co-producer Bob Gentry, environmental attorney Steven Hawley, Recovering a Lost River author David James Duncan, The Heart of the Monster co-author Zack Porter, All Against The Haul executive director Steve Seninger, University of Montana economist Spider McKnight, All Against the Haul communications specialist
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Embracing the Elements: Curanderismo
09/07/2014 Duration: 28minNatural healing can take many forms. These days, the Latin American “curandera” is re-emerging in the US, after generations of going underground. On this edition, producer Erica Hellerstein takes us on a journey to identity through an ancient medicinal practice. Featuring: Lauren Villa, UC Berkeley Graduate Student Atava Swiecicki Garcia Healer Sandra Pacheco, Healer and Professor of Chicana Latina Indigenous Studies at the California Institute of Integral Studies Patricia Torres, owner of Mystical Collections Anna, Psychotherapist and Sol Collective Member Lauren Villa’s father
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Women Rising #25 Activists Against Global Armaments and War
02/07/2014 Duration: 28minWe profile women fighting the expansion of global militarism and violence. Korean sister Stella Soh campaigns to save an UNESCO world heritage site from a planned military base. US activist Kathy Kelly founded Voices for Creative Nonviolence. And Brazilian Miriam Nobre works with the World March of Women. Featuring: Sister Stella Soh, Catholic Nun and activist with Save Jeju Island Kathy Kelly, Voices for Creative Nonviolence co-coordinator Miriam Nobre, Coordinator Of The International Secretariat Of The World March Of Women
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Restorative Justice: Reconciling Face to Face
25/06/2014 Duration: 28minVictims and perpetrators sitting down face to face…it can help heal their wounds, and our society. Incarcerating our way out of crime clearly hasn’t worked, and it’s costing us billions. Meanwhile, school suspensions are reaching record highs. Now, Institutions across US are finally starting to consider problem solving methods other than punishment. Restorative justice is gaining ground–in the schools, and behind bars. Featuring: Paul Jacobsen, Rosa Parks elementary school principal Mekaylah Porter, Marilyn, Rosa Parks elementary students Yari Sandel, restorative justice coordinator Helen Parker, San Francisco’s restorative practices department coach Sonya Shah, Insight Prison Project Justice Program Director Nancy Potts, mother of son killed by drunk driver Chris Scezech, drunk driver Radha Stern, mother of murder victim Sam Johnson, San Quentin prison inmate
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All Around Cowboy: Inside the world of queer rodeo
18/06/2014 Duration: 28minRodeo is a part of life for many Americans. But if you’re an LGBTQ rodeo fan participating in the sport you love can mean hiding part of who you are to fit in. But a tight knit group of queer cowboys has found a way to live the country and Western lifestyle in their own way. You don’t often hear the words “gay” and “rodeo” together. On this edition Producer Vanessa Rancaño brings us one bull rider’s story. Featuring: Jason Strand, bull rider Stud Monkey & David Grub, rodeo competitors Clint Coil, rodeo judge and Stud Monkey’s partner Judy Munson, Gay Games Rodeo Committee Chair Darcey Ward, arena crew member Rob Matyska, arena crew coordinator Tom Porter, rodeo fan and David’s partner Bill Lyle & Jane Silva, co-owners of The Thrill at Morgan Hill Rodeo Company Steve Wollert, longtime IGRA member Michael Weldert, rodeo fan Edwin & Romiro, Bill Lyle’s employees Will Ikeman, Jason’s husband
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G.M.nO! Genetically Modified Democracy
11/06/2014 Duration: 28minMore than 60 countries either ban or require labeling on GMO foods; the US is not one of them. As GMO regulation moves to a local level, frustrated consumers and farmers are pushing for state or county regulations, but the seed and pesticide companies are fighting back. Today, we bring you a special episode investigating corporate control of our democracy and our dinner plates. This program is part of What the Fork, a collaboration between Making Contact, Center for Media and Democracy/The Progressive Magazine and Food Democracy Now. Featuring: Rebecca Wilce, Progressive and ALEC Exposed reporter Marcia Ishii-Eieman, Pesticide Action Network senior scientist Don Tipping, Seven Seeds Farm owner Chris Hardy, Rogue valley farmer Elise Higley, Our Family Farms Coalition leader Magdeleno Rose-Avila, Yes on 15-119 volunteer Barry Bushue, American Farm Bureau vice president Klayton Kubo, Kauai citizen Gary Hooser, Kauai County Council member Dr. Judy Shabert, Harvard Physician Chris Broussard, Whinney Hee, James
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Rad Dads!!!!
04/06/2014 Duration: 28minParenting has never been easy. Merging your politics with your parenting decisions can be even more challenging. On this edition, fathers…and mothers…on fatherhood and how it’s changing. Traditional ideas about what a dad is supposed to be are slowly disappearing, but what will take their place? Featuring: Tomas Moniz, Rad Dad creator Airial Clark, Sex Positive Parent blogger Janine Macbeth, Oh Oh Baby Boy author Brent Ramos, Danny Gutierrez, Craig Elliot, Jeremy Smith, Jeremy John, Jason Oppy, fathers
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The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly Side of the Beautiful Game
28/05/2014 Duration: 29minDescription: As Brazil prepares to host the 2014 soccer World Cup many are questioning the economic, environmental, and social cost of this sporting mega-event. From soccer ball manufacturing in Pakistan, to forced evictions in Brazil to make way for World Cup infrastructure, who wins, when the World Cup comes to town? On this edition of Making Contact, we take a closer look at the good, the bad, and the ugly side of the “beautiful game.” Featuring: Dave Zirin; author “Brazil’s Dance With the Devil: The World Cup, the Olympics, and the Fight for Democracy”, Mohammad Idrees and Ghafoor Husain, soccer ball workers; Safdar Sanda, soccer ball factory owner; Sarfraz Bashir, chairman of Sialkot Chamber of Commerce. Santiago Halty, founder Senda Athletics; Nasir Dogar, chief executive Independent Monitoring Association for Child Labor, Djani da Silva,resident of Camarigibe; Ana Ramalho professor of urban planning and architecture at the Federal University of Pernambuco,
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Seeking Shelter: Building Housing and Community for LGBTQ Elders
21/05/2014 Duration: 28minLesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender seniors are much more likely than their straight counterparts to be alone and isolated as they age. Housing and support for these elders is a growing need--and the issue is not confined to the United States. On this edition, we’ll visit Jakarta Indonesia, and Los Angeles, California, to hear stories of building housing and community for LGBTQ seniors. Featuring: Michael Adams, Services and Advocacy for GLBT Elders executive director; Alice Herman, Rosie Delmar, Triangle Square residents; Eric Harrison, Gay and Lesbian Elder Housing executive director; Yulianus Rettoblaut, waria activist and community leader; Yoti Maya, Mbok Sri, waria elders. Special thanks to FSRN-Free Speech Radio News.
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Behind the Kitchen Door: Restaurant Workers’ Fight for Justice
14/05/2014 Duration: 28minAmericans eat out more than any other people. But the workers who put food on our restaurant tables are struggling to feed themselves and their families. On this edition, Saru Jayaraman, co-director of the Restaurant Opportunities Centers United and author of “Behind the Kitchen Door” makes the case for bringing justice to restaurants and how ordinary diners can help. Featuring: Saru Jayaraman, co-director of the Restaurant Opportunities Centers United and author of “Behind the Kitchen Door”