Access Utah

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 1596:26:59
  • More information

Informações:

Synopsis

Access Utah is UPR's original program focusing on the things that matter to Utah. The hour-long show airs daily at 9:00 a.m. and covers everything from pets to politics in a range of formats from in-depth interviews to call-in shows. Email us at upraccess@gmail.com or call at 1-800-826-1495. Join the discussion!

Episodes

  • Utah's Higher Education on Thursday's Access Utah

    10/04/2014 Duration: 53min

    On Thursday’s AU we’ll explore issues in higher education with Utah State University President Stan Albrecht. We’ll also be talking to Southern Utah University President Scott Wyatt.

  • Revisiting Ogden's 25th Street on Wednesday's Access Utah

    09/04/2014 Duration: 53min

    On Wednesday’s AU we revisit a popular episode from a few months back: Generations of Ogdenites have grown up absorbing 25th Street’s legends of corruption, menace, and depravity. The rest of Utah has tended to judge Ogden—known in its first century as a “gambling hell” and tenderloin, and in recent years as a degraded skid row—by the street’s gaudy reputation. Present-day Ogden embraces the afterglow of 25th Street’s decadence and successfully promotes it to tourists.

  • "Waiting for Mamu" on Tuesday's Access Utah

    08/04/2014 Duration: 55min

    Imagine, at five years old, you are sentenced to prison for 13 years. You have no access to your family or friends, to an education, to the outside world or to society. In some places, if a parent is sentenced to prison and they lack a guardian for their child, the child is imprisoned with the parent. Many of these children go to prison at a young age and are released to the world at age 18, with no life skills or support system, knowing nothing of the world but what they experienced in a jail cell.

  • "American Families of Faith Project" on Monday's Access Utah

    07/04/2014 Duration: 53min

    A large body of social science research has found a number of correlations between religious belief and practice and a range of aspects of marriage and family life (e.g., marital happiness, stability, parent-child cohesion, positive youth outcomes). What is much less known are the processes at work in this area.

  • "Radiant or Ravaged" Images of Water on Thursday's Access Utah

    03/04/2014 Duration: 53min

    We’ll merge science and art on Thursday’s AU. The Bear River Watershed Council has organized a photo exhibit called “Radiant or Ravaged.”

  • Should We Amend the Antiquities Act? On Wednesday's Access Utah

    02/04/2014 Duration: 01h02min

    Under the 1906 Antiquities Act, U.S. Presidents have the power to unilaterally create National Monuments. President Obama used this power in March to add 1,665 acres to the California Coastal National Monument.

  • BASE Jumping On Tuesday's Access Utah

    01/04/2014 Duration: 54min

    Three BASE jumpers have been killed in the last two months in Utah. BASE jumping, (BASE stands for “Building, Antenna, Span, Earth,”) The sport grew out of skydiving (some skydivers feel that BASE jumping gives their sport a bad image.) BASE jumping has started to gain a more mainstream following in the last fifteen years.

  • Utah Farmers Call for Immigration Reform on Monday's Access Utah

    31/03/2014 Duration: 53min

    We’ve been talking to various groups with a stake in the immigration debate and Monday on AU, Utah farmers will have their say.

  • Conservation Writer Emma Marris On Friday's Access Utah

    28/03/2014 Duration: 21min

    It is Natural Resources Week at Utah State University and the theme is "Go Wild, It's All Around you." Nature writer Emma Marris was a featured speaker during this week's celebration and she joins us today on the program to talk about the latest wave in conservation and her new book, The Rambunctious Garden, that is changing and challenging our traditional views of conservation.

  • Climate Change on Thursday's Access Utah

    27/03/2014 Duration: 51min

    According to Reuters, a 29-page draft by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) will warn that “Global warming will disrupt food supplies, slow world economic growth and may already be causing irreversible damage to nature” and “will also outline many ways to adapt to rising temperatures, more heatwaves, floods and rising seas.”

  • What are you Reading? On Wednesday's Access Utah

    26/03/2014 Duration: 59s

    It’s time again to build a UPR reading list. We want to know what you’re reading, whether it’s fiction, non-fiction, classic literature, young adult or children’s books.

  • Can Coal Ever be Clean? Tuesday's Access Utah

    25/03/2014 Duration: 50min

    Michelle Nijhuis writes in the April edition of National Geographic (“Can Coal Ever Be Clean?”) that “During the next two decades several hundred million people worldwide will get electricity for the first time, and if current trends continue, most will use power produced by coal...Coal, to use the economists’ euphemism, is fraught with “externalities”—the heavy costs it imposes on society.

  • Searching for Your Roots on Monday's Access Utah

    24/03/2014 Duration: 50min

    Are you interested in learning your genealogy and researching your family's history? Have you already traced your lineage back hundreds of years? Or are you just beginning?

  • Vegan Lifestyle on Thursday's Access Utah

    20/03/2014 Duration: 51min

    Are you Vegan? Vegetarian? Meat-eater? We’d love to hear from you on Thursday’s AU. We’re going to examine the vegan diet and lifestyle.

  • Revisiting "Boleto" on Wednesday's Access Utah

    19/03/2014 Duration: 54min

    On Wednesday’s AU we revisit a conversation from December: Alyson Hagy’s novel "Boleto," explores the themes of men and horses, the American West, and the dream of a ticket out. The protagonist Will Testerman is a young Wyoming horse trainer determined to make something of himself.

  • "Wild Rides and Wildflowers: Philosophy and Botany with Bikes" on Tuesday's Access Utah

    18/03/2014 Duration: 53min

    Two Utah Valley University professors who describe themselves as similar to hosts Click and Clack from NPR’s "Car Talk," set out to repeatedly bike the Great Western Trail, observing and writing about its variations with every season. The accounts of their adventures, however, refuse to be limited to flora and fauna.

  • The Return of the Undead on Monday's Access Utah

    17/03/2014 Duration: 53min

    A couple of years ago we took a fascinating look at zombies with Kyle Bishop, author of “American Zombie Gothic: The Rise and Fall (and Rise) of the Walking Dead in Popular Culture.” Bishop says that zombie movies reflect our cultural anxieties.

  • Legislative Summary on Access Utah Friday

    13/03/2014 Duration: 20min

    The 2014 Utah legislature closes Thursday night. Medicaid expansion, air quality, education, the budget...these are just some of the topics we’ll talk about on Friday’s AU.

  • Living Wages And Poverty On Access Utah Tuesday

    11/03/2014 Duration: 53min

    Rep. Lynn Hemingway’s (D- Salt Lake City) “Living Wage” bill (HB 73) would raise the minimum wage in Utah from $7.25/hour to $10.25/hour. According the Poverty in America Living Wage Calculator, a living wage for a Utah family with two adults and two children is $18.54/hour. That same family would need to earn $10.60/hour to hit the poverty line. President Obama is pushing for a higher federal minimum wage, saying that "nobody who works full-time should ever have to raise a family in poverty."

  • Former Biker Helps Veterans Overcome Disabilities: Access Utah Monday

    10/03/2014 Duration: 53min

    Tim Medvetz is a former member of the Hells Angels and host of the National Geographic Wild series “Going Wild.” After a horrible motorcycle accident and still not fully recovered from his extensive injuries (he was not expected to walk again) he decided to fly to Nepal, live with Sherpas, and summit Mt. Everest. He eventually created The Heroes Project, with the mission of taking veterans who suffered catastrophic injuries on climbs to the world’s seven tallest summits. Medvetz’ goal for these climbs is to mirror the mental, physical and emotional challenges it takes to overcome losing limbs in battle.

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