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How politics and lawsuits could shape Missouriā€™s cannabis industry in 2024

3 months 2 weeks ago
Since legal sales of medical marijuana started in Missouri in 2020 and adult recreational cannabis in 2023, business around all things marijuana has become a billion-dollar business. Missouri Independent journalist Rebecca Rivas talks about her recent coverage of Missouriā€™s cannabis industry, including a 60,000-product recall ā€“ and how lawsuits and politics could shape the industry in 2024.

Book ban efforts threaten ā€˜the heart of our democracy,ā€™ says Wentzville lead librarian

3 months 2 weeks ago
In the fall of 2022, a Missouri law went into effect that opened school officials to possible criminal charges if they provide ā€œexplicit sexual contentā€ to students. That has had a chilling effect on librarians, and it resulted in Missouri removing the third highest number of books from library shelves, following Florida and Texas. STLPR reporter Kate Grumke talks with Mernie Maestas, the lead librarian for the Wentzville School District in St. Charles County.

CVPA grad reflects on St. Louis Teen Talent Competition win and future endeavors

3 months 2 weeks ago
When Central Visual and Performing Arts High School student Ray Strickland performed his original song ā€œTime for Changeā€ at the St. Louis Teen Talent Competition in 2023, he sang in recognition of his cousin who he lost to gun violence, of George Floyd, who was murdered shortly after Strickland wrote the song, and in reflection of the mass shooting at his school months earlier. He shares what he is up to now and his belief in the power of the ā€œuniversal languageā€ of music.

How DB Cooper inspired a St Louis hijacker

3 months 2 weeks ago
D.B. Cooperā€™s 1971 airplane hijacking did more than just create an American crime legend: He inspired copycats, including in St. Louis in 1972. The St. Louis caper forms the core of University of Missouri history professor John Wigger's new book, ā€œThe Hijacking of American Flight 119: How D.B. Cooper Inspired a Skyjacking Craze and the FBIā€™s Battle to Stop It." Wigger interviewed McNally, who was released from federal prison in 2010, and more than a dozen retired FBI agents. Wigger spoke with St. Louis on the Air producer Danny Wicentowski.

Sam Goodwinā€™s forthcoming book shares the ways coincidence and connections led to his release from Syrian prisons

3 months 2 weeks ago
Sam Goodwin was just thirteen countries away from reaching his goal of visiting every country when he traveled to Syria. His visit took a wrong turn when he was wrongfully accused of espionage and held in the countryā€™s notorious prison system. Goodwinā€™s forthcoming book about his captivity shares the ways coincidence and connection led to his release.

The Endangered Species Act is 50. Here's how MoBot is helping plants survive

3 months 2 weeks ago
50 years after the Endangered Species Act was passed, the Missouri Botanical Garden continues their plant conservation efforts within the garden grounds and in the wild. Matthew Albrecht, director of Missouri Botanical Gardenā€™s Center for Conservation and Sustainable Development, and Becky Sucher, senior manager of the gardenā€™s Living Collections share the successes in plant conservation and how the noticeably changing weather patterns affects their work at the garden and in the field.

Meet the STLPR photojournalists who tell stories one frame at a time

3 months 4 weeks ago
Yes, radio stations have photojournalists ā€” and theyā€™re vital to the stories St. Louis Public Radio produces. Interim Digital Editor Brian Munoz and photojournalist Tristen Rouse have wrapped up collecting STLPRā€™s ā€œYear in Photos.ā€ They join the show to discuss what happens behind the lens, and how itā€™s led to some of their favorite images among the thousands theyā€™ve captured in 2023.

From Christopher Columbus to Ferguson, Michael Harriot delivers history that is ā€˜Black AFā€™

3 months 4 weeks ago
In this encore, listen back to our September interview with columnist and commentator Michael Harriot. Harriot's debut book, ā€œBlack AF History: The Un-Whitewashed Story of America,ā€ offers a compelling retelling of American history. Harriot discusses why he tackled a sweeping retelling of American history, and also shares his experiences from covering protests in Ferguson in 2014 and St. Louis in 2017.

ā€˜Theyā€™re buried in a mass graveā€™: How a St. Louis writer is grappling with loss and resilience in Gaza

4 months ago
On Oct. 25, more than a dozen of Fatima Elkabtiā€™s family members were killed in Gaza City in a single Israeli airstrike. The war is taking a toll on the Palestinian American, wife and mother. And, it comes at a time when the Washington University creative writing grad is writing a book thatā€™s preserving her familyā€™s history of displacement ā€” and drawing parallels to today.

The St. Louis Chamber Chorus will premiere a new centerpiece to its holiday program

4 months ago
In its 68th season, the St. Louis Chamber Chorus is taking a musical tour around the globe. This Sundayā€™s concert at the Second Presbyterian Church in the Central West End adds to that theme and will feature the premiere of ā€œSeeking You,ā€ a new Christmas song composed by Kerensa Briggs that uses text from a poem of the same name by Charles Anthony Silvestri. Briggs and St. Louis Chamber Chorus Artistic Director Philip Barnes join the show.

Missouriā€™s glades are trapped under trees. Botanists are freeing them by logging

4 months ago
In 2018, writer Robert Langellier and botanist Neal Humke cut down every tree across 19 acres in Pioneer Forest. Their aim was to restore one of the Ozarks' rarest ecosystems: a glade. While it may seem counterintuitive to cut down trees in a time of climate change, restoring glades helps ensure biodiversity. In this encore episode, Langellier talks about the conservation effort. Humke, land stewardship coordinator for the L-A-D Foundation (which privately owns the land in the Pioneer Forest) discusses the non-profitsā€™ work there and the importance of glades.

Radiation exposure funding isnā€™t in the final defense bill. Hereā€™s why U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley voted ā€˜noā€™

4 months 1 week ago
Congress is poised to give final approval to the National Defense Authorization Act, a customarily popular and bipartisan bill. But, U.S. Senator Josh Hawley voted ā€œnoā€ and heā€™s accusing congressional leadership of abandoning St. Louis-area victims poisoned by nuclear contamination from the Manhattan Project. Hawley talks with STLPR senior environmental reporter Kate Grumke about his opposition to the bill.