-
On today's politician-packed show, several state and national congresspeople discussed the results of Midterm elections. Plus, a Michigan concept artist spoke about his work.
-
On today's show, a reporter analyzed local abortion politics, and a Michigan filmmaker dished on a spooky flick. Plus, Jon Moshier joined to talk Halloween tunes,
-
Lansing-based comedy group Quality Scary straddles the line between frightening and funny.
-
The family that screams together stays together. At least, that's the case with James A. Janisse and Chelsea Rebecca, a husband and wife duo that runs the horror-centric YouTube channel and podcast, "Dead Meat."
-
"It is a Detroit story. And it should be told from the perspective of Detroiters and extend outwards."
-
Miz Korona's artistry extends from before her scene in 8 Mile through almost three decades of international touring, teaching, photography, fashion design, and beat production. Today, she’s getting ready to release a new EP: The Healer and the Heartbreaker.
-
For some Black people in the 19th and 20th centuries, "passing" meant living part or all of your life as non-Black. Recent creative works — Lovecraft Country, Passing, and The Vanishing Half — have brought the idea of passing back to the forefront. This month on Stateside, we discuss the life of a Detroiter who passed as white in the '40s and return to historical, pop culture references to passing in America.
-
Cultural references to passing have been around for a long time. But recent works like the Rebecca Hall’s film adaptation of Nella Larsen’s book, Passing, have brought it back to the forefront. Today, we talk about the contexts that have caused this narrative to recur across the centuries.
-
A journalist and two attorneys discuss the University of Michigan’s $490 million settlement with 1,050 claimants for decades of student sexual abuse by sports physician Robert Anderson.
-
A new Michigan-made film tells stories of veterans deported after their military service because of their immigration status.