Search Query
Show Search
Home
Programs
Program Schedule
Propose A Program
Shows A-Z
Program Schedule
Propose A Program
Shows A-Z
News
Arts & Culture
Business
Community
Criminal Justice
Education
Environment
Government
Health
Housing
NPR (National) News
Arts & Culture
Business
Community
Criminal Justice
Education
Environment
Government
Health
Housing
NPR (National) News
Support Us
Donate Now
Donate a Vehicle
Our Underwriters
Studio Rental
Transfer Securities
Underwriting
Volunteer
Donate Now
Donate a Vehicle
Our Underwriters
Studio Rental
Transfer Securities
Underwriting
Volunteer
About Us
Contact Us
Staff
Governance
History
Jobs
Privacy Policy
Contact Us
Staff
Governance
History
Jobs
Privacy Policy
Coverage Map
Community Calendar
Podcasts
PSA Policy
© 2026
Menu
A Public Service of Santa Fe Community College
Show Search
Search Query
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
On Air
Now Playing
KSFR
All Streams
Home
Programs
Program Schedule
Propose A Program
Shows A-Z
Program Schedule
Propose A Program
Shows A-Z
News
Arts & Culture
Business
Community
Criminal Justice
Education
Environment
Government
Health
Housing
NPR (National) News
Arts & Culture
Business
Community
Criminal Justice
Education
Environment
Government
Health
Housing
NPR (National) News
Support Us
Donate Now
Donate a Vehicle
Our Underwriters
Studio Rental
Transfer Securities
Underwriting
Volunteer
Donate Now
Donate a Vehicle
Our Underwriters
Studio Rental
Transfer Securities
Underwriting
Volunteer
About Us
Contact Us
Staff
Governance
History
Jobs
Privacy Policy
Contact Us
Staff
Governance
History
Jobs
Privacy Policy
Coverage Map
Community Calendar
Podcasts
PSA Policy
⚠️SFCC Campus will be closed Saturday February 28 & Sunday March 1 for facility upgrades. KSFR will still be on air, but no live hosts will be on site. Click this banner for the full announcement from SFCC. (Redirects to SFCC.edu) Thank you.⚠️
Search results for
Sort By
Relevance
Newest (Publish Date)
Oldest (Publish Date)
Search
Rep. Mike Johnson is the next Speaker of the House. What do we know about him?
New Yorker writer Jonathan Blitzer gives a deeper lens into Johnson, a conservative who refused to certify the 2020 election results. Blitzer also talks the influence of Rep. Jim Jordan.
Listen
•
37:01
How Trump bent the Justice Department and FBI to his will
NBC Newsinvestigative reporter David Rohde says that since 2016, Trump has used conspiracy theories, co-option and threats to undermine federal law enforcement. His new book is Where Tyranny Begins.
Listen
•
36:33
Former Attorney General Eric Holder continues the fight for voting rights
Obama's attorney general says that when it comes to voting rights, the Supreme Court has increasingly become "an impediment to justice." Holder's new book is Our Unfinished March.
Listen
•
44:31
The Promise And Peril Of School Vouchers
Indiana's private school voucher program is the largest of its kind in the U.S. Whether it's "social justice" or "an assault" on public schools depends on whom you ask.
Listen
•
6:59
Millions of American kids have an ADHD diagnosis. Are they being treated effectively?
ADHD has been considered a medical disorder, treatable with drugs like Ritalin, but New York Times Magazine writer Paul Tough says recent studies question that assumption and treatment options.
Listen
•
37:36
A pediatric neurosurgeon reflects on his intense job, and the post-Roe landscape
Jay Wellons has operated on kids' brains and spinal cords. He writes about the anguish of losing a patient and the exhilaration of saving a life in All That Moves Us. Originally broadcast July 2022.
Listen
•
36:14
The rich history of music in prisons shows how damaged souls can be worth redemption
Journalist Maurice Chammah says art and music programs help us understand "there's more to say about [a prisoner] than their crime." Chammah is the author of Let the Lord Sort Them.
Listen
•
42:51
Remembering Bob Edwards, Peabody Award-winning broadcast journalist
Edwards, who died Feb. 10, was the first and longest-serving host of NPR's Morning Edition, from the show's inception in 1979 until 2004. Originally broadcast in 1993 and 2004.
Listen
•
38:37
How did 'DEI' become part of a larger political agenda -- and a slur?
Georgetown professor Ella Washington and Harvard professor Frank Dobbin discuss the beneficiaries and misperceptions of DEI, and who will be hurt as it's dismantled across public and private sectors.
Listen
•
42:23
What Trump's cuts to the Department of Education mean for schools and students
The DoE is cutting staff, halting grants and pressuring schools on various administration priorities. Washington Post writer Laura Meckler discusses its destabilizing effect on the education system.
Listen
•
38:12
Previous
305 of 404
Next