Prairie Public NewsRoom
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Search results for

  • Sunday, July 11, at 5pm: Tune in for a new episode of Why? Philosophical Discussions About Everyday Life.
  • Episode 16 features an interview with Joe Wiegand; musician Ismay Avery; an interview with Presidential historian Douglas Brinkley on Woody Guthrie; a visit with Maartje Murphy of Duchessa Gelato in Carrington, ND; and arts educator Julie Wolfson on fermentation.
  • The Dakota Skipper butterfly lives in tall-grass prairie, and is found mostly in Illinois, Minnesota, the Dakotas, and southern Canada. The species is currently considered “threatened,” as its natural habitat continues to change. Ben South, supervisor at the Dakota Prairie Grasslands, is studying how the Grasslands can be returned to a state that allows these butterflies to thrive.
  • Sunday at 5pm: Tune in to hear “In Deep," a rich portrait of a working-class city and its residents at a perilous moment in our climate existence.
  • This week on Prairie Public Presents: A new episode of Why? Philosophical Discussions About Everyday Life! Tune in Sunday at 5pm as Jack Russell Weinstein and his guest, Firoze Manji, discuss “What does it Mean to be ‘African’?”
  • Hear North Dakota attorney and author Sarah Vogel read from her new acclaimed book, "The Farmer's Lawyer," and answer questions from the audience at an author event at Zandbroz Variety in Fargo.
  • This Sunday at 5pm, The Great American Folk Show returns with a new episode!
  • In Episode 22, host Tom Brosseau is joined by letterpress printer Ben Blount; Law professor and singer/songwriter Brit Benjamin; Author and poet Danielle Pollock; Legendary singer/songwriter Dan Bern; and Simone Wai of Folkways talks about their holiday Christkindlmarkt in Fargo, ND.
  • This Sunday at 5pm: Immerse yourself in the music and voices of the original emissaries of American music to the world. In October of 1871, the oldest university in Nashville, Tennessee, teetered on the brink of collapse. To survive, Fisk University staked its last $40 on a set of field hymns and 10 descendants of American slavery.
  • This Sunday on The Great American Folk Show features musicians Jolie Holland, Robert Ellis, and Courtney Hartman; and host Tom Brosseau chats with Julie Wolfson.
376 of 29,436