-
As breaking makes its Olympic debut, Bay Area breakers offer tips for first-time viewers and share their thoughts about its appearance on the global stage.
-
Last week, San Francisco received $10 million dollars to expand internet access. Officials say this money will help close a digital divide.
-
CrosscurrentsYesterday would have been Lawrence Ferlinghetti’s 105th birthday. The Bay Area literary icon died in 2021. He is most associated with books and poetry — and rightly so. But before he published Howl, before he opened City Lights and before the Beats he was part of the World War Two effort.
-
It’s coyote pupping season and that means that some of the trails in San Francisco's Presidio are closed to dogs.
-
San Francisco's reputation as one of America's most ethnically diverse cities has been in question as its African Americans population has eroded. But that’s not an entirely new phenomenon.
-
CrosscurrentsIn Oakland, you’re supposed to be able to reach a community response team by calling 911, but the system doesn’t always work.
-
CrosscurrentsSan Francisco is full of living history. In this episode, a tour of some of its institutions that have stood the test of time. They are all featured in the new book, “Oldest San Francisco.”
-
October is Filipino Heritage month and we're revisiting an interview with Choreographer Alleluia Panis.
-
CrosscurrentsStudies show that students benefit when their parents are involved in their schooling. The San Francisco Unified's "family liaison" was created to build trust and get more families on board.
-
CrosscurrentsIn honor of LGBTQ+ History month, we're revisiting a story from someone who shared his experience leaving his home country behind because his life was in danger.
-
CrosscurrentsIn classrooms nationwide, students learn to pay attention to the present moment. Focus on their breathing. Notice if they’re bored. And consider what that feels like in the body. One San Francisco volunteer walks kids through mindfulness practice.
-
A lot of people see San Francisco as different. Maybe that’s why there are so many songs about the city by the bay. And, it’s perhaps the only city in the country with not one, but two official songs.