Synopsis
Interesting news stories from around the Pacific Northwest.
Episodes
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Using Afrofuturism principles to keep, grow Black culture in Seattle's Central District
15/07/2021 Duration: 08minSeattle’s Central District once was a Black neighborhood. New arrivals and rising property values have pushed African Americans out, but many who have stayed hope to preserve and grow the Black culture that remains.
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Native fashion designer from Oregon lands in spotlight with 'game-changing' Interior secretary
09/07/2021 Duration: 05minIt’s every fashion designer’s dream to see their work prominently featured on a magazine cover, especially if it’s worn by someone prominent themselves. That’s the case with Korina Emmerich, who grew up in Eugene, Ore., and now lives and works in New York City. A dress of hers adorns Interior Secretary Deb Haaland on the upcoming August cover of InStyle magazine .
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Bjorn the blind sea lion gets a second chance at life at Point Defiance Zoo
08/07/2021 Duration: 04minAmber Becerra traveled from Los Angeles to Tacoma for a short 24-hour trip ahead of the holiday weekend. She wanted to see an old friend get his happy ending.
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Can't find an air conditioner at a store? Make your own.
28/06/2021 Duration: 03minA longer verson of this story originally aired July 25, 2015. Air conditioning would provide some welcome relief right now. But what if you are out of luck finding any? We dug into our archives to find you an alternative to your standard AC.
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As reopening approaches, efforts continue to get vaccines to people without shelter
21/06/2021 Duration: 07minThe lifting of most pandemic restrictions in Washington state is just days away, set for June 30. Ahead of it, KNKX has been talking with people in the health-care community about how they feel. Today, we focus on what reopening means for people who are unsheltered.
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FOOD: A salmon feast and a happy reunion
16/06/2021 Duration: 07minIt’s been a decade since I cooked my first salmon, while living in Alaska — three hefty filets from some Chinook I’d caught and saved, frozen, to impress my Michigan parents on their first trip to visit me. I baked it in foil with garlic and lemon, and when we were done, my mom put her fork down on her clean plate, looked at me across the table and said, “I hate salmon.”
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Plans to reopen feel different for rural hospitals – just like the pandemic itself
04/06/2021 Duration: 08minAs the state prepares to lift COVID restrictions at the end of this month, KNKX is talking with health-care leaders about what they're anticipating.
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'I've been praying': Manny's mom, family look for answers, change and time to grieve
28/05/2021 Duration: 04minWhen she learned that the police officers charged with killing her son were arrested, Marcia Carter-Patterson’s heart jumped. “It feels good that they are in custody,” Carter-Patterson told KNKX Public Radio moments after she learned the news. “But we have a long way to go.”
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She led King County's public health efforts for years. Now Patty Hayes wants to study the cosmos
28/05/2021 Duration: 08minFriday was the last day on the job for the head of Public Health – Seattle & King County. Patty Hayes retires after seven years in charge of the agency and after 30 years in public health.
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Washington reopens June 30, but there are some questions. We asked the state's top doc
25/05/2021 Duration: 08minWashington state is on track to fully reopen its economy by June 30. The state has been under some form of pandemic-related restriction since mid-March of 2020. The plan to return to business (mostly) as usual follows surprise guidance from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention earlier this month, saying fully vaccinated people no longer need to wear masks.
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A new graphic novel draws parallels between wartime incarceration and modern-day America
08/05/2021 Duration: 06minA new graphic novel is being released called “We Hereby Refuse: Japanese Resistance to Wartime Incarceration.” It’s part of a three-part series of graphic novels from the Wing Luke Museum in Seattle about the Japanese American wartime incarceration. It’s the story of three people who refused to submit to imprisonment in American concentration camps without a fight in the 1940s and presents a vision of America’s past with links to the American present.
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The pandemic made things harder on teens, so they wrote a new state law to help
06/05/2021 Duration: 07minThe COVID-19 pandemic took students out of school for most of the last year – away from friends and activities, and away from resources that can connect them to help when they’re struggling with a behavioral health concern. A new law drafted by teens aims to change that.
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New mapping offers more details on how 'the big one' might hit local Navy installations
29/04/2021 Duration: 04minIf you spend any time in the Northwest, it isn’t long before you start hearing about “the big one.” That’s the giant 9.0 earthquake and tsunami predicted for our part of the world.
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A WSU bioethicist's take on pausing use of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine
20/04/2021 Duration: 07minThe use of Johnson & Johnson's COVID-19 vaccine remains paused this week as U.S. regulators study a possible link to rare blood clots. They’re expected to review the pause on Friday. In the meantime, there are a lot of questions. To help us think through some of them, KNKX got in touch with bioethicist Thomas May of the Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine at Washington State University.
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King County's Zahilay on preventing gun violence and stopping hate
06/04/2021 Duration: 07minThe King County Council is spending $2 million for gun violence prevention. The recently approved money creates a grant program and comes from a larger $94 million pool of funds for COVID-19 relief measures.
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The doctor who helps save doctors found herself in greater demand during the pandemic
13/03/2021 Duration: 07minThis story focuses heavily on suicide, and it might not be appropriate for everyone. Dr. Pamela Wible is a family physician in Oregon. After learning that physicians have a higher rate of suicide than most professions, she set up a free suicide hotline for physicians. She's spent years counseling doctors and those who have lost a colleague to suicide. COVID-19 has put her in even greater demand.
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King Co. Council chair: 'Start and lead with the humanity' in addressing homelessness
24/02/2021 Duration: 08minCommunities in western Washington have grappled with how to address homelessness for decades. And Claudia Balducci, chair of the King County Council, says local governments, like the one she's part of, must “start and lead with the humanity of trying to help people who are suffering.”
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Black History Month celebrations include hip-hop, pioneers, painters
04/02/2021 Duration: 07minBlack History Month is being celebrated around the region through a series of programs and events, mostly virtual this year because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Sundance partners with Northwest Film Forum and other satellites to deliver festival virtually
27/01/2021 Duration: 03minLike many festivals over the last year, the Sundance Film Festival has had to rethink how to present its event during the pandemic. This year, Sundance decided to team up with about 30 “satellite” partner organizations to deliver the festival virtually. Northwest Film Forum is the only satellite partner in the Pacific Northwest.
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Reflecting the state Supreme Court's diversity, one portrait at a time
21/01/2021 Duration: 04minWhen Steven González was first named to the Washington state Supreme Court, as an associate justice in 2011, he brought his family to the Temple of Justice – that large, sandstone building in Olympia where the court meets. They were in a hallway looking at portraits of the previous justices – black-robed white men with serious expressions on their faces, staring out from the walls.