St. Louis on the Air

St. Louis Public Radio
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Jan 29, 2025 • 32min

How St. Louis’ Reesha Archibald is working to bring Black television into a new era

Before Reesha L. Archibald became a Hollywood television producer and started collaborating with Cedric the Entertainer and Eric Rhone, she was in St. Louis thinking about ways to use her artistic talents. Now that she’s made it big as an executive producer on shows including Bounce TV’s “Finding Happy” and “Johnson,” she’s focused on lifting up St. Louis’ talent and providing opportunities for creatives in her hometown. In this episode, she talks about her journey from St. Louis to Hollywood and her vision for storytelling that reflects the breadth of Black lived experiences.
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Jan 29, 2025 • 33min

Her husband lost his life to a distracted driver. Then she got the law changed

Adrienne Siddens lost her husband Randall after he was struck by a distracted driver. In conversation with STLPR’s Abby Llorico, she shares how she’s worked through grief and become an advocate for a distracted driving law in Missouri — which went into effect on Jan. 1.
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Jan 28, 2025 • 18min

How a St. Louisan helps her community navigate death by filling out advance directives

Vivial Lopez, a St. Louis native, shares what it means to help her community become comfortable with talking about death. She specializes in helping the Black community fill out advance directives and navigate death. An advance directive is important for an individual to ensure what their end-of-life care and values are.
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Jan 27, 2025 • 50min

Legal Roundtable takes on high school mascot, J6 pardons and more

A panel of attorneys discuss local and regional legal issues. Discussion will include the latest attempt to change the , allegations by a chess star against the U.S. Chess Federation, why a Wendy’s restaurant in Bridgeton is paying $5 million to a former worker who was a victim of sexual assault on the job, why Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey must sit for deposition, and more.
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Jan 24, 2025 • 30min

Sam Page continues a familiar battle: the county executive vs. the council

St. Louis County Executive Sam Page has officially entered politically treacherous territory. He’s leading Missouri’s largest county at a time of downward population growth, an uncertain budgetary future, and for the first time since he took office in 2019, Page is facing a county council with enough antagonists to override his veto. Politics correspondent Jason Rosenbaum sits down with Page in his office in Clayton to discuss criticisms, partnerships with leadership in the City of St. Louis and answer questions from listeners.
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Jan 24, 2025 • 21min

Missouri Republicans again push state control of St. Louis police department

Republicans in the Missouri General Assembly want to place a board with gubernatorial appointees in charge of overseeing the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department. It’s an idea with high-level support among police unions and Missouri’s new governor, but fierce opposition from St. Louis’ top elected officials. We talk about the proposal with one of its most vocal backers, Republican state Senator Nick Schroer from St. Louis County.
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Jan 23, 2025 • 18min

Facing ‘unsustainable’ costs, St. Louis County Library issues limits on Hoopla and Libby use

St. Louis County Library is spending more than half its collections budget on digital “eMedia” through subscriptions to services like Libby and Hoopla. The library told its patrons this month the cost would become “unsustainable” without changes. We hear from the library's director, Kristen Sorth, about the changing landscape for accessing books and other digital media, and the decisions facing libraries to maintain the public’s access.
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Jan 23, 2025 • 32min

What’s in a flag? How to represent the collective history and culture of a state

Between now and Feb. 14, Illinois residents can vote on whether to change their state flag — and if so, which resident-submitted design they'd like to see flying in the wind. We hear from two Illinois Flag Commission members who helped whittle down the selection from nearly 5,000 designs to the top ten. Flag design expert Ted Kaye also shares his suggestions for how those designs could be improved.
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Jan 22, 2025 • 22min

How a St. Louis-based tutoring program helps Black students achieve beyond systemic biases

A growing and significant body of research suggests that students benefit from having a teacher of the same race or ethnicity. Yet most teachers in the U.S. are white women. St. Louis entrepreneur Angelica Harris founded Top Tutors for Us to pair Black high school students with tutors who look like them. She shares how their services have led to improved test scores and higher college acceptance rates of their students.
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Jan 22, 2025 • 28min

How a firefighter’s frustration led to better technology to fight fires

About 15 years ago, Jason Cerrano was working for the Pattonville Fire Protection District when he conceptualized a way to make it more efficient for firefighters to put out fires. He wanted to automate how a fire truck selects its water source and pumps water, and allow pump operators to pay attention to other critical firefighting tasks. Cerrano, a graduate of Missouri S&T, discusses how he invented the SAM Control System that more than 120 fire departments employ. We also hear from Chief Hans Mueller of the Freeburg Fire Protection District in Illinois about his department’s use of the technology.

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