St. Louis on the Air

St. Louis Public Radio
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Jan 15, 2025 • 17min

New St. Louis County Prosecutor Melissa Price Smith targets violent crime

By her own admission, Melissa Price Smith never aspired to be in public office. But when it was clear in August that Wesley Bell would be departing as prosecutor to serve in Congress, Price Smith’s mindset about vying for an elected position changed. STLPR’s Rachel Lippmann and Jason Rosenbaum talk with Price Smith about her priorities and first days in office on the Politically Speaking Hour on St. Louis on the Air.
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Jan 15, 2025 • 24min

Robin Carnahan reflects on time as leader of General Services Administration

Former Missouri Secretary of State Robin Carnahan will soon depart from the agency responsible for managing federal procurement and the government’s real estate holdings. As administrator of the GSA, Carnahan’s mission was to make the federal government work better, faster and cheaper. That work included implementing elements of Biden’s 2021 infrastructure improvement plan and the Inflation Reduction Act — and revamping the country’s border crossings. Carnahan joins the Politically Speaking Hour on St. Louis on the Air.
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Jan 15, 2025 • 29min

Fluoride is in the political spotlight. St. Louis dentists say it’s critical to dental health

The American Dental Association calls the mineral fluoride "nature's cavity fighter." But the practice of adding fluoride to drinking water has long been a target of conspiracy theories and opponents of public health measures. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the Trump administration's pick to be the next American health secretary, has called fluoride "an industrial waste” associated with various diseases. Dr. Dwight McLeod, dean of A.T. Still University’s Missouri School of Dentistry & Oral Health, and Dr. Poonam Jain, a professor and vice dean at ATSU and the St. Louis Dental Center, discuss fluoride, the scrutiny over its use, and the importance of dental health.
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Jan 15, 2025 • 22min

SLU professor’s award-winning book explores the opportunity and power of blank spaces

While blank spaces, silences and gaps may appear empty, is true emptiness possible? St. Louis University Professor Jonathan Sawday explores that question — and addresses the opportunities, pitfalls and stories behind such gaps — in his award-winning book, “Blanks, Print, Space, and Void in English Renaissance Literature: An Archaeology of Absence.”
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Jan 13, 2025 • 28min

Black Yogi Nico Marie teases original music focused on meditation and healing

Turning over to a new calendar brings about many declarations around changing habits and making improvements. But you don’t have to create a wholly new version of yourself to do and be better. Nico Marie McNeese is known locally for her skills behind the turntables as DJ Nico Marie and as a yogi to her 190,000 followers on YouTube. She’s combining her love of music, movement and mental wellness in her first album, “Meeting Myself For The First Time.” Multidisciplinary artist Damon Davis helped produce the album and joined her in conversation about the goals of this project and how they collaborated to bring the album to life.
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Jan 13, 2025 • 22min

Language schools connect Korean Americans to cultural heritage in St. Louis

The United States is home to one of the largest populations of people of Korean descent. On the occasion of Korean American Day 2025, we talk with Julia Sim – a decades-long St. Louisan and president of the Korea Academy of St. Louis – about how she’s approached Korean language and culture education, for children and adults. Hyung Kyu Choi, current KASL teacher and parent, also shares personal reflections about language’s place in the experience of diaspora Koreans like himself, and in raising his young Korean American children in St. Louis.
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Jan 10, 2025 • 8min

What the Midwest Newsroom learned about funding earmarked for homeless students

In its series “Unhoused/Unschooled,” the Midwest Newsroom and its regional partners explored the complicated federal system designed to support K-12 public school students experiencing homelessness, particularly in rural communities. Midwest Newsroom managing editor Holly Edgell discusses the reporting project’s mission and conclusion.
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Jan 10, 2025 • 54min

How St. Louis became known as 'Mound City' despite settlers razing those monuments

Cahokia Mounds in Collinsville hosts about 350,000 visitors each year. Much less well-known are the sites where 27 monuments once stood in St. Louis. The mounds, carefully constructed and engineered by Indigenous people between 800-1350 CE, were destroyed by white settlers to make way for urban development during the 19th century. In this encore episode, “Mound City” author and historian Patricia Cleary details the history of the mounds, the strange paradox of local settlers claiming the moniker of “Mound City” while destroying them, and the mounds’ contribution to the cultural identity of St. Louisans and Americans across the country.
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Jan 9, 2025 • 26min

‘Demon Slayer’ and ‘Sailor Moon’ voice actor brings life to anime and video games

Robbie Daymond was bitten by the acting bug at a young age. The Warrenton native has gone from the stage to the recording booth, bringing life to animated characters like Marvel’s Spider-Man, Japanese anime fan favorites including “Sailor Moon” and “Jujutsu Kaisen” and a host of video games across several genres. Daymond joined the show to discuss his career, the art of voice acting, and some of his favorite characters.
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Jan 9, 2025 • 18min

210-year-old log house finds new home in historic Sappington park

The Joseph Sappington Log House is preparing for the start of its new life with a January 11 groundbreaking at a historic park in Crestwood. Like a giant Lego set, the house was disassembled piece-by-piece in 2022 from its original location in Affton. The house will be rebuilt near the brick home built by Joseph Sappington’s cousin, Thomas Sappington. Antique Logs Unlimited owner Mark Pratt, who has dedicated his life and career to restoring and building historic log homes, discusses the vast work to disassemble and then rebuild the log home. We also meet Dyann Dierkes, president of the Sappington House Foundation and a descendant of Thomas Sappington, who shares the history and meaning behind the home’s preservation.

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