May brings more blossoms to KBCS!!
Thanks again for all your support to listener supported, 91.3 KBCS HD-1.
This month we have been introducing some new public affairs, educational, informational and news programming to our airwaves. Be sure to check in with these programs live or from the program page archives. These programs blossom to our KBCS line up on 4am and 5am Monday through Friday.
KBCS 4am programs
Series Three: 4am Program updates
Monday – Sojourner Truth – Sojourner Truth brings you news and views on local, national, and international policies and stories that affect us all. We draw out how those of us most impacted – women, communities of color and other communities are responding. We also discuss the inter-relationship between art and politics
Tuesday – CodePink – CODEPINK Radio is an energizing program focused on ending wars and militarism, and building a peace economy. Listen weekly to robust conversation and inspiration from grassroots peacemakers in places like Korea, Yemen, Venezuela and Iran, peacemakers in our nation’s capital who are confronting warhawks in the White House and in Congress, and peacemakers in our communities who are modeling the actions of what a world of peace can look like.
Wednesday – Living On Earth – Living on Earth with Steve Curwood is the weekly environmental news and information program distributed by PRX. Living on Earth shares news, features, interviews and commentary on a broad range of ecological issues.
Thursday – With Good Reason – Scholars explore the worlds of literature, science, the arts, politics, history, and business through lively discussion with host Sarah McConnell. From reparations and global warming, to the unique worlds of comic books and wine-making, With Good Reason is always surprising, challenging and fun.
Friday – Aging Matters – Launched in 2017, AGING MATTERS features individuals with expertise about a broad array of aging related topics. The programs focus is to bring more awareness about aging issues to older adults and their families. Produced in an interview format, guests educate and inform listeners about timely topics that impact the lives of older adults, their care partners, and families.
Series Four: 5am Program updates
Monday – First Voices Radio – since 1992, “First Voices Radio” has been exploring global topics and issues of critical importance to the preservation and protection of Mother Earth presented in the voices and from the perspective of the original peoples of the world. Hosted by Tiokasin Ghosthorse (LAKOTA)
Tuesday – 5am: This Way Out, the only internationally distributed weekly LGBTQ radio program, featuring a summary of some of the major news events in or affecting the queer community (NewsWrap), in-depth coverage of major events, interviews with key queer figures, plus music, literature, entertainment — all the information and culture of a community on the move!
– 5:30am: WINGS: Womens International News Gathering Service, has been covering the global women’s movement and related issues for community radio worldwide. “Raising Women’s Voices through Radio Worldwide” since 1986
Wednesday – EcoJustice Radio, EcoJustice Radio is a weekly program that presents environmental and climate stories from a social justice frame, featuring voices not necessarily heard on mainstream media, co-hosted by Jessica Aldridge and Carry Kim. We investigate solutions for social, environmental, and climate issues with an eye to advance human health, steward wild landscapes, and solve the climate crisis across the USA and the world. It is a project of the nonprofit environmental organization, SoCal 350 Media, based in Los Angeles.
Thursday – 5am: Making Contact is an award-winning, 29-minute weekly magazine/documentary-style public affairs program committed to in-depth critical analysis that goes beyond the breaking news. – Ordinary people talk about how public policy affects their daily lives, families and communities, and share positive ways to solve problems.
– 5:30am: Between the Lines presents timely, in-depth analysis featuring progressive perspectives on national and international political, economic and social issues. Includes a five-minute summary of some of the week’s under-reported news stories gathered from the alternative press and other sources. Three in-depth interview segments focusing on significant international, national and regional issues.
Fridays – Possible envisions a future where everything goes right for humanity. Hosted by Reid Hoffman and Aria Finger, the broadcast features interviews with visionaries from various fields like climate science and criminal justice. Guests like Trevor Noah and Sam Altman share their insights. A unique aspect is the inclusion of GPT-4, OpenAI’s most advanced AI, providing speculative stories that spark discussions on a hopeful future. Through technology and collective action, Possible explores how we might achieve an ideal world.
Thanks again for all of your support and involvement bringing KBCS into our world, sharing these programs and so much more with others in our community. You can make a financial contribution at our DONATE page! Thank you again for 50 years of listener supported community radio.
Questions and comments please send an email to: listenercomment@kbcs.fm
Thank you again and take care.
Sincerely, Gregory D’Elia – KBCS Operations & Traffic Manager and Assistant Program Director
Help Us Improve the KBCS Website!
A group of students from the University of Washington is partnering with us to work on redesigning the KBCS website to make it more user-friendly and accessible. Please take a few minutes to complete this brief survey.

KBCS blossoms additional programs!
Spring brings with it fresh beginnings, and KBCS is thrilled to introducing a few new series of educational and cultural programs chosen to inform, educate, and offer a more structured forum for a debate of the prominent issues and topics of the day.
Series One: began a few weeks ago adding programs to the 12 noon to 1pm schedule:
Mondays – Philosophy Talk, a program that challenges listeners to identify and question their assumptions and to think about things in new ways.
Tuesday – The Commonwealth Club of California. For over 90 years, one of the largest and oldest public affairs forums in America, presenting distinguished speakers sharing their experiences and ideas in a nonpartisan forum that strives to bring more balanced viewpoints and a serious commitment to “stick to the facts.”
Wednesday – The City Arts & Lectures Series, features leading figures in the world of arts and ideas in literature, criticism, science, and the performing arts.
Thursday – Open to Debate, seeks to restore balance to the public square through expert moderation, good-faith arguments, and reasoned analysis on topics of science, technology, politics, culture, and global affairs.
Fridays – rounds off the week with Travel with Rick Steves. A cultural program hosted by Pacific Northwest’s Rick Steves, featuring great conversations with special guests and travel experts.
Series Two: this week KBCS set 7am programs with a repositioning and reinvigorating these programs:
Monday – Alternative Radio – established in 1986, this award-winning weekly one-hour public affairs program provides information, analyses, and views that are frequently ignored or distorted in corporate media. Hosted by David Barsamian.
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday – Hard Knock Radio – a drive-time Hip-Hop talk show produced in the Bay Area hosted by Davey D and Anita Johnson.
Friday – Yes! presents: Rising Up with Sonali – a weekly program, broadcasting an antidote to the doom and gloom of mainstream news, lifting up solutions that bring us closer to economic, racial, gender, and environmental justice. Hosted by Sonali Kolhatkar.
Series Three: KBCS updates and introduces new programs for 5am and 4am!
Thanks again for all of your support and involvement bringing KBCS into our world, sharing these programs and so much more with others in our community. You can make a financial contribution at our DONATE page! Thank you again for 50 years of listener supported community radio.
Questions and comments please send an email to: listenercomment@kbcs.fm
Thank you again and take care.
Sincerely, Gregory D’Elia – KBCS Operations & Traffic Manager and Assistant Program Director
Message from the GM – March 2024
Dear KBCS Listeners and Listener Supporters
In today’s rapidly evolving technological landscape, the ability to adapt and embrace change is not just beneficial—it is essential. As we navigate through these dynamic and tumultuous times, it is crucial to recognize that change is not merely a disruption but rather seizing an opportunity for sustained growth and innovation.
Here are a few reasons why embracing change is necessary in the workplace:
- Stay Competitive and True to our Mission: Nonprofit, educational radio stations are evolving, driven, in large part, by rapid technological advancements and changing times. College radio stations like KBCS must be willing to adapt to new strategies and best practices made possible by advanced technology to further our educational commitment and stay true to our college’s community outreach mission.
- Foster Innovation: Change encourages creativity and innovation. By embracing innovative ideas and novel approaches to broadcasting, we create an environment where innovation can thrive while increasing our commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion by building the opportunity for a remote workplace infrastructure with fewer physical barriers to participation.
- Enhance Sustainability: Change is inevitable, and radio stations like KBCS that can adapt quickly are better equipped to weather challenges and uncertainties. By fostering a pro-growth and innovative culture that embraces change, we cultivate resilience and agility, enabling us to overcome obstacles and emerge stronger than before.
- Cultivate Learning and Development: Embracing change requires continuous learning and development. It encourages our staff, students, and community volunteers to acquire new skills, expand their knowledge base, and embrace lifelong learning. This not only benefits individuals but also strengthens the organization as a whole.
- Increase our Operating Efficiencies: Staying abreast of new advances in automation and other time-saving broadcast software and hardware allows us to do more with less while providing a greater work-life balance for our small paid professional staff. Increased efficiencies mean that we can spend more time instructing and training more students and community volunteers. As we embark on the next phase of this critical journey of growth and transformation, our goal is to embrace change as an opportunity to innovate, evolve, and provide a model of greater inclusion. Let us embrace change not as a challenge, but as a catalyst for progress and expanding our educational outreach to our listeners and supporters across the greater Puget Sound and online everywhere.
Remember, technological change is not something to fear—it is something to embrace.
Best regards,
Dana Lee Buckingham
KBCS General Manager and Executive News Producer of World News Radio KBCS HD2
Heard online at www.worldnewsradiokbcs.com
KBCS Feature Programs: Women’s History
As Spring is upon us there are many changes and budding blossoms as the season shifts. KBCS also is going through some changes. Please check out our KBCS Spring News post for more info and updates, programming changes and opportunities open to represent more communities and voices.
Celebrating Women’s History Month, KBCS scheduled some feature programs for broadcast during our 7am morning educational, information and news programming hour on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays. Our Body Politic stays scheduled on Mondays at 7am and Wednesdays at 5am until the end of the month. Their poignant and professionally produced program is unfortunately going on hiatus. We hope Our Body Politic is back in production soon and we can add them to our schedule again. Yes! Presents: Rising Up with Sonali remains scheduled on Fridays at 7am.
Listener contributions assist KBCS in supporting many producers, studios and program resources. These resources provide more for our listeners. Please tune in to some of these feature programs for this month or connect to the audio in our archives or links below. Links in this message go direct to the audio if you miss the live broadcast or access to the KBCS audio archives. Please support KBCS by making a financial contribution clicking the DONATE button at the top of our webpage. Thank you so much for your support.
Below is the line-up for 7am, Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays thru March. Previous program dates are available on the 7am KBCS Features program page:
Tuesday – March 12th
7am – News Letters on the Air – Black Women Writers in History
7:30am – Modern Language Association – What’s the Word? Women Public Intellectuals
Wednesday – March 13th
7am – The Kitchen Sisters – Buildings Speak: Stories of Pioneering Women Architects
Thursday – March 14th
7am – Popaganda – A Brief History of Women in Comics
7:30am – Modern Language Association – What’s the Word? Women Warriors
KBCS Spring Fund drive Week! – Please contribute with a financial donation –
Tuesday – March 19th
7am – The Hidden Economics of Remarkable Women
– HERO Training Africa’s New Female Leaders —
Wednesday – March 20th
7am – New Letters On Air – Isabel Wilkerson – Pulitzer Prize-winning Journalist
7:30am – Making Contact – Black Women in History
Thursday – March 21st
7am- The Kitchen Sisters – House/Full of Black Women
Last week of the month –
Tuesday – March 26th
7am – Camino Real Productions, LLC – Margaret Sanger – Woman Rebel
Wednesday – March 27th
7am – I Spy: Real Life Spy Stories featuring Joanna Mendez, CIA’s Former Head of Disguise and Amaryllis Fox, former undercover agent
Thursday – March 28th
7am – Let’s Talk About Race: International Women’s Day is Every Day
Additional segments during the day are from:
SLB Radio – Women’s History Month
WDSE – Women’s History Month series
I hope these featured programs add to the education of our collective history and the celebration of Women’s History Month. Please continue to share beyond this month. KBCS strives to do more to represent more communities.
Thank you again for your support.
Sincerely – Gregory D’Elia, KBCS Operations Manager
Interfaith Environmental Advocacy
Reverend AC Churchill is the Executive Director at Earth Ministry Washington Interfaith Power and Light. The Ministry helps religious communities advocate for strong environmental policies and provides strategic guidance to religious communities working toward environmental justice.
Churchill talks about how they came into the world of interfaith environmental advocacy and lessons they’ve learned through their work.
Producers: Lucy Braginski and Yuko Kodama
Photo: AC Churchill
The Women’s Liberation Movement in Seattle
The Seattle area has a particularly distinctive feminist history. Dr. Barbara Winslow, Professor emerita at Brooklyn College, Founder of the Shirley Chisholm Project and author of Shirley Chisholm: Catalyst for Change came out with the book Revolutionary Feminists: The Women’s Liberation Movement in Seattle last year. She describes why Seattle’s feminist activism is unique and highlights some key moments, including a story Fannie Lou Hamer shared in Seattle about her own experience with reproductive rights.
Producer: Yuko Kodama
Photo: Portion of book cover – Revolutionary Feminists: The Women’s Liberation Movement in Seattle
Vashon Green School
Here’s a highlight of Vashon Green School, a K-5 school, founded by educator, activist, photojournalist and farmer, Dana Schuerholz on Vashon Island’s seedbees farm.
Producer: Yuko Kodama
Photos: Yuko Kodama
Astra – A Tree Facing Removal by Development
Gratitude Gatherings are held for trees facing removal in the face of new housing. They’ve been an event in Seattle neighborhoods since Luma, a Western Red Cedar, was first honored and ultimately protected in the summer of 2023.
A gathering was held recently for another Cedar, named Astra, whose fate still hangs in the balance. Tree advocates want to see decisions about trees on residential properties taken out of the hands of the Department of Construction and Inspection and moved into a new city Department of Climate and the Environment.
Producer: Martha Baskin with help from Daniel Guenther at Jackstraw Productions
Photos: Martha Baskin
KBCS Spring News
KBCS Spring News: Welcome to a Season of Renewal and Rebirth!
Dear KBCS Listeners and Supporters,
As the days grow longer and nature comes alive with vibrant colors, we welcome the arrival of spring with open arms. This is a time of renewal, growth, and endless possibilities. I hope this newsletter finds you all in good spirits and ready to embrace the wonders of this season of regrowth and new beginnings.
Here is what’s blooming at KBCS:
- Exciting New Programming:
Spring brings with it fresh beginnings, and we are thrilled to introduce a new series of educational and cultural program offerings on KBCS that were chosen to inform, educate, and offer a more structured forum for a more balanced debate of the prominent issues and topics of the day. On Monday, tune in for Philosophy Talk, a program that challenges listeners to identify and question their assumptions, and to think about things in new ways. On Tuesday, you can listen to the largest and oldest public affairs forum in America, the Commonwealth Club of California, where for over 90 years distinguished speakers have shared their experiences and ideas in a nonpartisan forum that strives to bring a more balanced viewpoint on the issues and a serious commitment to “stick to the facts.” Wednesday at noon, features the City Arts & Lectures series with leading figures in the world of arts and ideas in literature, criticism, science, and the performing arts. On Thursday, KBCS presents Open to Debate, a new program that seeks to restore balance to the public square through expert moderation, good-faith arguments, and reasoned analysis on topics of science, technology, politics, culture, and global affairs. Finally, we will round out the week with a cultural program offering that features one of our region’s favorite sons, Rick Steves, who is also one of public broadcasting’s favorite personalities with his weekly radio series Travel with Rick Steves, a program that features great conversations with special guests and travel experts. Check it out, each weekday at noon on KBCS.
- KBCS News Director, Yuko Kodama, has announced that she is leaving KBCS:
Our popular News Director, Yuko Kodama, has announced her resignation after serving for the past 7 years as the KBCS News Director. Yuko is an amazing journalist, a highly respected collaborator, and a compassionate human being. Her large body of work with its focus on stories of social justice will never be forgotten. I know that we will all miss her and offer Yuko our best wishes for wherever life’s journey takes her next. KBCS will now begin the search for our next News Director which will be conducted through the Bellevue College Department of Human Resources. A search team will be established shortly to begin the formal hiring process.
- KBCS Annual Spring Fundraiser kicks off on Friday, March 15.
Our KBCS Membership/ Development Manager, Ben Brandow, has set the date for our annual Spring Fundraising campaign. The on-air portion of the campaign will begin on Friday, March 15th, and run through Monday, March 25th. Join us for a celebration of our over fifty-year tradition of community radio programming across the Puget Sound region. KBCS is a “self-support” educational nonprofit radio station that depends on the financial contributions and generosity of our listeners and supporters for over 80% of yearly operating funds.
- World News Radio KBCS HD2 now streaming live online:
Some of you will be surprised to learn that there is more to KBCS than just our longtime flagship KBCS-FM-HD1 Community Radio format. KBCS also broadcasts and streams our World News Radio KBCS-HD2 News and Fine Arts radio programming around the clock. The base programming of World News Radio KBCS is a live satellite feed from London of the BBC World Service. The BBC World Service is one of the most respected and trusted news outlets in the world. This broadcast stream also features a variety of independent specialty news programs during the day. During the weekday evenings, sit back, relax, and enjoy beautiful symphonic concerts and chamber music from the world’s leading symphony and chamber music orchestras. On Sunday evenings you can listen to thought-provoking and highly imaginative radio dramas from the award-winning LA Theater Works. This program features contemporary actors from both stage and screen sharing their talents and creativity by performing in a “theater of the mind.” Our World News Radio KBCS HD2 programming can be heard over the air through our HD radio digital broadcast transmission, and now streaming online at www.worldnewsradiokbcs.com
- Stay Connected: Do not miss any of our popular live in-station interviews with musicians, during Iaan Hughes, Roots, Rock, and Soul show now heard each weekday from 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m. on KBCS-FM-HD1. Also join us during the evenings, overnight, and all through the weekend for an eclectic and diverse mix of amazing music programs produced and hosted by local community volunteers and students. Be sure to follow us on social media, subscribe to our KBCS newsletter, and visit our website regularly at kbcs.fm for the inside scoop on all things new this spring and much, much more.
As we embrace the new spring season’s spirit of renewal and growth, all of us here at KBCS are grateful for your continued moral and financial support as we embark on the next 50 years of great radio programming here in the beautiful Pacific Northwest.
Thank you for your time,
Dana Lee Buckingham, KBCS General Manager and Executive Producer of World News Radio KBCS-HD