Radio Feature

PRI's The World

Creole in Paris

Antillean Creole is the language spoken in the French Caribbean Islands of Guadeloupe and Martinique. To most French people, those are resort destinations. But that changed earlier this year after a series of protests on the island. About a half million people from Guadeloupe and Martinique live in Paris. They are French citizens but they don’t always feel like it. This year, for the first time, two public high schools are offering Antillean Creole language classes. Jacob Fenston reports from Paris.

KALW's Crosscurrents

Voodoo rhythms reach across cultures

When renowned Haitian drummer Daniel Brevil moved to Oakland last year from Port-au-Prince, he found keeping his culture alive meant reaching out to a non-Haitian audience. Since January he’s been teaching rhythms with roots in voodoo and slave rebellion to Bay Area residents.

The California Report

San Quentin’s Organic Garden

In a corrections facility filled to twice its capacity, inmates at San Quentin Prison have created a tiny retreat within the prison-yard walls: an organic garden. We visit the prison to find out how roses and geraniums exist in a world of razor wire and execution chambers.

The California Report

Letters to Obama

Among those pinning their hopes on President-elect Obama are some who are far too young to vote. Middle school students at Oakland’s Melrose Leadership Academy wrote down their thoughts for the new president, and a teacher and school psychologist are taking those letters and essays to Washington for the inauguration. We visited their classroom to record some of their letters.

The California Report

Pacific Pinball Expo

Pinball may seem a bit primitive compared with today’s dizzying video games. But that metal ball bouncing off bumpers and setting off bells and blinking lights still has passionate fans. This weekend, many of them are descending on the Bay Area for one of the country’s largest pinball expos.

The California Report

California Song: “California Blues”

Jimmie Rodgers, the “Father of Country Music,” was best known for songs about his native Mississippi or peach-pickin’ time in Georgia. But he did visit the Golden State on occasion and it inspired his Blue Yodel Number Four. From Oxford Mississippi, blues music writer Scott Barretta explains—what’s a blue yodel?

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