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Dec 15, 2025 • 29min

New plaque will mark notorious St. Louis slave prison site near Busch Stadium

A notorious "slave pen" in the heart of St. Louis trafficked thousands of men, women and children in the years before the Civil War. In January, a new plaque will be unveiled near its original location, now a parking garage across from Ballpark Village and Busch Stadium. Kenneth Winn, a former Missouri archivist and author of the plaque’s inscription, shares the history of the slave pen and its owner Bernard Lynch. Also, reporter Rocky Kistner discusses the years-long effort to place the memorial and his own family's experience in acknowledging an ancestor's ownership of enslaved people in St. Louis.
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Dec 15, 2025 • 22min

U.S. Figure Skating Championships brings two-time champ Bradie Tennell to St. Louis

Two time figure skating champion and 2018 Olympic team bronze medalist Bradie Tennell has come to St. Louis to compete in the U.S. Figure Skating Championships. An ankle injury in 2023 forced Tennell to take a step back from the sport. She said she used that time to rediscover the joy of figure skating. Now rejuvenated and prepared for the competition, Tennell discusses her figure skating career and her expectations for the upcoming championships.
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Dec 12, 2025 • 16min

What Dick Durbin’s retirement means for Illinois politics in 2026

After more than 40 years in Congress, U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin’s decision not to seek reelection in 2026 has set off a crowded and high-stakes Democratic primary in Illinois. Capitol News Illinois statehouse reporter Brenden Moore joins the Politically Speaking Hour on St. Louis on the Air to talk about the race and the candidates vying to succeed Durbin.
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Dec 12, 2025 • 34min

The U.S. Supreme Court could prolong Missouri's congressional redistricting battle

Missouri is currently in the midst of a titanic battle over a map that seeks to transform Congressman Emanuel Cleaver’s 5th Congressional District into a GOP-leaning seat. But depending on what the U.S. Supreme Court does to the Voting Rights Act, there could be another fight in the near future over the traditionally African-American 1st Congressional District in St. Louis. State Rep. LaKeySha Bosley joins the latest episode of the Politically Speaking Hour on St. Louis on the Air to discuss this issue.
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Dec 11, 2025 • 41min

Russell Byers claimed the plot to kill MLK started in St. Louis. What if he was telling the truth?

In 1968, a St. Louis criminal named Russell Byers found himself in the middle of a conspiracy to kill Martin Luther King. Before his death earlier this year, Byers spoke to St. Louis native and filmmaker Nina Gilden Seavey about the moment he was offered $50,000. He also revealed something he never told the FBI during its official investigations in the 1970s: that he had discussed the bounty before King’s death. Seavey talks about the significance of that timing, details in recently unsealed FBI files, and why she maintains the “Byers Bounty” is a real conspiracy rather than a conspiracy theory. (Correction: James Earl Ray died in 1998. A previous version of this episode stated incorrectly that he is alive.)
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Dec 10, 2025 • 42min

New St. Louis exhibit on “The Wiz” explores the role of fantasy and joy in times of upheaval

When “The Wiz” debuted on Broadway over 50 years ago, Dorothy Gale’s journey to self-discovery and community within the land of Oz was told with groove, funk and emotion. Its impact is still felt today — especially in St. Louis, which shares deep connections to the musical. National tour co-producer for “The Wiz” Nicole Hudson, 4theVille President Aaron Williams and artist Hayveyah McGowan discuss the intersection of art, fantasy and theater. They also share how “The Wiz” has served as a vessel for understanding and holding space for joy — particularly Black joy — over the years.
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Dec 9, 2025 • 23min

'To STL With Love’ celebrates St. Louis’ deep hip-hop roots, culture and influence

The multimedia art exhibition “To STL With Love” celebrates the deep roots and wide-ranging impact of hip hop culture in St. Louis and beyond. Curator Kristian Blackmon shares her own hip hop love story and how each of the borrowed items in the exhibition — from an Akai MPC2000 sampler and event posters to a Ferguson protest gas mask — reflect the history and ethos of St. Louis hip hop culture since the 1970’s. “To STL With Love” runs through the end of January 2026 at Sophie’s Artist Lounge in Grand Center.
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Dec 9, 2025 • 19min

Certified classics and new hits — 'tis the season for holiday tunes by St. Louis artists

The holiday season is here, and if you’re looking for festive tunes to get in the spirit, you’ve come to the right place! Holiday music enthusiast and STLPR visuals editor Brian Munoz and self-described “Grinch” producer Miya Norfleet share their favorite holiday songs by artists that call St. Louis home — from old standbys to new releases.
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Dec 8, 2025 • 22min

Why didn't the raccoon cross the road? Forest Park researchers use GPS to find out

As highly intelligent and adaptive animals, raccoons have learned to live alongside humans for many thousands of years. For the raccoons that live in Forest Park, adaptability includes the careful avoidance of crossing the road, despite the availability of food sources on the other side. Dr. Sharon Deem and Stephen Blake discuss their latest research, which sheds new light on the lives of 10 racoons, including a particularly adventurous forager named “Frankie.”
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Dec 8, 2025 • 20min

$500 monthly payments helped St. Louis families — then a lawsuit and a tornado hit

In September 2023, then St. Louis Mayor Tishaura Jones initiated a Guaranteed Basic Income pilot program that gave $500 direct cash payments to qualifying families across the city. Six months into the program, a lawsuit from members of the Holy Joe Society halted its funding for one month. Despite the pause in payments, researchers and city leaders said the pilot program was successful and provided a public benefit in addition to helping families meet their basic needs. Midwest Newsroom Reporting Fellow Naomi Delkamiller discusses the impact of the GBI pilot program in St. Louis.

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