August 22, 2016 - Segment 2 - We have a Local Roundtable focusing on the Port Covington work meetings, the $15 minimum wage as well as the lawsuit against Marilyn Mosby from the officers charged in the death of Freddie Gray.
August 22, 2016 - Segment 1 - We focus on the lack of media coverage surrounding the historic flooding in Baton Rouge and the Department of Justice's choice to stop utilizing private prisons.
August 19, 2016 - Segment 3 - We talk with Dr. Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor who talks about her highly acclaimed book From #BlackLivesMatter to Black Liberation.
August 18, 2016 - Segment 4 - In our latest episode of Sound Bites, we meet David Carter, also known as the 300 pound vegan, former NFL player Food justice and animal rights activist, and talk about the Vegan Soulfest.
August 18, 2016 - Segment 3 - Senior Producer Mark Gunnery speaks with local musician and artist TT the Artist. TT the Artist has a new album out called Queen of the Beat.
August 18, 2016 - Segment 2 - We discuss Fields Fest, a three-day festival featuring music, film, poetry and art in Darlington MD. We speak to organizers Amanda Schmidt and Stewart Mostofsky about what they plan to bring to the festival.
August 18, 2016 - Segment 1 - We speak with incoming Librarian of Congress, Carla Hayden. Hayden retired from her position as CEO of the Enoch Pratt Free Library. We speak to her about what her position means in the time of new media and what she plans for the position and the importance of free libraries.
August 17, 2016 - Segment 4 - We close the show with our regular series City Paper This Week, where we discuss this week's cover story, "Escape from Planet Earth: Psychedelics, Religion, and Outlaw Scientist John C. Lilly."
August 17, 2016 - Segment 3 - We listen in to the newest episode of our monthly Arts & Culture series, Booth Stories. We will talk with the Baltimore Slam Team who recently became the 2016 National Slam champions
August 17. 2016 - Segment 1 - We speak about the DOJ Report on Baltimore Policing, focusing on considerations of both race and class, jumping off from an article that guest host Dr. Lester Spence wrote for Jacobin, "Policing Class: In Baltimore and elsewhere, repressive policing isn't just about racism - it's also about class."
August 16. 2016 - Segment 2 - We discuss the discourse around race and racism at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro and the media narrative around the athletes and the game
August 16, 2016 - Segment 1 - We discuss the Milwaukee police shooting of 23-year-old Sylville Smith, a Black man the police say was armed, on Saturday. We discuss that shooting and the subsequent protests.
August 15, 2016 - Segment 1 Our entire two-hour show will consider the consequences of the DOJ Report on Baltimore Police that will require mandated reforms.
August 12, 2016 - Two-Hour Special - We bring you a special 2-hour production, Voices of the DOJ Report: Yesterday the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. DOJ released a scathing report detailing racial and gender bias by the Baltimore Police Department in its interactions with Baltimore's African American community.
August 11, 2016 - Segment 2 - We have a Sound Bites that features organizers from the Vegan Soulfest as well as a discussion on Governor Hogan's veto of the Clean Energy Jobs Act.
August 11, 2016 - Segment 1 - We begin the show with a special panel discussion on the Department of Justice report that documented Baltimore police routinely using excessive force and violating the constitutional rights of our citizens.
August 10, 2016 - Segment 4 - We close the show at 11:50 with our regular feature City Paper This Week. We talk with City Paper Editor-in-Chief Karen Houppert.
August 10, 2016 - Segment 3 - We talk with Baltimore community activist, educator and emerging artist Brittany Oliver about her trip to Palestine/Israel in July with a delegation from the Interfaith-Peace Builders.
August 10, 2016 - Segment 2 - We have a discussion on lead poisoning, in light of the fact that both Freddie Gray and Korryn Gaines suffered from this tragic and all-too-preventable disease
August 10, 2016 - Segment 1 - The Department of Justice investigated over a 14 month span andThe report finds that the BPD violated human rights and arrested many citizens unconstitutionally.
August 9, 2016 - Segment 3 - A conversation with writer Arun Gupta about an article he wrote for The Nation: "The Financial Firm That Cornered the Market on Jails."
August 9, 2016 - Segment 2 - National News Roundtable on the Presidential Election. We talk about the third party candidate against Trump and the idea that there is a "lesser of two evils" mentality this election.
August 9, 2016 - Segment 1 - We begin the show with a Local News Roundtable on topics to include Port Covington, the killing of Korryn Gaines, police investigations and more.
August 8, 2016 - Segment 2 - Parenting in the Age of Black Lives Matter. Speaking about racism and how to talk to your kids about their history and the upcoming election.
August 5, 2016 - Segment 4 - Marc Steiner Show Producer Imani Spence brings us an interview about another event happening this weekend at Druid Hill Park, the African Griot Book Fairfor our Children.
August 5, 2016 - Segment 3 - Marc Steiner Show Senior Producer Mark Gunnery brings us an interview with author and performer Isaac Oliver about his book of humorous personal essays Intimacy Idiot.
August 5, 2016 - Segment 2 - It's our monthly conversation on Health & Fitness with fitness trainer and activist Chauncey Whitehead along with Rhonda Silva.
August 5, 2016 - Segment 1 - We begin the show with our weekly feature Tengella's Take with Center for Emerging Media Satirical Commentator Koli Tengella.
August 4, 2016 - Segment 2 - In our latest edition of Sound Bites, our series about our food and our world, we speak with participants from the Baltimore Ecosystem Study, a consortium of long-term research projects examining Baltimore's ecosystem.
August 3, 2016 - Segment 3 - Today is the birthday of James Baldwin, who was born in 1924 and died in 1987 at the age of 63. We host a special segment celebrating one of the greatest creative minds of the 20th Century.
August 3, 2016 - Segment 6 The City Paper talks about Sonja Santelises, the new CEO of Baltimore Schools, Port Covington hearings and the National Conventions.
August 3, 2016 - Segment 5 - The Olympics begin this week, so we check in with Dave Zirin for a sports commentary on the Olympics in Rio and Basketball Players in the Movement for Black Lives.
August 3, 2016 - Segment 4 - We talk with author Marc Lamont Hill about his new bookNobody: Casualties of America's War on the Vulnerable, from Ferguson to Flint and Beyond.
August 3, 2016 - Segment 3 - We turn to the ongoing controversy between Donald Trump and the Khan family, with Zainab Chaudry, Maryland Outreach Manager for the Council on American Islamic Relations.
August 3, 2016 - Segment 2 - We look at the shooting death Monday of Korryn Gaines by Baltimore County police, which also resulted in the shooting of her 5-year old son (who is expected to survive).
August 2, 2016 - Segment 1 - We host an International Roundtable looking at Russia, the DNC email leaks, and the Russian helicopter shot down in Syria.
August 3, 2016 - Segment 1 - We look at Monday's Baltimore County Council vote on and rejection of a bill that would have made it illegal for landlords to discriminate against prospective tenants who use government housing vouchers to pay their rent.
August 1, 2016 - Segment 1 - We begin the week with a Local News Roundtable, covering Port Covington, the proposed increase to a $15 minimum wage, and more.
July 29, 2016 - Segment 3 - We discuss the future of the UK post-Brexit, and what Black Lives Matter has meant in the European context with members of the activist community in the UK.