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Pacifica Foundation also operates the Pacifica Network, a program service supplying over 200 affiliated stations with various programs, primarily news and public affairs. [3] It was the first public radio network in the United States and it is also one of the world's oldest listener-funded radio network.
The show is also available online, streamed live from KPFA.org (which podcasts the show), or from Negativland.com, where many older episodes are available as well. As of July 2021, approximately 1300 episodes are stored at the Internet Archive. It is the group's plan to digitize and archive every episode ever made.
1 KPFB rebroadcasts KPFA for 99% of its schedule. 2 KMUE and KLAI rebroadcast KMUD full-time. 3 KAQA rebroadcasts KKCR full-time. 4 KZYZ rebroadcasts KZYX full-time. 5 WGDH rebroadcasts WGDR. 6 KTCB rebroadcasts KMUN full time.
Pacifica continues today to be a listener-supported network of stations. The main KPFA transmitter is a 59 kilowatt class B, though there is a booster KPFA-FM3 in Oakley. KPFB 89.3 is a smaller station, also in Berkeley, that covers areas of Berkeley that are shielded from the main KPFA signal by the Berkeley Hills. It also carries some ...
He also hosted a weekly radio program called Over the Edge on the Berkeley, California, radio station KPFA, for more than 30 years. [1] Joyce was born in Keene, New Hampshire. Originally a visual artist, he earned a master's degree in painting from the Rhode Island School of Design before moving to the Bay Area, where he lived most of his life.
Flashpoints is a daily, politically progressive investigative news and public affairs program broadcast weekdays at 5 p.m. PST on Pacifica Radio station KPFA-FM (94.1) in Berkeley, California. The program is broadcast on Pacifica's national feed. [citation needed]
Hill created Music from the Hearts of Space in 1973 as a weekly three-hour local radio program on Pacifica station KPFA-FM in Berkeley, California.National syndication of a one-hour version of the program began in 1983 and grew to a network of over 290 NPR affiliate stations.
The Black Mass was a horror-fantasy radio drama produced by Erik Bauersfeld, a leading American radio dramatist of the post-television era.The series aired on KPFA (Berkeley) and KPFK (Los Angeles) from 1963 to 1967, on an irregular schedule.