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(Every other hour during the "E" segment, KQED pre-empts Marketplace Morning Report to air its own production, The California Report, [22] featuring news stories of statewide regional interest; The California Report, which has a companion 30-minute weekend edition, is syndicated to other NPR member stations in California, including KCRW and KXJZ.)
The organization's legal name is National Public Radio and its trademarked brand is NPR; it is known by both names. [10] In June 2010, the organization announced that it was "making a conscious effort to consistently refer to ourselves as NPR on-air and online" because NPR is the common name for the organization and its radio hosts have used the tag line "This ... is NPR" for many years. [10]
A Martínez – Co-Host, Morning Edition, Culver City, California; Renée Montagne – Special Correspondent/ former Host, Morning Edition; Peter O'Dowd – Guest Host, Here and Now; Ayesha Rascoe – Host, Weekend Edition Sunday, Co-Host NPR Sunday Puzzle; Ari Shapiro – Co-Host, All Things Considered
In 2007, Keith received first-place in the category "Outstanding Story, Radio" for "Overcrowded Prisons' Wastewater Poses Environmental Hazard (Mule Creek Prison)" on The California Report from the Society of Environmental Journalists in the sixth annual contest. [8] In 2009, Keith joined NPR as a business reporter. [5]
Among the locally produced shows are Forum with Mina Kim and Alexis Madrigal, The California Report and Tech Nation. The KQED-FM newsroom prepares frequent local and California news updates which air between programs, in addition to hourly newscasts from NPR.
KPBS-FM and KQVO have a public radio news-talk format.Weekdays begin with Morning Edition from National Public Radio, with local news updates from the KPBS-FM staff.Most of the other programs are also supplied by NPR and other public radio networks: All Things Considered, Marketplace, Fresh Air, 1A, Here and Now and The World.
KCLU-FM (88.3 FM) is a non-commercial radio station that is licensed to Thousand Oaks, California and serves Ventura County.The station, owned by California Lutheran University, is a member of NPR and airs local news, weather forecasts, and traffic conditions as well as a wide variety of public radio programming for California's South Coast of California and Central Coast of California ...
By 1985, it was the eighth most listened-to NPR station in the country. [3] Amid the expansion of NPR's schedule in the 1980s, Sacramento State sought and was granted a second station. That station, KXJZ, signed on in 1991 at 88.9 FM. By 1996, it had taken all NPR news programming from KXPR. The first full-power satellite, KXSR, signed on in 1992.