This newsletter is made possible by KQED members. Donate now to join our member community in supporting local public media. | |
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Fan-Favorite ‘Sanditon’ Is Back with a New Season | |
| Based on Jane Austen’s final unfinished novel, the acclaimed Masterpiece drama left fans with a lot of unanswered questions at the end of the first season. The new season picks up nine months after the end of season 1 as Charlotte returns to the beautiful seaside resort and soon attracts the attention of not one but two new suitors. Watch the season premiere of Sanditon on Sunday, March 20, at 9pm on KQED 9, or stream it on the PBS Video App. | |
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Antiques Roadshow Is Coming to the Bay Area: Win a Pair of Tickets! | |
| Antiques Roadshow is back on the road and will be coming to Woodside, California, on June 22! Do you have their next big find? Enter to win a pair of free tickets to the show at the link below; the deadline is Monday, March 21. | |
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Explore the Life and Career of Nancy Pelosi | |
| Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi has gained and wielded power and faced grave challenges to her leadership and to American democracy across three decades. Watch a new episode of Frontline, “Pelosi’s Power,” on Tuesday, March 15, at 9pm on KQED 9 or on the PBS Video App the day after the premiere date. | |
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‘If Cities Could Dance’ Is Back with a New Season | |
| KQED’s Webby Award-winning online video series If Cities Could Dance is back with a new season traveling across the country to showcase artists who celebrate, vitalize and transform their city's cultural tradition through dance. Watch the season premiere on Wednesday, March 2, at kqed.org/arts or on YouTube.com/kqedarts. | |
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| ODC | Five decades of virtuosic, exuberant, and fearless dance Celebrate ODC's 50+ Anniversary at Dance Downtown March 31 to April 10, 2022 at the Blue Shield of California Theater at YBCA . This incredible program features two seminal works by ODC Founder and Artistic Director Brenda Way that exemplify the company's emotional and virtuosic choreographic style: “Investigating Grace”and “Speaking Volumes.” The season also features world premieres by guest choreographers Amy Seiwert and Dexandro Montalvo, two innovative artistic voices who have long histories with ODC. Visit odc.dance/downtown for tickets. |
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Special Programming Coming to KQED for Women's History Month |
To celebrate Women’s History Month, KQED is airing a special TV programming lineup that includes Quest for Beauty; When Patsy Cline Was Crazy; Bring Her Home; Betty White: First Lady of Television and much more. Click the link below to find the premiere dates. | |
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KQED’s Annual Report to the Community Is Here |
Discover some the stories and projects we’ve created over the past year that you may not know – or may not know much – about, and their impact in our new Annual Report. You’ll also find a picture of our financial year, information about the awards we’ve won and much more. | |
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KQED’s ‘SOLD OUT’ Is Back for a Second Season | |
| Every year, at least 3.7 million evictions are filed in the United States. That’s far more than the number of homes that people lost to foreclosure at the height of the Great Recession. In the second season we look at the process of evictions from all angles, including the way evictions impact the community, which individuals are more likely to be evicted, the power of land ownership, a tenant's right to counsel in a court of law and how we can prevent eviction in the first place. The second season of SOLD OUT: Rethinking Housing in America launched on February 14 with new episodes dropping on Tuesdays through March 14. Find SOLD OUT wherever you get your podcasts or visit kqed.org/podcasts/soldout. | |
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Learn About Our Journalists’ Origin Stories in Public Media | KQED’s journalists are the cornerstone of our work. They also have something in common with you: a dedication to public media. We recently asked KQED staff to share their origin stories; the experiences that brought them to a career in public media. The snippet of the comic above shows that Scott Shafer started down the road to a career in news at a young age. You can find the rest of Scott’s story, along with all of the KQED origin story comics, at kqed.org/originstories. |
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