It’s a weird transitional moment for public radio. The classical music fans—who do provide fiscal support—are aging into hearing impairment. Younger classical fans most likely are using streaming services.
I’m sorry this is the first time I’ve heard of Kalihweyo’se, and it doesn’t seem to be archived or syndicated as a podcast. For all that WPR personnel shaped NPR structure, there are independent public radio stations in Wisconsin.
I’ve enjoyed listening to WOJB 88.9 from the Lac Courte Oreilles band in Hayward, WI. They livestream on the net. Their program guide is a Google Calendar (argh) and does show As It Happens from 6-7p weekdays. https://www.wojb.org/programming.html
It's a huge change
It’s a weird transitional moment for public radio. The classical music fans—who do provide fiscal support—are aging into hearing impairment. Younger classical fans most likely are using streaming services.
I’m sorry this is the first time I’ve heard of Kalihweyo’se, and it doesn’t seem to be archived or syndicated as a podcast. For all that WPR personnel shaped NPR structure, there are independent public radio stations in Wisconsin.
I’ve enjoyed listening to WOJB 88.9 from the Lac Courte Oreilles band in Hayward, WI. They livestream on the net. Their program guide is a Google Calendar (argh) and does show As It Happens from 6-7p weekdays.
https://www.wojb.org/programming.html
Oh! Their Spinitron (diary) offers more info: https://spinitron.com/WOJB/
As well as several programs that look like they could be on Ojibwa culture, but gotta use an old fashioned radio to hear them.
WXPR out of Rhinelander (with repeaters in Ironwood and Wausau) carries NPR news, curated music, and syndicated shows I enjoy https://www.wxpr.org/wxpr-radio-schedule#weekly
but just National Native News and Indegifi "modern indigenous music" -- last two weeks at https://play.wxpr.org/WXPR/show/215624/Indigefi
CBC does offer your fave shows as full podcasts As It Happens
https://www.cbc.ca/listen/live-radio/1-2-as-it-happens Q.
https://www.cbc.ca/arts/q