Politics Cascade PBS Ideas Festival | Left, Right & Center: Serious About Satire Mo Elleithee and Sarah Isgur join KCRW podcaster David Greene to debate the impact of political satire and the media's readiness for Trump's campaign. by Cascade PBS Newsroom Staff / May 16, 2024
Politics Cascade PBS Ideas Festival | Critics at Large: Crazy for Crime Are audiences still hooked on true crime? The New Yorker team breaks down the genre with author Patrick Radden Keefe. by Cascade PBS Newsroom Staff / May 15, 2024
Politics Cascade PBS Ideas Festival | Hear Me Out: Living History Historian Heather Cox Richardson talks with Slate podcast host Celeste Headlee about the state of democracy and the presidential election. by Cascade PBS Newsroom Staff / May 14, 2024
Politics Cascade PBS Ideas Festival | The Journal: Just how bad is the U.S Economy? The actual numbers, and how they differ from voters' perceptions, may determine the next president. Kate Linebaugh, Ryan Knutson and Molly Ball explain. by Cascade PBS Newsroom Staff / May 13, 2024
Politics Cascade PBS Ideas Festival | Text Me Back!: A Supreme Court roast Author Lindy West, comedian Guy Branum and democracy expert Meagan Hatcher-Mays raucously skewer our legal system, starting at the top. by Cascade PBS Newsroom Staff / May 12, 2024
News Cascade PBS Ideas Festival | Tug of War: Covering the Crisis in the Middle East CNN’s David Rind and Middle East correspondent Nada Bashir discuss the challenges of covering the crisis in Gaza. by Cascade PBS Newsroom Staff / May 11, 2024
News WA courts are meant to fine convicted sex buyers. Most don’t Courts could have collected over $2.5 million in fees in the past decade, which would have gone to programs to alleviate trafficking. Why didn’t they? by Kelsey Turner InvestigateWest / March 25, 2024
News WA school districts aren’t following up on their truant students Laws on unexcused absences are meant to keep kids safe, but a lack of resources and fear of court have kept districts from completing necessary steps. by Kelsey Turner InvestigateWest / March 5, 2024
Indigenous Affairs How the case of a missing Indigenous teen fell through the cracks No one was looking for Kit Nelson-Mora, despite warning signs, until a friend contacted police over a year after their disappearance in Omak. by Kelsey Turner InvestigateWest / February 14, 2024
Politics Track bills as they move through the Washington Legislature From updates to the cap-and-trade program to proposed AI regulations, follow some of the legislation moving through Olympia's 2024 session. by Cascade PBS Newsroom Staff / January 23, 2024