Content in partnership with Morning Edition

NPR’s Morning Edition Live From Youth Radio

03.18.16
NPR’s Morning Edition Live From Youth Radio
NPR Morning Edition (2)

NPR’s Morning Edition broadcast live from Youth Radio’s downtown Oakland studios March 21-25, 2016. Host David Greene and NPR partnered with Youth Radio’s local young reporters to co-produce and co-host stories covering Bay Area and national hot topics, trends and culture—all from a youth perspective.

Throughout the week, listeners heard student reporters from the Peabody award-winning Youth Radio as part of Morning Edition’s daily line-up. From gentrification and the San Francisco Bay Area’s housing crisis to Oakland’s vibrant arts scene and the 2016 Presidential Election, Youth Radio’s coverage highlighted youth voices on the week’s biggest stories.


 Friday, March 25th, 2016

Kenshe and David How Teens See The 2016 Election NPR's David Greene talks with Youth Radio journalists Desmond Meagley, Billy Cruz, and Kensha Secrease about how young people approach politics, first time voting, and the issues they care about from college debt to growing up in an age of terror and economic inequality.
         

 Thursday, March 24th, 2016

Teen Girls Flip The Script On Social Media For many teen girls, the Internet can be hateful place. To counter the negativity, they've been coming up with their own social media solutions. According to Pew, 73 percent of teen girls use social media to get support from peers, so they've been creating spaces where teens play into the positive and taking national conversations about gender into their own hands.
 
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Finding The Right Balance And Overcoming Fear
The perspectives of two young men. One who switched roles with his father after his dad became ill. And another who conquered stage fright.
             

Wednesday, March 23rd, 2016

HeavenMaskhorizontalOnly Smiling On The Outside: Teens Hide Depression  Nearly one-third of teens between the 9th and 12th grade show symptoms of depression, according to the Childtrends, a non-profit research organization that analyzed statistics gathered from the CDC. In this audio diary style feature followed by a conversation, Youth Radio explores how young people build healthy habits (through friendships and technology) to get through tough emotional times.
       

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2016

1457731884906Latino Youth Vote 2016 We talk about the “Latino vote” as if it were a thing, but in fact Latino voters are not easy to pin down because of their diversity. This is especially the case as the demographic skews younger. Youth Radio’s Nila Venkat has been talking to Latino college students around the country and looking into what defines this influential group of voters.
   
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Teens Take On Election 2016
In today's increasingly charged political climate, the youngest voters are the least likely to identify with a political party. Fifty percent of Millennials describe themselves as political independents, according to a 2014 analysis from the Pew Research Center. Morning Edition host David Greene speaks to Youth Radio reporters Nila Venkat and Amber Ly about young people's rejection of the two-party system. Listen below
 
   

Monday, March 21st, 2016

IMG_1299Young Adults Seeking Public Housing? Good Luck

Youth Radio looks at the ripple effects of a little-known restriction that blocks low-income college students from accessing public housing. While applying for public housing as a low-income student was once simple, that has changed in the last decade. In San Francisco, so-called “transitional age” youth face skyrocketing rents and limited options, especially those who want to pursue their dreams of higher education.

      OaktownOaktown
Oaktown is an interactive map of neighborhoods across Oakland that are changing in ways many locals never imagined. Youth Radio’s reporters, designers, and coders have filled the map with stories. Oaktown is a record of Oakland’s transformation: an evolving history of gentrification aimed at revealing the soul of a city. You’ll meet teens, elders, Oakland natives and newcomers–who all share how they've experienced the city's dramatic change.
   

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Downtown Oakland Tour

Oakland's changing all around us. Youth Radio's Senay Alkebulan sees his own neighborhood, West Oakland, as "ground zero" for gentrification. But the whole city's affected--including downtown, where Uber's ready to expand its huge headquarters. Join Senay and NPR's David Greene as they walk the streets and sit down with public librarian Dorothy Lazard, who runs the downtown History Room.

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Invest in the diverse voices that will shape and lead the future of journalism and art.
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