Thursday, November 5 at 8 pm on KPJK TV in the South Bay. Explores the historic art of horse regalia and how the tradition is being revived and reinterpreted by Dakota communities for a new generation. Interviewees discuss the sacred relationship between the horse and the Dakota people and the centuries-old tradition of dressing horses for ceremonies and celebrations. The film also looks at the efforts of artists, educators, and community leaders to preserve and restore the Dakota language, cultural traditions, and lifeways. Beyond chronicling how the Dakota people of Minnesota are working to keep their cultural identity thriving, The Horse Relative also details a story of migration, following the difficult path Native people and their horse relatives traversed as foreigners settled the surrounding lands.
Tuesday, November 3 starting at 3 pm on KRCB TV in the North Bay. PBS NewsHour broadcasts live, primetime coverage of the 2020 general elections.
Tuesday, November 3 starting at 6 pm on KPJK TV in the South Bay. Democracy Now! will cover results from the presidential election to congressional and state races as well as ballot initiatives.
Democracy Now!'s election night special will feature interviews and perspectives that you won't hear anywhere else. We’ll include the voices of activists, analysts, and grassroots leaders discussing how the movements on the ground will go forward following this historic election.
Thursday, October 29 at 9 pm on KRCB TV in the North Bay. Allegations of voter fraud and disenfranchisement in the lead-up to the 2020 election are investigated. With Columbia Graduate School of Journalism, New Yorker writer Jelani Cobb examines how the pandemic is being used to sway turnout.
Tuesday, October 27 at 9 pm on KPJK TV in the South Bay. Explores the personal transformations of six individuals who went from agents of anger and bigotry to advocates for empathy and inclusivity. In the documentary, former neo-Nazi Shannon Foley Martinez discusses how easy it was to direct her unprocessed rage and self-hatred from a sexual assault into a movement rooted in hate. Other interviewees include former white supremacists Arno Michaelis, Tim Zaal and Chris Buckley, who speak honestly and openly about the pain they willfully caused others, their changing beliefs, and their ongoing fight for a more compassionate and inclusive world.