Search Query
Show Search
News
Arts & Culture
Crime
Education
Government
Industry
Regional
Science & Environment
Sports
Health
Arts & Culture
Crime
Education
Government
Industry
Regional
Science & Environment
Sports
Health
Community
Classifieds
Community Calendar
Obituaries
Opinion
Classifieds
Community Calendar
Obituaries
Opinion
About
Programs A-Z
Radio Schedule
TV Schedule
KUCB Staff & Volunteers
Programs A-Z
Radio Schedule
TV Schedule
KUCB Staff & Volunteers
Contribute
© 2026 KUCB
Menu
Your voice in the Aleutians.
Show Search
Search Query
Donate
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
On Air
Now Playing
KUCB
All Streams
News
Arts & Culture
Crime
Education
Government
Industry
Regional
Science & Environment
Sports
Health
Arts & Culture
Crime
Education
Government
Industry
Regional
Science & Environment
Sports
Health
Community
Classifieds
Community Calendar
Obituaries
Opinion
Classifieds
Community Calendar
Obituaries
Opinion
About
Programs A-Z
Radio Schedule
TV Schedule
KUCB Staff & Volunteers
Programs A-Z
Radio Schedule
TV Schedule
KUCB Staff & Volunteers
Contribute
Search results for
Sort By
Newest (Publish Date)
Relevance
Oldest (Publish Date)
Search
Sunday Puzzle: P.E. Class
NPR's Ayesha Rascoe plays the puzzle with Weekend Edition Puzzlemaster Will Shortz and Michelle San Antonio of North Creek, NY.
Listen
•
5:44
The authors of a new book explain pseudoscientific conspiracies, and why we love them
NPR's Ayesha Rascoe talks with Lydia Kang and Nate Pedersen, authors of "Pseudoscience," about why people want to believe in things like Bigfoot, palm reading, and spontaneous human combustion.
Listen
•
6:10
How going fluoride-free has impacted one Alaskan city
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., the new head of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, has said he'll recommend removing fluoride from the country's drinking water. Juneau, Alaska, did so in 2007.
Listen
•
4:08
January 6th ... the board game?
Fight for America! is a new art installation about democracy that invites audiences to play a war game — battling over the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
Listen
•
8:07
Saturday Sports: Women's college basketball giants face-off, Buffalo Bills shoutout
NPR's Scott Simon and ESPN's Michele Steele preview a huge women's college basketball match this weekend, spotlighting the moment many women's sports teams are having.
Listen
•
5:05
Rupert Everett's 'The American No' draws from the rejections he faced in Hollywood
NPR's Scott Simon talks with British actor — and now short story writer — Rupert Everett about his new book, "The American No."
Listen
•
6:26
Trying to keep Food for Peace despite efforts to dismantle USAID
Although it's now on hold, The Trump Administration's move to stop foreign food aid shut off a market that farmers have relied on for 70 years. It has triggered a Republican push to resurrect the "Food for Peace" program.
Listen
•
3:58
Week in politics: Trump, Putin discuss the war, House and Senate Republicans divided
We look at President Trump's relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin and why House and Senate Republicans are charting different paths to passing Trump's budget.
Listen
•
4:29
Top federal prosecutor in Washington previously defended Jan. 6 rioters
Ed Martin advanced bogus claims about election fraud in swing states in 2020, and he spoke at a boisterous rally in Washington the day before the siege on the Capitol.
Listen
•
3:57
Hamas releases three Israeli hostages, the 6th group freed under a ceasefire deal
In a ceremony surrounded by masked Palestinian militants and rubble from the Gaza war, Hamas on Saturday released three Israeli hostages holding U.S., Russian and Argentinian citizenships.
Listen
•
3:54
Previous
163 of 2,972
Next