
The Bay
1,211 episodes — Page 1 of 25
Producer Jessica Kariisa Says Goodbye to The Bay
How Will Artists Adapt to AI in the Music Industry?
When We All Get to Heaven: Inside a Queer SF Church During the AIDS Crisis
‘We’re Still Here’: Celebrating Juneteenth in the Fillmore
The South Bay Plays Host to the World Cup
What Will Pacifica Do With Its Iconic Pier?
The Immigrant Youth Finding Safety in Local Soccer Leagues
Why California Takes Forever to Count Ballots
Trans Kids and the People Who Love Them
California’s Primary Results So Far
A Teacher Was Fired for Sexually Harassing Students. Why Did California Let Him Continue Teaching?
Three Recent Graduates Share Their Thoughts on AI
SF's Congressional Race, Local Tax Ballot Measures, and Richmond’s Mayoral Election
These Protesters Could Go to Prison for Blocking the Golden Gate Bridge
The Berkeley Physicist Whose Invention Changed Surfing Forever
At SF Carnaval This Weekend, Freedom and Resistance Take Center Stage
Benicia Wants to Be a Model for Life After an Oil Refinery. Can It?
Homelessness is Down in SF, But Not For Families
Community Childcare Centers on Shaky Ground After Transitional Kindergarten Expansion
The Workers Who Make SFO Go 'Round Want Higher Wages
PG&E Bills Are Going Up. Here’s Why
Can the Valkyries Take It to the Next Level?
Inside Elon Musk and Sam Altman's Battle Over OpenAI
Raising Kids in the Bay? It Comes With Compromises
The Civic Joy Fund Promises to Help ‘Revitalize’ SF. Some Artists Want No Part in It
Oakland Makes It Easier to Sweep Encampments, California Billionaire Tax, and SF Library Weddings
Inside California’s Last Nuclear Power Plant
Medi-Cal Cuts Are Coming. Contra Costa County Is Bracing for Impact
The Governor’s Race Changes Shape — Again
One Way to Keep Teachers in the Bay? House Them
Why Do BART Announcements Sound So Ancient?
The Rise and Fall of Eric Swalwell
Career or Kids? Child Care Costs Force Parents to Choose
Your Stories About Making Friends
An East San José Teacher Reckons With Cesar Chavez’s Legacy
Who Will Replace Nancy Pelosi? Hear 3 of the Candidates Debate

San José Unified Plans to Close 5 Schools
Last week, the San José Unified Board of Education voted 3-2 to close 5 elementary schools and relocate another. District leaders, citing declining enrollment, say that these closures will make it easier to provide adequate services and programs to students. But many parents are furious and are vowing to fight back. Links: San José School District Moves to Close 5 Elementary Schools | KQED Alleging Discrimination, San José Parents Try to Fight School Closures | KQED Email us: [email protected] Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

In Alameda, Sea Level Rise Is Happening on All Sides
The city of Alameda sits on a man-made island surrounded on all sides by water, making it a strong case study for how the Bay Area could address sea level rise. That’s because the city, with its 360-degree waterfront, will need to use every tool available to protect itself. Links: For This Bay Area Island City, Water Is Coming From All Sides Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Foster City Cyberattack, Jury Finds Meta and Google Negligent, and Can SF’s Small Clubs Survive?
In this edition of The Bay’s monthly news roundup, Ericka and Alan are joined by KQED senior editor Alexander Gonzalez to discuss a ransomware attack that hindered services in Foster City, a rare verdict in a case about Meta and Google’s role in fueling a youth mental health crisis, and whether San Francisco’s small clubs can survive. Links: Bay Area city declares state of emergency 6 days after cyberattack (SFGate) Foster City: City's Phone, Email Services Restored After Cybersecurity Breach Last Week (SFGate) Jury finds Meta and Google negligent in social media harms trial (NPR) Can San Francisco’s Small Clubs Survive? (KQED) Become a KQED member Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

‘It’s Inhumane’: After Sunnyvale Father’s Deportation, Family Trauma Lingers
EIn the early weeks of President Donald Trump’s second term, Ulises Peña Lopez, a husband and father, was arrested by ICE outside his home in Sunnyvale. During the encounter, he says he was severely beaten and suffered a heart attack and stroke. Last October, Ulises was deported to Mexico. Here in the Bay Area, his wife Aby and 4-year old daughter Emily are still reeling from the impacts of his deportation. Links: A Year After ICE Detained South Bay Immigrant, Family Trauma Lingers Email us: [email protected] Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Why California Has the Nation’s Most Expensive Gas
The U.S. and Israel’s war in Iran is leading to a global surge in gas prices, including in California, where the average is now $5.88 per gallon according to AAA. While the war with Iran is the main reason prices have increased, California has had more expensive gas for years, in part to policies that are meant to help the state reach its climate goals. Alejandro Lazo with CalMatters explains why gas is so expensive here. Links: California passed a law to curb spikes in gas prices. Why isn’t it using those powers now? Some California Democrats pitch gas price relief as prices at the pump soar Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Lowrider Community’s Long Fight to Ride Freely
This month, the United States Postal Service unveiled a new set of stamps honoring the lowrider community. This federal recognition comes three years after California lifted a decades-old ban on lowrider cruising. The state, widely understood as the birthplace of lowrider culture, has also historically been unfriendly to it. For decades, lowriding was blamed for traffic and alleged connections to gang violence. KQED’s Paloma Yaritza Abarca explains the years-long fight by community members to let their cars ride freely. This episode originally aired Nov 3, 2023. Links: The Provocative, Rebellious and Flamboyant Origins of Lowriding | KQED For Lowriders in San Francisco, It’s Not Just a Stamp — It’s Respect at the Federal Level Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sexual Abuse Allegations Against César Chavez Rock California
A New York Times investigation published Wednesday revealed that iconic farmworker organizer Cesar Chavez sexually abused women and underage girls for years. Chavez, who died in 1993, is honored and memorialized in public schools, street names, and buildings across California and the Bay Area. The news has sent shockwaves throughout the state, especially among Latino and labor organizers. Links: César Chavez Was a Hero to Farmworkers. Now They Confront the Pain of Alleged Abuse | KQED California Weighs Renaming Parks, Streets After Cesar Chavez Amid Abuse Allegations | KQED Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

AI Is Changing Tech Work. Here’s Why It Matters for the Rest of Us
Artificial intelligence has rapidly changed what tech workers in the Bay Area do every day. Whether you’re a software engineer or you work in sales, most employees at tech firms are expected to regularly use AI. Rya Jetha with the San Francisco Standard explains how AI is affecting tech employees across the industry, and how these changes could be a sign of what’s to come for the rest of us. Links: AI writes the code now. What’s left for software engineers? ‘Engineer’ is so 2025. In AI land, everyone’s a ‘builder’ now AI is booming. Tech jobs in San Francisco are not Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Your Kitchen Countertop Could Be Making Workers Sick
Engineered stone, or quartz, is a man-made material made with high concentrations of silica that is commonly used to make kitchen countertops in the U.S. And it’s making the workers who cut this material sick. And even though California has safety rules in place to reduce the risk to workers, some say it’s time to ban the use of engineered stone altogether. This episode first aired on Dec. 15, 2025. Links: Doctors say measures to control an incurable lung disease aren't enough : NPR As Lung Disease Threatens Workers, Lawmakers Seek Protections for Countertop Manufacturers - KFF Health News Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Alysa Liu’s Bay Area Homecoming
On Thursday, thousands of people gathered in Oakland to welcome home Olympic figure skater and gold medalist Alysa Liu, who won the women’s singles gold medal in the 2026 Winter Olympics last month. Liu, who was born in Richmond and grew up training in Oakland, is the first American woman to win gold in her sport since 2002. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

A Crowded Race for California Governor
With Gov. Gavin Newsom limited to two terms, California’s got a wide open governor’s race. Eight Democrats and two Republicans will be on the ballot in the June primary; from there, the top two finishers, regardless of party, will head to a runoff in November. KQED’s Guy Marzorati explains why this governor’s race is the most wide-open in decades. Links: California’s Governor’s Race Is Breaking an 80-Year Political Mold | KQED Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

How Oakland Is Fixing One of Its Most Dangerous Roads
EWest Oakland’s 18th Street is one of the city’s most dangerous for pedestrians, cyclists, and drivers, with wide lanes, hidden stop signs, and virtually nonexistent crosswalks in a residential area. It's one of many Oakland roads that has not been fixed for decades. Now, improvements are finally coming to 18th Street. The Oaklandside’s Jose Fermoso joins us to talk about what changes are on the horizon, and how upgrading roads can pave the way for broader changes in the city. Links: 18th St. is one of Oakland’s most dangerous. Here’s how the city is fixing it Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

All Aboard the 67, SF's Most Delayed Bus
The 67 is Muni’s most delayed bus line, snaking through the hills along Alemany Boulevard and Bernal Heights, ending at the 24th and Mission BART station. However unreliable it can be, it still serves an estimated 800 daily riders. But as SFMTA faces a budget deficit of more than $300 million in July, the 67 and other bus lines are at risk of disappearing if voters don’t approve ballot measures to fund transit this November. Links: It’s San Francisco’s Most Delayed Bus. For Riders, a Frustrating Problem May Get Worse Amid Bid to Save Bay Area Transit, Muni Gets a Campaign of Its Own Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Iranian Americans React to US-Israel War on Iran
Many Iranian Americans across California are still in disbelief after the U.S. and Israel launched military strikes in Iran over the weekend. On Saturday, an Israeli airstrike killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who ruled the Islamic Republic of Iran for nearly a half century. Hundreds more have been killed, including at least 6 American military servicemembers. Some Iranian Americans are overjoyed at the death of Khamenei, while others are critical of the U.S. and Israel’s involvement in yet another war in the Middle East. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices