Stations
Native Community Stations in the United
States
For a map and listing of Native stations affiliated with the
Center for Native American Radio, a centralized service bureau
for nearly 30 public radio stations serving Native American
listeners, click on "Stations" at www.cnapr.org/.
For a list of Native stations and links to their websitessome
broadcast in their own community and some now have online streaming,
enter here.
Latino Stations in the United States
and Stations in Mexico
Map and listing of Satélite Radio Bilingúe (SRB)
affiliate stations:
www.radiobilingue.org/affiliates.htm
(English and Spanish)
Native Community Stations in Mexico
For a printed map and listing of the affiliate stations of
the Sistema de Radiodifusoras Culturales Indigenista, the "Indigenous
Broadcasting System," go to www.cdi.gob.mx/index.php?id_seccion=23
(Spanish)
Native Stations in the City
CFWE 89.9 FM
Allan@ammsa.com
www.ammsa.com/cfwe/
Canada. Local: Alberta, British Columbia
Alberta's first and most extensive aboriginal radio broadcaster
provides programming via satellite to fifty-four First Nations
communities in Alberta. The station, owned and operated by the
Aboriginal Multi-Media Society, plays Native and country music,
multilingual features, and public interest announcements.
KNBA 90.3 FM
feedback@knba.org
www.knba.org
United States. Local: Anchorage, Alaska
KNBA-FM is the United States' first urban Native radio station.
Playing twenty-four hours, this popular station offers commercial-free
music, news, and cultural and local programming. The station
also produces national programs like Earthsongs, Native
Word of the Day, and National Native News. Its Website
features online listening and a program archive.
Radio Bilingue
www.radiobilingue.org
(English and Spanish)
United States. Local: Fresno, California (KSJV 91.5 FM)
Latino and international cultural information and news, including
Mexican and Latin American musical programming. Among its original
productions are the national Latino talk show Linea Abierta
and Noticiero Latino national news. The Website features
online listening and an archive of selected programs.
For a map of transnational broadcasting stations visit www.cdi.gob.mx/index.php?id_seccion=619
Sistema de Radiodifusoras Culturales
Indigenista (SRCI)
Its Website provides a newscast, broadcast schedule and programming.
For a map and listing of the affiliate stations of the Sistema
de Radiodifusoras Culturales Indigenista (Indigenous Broadcasting
System) go to www.cdi.gob.mx/index.php?id_seccion=23
(Spanish)
XECTZ 1350 AM
radioxectz@laneta.apc.org
http://civila.com/mexico/inipue2/Index.html
Mexico. Regional: Sierra Norte
XECTZ, "the voice of the Sierra Norte," is broadcast in indigenous
languages to more than one thousand locations in the mountain
range between the states of Puebla and Veracruz. It is the flagship
indigenous radio station of the nationally supported Sistema
de Radiodifusoras Culturales Indigenista (SRCI). Its Website
provides audio samples of indigenous music, a broadcast schedule,
and programming.


Programs
For information and links to local and national
programs available online as well as broadcasting schedules, consult
North American Indian Radio Online! at www.thepeoplespaths.net/indianradio.htm
(English) and www.YvwiiUsdinvnohii.net/mainindex.html
(Cherokee) or check the Websites of the individual programs. Some
sites have information, some have audio clips, and some have live
or archived programs available through the Internet.
Independent Radio Series
Independent radio series are produced by independent
producers and organizations for national broadcast, but are not
regularly scheduled, and may not be broadcast in your area. To
hear these and other national programs by radio, check with your
local public or independent radio stations or consult their Websites.
Programs from some of the independent radio series are available
for on-site listening in the Native media collection at the National
Museum of the American Indian in New York. Some are also available
through online streaming as noted.
California Indian Radio Project (CIRP)
Executive Producer: Peggy Berryhill
Project Producer: Joseph Orozco and Susan Newstead
www.flickerfeather.org
The California Indian Radio Project, a thirteen-part documentary
series, opens a window onto the California Indian world, populated
by more than three hundred tribes. Listeners gain an understanding
of the rich mixture of old and new. Tribal participants with
first-hand viewpoints narrate the programs. The series is available
for broadcast free of charge to public radio stations.
Club Red
Executive Producer: Peggy Berryhill
www.nativetelecom.org/realmedia/clubred/index.html
Called "Monty Python with moccasins," this comedy series features
Charlie Hill, Carla Plante, Bruce King, and Steve Tokar. Club
Red to be launched for regular broadcast in 2001. In 2000 the
program was aired as a Thanksgiving special, and a live performance
was given at NMAI's 2000 Native American Film and Video Festival.
Living Voices/Voces Vivas, Series
I
Produced by: the Smithsonian National Museum of the American
Indian
Executive Producers for NMAI: Keevin Lewis (Community Services)
and Elizabeth Weatherford (Film and Video Center)
Project Coordinator: Nan Rubin
Writers: Peggy Berryhill and Ginger Miles
Music motif by Ulali
www.nmai.si.edu/livingvoices/english.swf
(English)
www.nmai.si.edu/livingvoices/spanish.swf
(Spanish)
This fifty-part series of short profiles (40 in English, 10
in Spanish) focuses on Native people from various nations and
backgrounds in the United States, Canada, Mexico, and Panama.
Living Voices is produced by NMAI's Community Services
Department and the Film and Video Center. The series is available
for broadcast free to tribal and public radio stations.
Opening the National Museum of the American Indian
For more information about these programs contact the Native
Media Program at lewisk@si.edu
or phone 301-238-1640.
- Telling Our Story. A one-hour documentary
produced by NMAI's Media Program with KYUK, Bethel, Alaska,
documents the historic day when Native Americans celebrated
the opening of the NMAI on the National Mall. In English.
- First House. Six 5-min. programs about the
NMAI opening, produced by NMAI with Andre Morrisseau and Aboriginal
Voices Radio in Toronto. In English.
- Los Primeros Americanos. Six 5-min. programs
about the NMAI opening, produced by NMAI with Radio Bilingue
Satelite. In Spanish.
Oyate Ta Olowani, Songs of the People
Producers: Milt Lee and Jamie Lee
www.oyate.com
This radio series about Native music was taped in fifty locations,
with musicians from twenty-six different tribes. The thirty-minute
programs explore the meaning of music styles and traditions.
Biographical profiles of the artists and listening samples,
as well as music recordings and other radio programs for sale,
are available on its Website.
Spirits of the Present
Executive Producer/producer: Peggy Berryhill
peggy@nativeamericanpublicradio.com
A series of thirteen half-hour documentary programs on various
issues concerning Native America-casinos, sports, mascots, and
border culture, among others-aired on 427 U.S. and Canadian
radio stations. The series was produced for the Native American
Public Broadcasting Consortium (now NAPT) and Radio Smithsonian.
It is available for on-site listening at NMAI in New York.
National Programs: Broadcast and Online
Many national programs are broadcast Monday through Friday at
regular times by Native Voice One and Radio Bilingüe affiliates
and other independent and public radio stations and are online,
streaming live or through the website's archives. Other programs
are broadcast locally and may be available in addition on CD.
Check the Websites for broadcast and online streaming schedules
and for links to the regular weekly and daily programs' own websites
and/or instructions about how to participate in the live call-in
programs.
Earthsongs
Originating Station: KNBA 90.3 FM, Anchorage, Alaska
Producer/Host: Greg McVicar
www.earthsongs.net
The award-winning Earthsongs explores through commentary, artist
features, and music selections the Native influences that help
shape contemporary American music. Earthsongs's Website provides
online radio listening. Because it is broadcast by AIROS, refer
to www.airos.org
for affiliate stations and an online broadcast schedule.
Echoes in the Wind
Originating Station: WMPG 90.0 /104.1 FM, Portland,
Maine
Producer/Host: Valerie Cartonio
programdirector@wmpg.org
www.echoesinthewind.com
Broadcast Monday from 11:30 am to 1 pm on WMPG 90.0/104.1, this
program features traditional music of America's indigenous people.
Also included are Native American poetry, legends, folklore,
historical notes, news, and in-depth discussions of current
issues. The program can be heard online at WMPG-FM's Website,
www.wmpg.org.
Independent News from Oaxaca
In Spanish. The current political situation in Oaxaca is being
reported and webcast by the University of Oaxaca online at http://mexico.indymedia.org/oaxaca.
Linea Abierta
Originating stations: KSJV
91.5 FM, Fresno
Linea Abierta
is Radio
Bilingüe's live radio call-in program which daily takes
up issues of immigration, cultural life in Mexico, and other
issues of significance to indigenous Latino audiences.
Música Regional Mexicana
Originating Station: KSJV
91.5 FM, Fresno, California
Produced by the Radio Association of Oaxaca (Asociación
Radiofónica Oaxaqueña), this program presents
traditional music of brass bands and marimbas from Oaxaca and
other parts of southern Mexico. It is carried on Satélite
Radio Bilingüe and is broadcast Monday through Friday,
5 a.m. to 6 a.m., Pacific Standard Time. See its Website for
online listening and a local station listing.
National Native News (NNN)
Originating Station: KNBA
90.3 FM, Anchorage, Alaska
Host: Bernadette Chato
www.nativenews.net
Founded in 1987, National Native News is the only daily news
service focused on Native issues. It is currently being broadcast
by 256 public radio stations, often scheduled with Native
America Calling.
Native America Calling (NAC)
Originating Station: KUNM 89.9 FM, Albuquerque, New Mexico
Host: Harlan McKosato
www.nativeamericacalling.com
A production of Koahnic Broadcast Corporation
This one-hour call-in show, broadcast live Monday through Friday
at noon, central daylight time, focuses on timely, topical,
and lively issues in Indian Country. NAC is distributed to twenty-seven
Native American radio stations and National Public Radio. It
is simulcast by AIROS
and Satélite
Radio Bilingüe. AIROS also provides an online archives
of recent programs.
Native Word of the Day
Originating Station: KNBA
90.3 FM, Anchorage, Alaska
Native Word of the Day is a radio spot designed to demonstrate
the richness and variety of Native languages spoken in the United
States, with a word or short phrase presented by a Native speaker.
The spot is broadcast three times a day on KNBA 90.3 FM. Listeners
everywhere can hear the word of the day online on its Website
and also access an archive of past words and phrases.
Wixage Anai Mapuche Radio Show
In Spanish. A production of the Centro de Comunication Mapuche
Jvfken Mapu in Santiago, Chile. This program is heard locally
in Santiago and on-line at www.radiotierra.cl.
Weekly Programs
AlterNative Voices
Originating Station: KUVO 89.3 FM, Denver, Colorado
Producer/Host: Z. Susanne Aikman
www.alternativevoices.org
This program features Native music, interviews, and news reports
relevant to Indian Country. It is live on Sunday mornings from
7 a.m. to 8:00 a.m. on 89.3 KUVO-FM. Live audio streaming is
now available through KUVO radio's Website, www.kuvo.org.
Different Drums
Distributed by AIROS to public radio stations and available
on-line.
Producer/Host: Tricia King
www.differentdrums.com
This weekly hour program of music and commentary by contemporary
Native Americans frequently profiles individual artists or features
current issues in Indian Country. Different Drums has
been honored with eleven state and national awards since its
beginning in 1996. For its online broadcast schedule, see www.airos.org.
First Voices Indigenous Radio
Originating Station: WBAI, 99.5 FM, New York, New York
Hosts: Tiokasin Ghosthorse and Mattie Harper
firstvoices@wbai.org
www.firstvoicesradio.org
Broadcast 10 - 11 am on Thursdays by WBAI, 99.5 FM, in New York
City, First Voices is hosted by Tiokasin Ghosthorse and
Mattie Harper, with indigenous guests from throughout the hemisphere
speaking about numerous issues. First Voices frequently
broadcasts live coverage of indigenous events at the United
Nations and at other institutions in New York. The program is
heard live, and is available on CD. For more information go
to www.firstvoicesradio.org
and also see www.wole.org
and www.earthpeoples.org
or email firstvoices@wbai.org.
Kuna Yala en 30 Minutos
Originating Station: BB Stéreo, 92.5 FM, Panama City,
Panama
Director: Rogelio Albán
Host/Assistant Director: Anelio
Merry López
Kuna Yala en 30 Minutos broadcasts information on important
issues in the Kuna community, as well as other indigenous groups
in Panama and the world. The program, now in its tenth year,
is on-air every Saturday morning from 8:00 to 8:30 am throughout
Kuna Yalathe homelands of the Kunaon both the mainland
of Panama and in the San Blas Islands.
La Mixteca
Originating Station: KSJV
91.5 FM, Fresno, California
Host: Filemón López
This bilingual program in Mixtec and Spanish features music
from Oaxaca in southern Mexico. It provides information and
public service announcements relevant to Mixtec people on both
sides of the border. La Mixteca frequently links U.S.
residents via telephone to Mixtec radio stations in the Mexican
states of Baja California and Oaxaca.


Organizations
Aboriginal Voices Radio
P.O. Box 288, Station B, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
M5T 2W2
info@aboriginalvoices.com
www.aboriginalvoices.com
Canada. By spring 2001 a new initiative to establish
a national network of First Nations radio stations, especially
in urban centers, had gained licenses for two stations-Toronto
and Calgary-with a license pending in Vancouver. The Aboriginal
Voices Web pages are under construction, and online links to
radio programs may not be available. For a transcript of the
radio licensing hearings in Calgary, see www.turtleisland.org/news/calgary1.htm.
For Resolution 92/99 passed by the Assembly of First Nations
on "Development of Aboriginal Radio Services in Toronto & Elsewhere
- December 7th to 9th, 1999," see www.afn.ca/resolutions/1999.htm.
AMARC, World Association of Community Radio Broadcasters
International Office, 666 Sherbrooke West St., Suite 400
Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3A 1E7
Phone: 514-982-0351
Fax: 514-849-7129
amarc@amarc.org
www.amarc.org
(English, French and Spanish)
International. AMARC supports and contributes to the
development of community and grassroots radio, with almost three
thousand members and associates in one hundred and six countries.
AMARC publishes a magazine, InteRadio, and two newsletters,
one of them a publication of its International Women's Network.
Excerpts from publications and information about the organization's
activities worldwide is available on its Website.
The Center for Native American Radio
Executive Director: Loris Ann Taylor, loris@cnapr.org
Director of Services and Planning: Peggy Berryhill. peggy@cnapr.org
Director of Financial Affairs: Kai Aiyetero. kai@cnapr.org
www.cnapr.org
The Center for Native American Public Radio is a centralized
service bureau recently established, with $1.5 million from
the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, to provide technical,
fundraising and programmatic support to nearly 30 public radio
stations serving Native American listeners. Overseen by the
National Federation of Community Broadcasters, CNAPR is also
guided by an advisory council of Native American stations and
community leaders. The Center seeks non-traditional funding
sources to aid the coalition of Native stations, which serve
communities from the Alaskan tundra to the Arizona pueblo to
the Native American populations of America's biggest cities.
In addition to fundraising, the Center provides expertise in
accounting, engineering, programming and other forms of technical
assistance that small stations need to operate.
Koahnic Broadcast Corporation (KBC)
719 East 11th Ave., Suite C, Anchorage, AK 99501
Phone: 907-258-8880
President/CEO: Jaclyn Sallee
National Program Manager: Susan Braine
Feedback@knba.org
www.knba.org
United States. Koahnic Broadcast Corporation provides
American Indian and Alaska Native news and cultural programming
to public radio listeners nationwide. Its national program productions
include Native America Calling, Native Word of the
Day, National Native News, and Earthsongs.
KBC since 1992 has provided a Training Center to support the
development of media careers for Native people. The center currently
operates three primary programs-the Alaska Native Youth Media
Institute, KNBA Apprenticeship Program, and KBC Fellowship Program.
Its Website has information about them and provides the online
radio programming of KNBA 90.3 FM.
Native American Public Telecommunications (NAPT)
1800 N. 33 St., P.O. Box 83111, Lincoln, NE 68501
Executive Director: Frank Blythe
Phone: 402-472-3522
Fax: 402-472-8672
Native@unl.edu
www.nativetelecom.org
United States. NAPT encourages American Indians and Native
Alaskans to create and use public telecommunications to educate
and inform audiences about tribal histories, cultures, and languages.
NAPT produces and distributes programming and provides training.
Its Website provides abundant information on Native radio and
television, numerous links and telecommunication listings, and
a Native American radio station map.
Native Voice One
www.nv1.org
The new all-Native all-the-time radio distributor Native Voice
One, funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, was
launched in July 2006, and began offering internet streaming
on October 1, 2006. NV1 provides an outlet for Indians in urban
centers and for diverse audiences interested in indigenous programming.
Native Voice One currently distributes 11 programs including
Native America Calling, Earthsongs, Alternative
Voices, National Native News and Rezervations.
It has 27 station affiliates, mostly public radio, and provides
a menu of possible programs for them to broadcast. It's actively
seeking additional programming and plans to support more independent
producers to get their work made and broadcast. NV1 programming
is distributed to stations throughout the United States and
Canada.
NMAI Native Media Program
Executive Radio Producer: Keevin Lewis
Phone: 301-238-1640
lewisk@si.edu
Under NMAI's executive radio producer Keevin Lewis, special
and on-going series are produced by the museum in collaboration
with Native American and Latino community producers for broadcasting
on public radio. Information for producers to contribute to
the on-going series Living Voices and Time are
available under "Outreach" at www.americanindian.si.edu.
Northern California Cultural Communications (NC³)
P.O. Box 650, Hoopa, CA 95546
Director: Rhoby Cook
Phone: 530-625-422
Phone: 800-461-3991
Fax: 530-625-5231
www.flickerfeather.org
United States. An independent, Native-controlled media
and education resource organization founded in 1993, Northern
California Cultural Communications is on the Hoopa Valley Indian
Reservation. It serves Native American and rural northern California
communities by providing training in radio production and programming.
The organization has recently produced the thirteen-part documentary
series The California Indian Radio Project.
Satélite Radio Bilingüe (SRB)
5005 E. Belmont Ave., Fresno, CA 93727
Executive Director: Hugo Morales
KSJV Program Information: 800-200-5758
Fax: 559-455-5778
www.radiobilingue.org
(English and Spanish)
United States and Mexico. Radio Bilingüe is the only
national distributor of Spanish-language programming in U.S.
public radio. It is the producer, through its flagship station
KSJV-FM, of many national programs, including the Latino talk
shows Linea Abierta and La Placita Bilingüe,
Noticero Latino national news, and the indigenous documentary
program La Mixteca. Its satellite service distributes
its national and informational programs as well as cultural
programs originating in its affiliates and in Mexico to more
than sixty-five stations in the continental United States, Puerto
Rico, and Mexico. Regularly scheduled music programs focus on
traditional music, sung in Spanish and indigenous languages,
from the Mexican states of Sinaloa, Zacatecas, Oaxaca, Veracruz,
Michoacán, and Guerrero. It also distributes Native
America Calling to its listeners. SRB's Website provides
program descriptions and a schedule for national and affiliate
programming.
Sistema de Radiodifusoras Culturales
Indigenista (SRCI)
Comisión Nacional para el Desarrollo de los Pueblos Indígenas
de México Radio Department
Colonia Tlacopac, Delegación Alvaro Obregón C.P.
01010
Av. Revolución # 1279, México D.F. México
Contact: Citlali Ruiz Ortiz
Phone: (52) (55) 5593 3028
radio@cdi.gob.mx
www.cdi.gob.mx/index.php?id_seccion=23
(Spanish)
México. The Sistema de Radiodifusoras Culturales
Indigenista (SRCI), the "Indigenous Broadcasting System,"
was created in 1979 to provide services for communication, information,
and the support of indigenous cultures. As part of Mexico's
Comisión Nacional para el Desarrollo de los Pueblos Indígenas
(CDI), the national institute for indigenous peoples, SRCI is
supported by the national government. CDI promotes and supports
programs helping indigenous communities in economic development
and in legal, political, cultural, and social areas. SRCI operates
twenty-four radio stations in sixteen states of Mexico.


For More Information
Websites
North American Indian Radio Online!
nlthomas@YvwiiUsdinvnohii.net
www.YvwiiUsdinvnohii.net/mainindex.html
(Cherokee), www.thepeoplespaths.net/indianradio.htm
(English)
North American Indian Radio Online! is a service provided
by the People's Paths Website. It provides links and brief descriptions
of Native American programs and broadcasts. Check the Websites
of the individual programs for detailed information, audio clips,
and the availability of live or archived programs.
Turtle Island Native Network
www.turtleisland.org
Turtle Island Native Network is Canada's online source for
aboriginal news and information, hosting discussions on topical
issues and providing links to government and community organizations
and cultural and educational resources. The Website offers extensive
listings and links to radio stations and programs.
The Vision Maker
native@unl.edu
http://nativetelecom.org/news/
The Vision Maker, the newsletter of Native American
Public Telecommunications (NAPT), is now available online as
well as in print. It reports news in the field of public radio
and provides information on current activities of NAPT, AIROS,
and the many tribal and public radio stations that receive its
programming.
Books and Articles
Michael C. Keith, Signals in the Air: Native Broadcasting
in America, with foreword by Suzan Shown Harjo and Frank
Blythe, afterword by Peggy Berryhill, Media and Society Series
(Westport and London: Praeger, 1995). This first book-length
study of Native communications history emphasizes the influence
and impact of Native broadcast control on tribal communities.
Kallen Martin, "Listen: Native Radio Can Save Languages," Native
Americas 13 (Spring 1996): 22-29. This overview of the issue
of Native language preservation includes interviews with outstanding
Native radio producers in Canada and the United States and provides
detailed information on the use of Native languages and the
possible impact of radio.
Catherine C. Robbins, "Indian Country Radio Sends a Stronger
Signal," New York Times, February 4, 2001. Starting with
a description of the opening at Hopi of KUYI-FM, the most recent
tribal community station, this article provides an overview
of the organizations active in Native radio today.

Image credit: Harlan
McKosato, "Native America Calling" Host Drumbeat for Mother
Earth - Courtesy Joe Di Gangi/Amon Giebel
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