The @kcur podcast about the everyday heroes & renegades who shaped Kansas City. 🔎 Made by Suzanne Hogan & @_macmartin. Send ideas to [email protected].
At a time when disinformation and misinformation are putting our democracy at risk, KCUR’s official channels won’t reward that behavior.
Here’s our statement: https://t.co/bskdGjiZ52
Army Pfc. Willy F. James Jr. was finally honored in his hometown of Kansas City.
James was killed in 1945 by a Nazi sniper while trying to save his injured platoon leader. But he was unjustly denied the country’s highest award for valor. https://t.co/iMBI1qUj6N
KCUR’s Overlooked podcast has won the award for best audio project (small market) from the national nonprofit @IRE_NICAR, one of the most prestigious honors in investigative journalism.
https://t.co/yk3XUOXOUe
Julien Eltinge, Bert Savoy, and Karyl Norman were just a few of the famous artists who toured through Kansas City during the heyday of the Shubert and Orpheum theatres.
“Eltinge was internationally known. He was the RuPaul of his day,” Hinds says. https://t.co/4bd8r9mZct
He was the star of that first @NBCBaseball Congress event in 1935, winning four games, striking out 60 batters, leading Bismarck to the championship, and, most importantly, drawing large crowds. (via @KMUW) https://t.co/G0r4k3f64h
The Citizens Association started in the early 1930s and once held enormous influence over city elections. Its power has waned in recent years, but a new, more diverse group is reshaping the organization.
https://t.co/MgxU50uwJz
One of the most comprehensive stories I've read about @WhiteCastle, its history and its impact on American life today. If you Crave, definitely give this a read! 🍔🏰
Beautifully done, @_macmartin! 👏
https://t.co/BvtxkjNMb7
The @WhiteCastle chain began in 1921 in Wichita, Kansas, where its ingenious small burgers kicked off a national craze and inspired imitators of all shapes and sizes.
https://t.co/TTbPsVGJOq
✨ New episode alert ✨
@WhiteCastle's ingenious small burgers kicked off a national craze & inspired imitators of all kinds. But over a century later, the story of how it introduced America to the hamburger has been largely overshadowed. #kshistory https://t.co/Xc4VCLsKqE
@FrankSchloegel We haven't! But she does make a cameo in this episode about labor activist Sarah Lloyd Green, a trailblazer who was a contemporary of Don's but had a very different political agenda. 😉 You can listen to it here. https://t.co/IYSfXD2ylE
Fed up with harassment and housing discrimination, lesbians in 1990s Kansas City dreamed of a place where they could "walk hand in hand, freely down the streets."
https://t.co/AOpYDWOlUl
Missouri residents may have heard ghoulish tales of “Doc Annie” Smith, a physician who looms large in Missouri’s mythology for performing illegal abortions in the early 1900s. Today, the truth about her work has largely disappeared. (@PHKCpod)
https://t.co/qWfI5c3Vso
Happy Valentine's Day to everyone -- especially Kelly's Westport Inn, home to Kansas City meet-cutes for 75 years. 💕 @kcur@BekShackelford https://t.co/63CafFGEiZ
Check out a story I produced on how the Kansas City Chiefs were pioneers in recruiting Black players in the 1960s ✊🏿🏈 @KCURUpToDate@kcur@NPR@stevekraske
Thanks to @HaroldRKuntz3@MacCambridge & NFL Legend Willie Lanier for joining the conversation.
https://t.co/DjwBrT4SPC