
Kristie Song
Summer FellowKristie Song is a multimedia journalist based in Berkeley, California. She has previously covered arts and culture for KQED, where she reported on DIY music, zine and comics spaces as well as other diverse Bay Area arts communities.
-
Now Place, an SF organization dedicated to art and community-building for the Asian diaspora, is making way for bilingual zines and workshops.
-
The San Francisco Arts Commission is collaborating with the Chinese Culture Center to welcome public comment on public art proposals for Portsmouth Square.
-
Since the early 2000s, the Bay Area has been home to spaces like the San Francisco Zine Fest, the East Bay Alternative Book and Zine Fest, and the Bay Area Queer Zine Fest. They are places for zine lovers to hang out, find community, and explore the art form. This week, KALW brings you to a zine party in the Mission.
-
Zine culture is deeply rooted in San Francisco’s underground scenes, and the fluidity of the form continues to evolve. Places like the Prelinger Library document its history.
-
Hundreds protested at San Francisco's City Hall on Monday against Mayor Daniel Lurie's proposed budget cuts, which include $200 million in cuts to non profit organizations that provide housing counseling, bilingual language support, and other social services. We went to downtown San Francisco to ask people how this would impact them.
-
A U.S. District Judge in Oakland granted a preliminary injunction Monday that protects organizations providing health and supportive services for LGTBQ people.