Tuesday, March 14, 2023 – Federal heating funds seek eligible recipients
Wednesday, March 15, 2023 – Engaged Native youth increasing their profile
Thursday, March 16, 2023 – Remembering Navajo leader Peterson Zah
Native American Radio Network
By Art Hughes
By Art Hughes
By Art Hughes
Monday, February 27, 2023 – 50 years later: Remembering the Wounded Knee occupation
Tuesday, February 28, 2023 – How capping loan interest rates helps Native people
Wednesday, March 1, 2023 – Larry Casuse: taking an ill-fated stand
Thursday, March 2, 2023 – Willow: development vs climate change on Alaska’s North Slope
By Art Hughes
By Art Hughes
Monday, February 13, 2023 – Assessing Biden’s presidency so far
Thursday, February 16, 2023 – Sourcing ethical Native art and jewelry dealers
Friday, February 17, 2023 – What do tribal water rights mean if there’s no water?
Get Native America Calling program previews delivered to your inbox daily or weekly. Sign up for our newsletter today.
By Art Hughes
Monday, February 6, 2023 – Ensuring a long life for sturgeon
https://www.nativeamericacalling.com/wednesday-february-8-can-we-trust-police/
Get Native America Calling program previews delivered to your inbox daily or weekly. Sign up for our newsletter today.
By Art Hughes

Monday, January 23, 2023 — Indigenous interactions with artificial intelligence
https://www.nativeamericacalling.com/tuesday-january-24-2023-the-overincarceration-of-native-americans/
Thursday, January 26, 2023 – Evolving choices for Native family planning
https://www.nativeamericacalling.com/friday-january-27-2023-the-menu/
Get Native America Calling program previews delivered to your inbox daily or weekly. Sign up for our newsletter today.
By Art Hughes

Monday, January 16, 2023 – Teaching about other cultures
Native educators have a keen eye for guiding how schools teach students about Native history and culture. Does that experience also help when teaching Native students about other races and cultures? We’re well aware that colonial educational influences steered generations of students wrong when it comes to understanding Native people. Monday on Native America Calling, we’ll find out what Native educators do to avoid the same mistakes.
Tuesday, January 17, 2023 – Native in the Spotlight: Jana Schmieding
Tuesday on Native America Calling, Jana Schmieding (Cheyenne River Lakota) joins us for an hour-long conversation about her life and career as part of our Native in the Spotlight feature. Got a question you’re dying to ask her? Or maybe you just want to tell her how awesome she is. You can reach her on 1-800-99-NATIVE.
Wednesday, January 18, 2023 – Lumbee Nation vs. the KKK
The Battle of Hayes Pond in 1958 wasn’t much of a battle. But it was a major victory in the effort to stop the momentum of the Ku Klux Klan in the South. Wednesday on Native America Calling, on the 65th anniversary of the night members of the Lumbee Nation showed up in force to stop a KKK rally in Robeson County, we’ll revisit the event and how it continues to be a source of strength and pride for a tribe as it struggles for federal recognition.
Thursday, January 19, 2023 – Do stereotypes influence policy?
Montana—home to 12 federally recognized tribes—is the latest battleground over damaging rhetoric by public officials. One legislator floated a resolution calling on Congress to abolish reservations. The text was reportedly drafted by a businessman heading up what he calls “The States Rights Coalition”. Another official publicly questioned why Native Americans should be allowed to vote. He told a reporter that view is “the consensus opinion among conservatives” in the state. Thursday on Native America Calling, we’ll look at the continuing verbal, legal, and legislative affronts to tribal sovereignty based on outdated, stereotypical, and uninformed perspectives to which tribal officials are forced to respond.
Stay connected to our social channels for updates on Friday’s episode.
Get Native America Calling program previews delivered to your inbox daily or weekly. Sign up for our newsletter today.
By Art Hughes

Monday, January 9, 2023 – The benefits (and drawbacks) of college fraternities and sororities
Social connections and career networking are two of the top reasons college students seek out fraternities and sororities. Greek life supporters also say they offer mentorship, academic support, and life-long friendships. Native fraternities and sororities began in the mid 1990s and also offer a chance for Native students to connect with each other and draw support from shared cultural values. Monday on Native America Calling, we spoke with Mardella Richardson (member of the Lumbee Tribe of NC), national president of Alpha Pi Omega; Dr. Corey Still (citizen of the United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians), member on the national governance board for Iota Gamma; and Destiny Hutson (Cheyenne and Arapaho), vice president and historian of the Theta Chapter (Northeastern State University) of Alpha Pi Omega.
Tuesday, January 10, 2023 – A fair value for Native artists
Federal law already protects artwork legitimately made by Native Americans. But once artwork is sold, the artists typically don’t benefit from any residual appreciation of the work’s value. Some Native-owned galleries and organizations are working to ensure artists get full value for their work. And an effort in Canada aims to pay artists and their heirs resale rights. Tuesday on Native America Calling, we heard from Theresie Tungilik (Inuk), arts and traditional economy advisor for Nunavut government; Mathew Nuqingaq (Inuk), jewelry artist and sculptor; Dawn Iehstoseranón:nha Setford Whiteman Francis (Akwesasne Mohawk), president and founder of Indigenous Arts Collective of Canada; and Colleen Echohawk (Pawnee and Athabascan), CEO of Eight Generation.
Wednesday, January 11, 2023 – When language translations go wrong
The federal government issued translations on official documents to help Alaska Natives following destructive storms there. The trouble is, the text is indecipherable for those it was intended to help. An investigative report found the Iñupiaq and Yup’ik translations from FEMA are essentially unreadable for those familiar with the languages. One appears to be at least partly taken from a World War Two-era publication in the Soviet Union. Wednesday on Native America Calling, we checked in with Tara Sweeney (Inupiaq), Principal and CEO of Tack 71 Strategies and former Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs at the U.S. Department of Interior; Julia Jimmie (Yup’ik), translator and Yup’ik language programming producer; Sam Berlin (Yup’ik), translator and KYUK talk show host; linguist Gary Houlton; and Emily Schwing, freelance reporter based in Alaska.
Thursday, January 12, 2023 – P-22: How tribes want to honor the famous mountain lion
In a city known for celebrities, a mountain lion’s improbable, decade-long occupation of Los Angeles’ Griffith Park earned him a status any movie star would envy. P-22 was euthanized after wildlife officials determined his injuries and illnesses made it impossible for him to continue living in the wild without significant suffering. Now, area tribes say they want a say in what happens to the famous lion’s remains. Thursday on Native America Calling, we looked back on the life of P-22 and got an overview of how some tribes view mountain lions with tribal secretary Kimberly Johnson (Gabrieliño Tongva from the San Gabriel Band of Mission Indians), Alan Salazar (Fernandeño Tataviam Band of Mission Indians), tribal elder on the elder’s council and traditional storyteller; and Dr. Christina Swindall (Gabrieleño), secretary for the Gabrieleño Band of Mission Indians–Kizh Nation.
Friday, January 13, 2023 – Native fictional future perspective
The creators of the new Avatar sequel continue what they see as a science fiction account of colonialism and Indigenous resistance. It’s getting plenty of pushback from Native audiences for some significant missteps. The good news is there are plenty of films, comics, and artwork from Native creators that have a more informed take. Today on Native America Calling, we’ll hear from artist Virgil Ortiz (Cochiti Pueblo); Sadekaronhes Esquivel (Tyendinaga Mohawk), art lead and character designer for “Hill Agency: PURITYdecay”; Michael Sheyahshe (Caddo), artist and founder and technologist at alterNative Media; and Johnnie Jae (Otoe-Missouria and Choctaw), founder of A Tribe Called Geek and co-founding member of the Fan Organizer Coalition.
Get Native America Calling program previews delivered to your inbox daily or weekly. Sign up for our newsletter today.
By Art Hughes

Monday, January 2, 2023 – Stickball: culture and athleticism
Stickball is the older, rougher cousin of lacrosse, developed many centuries ago as both a game and a training exercise. The U.S. government once deemed stickball one of the cultural connections they needed to eliminate in the effort to assimilate Native children through missionary-run boarding schools. The game survived that assault and keeps gaining momentum, played by local clubs and in competitive national tournaments. Monday on Native America Calling, Shawn Spruce learned about the origins and growing future for the nation’s oldest team sport with Mike Slee (Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians), stickball player for the Walelu Cherokee Indian Ball team and the director of operations for the Museum of the Cherokee Indian; Miranda Long Stamper (Creek and a citizen of the Eastern Band of Cherokee), teacher, coach and stickball player; announcer and player Jeremy Bell (Mississippi Band of Choctaw member); Dr. Scott Ketchum (Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma), Chickasaw Nation endowed chair in Native American Studies for East Central University; and Casey Bigpond (Mississippi Band of Choctaw member), cultural revitalization specialist for the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians.
Tuesday, January 3, 2023 – Keeping your cool in 2023
A new year offers a sense of promise. But that promise this year comes with the backdrop of lingering division that infects our personal and professional relationships. Heated political discourse is at the top of the list and permeates everything from how we protect our own health to how we approach international security. Tuesday on Native America Calling, we spoke with Theda New Breast (Blackfeet), master trainer and facilitator for the Native Wellness Institute and board member of the Sovereign Bodies Institute; James Anderson (Lac Courte Oreilles Ojibwe), motivational speaker and success trainer; and D.J. Eagle Bear Vanas (Odawa Nation), motivational storyteller, bestselling author, and owner of Native Discovery Inc., about bridging divisions and avoiding the traps that drive wedges between us.
Wednesday, January 4, 2023 – Indigenous languages and the migrant border crisis
Thousands of migrants, many of whom are seeking asylum as they escape violence, extreme poverty, and oppression, are stopped at the U.S. border. The lack of resources available to them is a serious life-and-death concern. Adding to the many other hurdles is a language disconnect for Indigenous migrants. Wednesday on Native America Calling, we got an update on the crisis at the US-Mexican border and how it affects Indigenous people from Mexico and Central and South America with Odilia Romero (Zapotec), co-founder and executive director of Comunidades Indigenas en Liderazgo (CIELO); Javier Garcia (San Martín Peras from Juxtlahuaca in Oaxaca), interpreters program coordinator for the Mixteco/Indigena Community Organizing Project; and attorney Allegra Love.
Thursday, January 5, 2023 – Unequal discipline for Native students
An investigative report in New Mexico finds Native students are expelled at a far greater rate than their white counterparts. The report focuses on the public school district on the edge of the Navajo Nation with the highest percentage of Native students in the country. Thursday on Native America Calling, we’ll hear from Bryant Furlow, a New Mexico In-Depth reporter and member of ProPublica’s Local Reporting Network who pursued the story, as well as Native education experts about what the data means for students.
If you have information that could help Bryant Furlow’s reporting, reach out via @bryantfurlow.
Friday, January 6, 2023 – Inside the ring: Native pro wrestling
Professional wrestling draws fans in with a mix of theatrics, colorful characters, and campy violence. Indigenous wrestlers comprise only a small faction of the wrestling world, but they are making names for themselves. In the process of entertaining their fans, they risk broken bones, concussions, cuts, and bruises in the ring. Friday on Native America Calling, we’ll hear from Native wrestlers about their love of the pastime and how they’ve forged careers in the industry.
Get Native America Calling program previews delivered to your inbox daily or weekly. Sign up for our newsletter today.