Media Database
>
Alexis Madrigal

Alexis Madrigal

Contributing Writer at The Atlantic

Contact this person
Email address
a*****@*******.orgGet email address
Influence score
71
Phone
(XXX) XXX-XXXX Get mobile number
Location
United States
Languages
  • English
Covering topics
  • Computers & Technology
  • Technology

View more media outlets and journalists by signing up to Prowly

View latest data and reach out all from one place
Sign up for free

Recent Articles

kqed.org

John Markoff on Stewart Brand’s Visionary ‘Whole Earth’ - KQED

From his time with the Merry Pranksters to his influence on Steve Jobs to his utopian “Whole Earth Catalog,” Stewart Brand epitomizes the Bay Area counterculture visionary. Brand has “an eerie knack for showing up first at the onset of some social movement or technological inflection point and then…
kqed.org

All You Can Eat: The Bay Area’s Hip-Hop Food Hustles - KQED

The Bay Area has a storied hip-hop legacy. We’ve also got a legendary food scene. Maybe it’s natural that these two core components of the Bay Area would find each other. In our latest edition of All You Can Eat, our series on Bay Area food cultures with KQED food editor Luke Tsai, we’ll talk
kqed.org

Germany Has Created Monuments to Remember the Sins of its ... - KQED

Last year, poet and writer Clint Smith wrote the book, “How the World is Passed,” exploring how the US has failed to come to terms with the reality and legacy of slavery. Now, for an Atlantic cover story, “Monuments to the Unthinkable” he’s traveled to Germany to see how that country has grappled with memorializing
kqed.org

New Book, “Streets of Gold,” Busts Myths About Immigration - KQED

For centuries, America has lured millions of immigrants here with dreams of rising from rags to riches in a short amount of time. But the authors of “Streets of Gold: America’s Untold Story of Immigrant Success,” say that story is mostly a myth. The authors, Stanford professor Ran Abramitzky and Pr…
kqed.org

U.S. Poet Laureate Ada Limón on Elevating and Promoting Poetry When...

Sonoma native Ada Limón sees her work as the nation’s new poet laureate as “elevating and promoting the expansiveness of poetry.” Limón’s poems cover a huge range of subjects, from groundhogs to grief. “Poetry allows us to breathe,” she said in an interview after being selected as poet laureate. “I…
kqed.org

Mexican Singer Silvana Brings Her Genre-defying Music to San ... - ...

Mexican singer Silvana Estrada and the San Jose Jazz Summer Fest have at least one thing in common: they both defy genre. The 25-year-old singer from the coastal Mexican state of Veracruz is now on tour promoting her latest album, “Marchita.” Estrada’s music is rooted in jazz, but spans a fusion of musical styles. The
kqed.org

Expect More Crowds and Higher Prices as Summer Travel Roars Back - ...

Summer travel is on the rebound after a steep decline in 2020. But, as more people indulge the urge to travel this year, prices for gas, hotels and plane tickets have soared. That, along with ongoing concerns about the pandemic are forcing some travelers to rethink how and where they travel. Many pe…
kqed.org

1950 Census Opens Window Into American History - KQED

On April 1st 1950, about 144,000 census takers fanned out across the United States to count the population. Each conversation they had was reduced to a handwritten entry on a census form. Now, 72 years later, the National Archives has released those manuscripts. You can find Marilyn Monroe, Jerry Garcia, Jimi Hendrix, and maybe a
kqed.org

Merger with USF Charts New Direction for San Francisco Art Institut...

The San Francisco Art Institute and the University of San Francisco announced this month that they’re planning to merge. Under the agreement, USF will acquire the cash-strapped 151-year old arts college and offer a program called SFAI@USF in the fall. The move is reminiscent of Northeastern Universi…
kqed.org

Early Findings in ‘Baby’s First Years’ Study Shows Cash Aid Helps B...

Early results of an ongoing clinical trial found that cash aid to low-income mothers increases brain activity in babies – a finding that could help shape social policy. Called “Baby’s First Years,” it’s the first study in the U.S. to look at the impact of poverty reduction on early childhood develop…
kqed.org

A Mother’s Journey to Save Her Daughter from Addiction, Homelessnes...

Laurie Ann Steves drove from Seattle to San Francisco last May to try to reconnect with her daughter, Jessica, who is addicted to fentanyl and lives on and off the streets of San Francisco. Steves joins us to share how she tried to intervene in her daughter’s life, just months after losing her …
kqed.org

Albert Samaha Explores Colonialism and Assimilation through ... - KQED

Albert Samaha is the son of immigrants from the Philippines, a country molded by centuries of Spanish and American colonization and imperialism. His new book “Concepcion: An Immigrant Family’s Fortunes” is part memoir, part family history. Samaha reflects on his Filipino American identity and his family’s immigration experience, comparing the America he grew up in
kqed.org

“Hella Town” Traces the History of Oakland Through Its Built Enviro...

Oakland is one of the most diverse cities in the country. It’s also one of the most unequal. Architectural and Urban Historian Mitchell Schwarzer dives into the politics and decisions that helped make it that way in his new book, Hella Town: Oakland’s History of Development and Disruption. Schwarze…
kqed.org

San Francisco-based American Indian Film Festival Centers Native St...

For 46 years, the San Francisco-based American Indian Film Festival has showcased features, documentaries and animated works from Native filmmakers. This year’s festival kicks off Friday with more than a hundred films at a time when filmmakers and audiences are clamoring for more representation of N…
kqed.org

Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes Stands Trial for Allegedly Defrauding...

College dropout Elizabeth Holmes once claimed her start-up Theranos would transform blood tests and modern medicine. At its peak in 2015, the company was worth $9 billion and was set to roll out its products across the country. But that came crashing down when investigations revealing that the techn…
kqed.org

August Book Club: ‘Radiant Fugitives’ by Nawaaz Ahmed - KQED

The Forum Book Club pick for August 2021 is Nawaaz Ahmed’s debut novel “Radiant Fugitives.” Set in San Francisco in and around 2010, it tells the story of Seema, a lesbian and political organizer with doubts about the efficacy of politics even as she works on the campaigns of President Obama, Distri…