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Christina Cala

Christina Cala

Senior Producer at Code Switch - NPR/National Public Radio

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Email address
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Influence score
66
Location
United States
Languages
  • English
Covering topics
  • Entertainment
  • Society

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Recent Articles

npr.org

Tribal colleges are a unique resource — and they're under threat : Code Switch

Nueta Hidatsa Sahnish College has classes on everything from Native American studies to gardening to equine sciences to the Hidatsa language. Like other tribal colleges and universities (aka TCUs), it's a space where students can get their degrees while steeped in Indigenous traditions and learning techniques. But since the start of this presidential administration, funding for these colleges has been precarious, and tribal college administrators have been left scrambling to make sure they can continue with business as usual. So this week on the show, we're diving deep into what makes tribal colleges unique — and what these spaces mean to the students, faculty and staff who work there.
npr.org

Tribal colleges are a unique resource — and they're under threat : ...

Nueta Hidatsa Sahnish College has classes on everything from Native American studies to gardening to equine sciences to the Hidatsa language. Like other tribal colleges and universities (aka TCUs), it's a space where students can get their degrees while steeped in Indigenous traditions and learning techniques. But since the start of this presidential administration, funding for these colleges has been precarious, and tribal college administrators have been left scrambling to make sure they can continue with business as usual. So this week on the show, we're diving deep into what makes tribal colleges unique — and what these spaces mean to the students, faculty and staff who work there.
npr.org

How Elon Musk and JD Vance plan to 'save civilization' with more ba...

What do conservatives like JD Vance and tech executives like Elon Musk have in common? They, like other pronatalists, want to “save civilization” by having more American babies. But it wasn’t that long ago that some people wanted to save the world by limiting the number of kids being born. This week on the pod, we explore the surprising way eugenics plays a role in these two seemingly opposite fears.
npr.org

How Elon Musk and JD Vance plan to 'save civilization' with more ba...

What do conservatives like JD Vance and tech executives like Elon Musk have in common? They, like other pronatalists, want to “save civilization” by having more American babies. But it wasn’t that long ago that some people wanted to save the world by limiting the number of kids being born. This week on the pod, we explore the surprising way eugenics plays a role in these two seemingly opposite fears.
npr.org

Digging into our ancestors' drama : Code Switch

This week, we're bringing you a special episode from our play cousins over at the podcast "Our Ancestors Were Messy." We hear about how Zora Neale Hurston and Langston Hughes went from being best friends to not friends.
npr.org

Hot weather kills. Who gets protected? : Code Switch

The heat disproportionately kills poor, elderly and people of color. So on this episode we're focusing on the lives of those impacted, from roofers in Florida to prisoners who live and die in cells that feel more like ovens in Texas. We’re asking why so many people are dying from the heat and whose lives we value enough to count their deaths and try to prevent them.
npr.org

Hot weather kills. Who gets protected? : Code Switch

The heat disproportionately kills poor, elderly and people of color. So on this episode we're focusing on the lives of those impacted, from roofers in Florida to prisoners who live and die in cells that feel more like ovens in Texas. We’re asking why so many people are dying from the heat and whose lives we value enough to count their deaths and try to prevent them.
npr.org

NPR staffers share their favorite romance novels for summer Books W...

From our summer round-up of Books We Love, NPR staffers give recommendations for books they literally loved - all about romance.
npr.org

Why tacos are as 'American' as apple pie : Code Switch

The hunger for Mexican food in the U.S. is longstanding — from the conquistadors' love affair with chocolate, to the classic San Francisco burrito. This week, we're exploring the history of Mexican food in the United States, and asking what it takes for a cuisine to become quintessentially "American."
npr.org

'Not a badge of honor': how book bans affect Indigenous literature ...

For some authors, finding their book on a "banned" list can feel almost like an accolade, putting them right there with classics like The Bluest Eye and To Kill a Mockingbird. But the reality is, most banned books never get the kind of recognition or readership that the most famous ones do.
npr.org

'Not a badge of honor': how book bans affect Indigenous literature ...

For some authors, finding their book on a "banned" list can feel almost like an accolade, putting them right there with classics like The Bluest Eye and To Kill a Mockingbird. But the reality is, most banned books never get the kind of recognition or readership that the most famous ones do.
npr.org

A Intergenerational Fight Over Language in the Lakota Nation : Code...

Many Lakota people agree: It’s imperative to revitalize the Lakota language. But how exactly to do that is a matter of broader debate. Should Lakota be codified and standardized to make learning it easier? Or should the language stay as it always has been, defined by many different ways of writing and speaking? We explore this complex, multi-generational fight that’s been unfolding in the Lakota Nation, from Standing Rock to Pine Ridge.
npr.org

In Lakota Nation, people are asking: Who does a language belong to?...

Many Lakota people agree: It’s imperative to revitalize the Lakota language. But how exactly to do that is a matter of broader debate. Should Lakota be codified and standardized to make learning it easier? Or should the language stay as it always has been, defined by many different ways of writing and speaking? We explore this complex, multi-generational fight that’s been unfolding in the Lakota Nation, from Standing Rock to Pine Ridge.
npr.org

Travel is supposed to expand your horizons...but it's complicated :...

Traveling is supposed to open your mind and expand your horizons — but what if it doesn’t? In her new book <em>Airplane Mode, </em>author Shahnaz Habib suggests that sometimes, traveling does more to enforce our ideas about the world than to upend them. Which means that people with “passport privilege” — AKA, the ability to travel freely from country to country — may end up feeling like the stars of some massive international adventure, while people whose travel is more restricted feel like perp…
npr.org

What does home mean to you? Code Switch wants to know for our live ...

Code Switch wants to include your thoughts in our live show. We need you to send us a voice memo on what home means to you!
npr.org

Apply now for Code Switch’s mid-career fellowships

Code Switch fellowships for mid-career journalists are back. Submit a proposal and get a chance to work with Code Switch and NPR editors and producers to craft your story on race and identity.
npr.org

COMIC: How a computer scientist fights bias in algorithms - NPR

Computer scientist Joy Buolamwini is on a mission to fight bias in algorithms. In this comic, Buolamwini discusses the way biased algorithms can lead to real world inequality — and what we can do.
npr.org

Can therapy solve racism? : Code Switch

In 2020, nearly 20% of Americans turned to therapy. Many of those people were looking for a space to process some of the big, painful events they were living through, including the pandemic, a contentious election cycle, and of course, the summer’s racial reckoning. But that had us wondering: What e…
npr.org

How Ross Gay Finds Joy In The Smallest of ‘Delights’

On the Code Switch podcast, Ross Gay reflects on his 2019 collection The Book of Delights, the difficulty of allowing yourself to be moved, and why he thinks it’s important to use the word “love.”