McNeil Island's brown water leads Special Commitment Center residents to sue Bill Radke talks to Kenny Ocker, reporter for The News Tribune about the brown water at McNeil Island's Special Commitment Center, home to violent sex... Bill Radke
Seattle City Council vote on LGBTQ therapy brings reporter to tears Bill Radke speaks with Sydney Brownstone, reporter for The Stranger, about her reaction to the Seattle City Council unanimously banning gay conversion... Bill Radke
Seattle bans conversion therapy for LGBTQ youth Therapists in Seattle will no longer be able to offer “conversion therapy” to LGBTQ youth. Monday, the City Council unanimously voted to ban the... Paige Browning
Can incivility be good for our democracy? Bill Radke speaks with Washington State University professor Cornell Clayton about the role political incivility plays in our democracy. Bill Radke
Think these conventions were bad for unity? You should have been watching in 1924 Bill Radke talks to University of Washington history professor Margaret O'Mara about unity at the Democratic and Republican National Conventions and... Bill Radke
A call for Washington to be more like California, at least when it comes to guns Bill Radke talks with Everett Herald reporter Jerry Cornfield about a new push for state lawmakers to pass an assault weapons ban in Washington. Bill Radke
Sen. Murray: Hillary Clinton in the White House will empower women David Hyde talks with Sen. Patty Murray about Hillary Clinton's historic nomination for president. Murray speaks Thursday night at the Democratic... Kate OConnell
'Lifelong dream for me': What Washington delegation's women see in Clinton nomination Hillary Clinton may not be the first woman to run for president. Victoria Woodhull did that back in 1872, on the Equal Rights Party ticket with... David Hyde
WA delegate on Hillary Clinton's historic night Bill Radke talks with Washington state delegate Jamian Smith and KUOW's David Hyde from the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia. Shane Mehling
Why so few women have run for president of the United States Twelve women have run for president – ever. That’s partly because women didn’t get the right to vote until 1919. But Margaret O’Mara, professor of... Bill Radke