Episodes

  • When many people think of autism, they think of children. But as awareness about autism grows, more adults are also being diagnosed with autism.


    About two percent of adults are on the autism spectrum, which includes a broad range of conditions characterized by challenges with sensory sensitivities, social skills, repetitive behaviors, speech and nonverbal communication.


    MPR News host Angela Davis hosts part two of an April Autism Awareness Month conversation about what it’s like to be an adult with autism, how to get diagnosed and the pros and cons of disclosing you’re autistic in your school or workplace.


    Guests:


    Daren Howard is deputy director of the Autism Society of Minnesota (AuSM) and sought his own diagnosis with autism spectrum disorder after his child received a diagnosis. He moved to Minnesota several years ago from California, where he consulted and led nonprofit organizations focused on giving children and teenagers access to after school and summer programing.


    Zephyr James is director of marketing and communications with the Autism Society of Minnesota. They were diagnosed with autism as a young adult.

  • We’re approaching the two-year anniversary of the end of Roe v. Wade, the landmark Supreme Court decision that guaranteed the right to an abortion for half a century.


    The fall of Roe has heightened the intensity of a battle over reproductive rights across the country. And here in Minnesota, it’s inspiring activists to continue to pursue an Equal Rights Amendment that would enshrine gender protection and reproductive justice into the state Constitution.


    MPR News host Angela Davis talked about where the Equal Rights Amendment stands in the Minnesota legislature today and the state of gender inequality in 2024.

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  • What happens when a tightwad marries a big spender?


    Disagreement over money and how to spend it is a source of conflict in many close relationships and marriages.


    The families we grow up in shape our behavior around money. That can lead to trouble if you start sharing your life with someone who has a very different approach to spending and saving.


    Coming up at 9 a.m. on Monday, MPR News host Angela Davis talks with a researcher and a financial therapist about why so many couples fight over finances and how to resolve the inevitable disagreements.


    Guests:



    Scott Rick is the author of “Tightwads and Spendthrifts: Navigating the Money Minefield in Real Relationships,” published earlier this year. He’s an associate professor in the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan where he studies consumer behavior and decision making.


    Lindsey Konchar is a certified financial therapist based in Chaska, with a master’s degree in social work from Minnesota State University Mankato. She offers financial therapy to individuals and couples through her business, Coping with Lindsey.



  • As a child in Georgia, Reatha Clark King picked cotton for $6 a day to help her family make ends meet. Then, buoyed on the hopes and expectations of her family and church, she blazed a trail from a one-room schoolhouse in the segregated South to college.


    She pushed past gender and racial barriers as a Black woman to become a research chemist in the 1960s, contributing to NASA’s moon landing. She went on to become a college dean, university president and a philanthropist and a vice president of a major corporation.


    Earlier this week, she was honored at the Humphrey School of Public Affairs at the University of Minnesota with a reception and celebration of her recent biography, “Find a Trail or Blaze One.”


    MPR News host Angela Davis talks with Minnesota trailblazer Reatha Clark King about her life.


    Guest:


    Reatha Clark King worked as a research chemist for the National Bureau of Standards in Washington, D.C. In the 1960s. She moved to Minnesota to become president of Metropolitan State University from 1977 to 1988. She was a vice president of General Mills Corporation and president and executive director of the General Mills Foundation until she retired in 2002. Her biography “Find a Trail or Blaze One” was published in 2021.

  • One in three Americans has cheated on a partner, according to a YouGov survey from 2022.


    Cheating can be devastating on a personal level and tumultuous for the relationship. But many couples figure out a way to work through it. Many people are able to move on and move forward.


    MPR News host Angela Davis and her guests talked about infidelity: Why it happens and how to deal with it — whether you’re the person who has been cheated on, or the person who has done the cheating.


    Guests:


    LaReesa Hooper is a therapist and founder of Therapeace Counseling in St. Paul. She is a licensed marriage and family therapist and licensed alcohol and drug counselor.


    Shanelle Wenell is a therapist with Therapeace Counseling in St. Paul. She is a licensed associate marriage and family therapist with additional expertise in equine therapy.

  • Minnesota communities have spent the last few years debating the role of police in schools.


    In 2020 after the murder of George Floyd, the Minneapolis school board voted to end its contract with police and removed school resource officers, or SROs, from Minneapolis Public Schools.


    Many other districts across the country also phased out SROs, including St. Paul.


    Then last year, the state Legislature passed a law that limited how officers could physically restrain students. Some law enforcement agencies raised concerns that the new restrictions left them open to lawsuits and pulled their SROs from schools just before the start of this school year.


    That brings us to the present moment. In March, updated legislation that clarified restraints and provided for more training and a uniform school resource officer policy was signed into law. As some law enforcement agencies prepare to return SROs to schools, basic questions remain:


    Do school resource officers make schools safer?


    Can a trusted police officer in a school building prevent violence and support students in crisis without leading to more students being suspended, expelled or arrested?


    At 9 a.m. on Tuesday, MPR News host Angela Davis explored the role of SROs with current and former school resource officers.


    Guests:



    Rudy Perez is president of the National Association of School Resource Officers. He relocated to Minnesota in 2023 to serve as assistant chief of police for the Golden Valley Police Department, where he oversees patrol services including school resource officers. He previously served 22 years in the Los Angeles School Police Department, as an SRO and later as a lieutenant overseeing school resource officers. He joined MPR News from St. Cloud where he’s attending a Minnesota Chiefs of Police Association training.


    Charles Adams III was a police officer with the Minneapolis Police Department for 20 years and a school resource officer until 2020 at North Community High School in Minneapolis. He still coaches the North Polars football team and was featured in the 2023 Showtime documentary “Boys in Blue” which followed the team during the 2021 season. He’s now director of team security for the Minnesota Twins.


    Todd Mohr has been a school resource officer for the Mankato Department of Public Safety for nine years. He works mainly out of West High School in Mankato.



  • About 40 percent of workers over age 40 say they’ve experienced ageism at work, according to a recent AARP survey.


    That means sometimes getting passed up on opportunities for promotions. Or not getting hired at all.


    But unemployment is so low, many hiring managers are having a hard time finding workers. And that’s good news for older workers facing bias and stigma in the hiring process.


    MPR News guest host Chris Farrell and his guests talked about what ageism looks like in 2024, and how to reframe our ideas about aging and older workers.


    Guests:


    Kate Schaefers, Ph.D., is director of the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at the University of Minnesota and volunteer state president for AARP-MN.


    Rajean Moone, Ph.D., is associate director of education for the Center for Healthy Aging and Innovation in the University of Minnesota’s School of Public Health, and a member of the Governor’s Council on an Age-Friendly Minnesota.

  • New information is still surfacing surrounding Wednesday’s armed standoff in Minnetonka that injured two Hennepin County Sheriff’s deputies.


    Gun violence is an American epidemic, killing tens of thousands of people across the country each year in their homes, churches, schools and malls.


    There’s a lot we don’t know about what motivates a person to kill a stranger, or even someone they love.


    MPR News host Angela Davis talked to the researchers studying why gun violence happens, hoping to prevent it before it starts. They’re based right here in Minnesota.


    Guests:


    James Densley, Ph.D., is a professor and department chair of criminal justice at Metro State University, and deputy director of the Violence Prevention Project Research Center at Hamline University.


    Jillian Peterson, Ph.D., is a professor of criminology and criminal justice at Hamline University, director of their forensic psychology program and executive director of the Violence Prevention Research Center at Hamline University.

  • Imagine being overwhelmed by the bright lights and bustle of a supermarket, to the point where it caused you pain and you couldn’t go shopping.


    Imagine being so shaken up by a detour sign on your regular route to work that you had to pull over to fight against a panic attack.


    Or not recognizing when someone was sarcastic with you or flirting with you.


    These can be common experiences for people diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder, a broad range of conditions characterized by challenges with sensory sensitivities, social skills, repetitive behaviors, speech and nonverbal communication.


    The number of adults who identify as autistic is growing, along with awareness. It now affects just over 2 percent of adults in the U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control.


    MPR News host Angela Davis talks with guests about their experiences living as adults with autism.

  • As parents, we teach our children how to move through the world. But as our children grow older, we learn from them, too.


    That relationship can grow into a real partnership and friendship — and a positive support system pushing each other to be better and do better.


    Our next Power Pair is a good example of that transition: Mother-daughter duo Rose McGee and Roslyn Harmon.


    It’s part of our new series on the show about prominent Minnesotans you may know about individually, but who also have a close relationship.


    Guests:


    Rose McGee is President and Founder of the Sweet Potato Comfort Pie organization, which brings people together for hope, healing and dialogue around race. She’s also a facilitator, author and recent Bush Fellow.


    Roslyn Harmon is the mayor of Golden Valley — the first Black person to hold that position. She is also an educator, counselor and ordained pastor.

  • Many people are just one medical emergency away from a financial crisis.


    A hundred million Americans live with medical debt, or about 41 percent of adults, according to a survey by Kaiser Family Foundation.


    To pay off medical bills, many people have taken on other debt, including credit cards, personal bank loans or loans from family and friends. Medical debt creates stress and prevents people from saving for housing, cars and retirement. It makes people less likely to seek the medical care they need and contributes to bankruptcy.


    About two percent of Minnesota households have medical debt in collections compared to a national average of 13 percent. But that rate is double in communities of color.


    Local governments, including St. Paul, are increasingly using public money to pay off residents’ medical debt. And, earlier this year, the administration of Gov. Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison proposed changing how medical debt is handled.


    The legislation, called the Minnesota Debt Fairness Act, would ban medical providers from denying non-emergency care to patients with large overdue bills, lower the interest rate on medical debt to zero and keep medical debt from showing up on credit reports. And, it would stop the automatic transfer of medical debt to a patient’s spouse.


    Listen to a rebroadcast of a conversation from 2022 as MPR News host Angela Davis talks about medical debt with financial and legal experts and the head of the national nonprofit that buys and forgives medical debt for pennies on the dollar.


    For more, watch a recent panel discussion about medical debt held in St. Paul and moderated by Marketplace host David Brancaccio.


    Guests:



    Allison Sesso is the president and CEO of RIP Medical Debt, a national nonprofit organization that uses donations to buy and forgive medical debt.


    Kim Miller is a certified financial counselor with LSS Financial Counseling, a service of Lutheran Social Service of Minnesota.


    Laura Orr is a staff attorney at the Minnesota Elder Justice Center. She was previously a senior attorney in elder law at Southern Minnesota Regional Legal Services based in St. Paul.





    Subscribe to the MPR News with Angela Davis podcast on: Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify or RSS.


    Use the audio player above to listen to the full conversation.

  • On Feb. 27, a group of Minnesotans gathered in Woodbury to share how political division has affected their communities and personal lives.


    The group was a mix of conservatives, liberals and independents with a common purpose: to learn how to communicate without letting their political views conflict with important relationships.


    This in-person discussion was the first in a series from Talking Sense, MPR News’ online and in-person platform to help Minnesotans have hard conversations, better.


    Bill Doherty, co-founder of Braver Angels, a nonprofit, nonpartisan group that works to help people bridge political divides guided the conversation and asked the audience to share their thoughts on sources of polarization today.


    MPR News host Angela Davis takes us through the first in-person discussion and workshop from Talking Sense and Braver Angels.


    The next in-person Talking Sense event will be held on Wednesday, April 24 at the Chateau Theatre in Rochester. It will be open to students and members of the community.


    Guest:



    Bill Doherty is co-founder of Braver Angels, a nonprofit that seeks to restore trust, respect and goodwill in American politics. He’s also a professor of family social science at the University of Minnesota.





    Subscribe to the MPR News with Angela Davis podcast on: Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify or RSS.


    Use the audio player above to listen to the full conversation.

  • Here’s a striking piece of information: Social isolation is as deadly as smoking up to 15 cigarettes a day.


    Loneliness is an epidemic in the United States. We’re approaching one year since the U.S. Surgeon General released a groundbreaking report on loneliness and isolation.


    Two researchers joined MPR News host Angela Davis to help us understand why so many of us feel lonely, and why our mental health is so closely tied to serious physical health impacts.


    They’ll also talk about practical strategies to help us feel better.


    Because lots of us feel this way — at least half of us have measurable levels of loneliness.


    Guests:


    Stephanie Hooker is an assistant professor at the University of Minnesota’s School of Family Medicine and Community Health.


    Roxanne Prichard is a professor of neuroscience and psychology at the University of St. Thomas.

  • Cherise Ayers was president of the student council at Central High School in St. Paul in the late 1990s. Two years ago, the St. Paul native returned to Central in a very different leadership role: as principal.


    Central is the oldest high school in Minnesota, founded in 1866. Known for strong academics, it was one of the first schools in the state to offer an international baccalaureate diploma program.


    Its graduates, including Ayers’ classmate St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter, have gone on to be prominent leaders in business, education, sports and politics.


    MPR News host Angela Davis talks with Ayers about returning to lead her alma mater, her vision for the school and what it’s like to follow in the footsteps of longtime Central High School principal Mary Mackbee, who retired in 2019.


    Guest:



    Cherise Ayers was named principal of Central High School in St. Paul in 2022. She graduated from Central in 1997 and holds a bachelor’s degree in English from Spelman College and a master’s degree in secondary education and teaching from Brown University. A lifelong educator, she’s worked as a middle and high school English teacher in Georgia and Minnesota, as dean of students for Richfield Public Schools, as an assistant principal in St. Paul Public Schools and as an equity supervisor and interim principal for the North St. Paul-Maplewood-Oakdale School District.






    Subscribe to the MPR News with Angela Davis podcast on: Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify or RSS.


    Use the audio player above to listen to the full conversation.

  • Teaching is no easy job — over the past couple of years, it’s become even more challenging.


    The pandemic flipped education on its head, making educators roll with the punches and adapt to remote learning, hybrid teaching styles and constantly changing circumstances.


    We know the classroom has changed, but what about those behind the desk?


    A new generation of teachers is now steering the ship, many of whom got their certifications during the pandemic.


    Two teachers at the beginning of their careers spoke to MPR News host Angela Davis about the struggles and joys of leading the classroom.


    Guests:



    Jordan Biros is a first-grade teacher in her second year at Highwood Hills Elementary in St. Paul.


    Khadra Ali was a paraprofessional for at least 19 years before delving into teaching. She is now in her fifth year teaching first grade at Highwood Hills Elementary.






    Subscribe to the MPR News with Angela Davis podcast on: Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify or RSS.


    Use the audio player above to listen to the full conversation.

  • Last month, a shootout in Burnsville took the lives of three first responders.


    It all stemmed from a 911 call reporting domestic abuse. Suspect Shannon Gooden, who later died by suicide, had previously been accused of intimate partner violence by at least three different women.


    Three guests in the domestic violence space joined MPR News guest host Catharine Richert — not to talk about Gooden’s case specifically — but how it highlights the complexities of domestic violence cases.


    Richert and her guests talked about why a restraining order, or even the death of an abuser, doesn’t mean the violence or the trauma is over.


    They also discussed challenges in the legal system that sometimes allow kids to remain with abusive parents, and how the court system can sometimes work against victims of domestic violence.


    And they heard from survivors of abuse about how the system failed them, time and time again.


    Guests:


    Stacie Burke is a domestic and sexual violence advocate at 360 Communities.


    Sharon Jones is the Executive Director of Legal Assistance of Dakota County.


    Meggie Royer is the Youth and Prevention Program Manager with Violence Free Minnesota.

  • What’s old always becomes new again — even with workout routines.


    The hot workout class of the moment isn’t brand-new. It’s Pilates, a core-focused routine first popularized almost a century ago.


    Pilates, yoga, barre and other “lower-impact” exercise classes are gaining popularity, as Americans turn away from previously-popular “higher-impact” classes, such as CrossFit.


    But lower-impact doesn’t necessarily mean “easy.”


    Three guests joined MPR News host Angela Davis to talk about the benefits of these low-impact classes, sometimes called “functional fitness,” and how they can fit into your routine.


    Guests:


    Ayanna Rakhu, Ph.D., is a graduate of the University of Minnesota School of Kinesiology with a background in sport and exercise psychology. Rakhu is a physical activity expert who focuses on swimming.


    Libby Grundhoefer is a Pilates instructor and personal trainer with the Minnesota Jewish Community Center.


    Gretchen Bierbaum is the owner of Straightline Dance Fitness, a fitness studio in northeast Minneapolis.

  • Updated: 4 p.m.

    Jamie Gilchrist and Jessica Liimatainen did almost everything together growing up together as identical twins in Barnum.


    They went to the same schools and took the same classes. They both started hockey together when they were three years old and both played for their high school team.


    “Our parents told us that we had our own language growing up,” Gilchrist said.


    “They would come into the room and we’d be talking like gibberish and they had no idea what we were saying, but we would be laughing,” Liimatainen said. “Obviously we don’t have that anymore, but if we look at each other 
”


    “
We know exactly what we’re thinking,” Gilchrist said, finishing her sister’s sentence. “She’s my best friend. She’s my go to. Only a twin would know what kind of bond we have, and I would say in particular identical twins have that connection.”


    When the time came to think about a career, they both thought they’d become nurses until they got interested in law enforcement.


    Today, the 25-year-old twins work for the Minnesota State Patrol in adjacent counties near Duluth, among the 8 percent of State Patrol sworn officers who are women.


    “Sometimes people will ask me, ‘Are you really old enough to be in this job?’ And then I always ask, ‘Well how old do you think I am?’ And they’re usually like ‘16, 17 at most.’ I’m like, ‘Oh, I wouldn't be here then if I was that young,’” Liimatainen said. “I get asked a lot of questions about being a female [officer] too, like what I like about it and 
”


    “... Especially like, ‘Why do you do it?’ Like, ‘You’re so small’” Gilchrist said. “They say, ‘You’re 
 here by yourself.’ Well, I know I’m small, but I have my training,” Gilchrist said.


    MPR News host Angela Davis talks with Jessica Liimatainen and Jamie Gilchrist about being twins and young women in law enforcement.


    The conversation is part of our Power Pair series, focused on Minnesotans who play important roles in their community and who also have a close relationship with each other.


    Guests:



    Jessica Liimatainen is a Minnesota state trooper working out of Carlton County.


    Jamie Gilchrist is a Minnesota state trooper working out of St. Louis County.






    Subscribe to the MPR News with Angela Davis podcast on: Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify or RSS.


    Use the audio player above to listen to the full conversation.

  • Back in the 1990s, Minnesota was gaining population from other places in the U.S. But in recent years, that trend reversed, and now more people leave Minnesota for other states each year than move here.


    The net loss is a concern to state officials who want to fill jobs. So, this month, the state’s tourism office Explore Minnesota launched a first-ever advertising campaign encouraging people in other parts of the country to resettle in Minnesota.


    Coming up at 9 a.m. on Monday, MPR News host Angela Davis talks about what’s drawing people to Minnesota — from job seekers to climate refugees to people attracted to the state's more liberal laws and policies — and what life is like for them once they get here.


    Guests:



    Lauren Bennett McGinty is the executive director of Explore Minnesota, the state tourism agency. Earlier this month, the agency launched a new national advertising campaign to encourage people to move to Minnesota.


    Sapna Kumar is a professor at the University of Minnesota Law School. She moved to Minnesota last summer from Texas after spending 15 years as a professor at the University of Houston Law Center in Texas. Her work focuses on intellectual property rights and patent law.



  • Ethnic studies will roll out to Minnesota K-12 classrooms in 2026. The content area was added to the state social studies standards this winter, joining history, geography, economics and government as major themes.


    The Minnesota Department of Education is still working on a final framework to guide curriculum. But some districts aren’t waiting.


    In 2022, both St. Paul and Minneapolis public schools added ethnic studies as a high school class required for graduation. Other districts have had ethnic studies style classes in place for even longer.


    On March 18, MPR News gathered teachers and students already participating in ethnic studies and asked them to share their experiences, with the goal of imaging the future as ethnic studies is incorporated into schools across the state.


    What does ethnic studies really mean? Is it a thinly veiled attempt to introduce critical race theory, as critics contend? How do students react to hard conversations about race and absent narratives? And could this be one way to close the education gap between white students and students of color?


    MPR News host Angela Davis hosts this special North Star Journey Live conversation, recorded live at Roseville Area High School.


    Guests:



    Kong Vang, teacher at Washington Technology High School


    Alycia Monserrate, teacher at Exploration High School


    Natalia Benjamin, director of Multilingual Learning at Rochester Public Schools


    Marlee Mfalingundi, teacher at Roseville Area High School


    James Dawolo, teacher at Roseville Area High School


    Amy Westland, social studies department lead and teacher at Roseville Area High School


    JaLayla McCoy, student at Exploration High School


    Jackie Le, student at Great River School


    Ethan Vue, PSEO student at Spring Lake Park High School


    Evelyn Sagor, student at Roseville Area High School


    Madisen Lo, student at Roseville Area High School