
Has Colorado Learned The Lessons From Its Own Past School Shootings?
Are Colorado’s schools safer after lessons learned from Columbine and Arapahoe high schools? Ecologist and climate scientist Jane Zelikova talks about her new documentary, “The End of Snow.” For poet Andrea Gibson, thinking about gender used to be painful, but now it’s become celebratory. And Henry Sakaguchi remembers the prejudice against Japanese-Americans in World War II and want to fight for his country any.

A Culinary Trip To Denver’s Old Chinatown Through The Doors of Hop Alley
Chef Geoff Cox talks about a dish he prepared for us called Mapo Doufu. He shared the recipe.

Managers Are Usually The Ones Awarding Bonuses. What If Your Co-Worker Could?
A Boulder-based company offers a website and app that allows employees to recognize colleagues by awarding small bonuses.

Former Olympian Nancy Hogshead-Makar On How To Protect Young Athletes From Abuse
After the gymnast sex abuse scandal, we talk with Nancy Hogshead-Makar, a gold medalist in swimming who is now a lawyer, and the founder of Champion Women, a legal advocacy group for girls and women in sports. Then, we thought that since it’s Valentine’s Day today, the timing was perfect for a chat about dinosaur sex.

Should You Pick Your Partner Based On Your DNA?
The burgeoning business of DNA analysis includes a Denver company that gives couples a glimpse of what they’re baby might look like.

Colorado Once Said ‘No’ To The Winter Olympics. Boosters Want To Try Again
We talk with Rob Cohen, who leads a group that wants Colorado to bid for the Winter Olympics games again.

A Former Journalist Tells The Stories Of Those With Dementia Who Can’t
Former Time Magazine correspondent Jay Newton-Small used to cover politics and foreign policy. Now, she writes the life stories of people with dementia.

New Bling For Outdoor Gear Geeks
The 2018 Outdoor Retail show, which this year moved from Salt Lake City to Denver, features some gadgets and outerwear for those who like recreating in the great outdoors.

Former Juror Sent A 15-Year-Old To Prison For Life. Now He Wants Him Released
Curtis Brooks was 15 when he was sentenced to life in prison without parole for a shooting death in which he didn’t pull the trigger.

One Husband, Two ‘Accidents,’ Two Dead Wives
The book, “The Accidents,” by Caleb Hannan, details the 2012 murder of Toni Henthorn by her husband, Harold.Henthorn, who is also suspected in the death of his first wife, Lynn.

A Revamped Interior Department Could Affect Denver; A Novel Imagines Family Life In Prison
President Donald Trump and Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke are reimagining Western resources. What that could mean for Denver. Then, a new novel about children living in a Bolivian prison with their father. And, the Boulder Philharmonic performs the regional premiere of a piece by one of America’s best-known living composers, Philip Glass.

For Children of Inmates, Home Was A Bolivian Prison
The new novel “An Uninterrupted View of the Sky” by Melanie Crowder tells the story of two children forced to live in prison after their father is convicted of a drug-related crime.

Things Got Violent The Day The Klan Disrupted Denver’s MLK Parade
Security guard Jonathan McMillan was a marshall at Denver’s annual Martin Luther King Day Marade when a KKK rally at the state capitol sparked violence between marchers and police.

Things Got Violent The Day The Klan Disrupted Denver’s MLK Parade
Security guard Jonathan McMillan was a marshall at Denver’s annual Martin Luther King Day Marade when a KKK rally at the state capitol sparked violence between marchers and police.

Retired U.S. Navy Admiral Dropped Son At College. Four Days Later, His Child OD’d
Admiral James Winnefeld was hopefuL but apprehensive about his son’s recovery from heroin addiction. It wasn’t long before he got the gut-wrenching call.

Why Denver Officials Want To Check Out Vancouver’s Drug Scene
Denver officials will pay a visit this month to Vancouver to see if they can learn from that city’s innovative approach to injection drug use.