Colorado Matters

Hosted by Ryan Warner and Chandra Thomas Whitfield, CPR News' daily interview show focuses on the state's people, issues and ideas.
Airs Monday-Friday: 9 a.m.-10 a.m. & 7 p.m.-8 p.m.; Sundays: 10 a.m.-11 a.m.
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Latest Episodes

The Media And Mass Shootings, A Tribal Push For A New National Monument

We talk about what you told us you want and don’t want from the media after a mass shooting in Colorado — it’s a question we posed through our Public Insight Network. Among the people who responded was Coni Sanders, whose father was killed at Columbine High School in 1999. She thinks telling these stories is important, “but it needs to be done so responsibility, meaning there be a focus on prevention, there be brief, little to no mention of the killers’ names, especially showing their faces.” Also on Thursday, a rare coalition of American Indian nations, including the Ute Mountain Utes of Colorado, seek a new national monument across the border in Utah.

Playing Cards And Cold Cases, Zombie Bills, ‘Where The Columbines Grow’

To solve old murders, the state has created playing cards with the faces of victims and details about their case. The decks are already circulating in prisons and leading to tips. One card features Tommy Kinslow. His mother says the 10th anniversary of his murder just passed but she remembers that night clear as day. Then we talk about how Colorado gives tax breaks for affordable housing, energy development — and bingo equipment. There are about 200 credits and exemptions in all, and one lawmaker wants to make sure the state’s getting its money’s worth. And, quick, what’s Colorado’s state song? Isn’t it “Rocky Mountain High?” Yes. But there’s more to the story, and Rob Natelson of the Independence Institute, has written a paper about the song’s history.

Canon City Sexting, One Last Turn As Scrooge, Daniels And Fisher History

Prosecutors won’t charge Canon City High students who shared sexually explicit photos, and we speak with that district’s superintendent about how the school moves forward. Then, Philip Pleasants, an actor who has played Ebenezer Scrooge for nearly 40 Christmases, will take the stage in that role for the last time this year. And, only the clock tower remains, but the Daniels and Fisher Department Store on 16th Street in Denver used to be the place to be. We speak with the author of a new book on the landmark.

Staff

Tom Hesse.
Colorado Matters Western Slope Producer

Tom Hesse