Top Regional News
The Idaho Secretary of State rebuts suggestions that he's too weak to stand up to federal election officials.
Azar stars in the one woman Play "All Things Equal: The Life and Trials of Ruth Bader Ginsburg," which comes to Spokane this weekend.
Arts & Culture
-
Conversation with Spokane String Quartet violist Jeanette Wee-Yang and guest 'cellist Calvin Kung
-
Conversation with Artistic Director Zuill Bailey around the next Classics NW concert, March 7th and 8th in Spokane.
-
Movie Reviews"EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert," a documentary playing on regular and IMAX screens around the country, is director Baz Luhrmann’s second film about the King. Nathan Weinbender says it’s a freewheeling testament to Elvis’s enduring power as a performer.
Events
-
SPR and IAE present David Sedaris on November 13th, 2025 at the Fox Theater.
-
SPR is a media partner for the Fall Folk Festival, taking place November 8th and 9th, 2025 at Spokane Community College.
-
SPR Staff attended the Fall Arts Preview in Comstock Park on Labor Day, September 1st, 2025
-
A celebration of the life of civil rights leader Jesse Jackson will be held in Chicago Friday. Current and former elected officials, faith leaders, entertainers and more are expected to attend. A private funeral will be held Saturday.
-
Many Iranians in the U.S. with family back in Iran have been having a very difficult time staying in touch as bombs continue to drop around the country. That's creating a lot of anxiety and worry.
-
One week into the U.S.–Israeli bombing campaign against Iran, the conflict is already spilling far beyond its original battlefield — with shockwaves reaching from Cyprus to Sri Lanka.
-
Nearly a week into a new and widening war in the Middle East, some of the U.S.'s closest allies in the region and beyond are trying to contain it.
-
It's long been assumed that koalas in southern Australia are genetically unhealthy. A new study finds they're actually recovering, changing how scientists look at genetic risks.
-
NPR's Juana Summers speaks with Kathy Roth-Douquet, CEO of Blue Star Families, about the challenges that military families face around deployment.
-
China has set a more modest growth target for its economy. That reflects the drag from sluggish domestic demand.
-
Most Americans disapprove of President Trump's handling of Iran, and a majority sees Iran as either only a minor threat or no threat at all, an NPR/PBS News/Marist poll finds.
-
Ten years after Colombia's peace deal, former FARC commander on the election campaign trail is discovering that winning ballots can be tougher than waging war.
-
Sedaka, who died Feb. 27, was a classical piano prodigy whose hits in the late '50s and early '60s included "Calendar Girl" and "Breaking up is Hard to Do." Originally broadcast in 2007.