On This Page
These are just some of the great podcasts out there that will help educate you on the history of race in this country and keep you informed of current events. The descriptions are taken from the series’ descriptions themselves.
Podcasts may not be available on all podcast platforms. You can subscribe in a browser but it’s easier to listen in an app. Below are links to the most popular Podcast platforms.
Podcasts to Help Adults
All My Relations is a podcast hosted by Matika Wilbur (Swinomish and Tulalip), and Desi Small Rodriguez (Northern Cheyenne) [previously by Dr. Keene] to explore our relationships— relationships to land, to our creatural relatives, and to one another. Each episode invites guests to delve into a different topic facing Native American peoples today. We keep it real, play some games, laugh a lot, and even cry sometimes.
Watch Molly of Denali videos, play games, and do printable activities. Join Molly and friends on Alaskan adventures, using informational text along the way!
Native Opinion is a unique education, entertainment and informational radio show and podcast. Hosts, Michael Kickingbear, of the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation, and, David GreyOwl, a member of the Echota Cherokee Tribe of Alabama, present an Indigenous view on American history, politics and culture, and how those things impact and shape Native American lives.
This show has one function and that is to provide a forum for Native issues.
The Red Nation Podcast features discussions on Indigenous history, politics, and culture from a left perspective. Hosted by Nick Estes and Jen Marley with help from our friend and comrade Sina.
My radical activist mother Kahentinetha Horn tells me stories of her very long adventurous life, always with the sense of humour that carried her through.
How a string of custody battles over Native children became a federal lawsuit that threatens everything
from tribal sovereignty to civil right
After contact, Indigenous foodways and knowledge were devastated, nearly destroyed and replaced with foods that are far from the people. So today, I’m talking to Native chefs and foodies about what Indigenous cuisine is, where it comes from, where it’s headed and how it’s used to connect them and their communities to their origins and traditions.
A live call-in program, engaging noted guests and listeners in a thought-provoking national conversation from a Native perspective
The Cuts is a regular podcast hosted by filmmaker Sterlin Harjo. Sterlin interviews friends, artists and unique people in a comfortable, conversational setting creating a unique, informative and entertaining look into the lives of his guests.