SOLD OUT: Rethinking Housing in America

KQED

  • 32 minutes 3 seconds
    How We Rebuild - Part 2

    KQED’s housing and climate reporters team up for a special series on what it takes to recover from catastrophic wildfires, as the focus in Los Angeles shifts from the immediate emergency to rebuilding. In this second episode, past fire survivors reveal how they rebuilt with resilience in mind and worked with their neighbors to make their communities safer. We also talk to KQED reporters Danielle Venton and Ezra David Romero about how the recent Los Angeles fires are impacting an already unstable insurance industry—and what to expect from future fires and floods.

    19 February 2025, 11:00 am
  • 32 minutes 17 seconds
    How We Rebuild - Part 1

    KQED’s housing and climate reporters team up with a special series about what it takes to recover from catastrophe. In this first episode, we visit Los Angeles, a city in the earliest stages of recovering from devastating fires. The narrative that people quickly devolve into their worst after a disaster could not be further from the truth. What our reporters find instead is an outpouring of altruism and a community coming together.

    12 February 2025, 11:00 am
  • 55 seconds
    Coming Soon: How We Rebuild

    Join us on Wednesday, February 12 as the KQED housing and climate reporters team up for a special series exploring recovery efforts after the devastating fires in Los Angeles.

    8 February 2025, 2:20 am
  • 50 minutes 36 seconds
    Forever Dreaming, California

    In a rural corner of the San Francisco Bay Area, a tech investor has a vision to build a walkable city atop farmland and golden rolling hills. The proposal could help solve twin crises confronting the Bay Area: a shortage of housing and the growing threat of climate change. But the project has generated controversy from the start, and getting it off the ground has been anything but easy. KQED's housing affordability reporter Adhiti Bandlamudi follows along to see what it takes to build something of this scale in California.

    28 October 2024, 10:00 am
  • 36 minutes 24 seconds
    'Going Bare' In The Wildlands

    Rachel Traficante and her husband Mark have spent the last few decades perfecting their dream home in the mountain town of of Cohasset, California, and were devastated when this summer's Park Fire turned it and many of their neighbors' homes to rubble. Like many who live in the fire-prone area, they found that home insurance had become too difficult and too expensive to get, so they were "going bare". In the last season of Sold Out, climate reporter Danielle Venton explained the causes behind California's brewing home insurance crisis. Now, she shares Rachel and Mark's story of what it's like to try to recover when you can't count on an insurance payout.

    21 October 2024, 10:00 am
  • 25 minutes 10 seconds
    After The Flood Waters Recede

    One night in March 2023, the rain-swollen Pajaro River in Monterey County burst the seams of a levee, flooding the rural town of Pajaro and damaging hundreds of homes. In Season 3 of Sold Out, reporter Ezra David Romero followed the story of the Escutia family, as they set out to find a new place to call home. Now, a year later, he shares their next chapter. Though the family vowed never to return to the floodplain, that vow was tested as they came up against the reality of high rents on California’s Central Coast.

    14 October 2024, 10:00 am
  • 32 minutes 27 seconds
    Facing The Fire

    Growing up in California's Sierra Nevada foothills, wildfire has always been part of Sold Out host Erin Baldassari’s consciousness. Her earliest memory is fleeing a fire as it bore down on her childhood home. At the time, it was the state’s third largest wildfire, but now it doesn’t even rank in the top 20. As she considers moving back, she explores what it means to live in an area with known and pronounced climate risk. The question for all of us on the frontlines of climate change is: how do we adapt when our memories of a place are constantly clashing with new realities?

    20 November 2023, 8:05 am
  • 52 minutes 26 seconds
    Sold Out Presents: Sea Change

    Sea Change is a podcast from WWNO and WRKF in Louisiana that dives deep into the environmental issues facing coastal communities on the Gulf Coast and beyond.

    When we talk about climate change, we hear one word all the time: resilient. We use it to talk about everything from our houses, to our power grid, to ourselves. 

    In this episode of Sea Change, we asked our listeners what they think about this word, and we got some very strong reactions. And, we ask the question: how can we address both the physical forces of climate change and the broken social systems that make it an even greater threat? We hear stories about efforts from across the Gulf Coast – from storm-proofing homes to creating neighborhood disaster response groups – to help keep people from needing to be resilient in the first place.


    16 November 2023, 8:05 am
  • 29 minutes 21 seconds
    Surviving California's Insurance Crisis

    When a flood or fire swallows someone’s home, insurance can provide some stability, and prevent a plunge into poverty. But as insurance companies pull out of California that promise is melting away. In this episode we discover what happens to home insurance as wildfires get worse and what we can do to improve the outlook. And we meet two families living with the consequences of this uncertain future.

    13 November 2023, 8:05 am
  • 23 minutes 44 seconds
    Reimagining Our Cities For The Climate

    What if there was a way that California could build the housing it needs and drastically cut carbon emissions at the same time? City planners and environmentalists say this unicorn does exist: transit-oriented housing. It sounds great in theory, but in practice, it’s more complicated. This episode explores how one California city, built around cars, is trying to create a different future. We’ll examine how the perfect solution for climate change forces us to rethink the American dream of the detached single family home and the SUV.

    6 November 2023, 8:05 am
  • 27 minutes 28 seconds
    Electric Avenue

    A quarter of California’s carbon emissions come from homes and buildings -- from the appliances we use to keep ourselves warm and our families fed. Replacing gas powered appliances with electric ones is one way to make a big impact, but the process is slow and expensive. We head to a neighborhood in Oakland that is taking a revolutionary approach to reducing their emissions: by electrifying together, all at once. We talk to the gung ho enthusiasts and the holdouts and explore the roadblocks to success.

    30 October 2023, 7:05 am
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