SPOKANE — On the Spokane Indian Reservation, young people have to sit in their cars to hear the fading signal from a low-power community radio station 50 miles away.
They are listening to a show that airs from 3 to 4 p.m. every Tuesday on Thin Air Community Radio, KYRS-FM, 92.3 and 89.9. The program offers 60 minutes of news, interviews and music that matter to American Indians.
“It is filling a gap that hasn’t been filled before,” said Twa-le Abrahamson, a Spokane tribal member who produces the show, “InnerTribal Beat.”
Abrahamson said word is getting out about the program, and once people learn about it, they are “very excited to be included.”
The show relies on this excitement, because listeners who call in provide much of the content, including news about American Indians who live in Spokane as well as on the area’s reservations.
This is important, Abrahamson said, because tribal newspapers, which are run by tribal governments, “are too political.” She envisions a day when reservation residents will be able to rely on expanded Native programming at KYRS as an independent news source.
It is a vision shared by KYRS program manager Lupito Flores, who has applied to the Federal Communications Commission for a full-power license. Because KYRS is a low-power station, its signal often cannot be heard on the reservations.
After the nonprofit KYRS goes from 100 watts to 6,000 watts, the station will be heard on the Spokane and Colville reservations.
“Our mission is to provide programs to unserved and underserved populations,” Flores said, not duplicate things you can already hear on radio. “We are surrounded by tribes, so it makes sense to produce a local Native American show.”
“InnerTribal Beat” is the second attempt by KYRS to provide Native programming, having broadcast a show two years ago with host Jim Boyd, a Colville tribal member and nationally known recording artist.
The new show has two hosts. Gabe Bylilly, an Eastern Washington University graduate student, provides the music and music commentary. Jeff Ferguson reads the news and public announcements, including job listings. The two also were involved in founding an American Indian music festival, called InnerTribal Vibes, which last May brought regional Native talent to Spokane Falls Community College.
Bylilly and Ferguson said the program fills a need among young people wanting to hear Native bands, particularly those specializing in hip-hop and rap that are rarely heard anywhere else.
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