More Posts for Show: Asheville Live Music Sessions
Asheville FM Live Music Sessions with Descolada
More Posts for Show: Asheville Live Music Sessions
The home of Asheville FM, WSFM-LP 103.3
by KP Whaley
by bogoodness

This week on the show, we feature a chat with Aaron Parker of Edgewood Nursery & Tim Holland (aka MC Sole), who together form the Propaganda By The Seed podcast. You can find the podcast on the channel zero network, Libsyn, and a bunch of streaming services. We hope you enjoy this chat as much as Bursts did. We talk about their project of sharing conversations with various farmers, herbalists, propagators, scavengers, historians and cooks about plants, food autonomy, agriculture mutual aid and a host of other, related topics.
You can find a bunch of Sole’s music at his bandcamp. And, if you want to hear past convos we’ve had, you can find a chat Tim & Bursts had (when Bursts was wicked underslept) in 2017 or Amar & Bursts on the “final” Solecast in 2020.
Check at our website for more details on topics discussed and links. Also, if you want to hear the last 30 minutes of this chat (including talk about ethics in food production under capitalism, land projects & Sole’s music) plus Sean Swain’s segment, you can find our podcast on a bunch of streaming sites listed at tfsr.wtf, or you can play it at our site or subscribe to our podcast.
For a few articles on the Amy’s Kitchen labor issues, since they closed a factory in San Jose, laying off 300 employees with no notice…:
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by DJ Smittymon
Join DJSmittymon this week for a live performance and talk by local Asheville folk / rock band * Strawhouse * on this edition of the Positive Vibes’ Early Morning Music Sessions.. happens Tuesday, Sept. 6th – starts around 9am.. tune in – turn it up.. enjoy… smittymon

by Sagan
This week on Radio Active Kids, we have an in-studio interview and performance (her third!) with local kindie heroine Kare Strong! Also, new songs by Itty Bitty Beats, Martin and Rose, DARIA & fleaBITE, plus older songs by Carrie Ferguson, #KonshenstheMC, Pierce Freelon, #MrBooDaddy, The Whomping Willows & Suli Puschban, AND a whole set of really corny songs by Astrograss, Barenaked Ladies, Corn Man, Recess Monkey, Schmoyoho/Recess Therapy, Kymberly Stewart, uncle dox & The Green Orbs, & The Vegetable Plot!!! 8-10am ET Saturday at ashevillefm.org/show/radio-active-kids or tun.in/pjiei & podcasting at mixcloud.com/Radio_Active_Kids!
ROCKLAND COUNTY, NY – August 26, 2022 – In July, a case of paralytic polio was detected in Rockland County, New York, north of New York City. The person was unvaccinated and exposed to someone who had received the oral polio vaccine. This is the first case of polio originating in the U.S. since 1979. Dr. José Romero, director of the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, told CNN “I think most of the American public has never seen a case of polio. People have lost that fear, if you will, of the disease.”
On August 12th, New York City health authorities said that the polio virus has been identified in wastewater samples since May. The polio virus has also been detected in wastewater samples in Rockland County and Orange County, N.J., both near New York City. Detection of polio virus in the wastewater may indicate future cases of polio in New York City or the immediate vicinity. There “must be several hundred cases in the community circulating,” a senior official with the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention told CNN earlier this month.
In New York City, the rate of polio vaccination among children 5 years and under is 86%, lower than the national rate of 93%. Vaccination rates in neighboring Rockland County and Orange County are about 60%. Vaccination rates in New York City have fallen because regular doctor visits were postponed during the COVID crisis and from vaccine misinformation that became more prevalent during the COVID pandemic. Some small ethnic & religious groups have not vaccinated their children, like the ultraorthodox Jewish community in Rockland County where this recent case was identified.
“The risk to New Yorkers is real but the defense is so simple — get vaccinated against polio,” Dr. Ashwin Vasan, the New York City health commissioner, said in a statement. “With polio circulating in our communities, there is simply nothing more essential than vaccinating our children to protect them from this virus, and if you’re an unvaccinated or incompletely vaccinated adult, please choose now to get the vaccine.”
Listen to the full report below:
Contact: Dick Needleman, Health reporter, 103.3 AshevilleFM, [email protected]
ASHEVILLE, NC – August 26, 2022 – Polio is an infectious disease caused by the polio virus. It is highly infectious and spreads from person-to-person. Polio has an asymptomatic form, a mild form and a severe form. The majority of people with polio do not have any symptoms so it can spread silently. Symptoms of sore throat and fever are in the mild form. The severe type affects the central nervous system resulting in paralysis or non-paralytic nerve damage and weakness. About 1 in 200 infected persons will become paralyzed. By the 20th century, polio became one of the most worrisome childhood diseases in the U.S. and the world. In 1952, prior to the polio vaccine rollout in 1955, there were more than 20,000 cases of paralysis in the U.S. due to polio. With the discovery of polio vaccines, mass immunization of people in developed countries followed by developing nations led to a sharp decline in the number of polio cases in the U.S. and worldwide. By 2021, there were only 6 confirmed cases in 3 countries (Pakistan, Afghanistan and Malawi).
There is no cure for polio, but it can be prevented through vaccination. One type of vaccine is weakened live virus administered orally and the other type is inactivated polio virus given by injection. Only the inactivated vaccine is used in the U.S. However, the oral vaccine is used in much of the world. Therefore, a person who receives the oral vaccine can spread a weakened form of polio virus to others. In communities with low vaccination rates, or in immunocompromised persons, the weakened virus can mutate to a virulent form that can cause severe polio illness.
Four doses of the injected vaccine, usually administered between ages 2 months and 6 years, can provide at least 99% protection against severe disease. No cases of polio have originated in the U.S. since 1979. However, the last time polio has been in this country was brought in by travelers in 2013. According to the CDC, almost 93% of all children in the U.S. have had the full polio vaccination series. Therefore, the elimination of polio has been attributed to a successful vaccination program.
Wastewater surveillance has been used to track disease-producing virus material that can be shed in an infected person’s stool. Scientists can use this data to track the amount of virus material and whether it is rising or falling in a particular area. This technique has been used to study the amount of COVID-19 virus in a community. Recently, it been used to track polio virus in many communities in the U.S. and worldwide. This year, the polio virus has also been detected in wastewater in New York City and surrounding counties, Israel and London. The Metropolitan Sewage District plant for Buncombe County in partnership with the Buncombe County Health Department, the CDC, and the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, has been testing for COVID-19. According to General Manager Tom Hartye, the district plant does not presently test for polio.
Listen to the full report below:
Contact: Dick Needleman, Health reporter, 103.3 AshevilleFM, [email protected]