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Yesterday — 30 September 2025WDET 101.9 FM

In The Groove: Jeff Tweedy’s massive solo album, Big Thief’s ‘Happy With You,’ plus a musical time capsule from 1998

29 September 2025 at 20:53

Cracking open a couple of musical time capsules by throwing it back to the releases of Stevie Wonder’s magnum opus “Songs in the Key of Life” as well as a groundbreaking Temptations single.

We also go back 27 years ago to 1998 when A Tribe Called Quest and OutKast both dropped landmark albums on the same day.

Of course, there’s new stuff, too, from Nightbus, Jeff Tweedy, Big Thief, Tortoise and more.

Check the playlist below and listen to the episode for two weeks after it airs using the player above.

In The Groove with Ryan Patrick Hooper playlist for September 29, 2025

  • “Papa Was a Rolling Stone (Single Version)” – Temptations
  • “Psychedelic Reggae (with Tommy McCook & The Supersonics) [with Tommy McCook & The Supersonics]” – Winston Wright
  • “Let It Be (with The Dixie Flyers)” – Aretha Franklin
  • “Happy With You” – Big Thief
  • “KC Rain (No Wonder)” – Jeff Tweedy
  • “Banc de poissons” – Vulfmon & Jacob Jeffries
  • “Animaru” – Mei Semones
  • “Gimme Some More” – Labi Siffre
  • “SHELL ( OF A MAN )” – Saya Gray
  • “Love Takes Miles” – Cameron Winter
  • “Layered Presence” – Tortoise
  • “The Field (feat. The Durutti Column, Tariq Al-Sabir, Caroline Polachek & Daniel Caesar)” – Blood Orange
  • “Will Anybody Ever Love Me?” – Sufjan Stevens
  • “A Deeper Life” – Chaos In The CBD & Isaac Aesili
  • “Love’s In Need of Love Today” – Stevie Wonder
  • “Village Ghetto Land” – Stevie Wonder
  • “Silver” – Say She She
  • “Riverside” – Oracle Sisters
  • “African Skies” – Lars Bartkuhn
  • “I Did It For You” – Tom Misch & Yussef Dayes
  • “Chasing The Drum” – Yussef Dayes
  • “Rust (feat. Tom Misch)” – Yussef Dayes
  • “Ámame” – Bardo
  • “Save Me” – Emma-Jean Thackray
  • “See-Line Woman” – Danielle Ponder & Bryce Dessner
  • “My Moon My Man” – Feist
  • “Africa” – Bill Laurance & Michael League
  • “You’d Be So Nice to Come Home To” – Andrew Bird, Alan Hampton & Ted Poor
  • “Garden” – Maria Somerville
  • “To Be A Rose” – Jenny Hval
  • “Angles Mortz” – Nightbus
  • “The Middle (Outro)” – Girls of the Internet & Allysha Joy
  • “Back 2 Me (feat. Sadie Walker)” – Girls of the Internet
  • “Find A Way” – A Tribe Called Quest
  • “Rosa Parks” – OutKast

Listen to In the Groove with host Ryan Patrick Hooper weekdays from noon-3 p.m. ET on 101.9 WDET or stream on-demand at wdet.org.

The post In The Groove: Jeff Tweedy’s massive solo album, Big Thief’s ‘Happy With You,’ plus a musical time capsule from 1998 appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Detroit Evening Report: Flags at half-staff following Grand Blanc attack

29 September 2025 at 20:37

Governor Gretchen Whitmer has ordered public buildings to fly flags at half-staff in memory of those who were killed in yesterday’s attack at a church in Grand Blanc Township.

Police say a former Marine drove his truck through the doors of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, started shooting at the hundreds of people worshiping inside, then set the building on fire.  Police identify the killer as Thomas Sanford of Burton, a former Marine who served in Iraq. 

Investigators say at least four people died and eight others were hurt.  

Officers fatally shot the gunman in the parking lot. The FBI is leading the investigation, trying to find a motive. 

Additional headlines from Monday, September 29, 2025

Arab Con 

People from across the nation gathered for ArabCon this past weekend. It’s the second time the national convening took place in Dearborn, home to the largest concentration of Arab Americans per capita.

The event was put on by the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, the largest Arab American grassroots civil rights organization in the U.S. The group hosts this annual convention as a way to promote cultural heritage, and bring together community leaders, activists, artists, and entrepreneurs. They also bring forth national speakers to discuss matters of importance to the community including the ongoing war in Gaza. 

Attendee Ali Baleed Almaklani is the Executive Director of the Yemeni American Benevolent Association. 

“Because this ADC [has] been working hard, serving the community, fighting for the rights of this community, the rights of Palestinian people. And when you come to the conference, you’ve see a lot of faces. You learn more from those who participate.”

Almaklani says it’s also a great way to network with people and purchase items from vendors. 

Panelists discussed a range of topics from politics to activism. 

United Way preparedness

United Way and Verizon are raising awareness for emergency preparedness as part of a community resiliency initiative. 

Marcus Coleman Jr. is the Vice President for Community Resiliency Strategy at United Way Worldwide. He says the organization was created in response to crisis and now there are 1,100 branches in 35 countries. 

He says as more and more extreme weather events occur such as severe floods, it’s important for people to be prepared. 

“For the weeks, months and years, long after that disaster, to really help communities recover and we mobilize, right? So United Way works with a number of groups on the private sector side, but we also come alongside the American Red Cross, Feeding America, Islamic Relief USA, and many others, to ensure that all needs can be met during a disaster.”

Coleman says United Way is hosting workshops to teach people about preparedness. People can find out more about workshops and tips at unitedway.org/prepare

Operation Warm 

The national nonprofit Operation Warm manufactures and distributes coats and shoes to students in need at Title I, or low-income, elementary schools

Brenda Lee is Vice President of Marketing and Communications at Operation Warm. 

She says they’ve served over 7 million children in 25 years. 

“So a donation of $25 will supply a brand new winter coat for a child or a pair of shoes. And our programming is highly efficient, so 95 cents of every dollar donated goes directly back into coat and shoe programs.” 

The nonprofit recently did a survey, finding 36% of parents admit that they’ve kept their kid home on a cold day because they didn’t have a warm coat. 

Operation Warm has two gifting events coming up this year: one in Warren in October and one in Detroit in November. 

Lee says families whose children attend a Title I school can ask their school to join the Operation Warm wishlist and stay in the know about upcoming distributions.  

If there is something happening in your neighborhood that you think we should know about, drop us a line at DetroitEveningReport@wdet.org.

Listen to the latest episode of the “Detroit Evening Report” on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, NPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

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Donate today »

The post Detroit Evening Report: Flags at half-staff following Grand Blanc attack appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

The Metro: Detroit plans to reroute trucks away from residential neighborhoods

By: Sam Corey
29 September 2025 at 18:55

In Southwest Detroit, 18-wheeled vehicles frequently rumble through streets that aren’t made for them. Heavy truck traffic has been more than just an inconvenience here. 

For years, it’s meant noise, pollution, and danger for neighbors. And the problem is significant. 

Detroit is one of the country’s busiest freight hubs. Per Outlier Media reporting, about 128,000 loaded containers entered the city in July alone. 

To improve the situation, the city of Detroit is creating new truck restrictions on certain streets. Samuel Krassenstein is the Chief of Infrastructure and the Deputy Director for Public Works for the City of Detroit. He tells The Metro that next week the city plans to make some of the biggest series of truck route restrictions yet.

Krassenstein spoke with Robyn Vincent about truck traffic in Detroit, the problems it causes, and how the city is working to alleviate the problem for residents who live near it.

 

Listen to The Metro weekdays from 10 a.m. to noon ET on 101.9 FM and streaming on-demand.

Subscribe to The Metro on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or NPR or wherever you get your podcasts.

 

Support local journalism.

WDET strives to cover what’s happening in your community. As a public media institution, we maintain our ability to explore the music and culture of our region through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

More stories from The Metro

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Losing ‘SNAP-Ed’ means losing infrastructure to promote community health

29 September 2025 at 17:25

Suzanne McAtee has attended the classes offered through Munson Hospital’s Fruit and Vegetables Prescription Program since they began five years ago.

At 93, she credits the program — through which doctors prescribe diet education as a treatment for chronic diseases such as obesity, diabetes and high blood pressure — with helping her manage her health.

“I have stage-five kidney disease. My next step is dialysis,” McAtee said. “I have controlled this through my diet, which is very important to me, and that’s the other reason I pay particular attention to everything I eat.”

Come month’s end, the class may not exist.

The class is led for free by educators who are part of the federally funded SNAP-Education program, which partners with more than 33,000 organizations nationwide to promote healthy eating, physical activity, and better food access. In Michigan, two agencies — Michigan State University Extension and the Michigan Fitness Foundation — operate SNAP-Ed programs in places such as schools, senior centers, and food pantries.

Funding cuts

Congress slashed funding for SNAP-Ed in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act earlier this year. More than 120 MSU Extension health educators will lose their jobs across Michigan this month, and the Michigan Fitness Foundation is in the process of sunsetting some of its programs into next year.

Michigan Congressman Jack Bergman, who supported the cuts in May, did not respond to a request for comment. In an email to constituents, he said that, while the SNAP-Ed initiative was “commendable,” the results were disappointing, citing rising childhood obesity rates. According to the Ballard Center for Social Impact, the rate of childhood obesity has tripled since the 1970s.

Sarah Eichberger, a Traverse City SNAP-Ed educator, disagreed that that was proof SNAP-Ed programs failed. Rather, she said, that highlights how large the American health crisis really is.

“How can you now say one underfunded federal nutrition program is responsible for not making our entire country healthy?” Eichberger said. “We live in a country where there are systems and structures that prevent people from being healthy.”

Michigan’s share of the SNAP-Ed budget

Of the SNAP-Ed budget — $536 million in fiscal year 2025 — Michigan received $27 million and relied on that funding more than any other state of its size — with only California, New York and Pennsylvania receiving more funding.

In 2024, the MSU Extension’s SNAP-Ed program reached more than 115,000 people across Michigan, with national SNAP-Ed outreach serving millions of low-income Americans.

Much of the work done by SNAP-Ed, according to Eichberger, is behind the scenes, like securing grants for its 1,000 community partners. Those partnerships allowed the program to stretch its budget further and reach more people.

How can you now say one underfunded federal nutrition program is responsible for not making our entire country healthy? We live in a country where there are systems and structures that prevent people from being healthy.

—SNAP-Ed educator Sarah Eichberger

Two years ago, Eichberger helped launch a program to deliver boxes of locally grown fruits and vegetables to daycares across 32 counties. That initiative, made possible through outside grants, relied on the network of SNAP-Ed staff working directly with child care providers to offer expertise and support.

The loss of SNAP-Ed, Eichberg said, is not just health and nutrition classes going away. It’s the loss of an entire network of people and partnerships working to create healthy systems and programs.

Making America healthy 

While the Trump administration’s Make America Healthy Again movement — which has focused on banning red food dyes and encouraged the fast food restaurant Steak ‘n Shake to switch from frying its food in seed oil to beef tallow — has made headlines, Eichberger said the work SNAP-Ed does to promote a healthy diet of fresh fruit and vegetables along with exercise is even more important.

“If you can get people to be healthier, if you can prevent Type 2 diabetes, heart disease… that’s so much more impactful than some of these things the conversation has been moving more towards,” said Eichberger.

Loss of funding, loss of access

The loss of SNAP-Ed is part of a larger trend of cuts to public health funding. That includes increased work requirements for Medicaid and cuts to SNAP’s food assistance program through the Big, Beautiful Bill, along with long enough delays in US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention funding that local agencies have had to lay off staff.

Eichberger worries about the long-term effects, especially as fewer people will have access to food stamps and health care coverage.

“Less people are going to be able to access food stamps. There’ll be less access (to) health care coverage,” Eichberger said. “We haven’t fully seen the impact yet… but it will be significant.”

Hopes for new funding

Patti Tibaldi, the project manager for SNAP-Ed at Traverse City Area Public Schools through the Michigan Fitness Foundation, had to let go of four staff members when funding was cut earlier this year. However, she may be able to bring them back if new funding becomes available.

The US Department of Agriculture recently opened a new grant for SNAP-Ed programs, although with reduced funding. The grant is meant to sunset the program, Tibaldi said, and will only last until next summer. Many organizations, Tibaldi said, have chosen not to pursue it.

For now, Tibaldi and the few remaining SNAP-Ed programs are waiting to find out about that USDA grant — and see if they have just one year left.

“We’re going to try to hang in there — whatever little thing we can do to help these families and the kids,” said Tibaldi. “I think it’s very shortsighted to lose the focus on how important it is for kids and families to learn healthy habits.”

This reporting is made possible by the Northern Michigan Journalism Collaborative, a project led by Interlochen Public Radio and Bridge Michigan, and funded by Press Forward Northern Michigan.

The post Losing ‘SNAP-Ed’ means losing infrastructure to promote community health appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music: Songs about songs!

29 September 2025 at 15:06

In this week’s episode of Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music, as a HUGE “thank you” to all who supported us during the fundraiser, we’re getting back to “normal” this week with SONGS… In fact, 2 hours of Songs About Songs (and songwriting)! From Aretha to Weezer, EWF to Shaboozey and lots more!

See the playlist below and listen to the episode for two weeks after it airs using the media player above.

Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music Playlist for September 27, 2025

HOUR ONE:

  • “Sing A Song” – Earth Wind & Fire
  • “Rap Song” – Black Eyed Peas
  • “Wrote A Song For Everyone” – John Fogerty
  • “I Wrote This Song For You” – Willie Nelson
  • “A Song” – Apropos
  • “Life Is A Song Worth Singing” – Teddy Pendergrass
  • “Sing A Simple Song” – Sly & The Family Stone
  • “Sing My Song” – Langhorne Slim
  • “Border Song” – Aretha Franklin
  • “Radio Song” – Esperanza Spalding
  • “Radio Song” – R.E.M.
  • “Radio Songs” – Jack Spivey
  • “Redemption Song” – Bob Marley & The Wailers
  • “Love Song” – Lesley Duncan
HOUR TWO:
  • “A Great Idea For A Song” – Artichoke
  • “Same Old Song” – The Lumineers
  • “It’s The Same Old Song” – The Four Tops
  • “Crappy Love Song” – Theo Katzman
  • “Silly Love Songs” – Wings
  • “Love You Like A Love Song” – Selena Gomez
  • “Love Song For No One” – John Mayer
  • “No More Love Songs” – Bette Smith
  • “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” – Shaboozey
  • “Prison Song” – Graham Nash
  • “A Song For You” – Merry Clayton
  • “Look What They Done To My Song” – Ray Charles
  • “All My Favorite Songs” – Weezer
  • “I’ll Write A Song For You” – Earth Wind & Fire

Listen to Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music every Saturday from 2-4 p.m. ET on Detroit Public Radio 101.9 WDET and streaming on-demand at wdet.org

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today.

Give now »

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Acoustic Café: Rocker Kristen Ford is our guest, and in-studio archives from Mon Rovia, ZZ Ward, Lady Blackbird + more

29 September 2025 at 13:57

On this week’s episode of Acoustic Café, Kristen Ford plays songs from her seventh album”Pinto.” First inspired by seeing Ani Difranco as a teenager, Kristen’s new record is her first for Ani’s Righteous Babe Records label!

Also, we dip into the archives for songs from Lady Blackbird, ZZ Ward and Mon Rovia, all recorded this year, Grant Lee Phillips in 2000 and much more!

See the playlist below and listen to the episodes on-demand for two weeks after it airs using the media player above.

Acoustic Café Playlist for September 28, 2025

  • “Million Dollar Intro” – Ani DiFranco
  • “Returning To Myself” – Brandi Carlile
  • “Cherokee Louise” – Joni Mitchell
  • “Foreign” – Britton
  • “She Explains Everything To Me” – David Byrne
  • “Big Love Ahead” – Mon Rovia (in-studio performance)
  • “Lonely Avenue” – Jon Batiste w/Randy Newman
  • “White Man’s Dream” – Kristen Ford (in-studio guest)
  • “Wild Heart” – Kristen Ford (in-studio guest)
  • “Fast Like You” – Hazlett
  • “Rosalee” – Molly Tuttle
  • “No More Love Songs” – Bette Smith
  • “Lioness” – ZZ Ward (in-studio performance)
  • “Atlantic City” – Bruce Springsteen
  • “Keep A Picture” – Margo Price
  • “I Listened (Every Night)” – Blood Orange
  • “Let You People Down” – Fruit Bats
  • “Man On A Boat” – Lady Blackbird (in-studio performance)
  • “Mockingbird (unplugged)” – Larkin Poe
  • “Blame It On God” – Jacob Banks
  • “Little Men” – Grant Lee Phillips
  • “You’re A Pony” – Grant Lee Phillips (in-studio performance)
  • “My Key To Gramercy Park” – Rachael & Vilray
  • “Grrrl In The Mirror” – Kristen Ford (in-studio guest)
  • “Whiplash” – Kristen Ford (in-studio guest)

Listen to Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music every Saturday from 2-4 p.m. ET on Detroit Public Radio 101.9 WDET and streaming on-demand at wdet.org.

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today. Give now »

The post Acoustic Café: Rocker Kristen Ford is our guest, and in-studio archives from Mon Rovia, ZZ Ward, Lady Blackbird + more appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

CONTAINER on The Metro: Taylor Childs

29 September 2025 at 12:00

Taylor’s Creative Journey in Art and Fashion

Taylor has made a name for herself in art and fashion. In 2025, Taylor was named a Kresge Gilda Snowden Emerging Artist. She was also a prominent designer featured in Detroit Month of Design and a standout for the year’s Michigan Fashion Week.

Taylor graduated from the College for Creative Studies and Cranbrook Academy of Art.

The limit seemingly doesn’t exist for Taylor and what she can create. Taylor’s designs are unique in that she practices sustainable fashion.

But as Taylor would tell it, she learned how to create something out of nothing from her family, starting with her grandmother, who made sure the neighborhood was a community.

CONTAINER On The Metro is a new WDET-produced storytelling series that brings Detroit’s creative heartbeat to the airwaves.

CONTAINER is a program created by The Love Building to showcase Detroit’s most promising creative talent across music, fashion, fine arts and food. Done in collaboration with WDET Public Radio with major support from the Gilbert Family Foundation.

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At least 5 dead following attack on Mormon congregation in Grand Blanc

29 September 2025 at 02:17

At least five people, including the attacker, are dead after a gunman opened fire inside the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in Grand Blanc on Sunday morning. Eight others were taken to the hospital.

The shooter has been identified as 40-year-old Thomas Jacob Sanford, a military veteran from Burton, Michigan. Authorities say he rammed his truck into the church just before 10:30 a.m. local time and opened fire on the Mormon congregation.

The church was also set on fire during the ordeal. Investigators believe Sanford intentionally started the blaze and likely used an accelerant to intensify the flames.

Grand Blanc Township police chief William Renye, says local authorities were on the scene within minutes.

“The suspect,” says Renye, “was neutralized at 10:33:44 a.m. in the parking lot of that church.”

The FBI is leading an investigation into the attack and is treating it as a targeted act of violence. State law enforcement say they’ve responded to a number of bomb threats in the community following the Grand Blanc attack.

When asked whether the attack on the Mormon church was retaliation for the shooting of Charlie Kirk in Utah, Michigan State Police lieutenant Kimberly Vetter says it’s too soon to pinpoint a motive.

“That’s exactly what it is,” says Vetter, “is speculation. And we won’t come to those types of conclusions for some time.”

Law enforcement say they have not yet determined whether there are additional bodies in the burned-out church.

The FBI is asking members of the public to share any information that may help with the investigation.  That can be done by calling 1-800-CALL-FBI (1-800-225-5324) or by using the Bureau’s online tip portal

The post At least 5 dead following attack on Mormon congregation in Grand Blanc appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

BREAKING: Multiple people shot at Mormon church in Michigan and shooter is down, police say

28 September 2025 at 16:01

GRAND BLANC, Mich. (AP) — Multiple people have been shot at a Mormon church in Michigan and the shooter is down, police said Sunday.

 

The shooting occurred at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Grand Blanc, about 50 miles north of Detroit, local police said in a social media post. The church was on fire.

Police said there is no ongoing threat to the public.

Keep up with updates.

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Detroit Evening Report: Michigan receives federal approval for revised EV charging plan

26 September 2025 at 19:06

State to use $52 million in frozen funds to expand network

Michigan is moving forward with its revised electric vehicle charging plan after receiving federal approval. The US Department of Transportation approved the state’s plan under the National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Formula Program, allocating $52 million remaining from an original $110 million. The Trump administration froze the $52 million in February.

One of the biggest challenges for electric vehicles is the limited number of charging stations. Michigan plans to fund a total of 83 stations. Two are already operational and four more are under construction. The rest are still being planned.

Read more from the Detroit News

More details from MDOT

Additional headlines

Detroit’s economic outlook shows steady growth

The city of Detroit held its regular biannual revenue estimating conference this week to review its economic outlook. State law requires these independent revenue conferences to be held in September and February each fiscal year.

The Detroit Economic Outlook for 2024–2030 projects that the city will see an increase in jobs, wages, and resident employment in the next five years. The forecast also shows moderate growth for payroll jobs, while Detroit wages are expected to outpace the state average.

Read the city’s full economic outlook

Detroit Digital Empowerment Summit highlights innovation

The City of Detroit is participating in the Detroit Digital Empowerment Summit this weekend. The event will feature competitions awarding $175,000 in funding for new tech ideas.

The three-day summit is hosted by the organization Black Tech Saturdays and will showcase innovation and economic mobility. It will also include pitch competitions and opportunities for Detroiters of all ages to explore the power of technology.

The city’s Office of Innovation and Technology will present Youth Tech Fest at the summit to introduce technology to the next generation.

Learn more at DetroitMI.gov

Follow the summit at Black Tech Saturdays

Detroit Lions and Tigers weekend matchups

The Detroit Lions had a commanding performance on Monday against the Baltimore Ravens, beating them 38–30. According to ESPN, the game was one of the most viewed Monday night matchups in the last 20 years. This Sunday, the Lions face the Cleveland Browns at Ford Field with kickoff at 1:00 p.m.

In Major League Baseball, the Detroit Tigers will face the Boston Red Sox this weekend. The Tigers are currently in second place in the American League Central and could move back to the top with a series win.

Detroit Fiber Festival returns Sunday

The Detroit Fiber Festival takes place this Sunday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. The event brings together fabric artists, makers, and vendors from across Metro Detroit. This year’s focus is sustainability in sourcing textiles and materials.

There will also be lectures and demonstrations on preservation, highlighting how period fabrics and textiles are used in costuming.

Learn more at Detroit Month of Design

Listen to the latest episode of the “Detroit Evening Report” on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, NPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

Support the podcasts you love.

One-of-a-kind podcasts from WDET bring you engaging conversations, news you need to know and stories you love to hear. Keep the conversations coming. Please make a gift today. Give now »

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In The Groove: New music Friday with Juana Molina, Automatic, Nightbus, RIO KOSTA + more

26 September 2025 at 18:31

So much to explore on this new music Friday on In The Groove! Fresh releases from Jadu Heart, Vulfmon, Franc Moody, Juana Molina, Joy Crookes, Nightbus (a new favorite around here!), plus Automatic, RIO KOSTA and more.

Check the playlist below and listen to the episode for two weeks after it airs using the player above.

In The Groove with Ryan Patrick Hooper playlist for September 26, 2025

  • “Save Me” – Emma-Jean Thackray
  • “Siestas ahí” – Juana Molina
  • “Sharks In The Water” – Franc Moody
  • “Banc de poissons” – Vulfmon & Jacob Jeffries
  • “Dewy” – Resavoir & Matt Gold
  • “Fade Your Heart” – Joy Crookes
  • “Landslide” – Nightbus
  • “Alone (Four Tet Remix)” – The Cure
  • “Mercury” – Automatic
  • “It’s Starting” – RIO KOSTA
  • “Kelly Watch the Stars (Vegyn Version)” – Air
  • “Sad Makeup” – Yukimi
  • “Selenge” – Céline Dessberg
  • “Nobody New” – The Marias
  • “Soul On Fire” – LaVern Baker
  • “Every Time He Comes Around” – Minnie Riperton
  • “BOYS WITH THE CHARACTERISTICS OF WOLVES” – Unknown Mortal Orchestra
  • “Bill Loves You” – Hidden Spheres
  • “Stay Happy” – Broken Social Scene
  • “SOS” – Jadu Heart
  • “U” – Jadu Heart
  • “Monsters” – SAULT
  • “Sun For Someone” – Oscar Jerome
  • “Little Things” – Lake Trout
  • “Another Day To Run” – Bill Withers
  • “Bright Moments” – Admin
  • “Don’t Be Afraid” – East Coast Love Affair
  • “Seoul Disco Night” – Lewis OfMan
  • “Fuzz Jam (Harvey Sutherland X-Tra Fuzz Remix)” – Lazy Eyes
  • “Attitude” – Lewis OfMan
  • “Plasty” – LL Burns
  • “Quiet Places” – Ghost Funk Orchestra
  • “Loud Places” – Jamie XX, Romy
  • “NEVER ENOUGH” – Turnstile
  • “draw something beautiful” – Ganavya
  • “Roygbiv” – Boards of Canada
  • “Eple” – Röyksopp

Listen to In the Groove with host Ryan Patrick Hooper weekdays from noon-3 p.m. ET on 101.9 WDET or stream on-demand at wdet.org.

 

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today. Give now »

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MichMash: Recapping the Mackinac Republican Leadership Conference

26 September 2025 at 17:21

The Michigan GOP held their biennial leadership conference at Mackinac Island this past weekend. In this episode of MichMash, WDET’s Cheyna Roth and Gongwer News Service’s Alethia Kasben sit down with Baldy Bipartisan’s John Selleck to discuss whether the conference is still beneficial for the Michigan Republican party.

Plus, Cheyna and Alethia discuss a proposal to move the state’s primary election from early August to May.

Subscribe to MichMash on Apple PodcastsSpotifyNPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

In this episode:

  • How important is the Mackinac Republican Leadership Conference?
  • Should Michigan’s primary election be moved up to earlier in the year?
  • Where are we with the state budget?

Support the podcasts you love.

One-of-a-kind podcasts from WDET bring you engaging conversations, news you need to know and stories you love to hear. Keep the conversations coming. Please make a gift today. Give now »

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The Metro Events Guide: Interactive sculptures, intimate concerts and more ways to engage with art

25 September 2025 at 22:25

This week, we’ve got tons of ways to engage with art in metro Detroit, from interactive sculptures to intimate concerts. Plus, fall favorites, small business experiences and season premieres. Read on to learn more.

Upcoming events

Season Fair

📍  Michigan Central in Detroit

🗓  Thursday, Sep. 25 through Sunday, Sep. 28

🎟  $30–$100

Detroit’s first contemporary art fair dedicated to bringing local and international galleries together. Visitors can browse featured artwork, shop for new pieces and attend panel discussions. The fair is open from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, and from noon to 6 p.m. on Sunday. Single day entry is $40 for general admission or $30 for seniors and students with valid ID. VIP tickets are available for $100 and include multi-day entry and access to exclusive events.

Rooftop Rendezvous feat. Kasan Belgrave

📍  Arab American National Museum in Dearborn

🗓  Friday, Sep. 26

🎟  Free with RSVP

A free outdoor concert featuring saxophonist Kasan Belgrave and his band. Belgrave is a woodwind specialist, recording artist and jazz composer, and he’s the son of legendary Detroit trumpet player Marcus Belgrave. The concert goes from 6–8 p.m.

Hay Ride Central

📍  Heritage Park in Farmington Hills

🗓  Every Friday, Sep. 26–Oct. 31

🎟  $5–$6

Family hayrides through the trails of Heritage Park in Farmington Hills. Admission is $5, and participants can get cider and a s’more at the end of the ride for an extra $1. Kids under 2 years old ride for free. Rides leave every half hour from 5:30–7 p.m.

Shop Downtown Detroit

📍  Various locations in Detroit

🗓  Saturday, Sep. 27

🎟  Free

A one-day event promoting downtown businesses, featuring exclusive deals, limited-edition products and interactive experiences. Promotions go from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. at participating vendors.

13th Annual Ofrendas: Celebrating el Día de Muertos

📍  Detroit Institute of Arts

🗓  Saturday, Sep. 27 through Sunday, Nov. 2

🎟  Free with museum admission (free for residents of Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties)

The 13th installment of the DIA’s Día de Muertos celebration, developed in partnership with the Consulate of Mexico in Detroit, the Southwest Detroit Business Association and Mexicantown CDC. The exhibition features ofrendas by local artists and community members, and is designed to familiarize visitors with the Mexican traditions of the Day of the Dead.

Public Opening Celebration for Contemporary Anishinaabe Art: A Continuation

📍  Detroit Institute of Arts

🗓  Sunday, Sep. 28

🎟  Free with museum admission (free for residents of Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties)

A day of creative and cultural activities to mark the opening of the DIA’s newest exhibit highlighting contemporary Anishinaabe art. There will be a sculpture dedication ceremony, drop-in art making activities, live musical performances and storytelling. All ages are welcome.

10 Years Back, 10 Years Forward: Black Bottom Archives

📍  Detroit Historical Museum

🗓  Ongoing through Sunday, Sep. 28

🎟  $15

A 10th anniversary exhibit celebrating the Black Bottom Archives, featuring zines, podcasts, photos and interactive displays about the historic Detroit neighborhood.

Here There Are Blueberries

📍  Detroit Public Theatre

🗓  Wednesday, Oct. 1 through Sunday, Nov. 2

🎟  $5–$100

A play based on true events that follows a mysterious album of never-before-seen World War II-era photographs and a shocking truth behind the images inside. This is the first production in DPT’s 11th season. General admission is $52–$100 and select dates feature pick-your-price tickets starting at $5.

Shape Your World Interactive Experience feat. Optik Installation

📍  Beacon Park in Detroit

🗓  Ongoing through Friday, Oct. 3

🎟  Free

An outdoor installation featuring interactive gyroscopic structures that create unique light displays and abstract sounds depending on the position of the sun. The venue also offers music and curated beverages by Lumen Detroit. The installation is open to the public daily from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m.

Support local journalism.

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The post The Metro Events Guide: Interactive sculptures, intimate concerts and more ways to engage with art appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

The Metro: Neuroscientist explains how music affects the brain

25 September 2025 at 21:04

Music is a form of creative expression, but it’s also an antidote that can put you in just the right head space at the right time. It can calm you down after a stressful day or hype you up before a night out. 

Music has the power to alter or reinforce our state of being and scientists like Daniel Levitin want to harness its power to heal us.

Levitin is a neuroscientist and a musician who has spent a lot of time studying the impact music has on our brains. His most recent book is called “I Heard There Was A Secret Chord: Music As Medicine”.

He joined he show to discuss the book and explain how music can heal us.

Listen to The Metro weekdays from 10 a.m. to noon ET on 101.9 FM and streaming on demand.

Subscribe to The Metro on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, NPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

Support local journalism.

WDET strives to cover what’s happening in your community. As a public media institution, we maintain our ability to explore the music and culture of our region through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

More stories from The Metro

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Detroit Evening Report: Entrepreneur and lender match program announced

25 September 2025 at 20:55

The Detroit Economic Growth Corporation announced a new platform that will match entrepreneurs with the best fitting lender. 

The website is designed to help small businesses navigate financial options through partnerships with local Community Development Financial Institutions.   

Applicants visit the website, submit the criteria for the type of loan and amount they need, and the algorithm will match them with the best lenders.  

DEGC Senior Vice President Derrick Headd calls the hub a central command center for the city’s small business ecosystem.  “One place where you can find financing options, technical assistance, and service organizations. Everything you need to have a thriving company.” 

Lenders participating in the hub include ProsperUS, Detroit Development Fund, Invest Detroit and more.  

Eligible applicants must be located in the city, have documented cash flow, and cannot be affiliated with any business prohibited by federal law.  

 Additional headlines for Thursday, September 25, 2025

Pastors seek high voter turnout this mayoral election

Detroit voters will elect the city’s first new mayor in 12 years this fall. A coalition of pastors is working to educate and mobilize their flocks to decide between City Council President Mary Sheffield and Reverend Solomon Kinloch. 

Organizers say 12 churches took part in the Lift Every Voice and Vote campaign in the August primary. They want five times that number mobilizing voters in the general election. 

Al Williams leads Lift Every Voice and Vote Detroit. He admits its hard motivating voters in the city. “I think that the history of our mayoral elections, past two or three mayoral elections, have shown us that the excitement has gone down every single mayoral election. Yes, it has made it a challenge.” 

Less than 20 percent of eligible Detroit voters cast ballots in the August primary.

Proposed ordinance requires body cam footage be made public

A proposed Detroit ordinance would require police to release body camera footage within 30 days of police shootings and other incidents including the use of non-lethal weapons like tasers, pepper spray, tear gas, bean bags and rubber bullets.

Under the proposed ordinance, footage must be posted on a public website. Exemptions would be allowed upon written request from the Detroit Police Department or Wayne County prosecutor.

Exceptions apply to footage captured during federal or state task force operations, footage prohibited by court order and footage determined to be prejudicial to a civil matter. 

James Baldwin Sidewalk Libraries

The City of Detroit and the Detroit Public Library will be hosting the James Baldwin Sidewalk Libraries across the city. Detroit ACE and the Charles H. Wright Museum also partnered to launch the reading campaign.

Boxes designed to help residents find or donate books by and about author James Baldwin will be placed in Detroit neighborhoods. 

The initiative completes the work started by artist Sabrina Nelson, whose landmark exhibit on Baldwin debuted last fall.

The initiative is being launched during Black Reading Month in Detroit. 

Fashion business management degree now offered at CCS

 The College for Creative Studies in Detroit is now offering a fashion business management degree. The degree will take 90 credits and just over three years to complete. 

Students will learn merchandising, styling, marketing strategy, brand development, trend forecasting, and fashion communications. No portfolio is required for admission.

Visit the College for Creative Studies and look under the listing of undergraduate programs more information and to apply. 

Listen to the latest episode of the “Detroit Evening Report” on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, NPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

Support local journalism.

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CuriosiD: What happened to the Chamberlain Bakery in Southwest Detroit?

25 September 2025 at 20:02

WDET’s CuriosiD series answers your questions about everything Detroit. Subscribe to CuriosiD on Apple PodcastsSpotifyNPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

In this episode of CuriosiD, listener Martha Rotter asks the question:

“What happened to Chamberlain Bakery and their sour rye bread recipe?”

A loaf of sour rye bread
A loaf of sour rye baked by David Alkevicius.

The short answer

The Chamberlain Bakery was opened in 1924 by Lithuanian baker and owner Stanley Vasilauskis. It was located on a residential street in Southwest Detroit.

The bakery was owned by family members over the years, until about 1980, when Werner Lehmann purchased it. In 2002, the company Alexander & Hornung purchased the bakery. It was closed between 2008–2009.

A nostalgic walk through Chamberlain Street

On Detroit’s Chamberlain Street, people would wake up to the aroma of freshly baked sour rye bread from the Chamberlain Bakery.  

It was opened by Lithuanian baker Stanley Vasilauskis (who also went by Wasilauskis) in 1924. He brought the recipe with him when he moved from Chicago, where his family owned the Wasilauskis Home Bakery. 

Black and white photo of a man taking bread out of a brick oven
Archived newspaper clipping about Chamberlain Bakery.

Livonia resident Martha Rotter remembers eating the bread with her German husband’s family during gatherings.  

“Every time we got together, whether it was a potluck or just a regular family dinner, there was Chamberlain Bakery bread there… And they all agreed it was the best bread,” she says. 

John Micallef, the CEO of Oakland Macomb OBGYN, grew up in Southwest Detroit near the Chamberlain Bakery. He worked on a paper route in the 1980s, close to the bakery.  

“I remember stopping there on the way, doing the route, grabbing a snack. Sometimes in the morning, they would give you a cookie or something. We were really young back in the day,” he reminisces.

Newspaper clipping about Chamberlain Bakery from the Detroit News circa 1997.
Newspaper clipping about Chamberlain Bakery from the Detroit News circa 1997.

Micallef says the bakery was a gathering space where people knew you on a first-name basis.  

“It was just a great neighborhood type of bakery, the kind you don’t really see too much anymore, but the smell was always wonderful. People were friendly. They knew you by your name.” 

The bakery was sold again in 2002 to Alexander & Hornung, a sausage-processing company. Then-president Bernie Polen says the bakery was on its last leg and he purchased it to keep it alive.

At the time, they baked about 800 loaves of bread daily and distributed them to stores in metro Detroit. Polen says he closed the bakery around 2008 or 2009 because it wasn’t financially viable.

A second act for Chamberlain Bakery bread

David Alkevicius also grew up in Southwest Detroit on the sour rye bread from Chamberlain Bakery. He says many times he was the designated person in the family to grab loaves of bread for special occasions.  

When he learned the bakery had closed down, he decided he needed to learn how to make the bread.

“Honestly to begin with, it was more selfish because I wanted it and I didn’t know anywhere to get it,” he laughs. 

A bakery counter filled with stacks of loaves of bread.
Loaves of bread baked by David Alkevicius.

He began reaching out to people who formerly worked at the bakery to learn the recipe and make the sour rye bread.

It turns out the sour rye bread has a large fan following, in part due to how it was baked in a brick oven heated up to over 425 degrees. The coal burning oven stayed on practically all the time, until it was changed to a gas oven after Polen acquired the bakery. He says the oven would be turned off once a year to cool down and to allow a mason to patch the brick.

Alkevicius says the rye bread has a unique formula.

“Most rye breads that you buy from the store are 15% (rye). The sour rye from Chamberlain Bakery, they had a half and half, which was 50-50, and then their actual sour rye was 75%, and so it’s a heavy, dense bread, but still very soft,” he explained.

It took him about five years to perfect the recipe. He also made a few adjustments. 

“You’d mix the hot, boiling water with the rye flour, and once it cooled, you added it to the mother dough. And I think it just changed the whole, you know, the whole composition of the bread, because I tried making it the traditional way, where people just mix flour and water, and it never came out right,” he said.

Alkevicius says it’s hard to find a similar bread in stores.

He began selling his bread at the Wilson Barn farmer’s markets for two years. Then he opened Alkevicius Breads in 2016, a bakery in Livonia located on Five Mile and Farmington Road that operated through 2018. He hopes he can bake the breads again someday.

Exterior of Alkevicius Breads in Livonia
Exterior of Alkevicius Breads in Livonia.
Customers line up at a bakery counter
Inside Alkevicius Breads in Livonia.

Although it’s been nearly two decades since the Chamberlain Bakery has shut down, many people still talk about it on Facebook and Reddit threads.

It holds a special place in people’s memories, with many hoping they can get another bite of the one-of-a-kind sour rye bread.

Black and white photo of the Chamberlain Bakery on Chamberlain Street in Detroit
The Chamberlain Bakery on Chamberlain Street in Detroit circa 1991.
Exterior of the old Chamberlain Bakery in 2025
The location where the Chamberlain Bakery once was on Chamberlain Street in Detroit circa 2025.

Lithuanians in Michigan

Algis Kaunelis is the cohost of the Lithuanian Melodies Radio Program on WMZK 690 AM. 

Kaunelis grew up in Southwest Detroit on 25th and Vernor Street. His parents moved to Detroit during World War II. He says sour rye bread is popular among Lithuanians in the area.

“My parents ended up at a displaced persons camp in Germany, like a lot of other Lithuanians, and then eventually had a godmother in Detroit. And so, they settled in the Detroit area, which a lot of other Lithuanians did, because there were good automotive jobs that they could get and start earning a living right away.”

He too grew up eating bread from Chamberlain Bakery, which his family purchased from a local Lithuanian store that carried the bread.

Years later, he and his wife Patt volunteered their time to deliver about 25 loaves to All Saints Church on Fort Street on Saturday afternoons. The bread was donated by the baker until it shut down.

Today, Kaunelis says there are about 30,000 Lithuanians living in metro Detroit.

Lithuanian crest hung up in Manoogian Hall's Lithuanian Room.
Lithuanian crest hung up in Manoogian Hall’s Lithuanian Room.

About the listener

Livonia resident Martha Rotter remembers having Chamberlain Bakery bread with her German husband’s family during gatherings. She says it went well with different pairings. She hopes the bakery opens up again someday, or that someone sells the bread once again.

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Have a question about Southeast Michigan’s history or culture? Send it our way at wdet.org/curious or fill out the form below. You ask, we answer.

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The post CuriosiD: What happened to the Chamberlain Bakery in Southwest Detroit? appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

In The Groove: keiyaA, Tame Impala, plus your fall song picks from the hotline

25 September 2025 at 19:58

Just a dash of new music on the show today from Tame Impala and keiyaA. The rest is a ton of throwbacks, opening up with Led Zeppelin and ending with Prince and sprinkling in a ton of your fall song picks that you left on the In The Groove hotline—thank you so much for those!

Check the playlist below and listen to the episode for two weeks after it airs using the player above.

In The Groove with Ryan Patrick Hooper playlist for September 25, 2025

  • “Ramble On” – Led Zeppelin
  • “Blue Ridge Mountains” – Fleet Foxes
  • “So Says I” – The Shins
  • “Mansize Rooster” – Supergrass
  • “20th Century Boy” – T. Rex
  • “Land of the Freak” – King Khan & the Shrines
  • “If You Want Me” – Womack Sisters
  • “Just A Little Bit” – Etta James
  • “I’ll Bet You” – Funkadelic
  • “Ball of Confusion (That’s What the World Is Today)” – The Temptations
  • “Where’s My Brain???” – The Lazy Eyes
  • “End Of Summer” – Tame Impala
  • “St. Elmo’s Fire” – Michael Franks
  • “Red Clay” – Jack Wilkins
  • “Motions” – Liz Cooper & The Stampede
  • “Freaking Out the Neighborhood” – Mac DeMarco
  • “Black Power” – Peace
  • “Dooyo” – Dur-Dur Band
  • “Glasshouses” – Maribou State
  • “5pm” – Otis Junior & Dr. Dundiff
  • “Sigo Sin Entenderte” – LOUTA
  • “Heart of Glass (12-Inch Version)” – Blondie
  • “Guilty” – Lady Wray
  • “Whirlpool Dub (Adrian Sherwood Reset in Dub Version)” – Panda Bear, Sonic Boom & Adrian Sherwood
  • “Caroline, No” – Beach Boys
  • “Stupid Prizes” – KeiyaA
  • “Bamboo” – Harvey Sutherland
  • “Coltrane (Crooked Man Remix)” – Cymande
  • “Last One Standing (Vocal Version)” – Monophonics & Kelly Finnigan
  • “In Your Eyes (feat. Charlotte Day Wilson)” – BADBADNOTGOOD
  • “Weird Fishes / Arpeggi” – Radiohead
  • “Purple Rain” – Prince & the Revolution

Listen to In the Groove with host Ryan Patrick Hooper weekdays from noon-3 p.m. ET on 101.9 WDET or stream on-demand at wdet.org.

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The Metro: How to stop foreclosures in Detroit

By: Sam Corey
25 September 2025 at 18:37

When the Great Recession hit, homeownership in Detroit took a dive. Between 2011 and 2015, about 10,000 residents lost their homes due to illegal tax foreclosures following the city’s bankruptcy. 

Many foreclosed homes have ended up on the Wayne County auction list over the last decade. The good news is that the overall number of those homes has been shrinking, but it remains to be seen if this signals a trend. 

In this conversation, Metro producer Sam Corey spoke with Alex Alsup. He’s the author of the substack, “The Chargeback.” The two discussed what accounts for the increase in homes up for auction this year, and what can be done to stop or slow foreclosures.

 

Listen to The Metro weekdays from 10 a.m. to noon ET on 101.9 FM and streaming on-demand.

Subscribe to The Metro on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or NPR or wherever you get your podcasts.

Support local journalism.

WDET strives to cover what’s happening in your community. As a public media institution, we maintain our ability to explore the music and culture of our region through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

More stories from The Metro

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The Metro: How to confront cultural norms driving domestic abuse

24 September 2025 at 19:16

At the end of August, at least three women in Southeast Michigan were killed by a partner or family member. Those cases prompted questions about protection orders—processes through which victims of domestic abuse can protect themselves.

Do they make a difference, and what more can be done to prevent instances of abuse?

Chéree Thomas is the Co-Executive Director of the Michigan Coalition to End Domestic and Sexual Violence. She believes the responsibility to protect victims should not be placed exclusively on the justice system, it should also be placed on the shoulders of the broader community.

She joined the show to discuss how to collectively address and reduce domestic violence. 

Listen to The Metro weekdays from 10 a.m. to noon ET on 101.9 FM and streaming on demand.

Subscribe to The Metro on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, NPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

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WDET strives to make our journalism accessible to everyone. As a public media institution, we maintain our journalistic integrity through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

Donate today »

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