Source: The New York Times
On February 4, 2001, The New York Times published an article on Indian radio stations. Indian country just celebrated its first radio station, KUYI-FM, in First Mesa, Ariz. The new station is significant in part because it
"can give news to elderly Hopi that can't speak English." In addition, the birth of the station represents "another triumph over difficult conditions in an industry
that ignores Indian broadcasting. KUYI (88.1 FM) is just the 30th American
Indian radio station in the United States." KUYI serves a remote reservation of 11,000 Hopis who have retained much of their traditional culture. "As mass media chip away at Indian cultures, tribes have turned to radio to
keep languages heard and spoken...Like most Indian stations, KUYI carries a mix of programming: mainstream and
American Indian music...; information from tribal
and village governments; syndicated national news in English; live coverage of
high school basketball games, which Indians follow fervently; community bulletin
boards. Also like many stations, KUYI carries the English-language 'Native
America Calling,' a popular national call-in show that allows dialogue between Indians and non-Indians all over the country." A recent program of the show featured a discussion about the massacre of
Lakota Sioux at Wounded Knee, S.D., 110 years ago.
"Most public radio stations...do not pick up national programs like 'Native America Calling.'...Indians are not seen as a desirable demographic...Indian radio stations are
publicly financed through tribes, grants and underwriting. The Corporation for
Public Broadcasting channels federal money...to stations that meet
certain criteria." In spite of financial difficulties, "Indian stations...continue to grow. They have gone
beyond cultural preservation and are active listening posts for the communities
they serve. They also provide indispensable, sometimes lifesaving public
service, especially on sprawling reservations where phone service is inferior or
nonexistent...National programming brings Indians and non-Indians to a common ground around
the microphone and on the Web." One listener said that "Native
America Calling" reflects "what the 500 tribes of American Indians share -- the
continuing pain of oppression -- while telling the story of how Indians live in
two worlds, the tribal and the broader cultures."