Roddy Bottum: A queer rock pioneer remembers San Francisco's lost era
Release Date: 11/13/2025
California Sun Podcast
Julia Turner and Julia Wick have spent their careers covering Los Angeles — and like anyone who's lived here long enough, they couldn't always figure it out either. So they did what journalists do. They started digging. is their newly launched independent digital newsroom, and their obsession is simple: making sense of a city that resists it.
info_outlineCalifornia Sun Podcast
Peter Richardson, author of the new book ": The Wild Rise of Rolling Stone Magazine," discusses the pioneering music magazine's San Francisco decade — between 1967 and 1977 — when the Bay Area's counterculture reshaped music and the journalism that covered it. From Haight-Ashbury to the Fillmore, Hunter S. Thompson to Annie Leibovitz, the magazine documented a social revolution while simultaneously creating it.
info_outlineCalifornia Sun Podcast
Ann Carlson discusses her new book "." Smog was once as much a symbol of L.A. as palm trees — a bane to public health and a national punchline on Johnny Carson's "Tonight Show." An expert in environmental law, Carlson chronicles the decades-long battle that transformed the air from toxic to breathable, and what today's rollbacks threaten to undo.
info_outlineCalifornia Sun Podcast
Severin Borenstein, a professor at UC Berkeley's Haas School of Business and an expert on the economics of energy, explains how the Iran war is disrupting global oil markets and why California faces especially sharp price impacts. Beyond the crude oil disruptions affecting everyone, the state's refinery shutdowns, import constraints, and gasoline surcharge create unique vulnerabilities as supply chains scramble to adjust.
info_outlineCalifornia Sun Podcast
Miriam Pawel, author of the definitive Cesar Chavez biography, "," reflects on the recent shattering of the Cesar Chavez myth — and the harder questions beneath it: what was known, what was ignored, and why movements so often need saints. In this wide-ranging conversation, Pawel explores Chavez’s charisma, control, contradictions, and the challenge of holding both his historic achievements and the harm he may have caused in the same frame.
info_outlineCalifornia Sun Podcast
Caroline Tracey explores the world's threatened salt lakes with a focus on California — Mono Lake, Owens Lake, and the Salton Sea — where irrigation diversions have transformed stunning desert ecosystems into sources of toxic dust. She discusses landmark environmental cases that established California's public trust doctrine and how these seemingly dead landscapes remain vital habitats worth preserving. Her decade of research across four continents is chronicled in her new book "."
info_outlineCalifornia Sun Podcast
Joe Flint, a media reporter for the Wall Street Journal, joins us as Hollywood heads into Oscar weekend — a moment when the world celebrates the glamour of the movies even as the business faces deep uncertainty. Flint looks at the industry’s economic upheaval: mergers, mounting debt, streaming disruption, and the growing question of whether the Hollywood model that built California’s cultural and economic identity can survive the digital age.
info_outlineCalifornia Sun Podcast
Chef Geoff Davis opened Burdell in Oakland to cook the soul food his grandmothers made — a distinct American cuisine rooted in migration and adaptation rather than Southern tradition. In 2024, Food & Wine the "Restaurant of the Year." But it was a 20% service fee at the bottom of Burdell's receipts that recently started a about labor, class, and whether we've ever really reckoned with the history of tipping.
info_outlineCalifornia Sun Podcast
Valerie Ziegler, a high school teacher in San Francisco, and Joel Breakstone, executive director of Stanford's Digital Inquiry Group, talk about digital literacy in the classroom. Many self-described “screenagers,” they say, can no longer tell real from fake. Together, Ziegler and Breakstone are at the forefront of a movement to prepare young people for a world of influencers, algorithmic manipulation, and artificial intelligence, an effort recently .
info_outlineCalifornia Sun Podcast
When California legalized recreational cannabis, Silicon Valley envisioned a new Gold Rush. Tushar Atre — a tech entrepreneur, surfer, and disruptor — thought he could bridge two worlds: venture capital and the black market. On Oct. 1, 2019, he was shot execution-style on his own property, hands bound. Investigative journalist Scott Eden, author of the new book "," spent four years unraveling what happens when ambition meets an industry that never forgot its outlaw roots.
info_outlineRoddy Bottum, a founder of the alternative metal band Faith No More, chronicles 1980s and '90s San Francisco — a dark, overlooked era between the Summer of Love and the tech boom. His memoir, "The Royal We" recalls a vanished city of bicycle messengers and punk rock in the shadow of the AIDS crisis. It's a poetic testament to community, loss, and the creative rebellion that defined pre-tech San Francisco.