A directory of Indigenous radio stations in the United States.
Currently sorted By creation date ascending Sort chronologically: By last update | By creation date
KBRW-FM (Alaska):KBRW-FM is a non-commercial radio station in Barrow, Alaska, broadcasting on 91.9 FM. The station airs public radio programming from the National Public Radio and WFMT networks. KBRW-FM also airs some locally originated programming. KBRW-FM makes heavy use of broadcast translators to spread the signal across much of Alaska.
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KBRW (Alaska):KBRW is a non-commercial radio station in Barrow, Alaska, broadcasting on 680 AM. The station airs public radio programming from the National Public Radio and Native Voice One networks. KBRW also airs some locally originated programming, as well as native affairs, popular music and religious programs. KBRW airs a schedule different from KBRW-FM 91.9 FM. In addition to the main station, KBRW has an additional 5 translators to widen it's broadcast area.
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KNBA (Alaska):KNBA is run by the Koahnic Broadcasting Corporation. Its programming is primarily Alaska Native affairs, although it also broadcasts shows from a youth media group - the Alaska Teen Media Institute - and rebroadcasts original programming from KSKA, plus programs from Native Voice One. |
KOTZ (Alaska): |
KTNN (Arizona):KTNN is a Navajo Language AM radio station, broadcasting from Window Rock, Arizona, the seat of the government of the Navajo Nation. It broadcasts Country Music in English, but most of its announcers broadcast in Navajo over the air. The station is notable because it is currently the last AM station to receive a 50,000 watt license. KTNN's daytime signal covers much of the Four Corner states; in contrast, its nighttime signal can be heard throughout most of the western United States, reaching as far away as the California Central Coast and even countries around the Pacific Rim. During nighttime, the station uses a directional antenna pointed westward, presumably to protect WFAN's signal. |
KUYI (Arizona):KUYI (91.3 FM), is a public radio station in Hotevilla, Arizona. It primarily features local programming for the Hopi Native American community, plus networked programming from National Public Radio and Native Voice One. |
KIDE (California):KIDE is a radio station serving Hoopa, California and the vicinity providing a community radio format and is affiliated with the Pacifica Radio Network. It broadcasts on 91.3 MHz and is under ownership of the Hoopa Valley Tribe. It is one of the stations in the United States to be solar powered. |
KILI (South Dakota):KILI (90.1 FM), licensed to Porcupine, South Dakota, is a non-profit radio station broadcasting to the Lakota people on the Pine Ridge, Cheyenne River, and Rosebud Indian Reservations, part of the Great Sioux Nation. The station started broadcasting in 1983 as the first American Indian-owned radio station in the United States. Owned and operated by Lakota Communications, KILI-FM serves 30,000 people on the three reservations, along with the large American Indian urban community in Rapid City, using a translator in the Mount Rushmore State's second-largest city. It seeks to preserve Native American culture and instill pride in the peoples' unique heritage. |
WOJB-FM (Wisconsin):WOJB is a National Public Radio member on 88.9 MHz, and serves northwestern Wisconsin from the Lac Courte Oreilles Reservation southeast of Hayward, Wisconsin. Founded in 1982 with the intention of bridging the culture gap between the Native American population in the area and their non-Native neighbors in a time of heightened racial tension, the station is now a fixture of the northwestern Wisconsin airwaves, presenting a variety of programming, much of it presenting the culture of the local Ojibwa community and the wider Anishinaabe culture. The station also webcasts its programming via its website. |
KWRR (Wyoming):KWRR-FM (89.5 FM), is a public radio station in Ethete, Wyoming, serving residents of the Wind River Indian Reservation. Programming on KWRR consists of local programming (including country music), plus programs from National Public Radio and Native Voice One. |