Out of the frying pan, into the airwaves... Three young chefs dish about food in Baltimore
What's new with the labor movement?
Join our discussion on the relationship between Baltimore and Washington, D.C.
A young candidate challenges the political status quo in Baltimore, and loses
March, 2009
New article from Page Croyder
Page Croyder, former assistant State's Attorney for Baltimore City, has
a new article on steinershow.org. Her latest article is the third
in her series on the parole system in Maryland. Click here to read her article.
You're Invited: Town Hall Meeting, April 1st
"Solutions and Stimulus for the Baltimore Economy: A Town Hall Meeting"
Join Marc Steiner and a panel of city leaders and community activists on Wednesday April 1st from 5-7pm in room 101 in the New Communications Building at Morgan State University.
Save Baltimore's Small Performance Venues
Christina here – I'm one of the interns on the show, and wanted to spread the word about a piece of legislation making its way through the City Council that would have a huge effect on small performance venues in Baltimore City.
Happy St. Patrick's Day!
Happy St. Patrick’s Day to all, and to my Mom, wherever your spirit is floating around. I am sure you are having a Guinness and shot. She is the reason that I am so Irish. Well, she was Irish by immersion. Maisie Anne Round Steiner grew up in the north of England, the daughter of North Country miners and a Scotswoman of the MacPherson clan. She was a wild, unruly, alive renegade whose mother sent her to a Catholic convent (though she was Protestant of Baptist/Methodist roots) in the mountains of Wales. It turned out that the nuns were a bunch of Irish pro-IRA radicals who embraced my mom as she embraced them.
So we were brought up on the legends of ancient Irish warrior kings like Brian Baru, IRA revolutionaries like James Connolly, the first Jewish Mayor of Dublin Robert Briscoe and the great Irish poets and writers who graced our bookshelves. The nuns imbued in her a sense of social justice. As a young British woman she embraced the IRA, anti-colonial struggles and love for humanity and human rights. Her mother sent her away to be disciplined and straightened out, so she could act more like an English lady. Instead, she came back with the fire, soul and love of life of the Irish. She passed it on to her children and breathed it deeply with each breath she took. She found four leaf clovers and had conversations with the leprechauns and the spirits. Though Eire did not flow in her veins, it lived in the depths of her being.
Thanks Mom, for making me Irish. I’ll have a Guinness and a shot for you tonight.
Andres Alonso Blasts Michael Steele
Michael Steele is making numerous headlines today for his apology to Rush Limbaugh. Locally, he is also making headlines after being called out by Baltimore School's CEO Andres Alonso at a public forum which also featured Governor Martin O'Malley last night at Frederick Douglass High School in Baltimore. Alonso demanded an apology from Steele for promises he made to that school in the past, which he never kept.
Our reporter Melody Simmons was there. Click the podcast player to hear her recording of Alonso's remarks on Steele, and also on Governor O'Malley.












