A Prairie Home Companion: Status and Archives – A 2025 Update

A Prairie Home Companion: Status and Archives

A user today on Facebook asked about A Prairie Home Companion. It ended its original run on July 2, 2016, when Garrison Keillor hosted his final episode at the Hollywood Bowl after 42 years as host. The show continued under Chris Thile from October 2016 until 2020, when it was renamed “Live from Here” in December 2017 following allegations against Keillor.

However, Keillor continues to perform live stage shows under the Prairie Home Companion name, as he retained the trademark rights.

Current Status and Archives

Multiple comprehensive archives exist for accessing Prairie Home Companion episodes, though availability varies by time period:

Official Archives:

Comprehensive Third-Party Archive: Good for Finding Episodes!

  • A PHC Archive (https://aphcarchive.com) – A free, comprehensive archive specifically designed to fill gaps in the official sites, with detailed search capabilities and information covering the first 20+ years of the show that other sites lack

Additional Sources:

The official Prairie Home site notes that their archive “only goes back to 1996ish” with “a few 1985 episodes on YouTube,” making the third-party PHC Archive particularly valuable for accessing the show’s complete history from its 1974 debut.

So yes, while there are no new shows in the traditional sense, there’s a wealth of archived content available online for fans who want to revisit the magic of Lake Wobegon and Garrison Keillor’s storytelling.

#2025 #America #Archives #Education #GarrisonKeillor #History #LakeWobegon #Libraries #Library #LibraryOfCongress #NationalPublicRadio #NPR #PHC #PrairieHomeCompanion #Technology #UnitedStates #Writing #YouTube

ll pianeta non sta niente bene, parola di PHC

Il rapporto Planetary Health Check (#PHC) fornisce una valutazione dello stato del nostro pianeta basandosi su nove processi noti per regolare stabilità, resilienza e funzioni di supporto vitale
del pianeta.
Il rapporto 2025 conclude che sette processi sono stati violati, e mostrano tendenze di crescente pressione, suggerendo ulteriore deterioramento e destabilizzazione della salute planetaria nel prossimo futuro

https://gat.to/ti62x

@scienze

It’s another give away time! I have 30 free tickets for my #Phc people. I am glad to give you one more opportunity to see the movie and join the conversation. The first 30 persons at the #cinema will get free #ticket to see #AmayanaboatheEagleKing.❤️ #bahdlex #HildaDokubo
It’s another give away time! I have 30 free tickets for my #Phc people. I am glad to give you one more opportunity to see the movie and join the conversation. The first 30 persons at the #cinema will get free #ticket to see #AmayanaboatheEagleKing.❤️ #bahdlex #HildaDokubo

NEW PINKSHIFT! And they're channeling some angrier punkier stuff than their last album. If this sound is indicative of an upcoming album's tone than they're aiming for my AOTY list. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ME-FbKASXlE

#music #phc #posthardcore #pinkshift

Pinkshift - Evil Eye (Official Music Video)

YouTube
Watching Prairie Home Companion anthology of Christmas videos from past shows, with captions! Where have these captions been for all those #phc shows of old?
#old #GarrisonKeillor
#PalmOil giant #PHC formerly #Feronia, violently silences environmental defenders in the #DRC #Congo. Protesters arrested, journalist kidnapped, workers left without justice. Take action for #HumanRights #BoycottPalmOil 🌴🚫 @palmoildetectives https://wp.me/pcFhgU-8xX
Palm Oil Protesters Silenced and Arrested in Congo

On Tuesday, April 30, 2024, a shocking and disgraceful incident occurred in Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). During a meeting of shareholders from Plantations et Hui…

Palm Oil Detectives

Palm Oil Protesters Silenced and Arrested in Congo

On April 30, 2024, a shocking and disgraceful incident occurred in Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). During a meeting of shareholders from Plantations et Huileries du Congo (PHC), (formerly known as Feronia) environmental rights defenders were arrested, and a journalist was kidnapped after displaying banners denouncing PHC’s mistreatment of local communities. PHC, formerly known as Feronia, is a multinational company that operates large palm oil plantations in the DRC. Take action in solidarity of these people and #BoycottPalmOil when you shop!

In April, environmental defenders in the #DRC were arrested and kidnapped at a shareholder meeting for highlighting #PalmOil #HumanRights abuses 🔥🌴⛔️ Since then no action has been taken! Stand with them 💪 #WorkersRights #BoycottPalmOil https://wp.me/pcFhgU-8xX @palmoildetect

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#PalmOil giant #PHC formerly #Feronia, violently silences environmental defenders in the #DRC #Congo. Protesters arrested, journalist kidnapped, workers left without justice. Take action for #HumanRights #BoycottPalmOil 🌴🚫 @palmoildetect https://wp.me/pcFhgU-8xX

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https://youtu.be/Vp03S3v4r5Y

Zongwe Lukama, F. (2023, May 2). DRC: Mystery and collusion in the disappearance of environmental defenders fighting palm oil multinationals. Kilalo Press. Business and Human Rights Resource Centre has since asked for a company response, but to date none has been forthcoming from the palm oil company.

Arrests and Abduction at PHC Shareholders Meeting

On Tuesday, April 30, 2024, a shocking and disgraceful incident occurred in Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). During a meeting of shareholders from Plantations et Huileries du Congo (PHC), environmental rights defenders were arrested, and an environmental journalist was kidnapped after displaying banners denouncing PHC’s mistreatment of local communities. PHC, formerly known as Feronia, is a multinational company that operates large palm oil plantations in the DRC.

Who are Plantations et Huileries du Congo (PHC)?

Plantations et Huileries du Congo (PHC) are a palm oil company that operate extensive palm oil plantations in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The company produces palm oil used in many products like food, cosmetics, and biofuels. PHC has faced numerous protests and criticism for its detrimental impact on the environment and local communities.

The people versus Feronia: Fighting palm oil agrocolonialism in the Congo

This powerful #comic is by Didier Kassai and Dieudonne Botoko Kendewa is about a community in the #Congo 🇨🇩 living next to the #Feronia #palmoil plantation. They faced #violence…

Keep reading

by Palm Oil Detectives

The Protesters’ Demands

The protest was sparked by a letter from the Réseau d’Information et d’Appui aux ONG (RIAO – DRC), a network supporting non-governmental organisations (NGOs) in the DRC. This letter led PHC to hold an urgent meeting in Kinshasa.

Protesters had several demands:

  • Release people who were unjustly imprisoned.
  • Compensate workers for accidents and retirees.
  • Reopen the Lokutu and Boteka ports, which they argue are public roads, not PHC property.

Call to Action and Strong Suppression

The protesters wanted to push state authorities to act on an open letter from RIAO – DRC and its partners. This letter discussed mediation claims funded by the German Bank (DEG) and the Dutch Development Bank (FMO) to help communities affected by PHC. Unfortunately, security forces were called to stop the protesters, damage their equipment, and kidnap the journalist and environmental defender.

An Urgent Appeal for Support

RIAO-RDC, a national support network for NGOs, made an urgent call to security authorities and stakeholders to find their members, Dieumerci Mpay Ngomba, and a cameraman journalist from Numerica TV in Kinshasa. They called these actions “kidnapping” and stressed that defenders of forest community rights should not face political or rights abuses.

An Alarming and Unjust Situation for Environmental Defenders

The situation for environmental defenders in the DRC is worrying. RIAO-RDC said Dieumerci was arrested because of a complaint by PHC. At the General Prosecutor’s Office near the Court of Appeal of Kinshasa Gombe, protesters were charged with inciting breaches against public authority under article 135 of the Congolese penal code.

Targeting Environmental Advocates

RIAO-RDC believes that PHC is mainly targeting Jean François Mombia Atukua, who previously led a disguised march against RIAO and its director at the Lokutu base. The organisation urges the judiciary to ensure the safety of those arrested and uphold press freedom and human rights.

Company Response

Following publication PHC did not respond to the Business and Human Rights Resource Centre’s request for comment regarding these allegations.

References

Zongwe Lukama, F. (2023, May 2). DRC: Mystery and collusion in the disappearance of environmental defenders fighting palm oil multinationals. Kilalo Press. Business and Human Rights Resource Centre has since asked for a company response, but to date none has been forthcoming from the palm oil company.

ENDS

Read more about human rights abuses and child slavery in the palm oil industry

Palm Oil Threatens Ancient Noken Weaving in West Papua

Colonial palm oil and sugarcane causing the loss of West Papuans’ cultural identity. Land grabs force communities from forests, threatening Noken weaving

Read more

Family Ties Expose Deforestation and Rights Violations in Indonesian Palm Oil

An explosive report by the Environment Investigation Agency (EIA) details how Indonesia’s Fangiono family, through a wide corporate web, is linked to ongoing #deforestation, #corruption, and #indigenousrights abuses for #palmoil. Calls mount for…

Read more

West Papuan Indigenous Women Fight Land Seizures

Indigenous Melanesian women in West Papua fight land seizures for palm oil and sugar plantations, protecting their ancestral rights. Join #BoycottPalmOil

Read more

Greasing the Wheels of Colonialism: Palm Oil Industry in West Papua 

A landmark study published in Global Studies Quarterly in April 2025 has revealed that the rapid expansion of the #palmoil industry in #WestPapua is not only fuelling #deforestation, #ecocide and environmental destruction but…

Read more

Palm Oil Practices Resemble Colonial Exploitation

Indonesian palm oil workers expose industry practices that mirror colonial exploitation: land grabbing, bad conditions, ecocide. Systemic change is needed!

Read more

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Take Action in Five Ways

1. Join the #Boycott4Wildlife on social media and subscribe to stay in the loop: Share posts from this website to your own network on Twitter, Mastadon, Instagram, Facebook and Youtube using the hashtags #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife.

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2. Contribute stories: Academics, conservationists, scientists, indigenous rights advocates and animal rights advocates working to expose the corruption of the palm oil industry or to save animals can contribute stories to the website.

Wildlife Artist Juanchi Pérez

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Mel Lumby: Dedicated Devotee to Borneo’s Living Beings

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Anthropologist and Author Dr Sophie Chao

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Health Physician Dr Evan Allen

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The World’s Most Loved Cup: A Social, Ethical & Environmental History of Coffee by Aviary Doert

Read more

How do we stop the world’s ecosystems from going into a death spiral? A #SteadyState Economy

Read more

3. Supermarket sleuthing: Next time you’re in the supermarket, take photos of products containing palm oil. Share these to social media along with the hashtags to call out the greenwashing and ecocide of the brands who use palm oil. You can also take photos of palm oil free products and congratulate brands when they go palm oil free.

https://twitter.com/CuriousApe4/status/1526136783557529600?s=20

https://twitter.com/PhillDixon1/status/1749010345555788144?s=20

https://twitter.com/mugabe139/status/1678027567977078784?s=20

4. Take to the streets: Get in touch with Palm Oil Detectives to find out more.

5. Donate: Make a one-off or monthly donation to Palm Oil Detectives as a way of saying thank you and to help pay for ongoing running costs of the website and social media campaigns. Donate here

Pledge your support

#BoycottPalmOil #BoycottPalmOil #childLabour #childSlavery #Congo #corruption #DemocracticRepublicOfCongo #DRC #Feronia #humanRights #HumanRights #indigenousRights #landRights #landgrabbing #PalmOil #palmoil #PHC #slavery #workersRights #WorkersRights

Strengthening primary health care in a changing climate

A new article by Andy Haines, Elizabeth Wambui Kimani-Murage, and Anya Gopfert, “Strengthening primary health care in a changing climate,” outlines how climate change is already impacting health systems worldwide, with primary health care (PHC) workers bearing the immediate burden of response.

Haines and colleagues make a compelling case for strengthening primary health care (PHC) as a cornerstone of climate-resilient health systems.

First, they note that approximately 90% of essential universal health coverage interventions are delivered through PHC settings, making these facilities and workers the backbone of healthcare delivery.

This is particularly significant because PHC systems address many of the health outcomes most affected by climate change, including non-communicable diseases, childhood undernutrition, and common infectious diseases like malaria, diarrheal diseases, and respiratory infections.

Furthermore, PHC workers are often the first responders to extreme weather events such as floods, droughts, and heatwaves.

They must manage both the immediate health impacts and the longer-term consequences of these events.

This comprehensive view of PHC’s role in climate resilience represents a significant shift from viewing primary care merely as a service delivery mechanism to recognizing it as a crucial component of climate adaptation and health system strengthening.

The authors argue that investing in PHC is not only essential for addressing immediate health needs but also for building long-term resilience to climate-related health threats.

In examining workforce issues, Haines et al. specifically emphasize that “building the capacity of the PHC and public health workforce in emergency preparedness and response to climate-induced risks is crucial for enhancing the resilience of health systems.”

They argue that “the health-care workforce, including multidisciplinary PHC teams, should be provided with training and education on the impacts of climate change on health and the implications for health-care delivery.”

The article specifies that this training should focus on three key areas: “strengthening integrated disease surveillance and response systems,” “diagnosis and management of changing disease patterns (eg, outbreaks of vector-borne diseases in new locations),” and “interpretation and use of available climate, weather, and health data to support planning and management of adaptation and mitigation interventions.”

They mention resources like those proposed by the “WONCA Global Family Doctor Planetary Health Working Party” as instructive for such training.

Although the article emphasizes the role of PHC workers as being “often on the front line of responses to extreme events such as floods, droughts, and heatwaves,” it does not discuss mechanisms for capturing or leveraging their experiential knowledge.

This is what they know because they are there every day.

Recommendations follow a traditional institutional approach: strengthen health information systems, build workforce capacity, develop integrated service delivery models, increase funding, and enhance governance.

While these recommendations are well-founded, they primarily envision a top-down flow of knowledge and resources, with health workers positioned as recipients of training and implementers of policies.

The epistemological framework underlying their recommendations reflects what educational theorists would recognize as a transmission model of learning, where knowledge is conceived as flowing primarily from experts to practitioners in a hierarchical manner.

This approach, while valuable for disseminating standardized protocols and evidence-based practices, implicitly positions health workers as passive recipients rather than active knowledge creators and agents of climate-health resilience.

Such a framework potentially undervalues the situated knowledge and practical wisdom (what Aristotle called phronesis) that practitioners develop through direct experience with climate-health challenges in their communities.

It also overlooks the potential for what complexity theorists describe as emergent learning – where new knowledge and practices arise from the dynamic interactions between practitioners facing similar challenges in different contexts.

Our research has documented how health workers are already responding to climate-related health challenges.

For example, observations from more than 1,200 health workers in 68 countries reveal a rich tapestry of local knowledge and insights that often go unrecognized in formal academic and policy discussions

Health workers are already intimate witnesses to the impacts of climate change on the health of the communities they serve, possessing valuable knowledge that should inform both science and policy.

Where Haines sees health workers primarily as implementers of climate-resilient healthcare strategies, we view them as leaders and innovators in climate adaptation.

However, these perspectives need not be mutually exclusive.

TGLF’s model offers a bridge between formal institutional approaches and ground-level experiential knowledge.

New peer learning platforms like Teach to Reach enable rapid sharing of solutions across geographical and institutional boundaries.

This platform enables health workers to be both learners and teachers, sharing successful adaptations while learning from colleagues facing similar challenges in different contexts.

Such participatory approaches also help local knowledge inform global understanding – if global research institutions and funders are willing to listen and learn.

When TGLF gathered observations about climate change impacts on health, we received detailed accounts of everything from disease transmission to healthcare access.

A health worker from Cameroon described how flooding from Mount Cameroon led to deaths in their community.

Another from Kenya shared how changing agricultural patterns forced them to develop new strategies for ensuring safe food access.

Jones, I., Mbuh, C., Sadki, R., Eller, K., Rhoda, D., 2023. On the frontline of climate change and health: A health worker eyewitness report. The Geneva Learning Foundation. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10204660

These granular insights complement the broader statistical evidence presented in academic literature, providing crucial context for how climate changes manifest in specific communities.

TGLF’s model demonstrates how digital technologies can democratize knowledge sharing to strengthen scientific evidence and drive locally-led action.

This creates a dynamic knowledge ecosystem that can respond more quickly to emerging challenges than traditional top-down approaches.

Importantly, this model addresses a key gap in Haines’ recommendations: the need for rapid, scalable knowledge sharing among frontline workers.

While formal research and policy development necessarily take time, climate impacts are already affecting communities.

TGLF’s approach enables immediate peer learning while building an evidence base for longer-term policy development.

The model also addresses the issue of trust.

Health workers, as trusted community members, play a crucial role in helping communities make sense of and navigate the changes they are facing.

Their understanding of local contexts and constraints are critical to develop strategies that can actually be implemented.

By combining institutional support with health worker-led local action, we can strengthen health systems to be both technically robust and locally responsive.

Our experience at the Geneva Learning Foundation suggests that new learning and leadership are needed to bridge these approaches, enabling the rapid sharing of both formal and experiential knowledge while building the collective capacity needed to survive the impacts of climate change on our health.

References

Haines, A., Kimani-Murage, E.W., Gopfert, A., 2024. Strengthening primary health care in a changing climate. The Lancet 404, 1620–1622. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(24)02193-7

Image: The Geneva Learning Foundation Collection © 2024

Share this:

#AndyHaines #AnyaGopfert #climateAndHealth #ElizabethWambuiKimaniMurage #epistemology #globalHealth #healthWorkforce #HumanResourcesForHealth #PHC #phronesis #primaryHealthCare #situatedKnowledge

On the frontline of climate change and health: A health worker eyewitness report

This is the Full report. An abridged Summary report and an At a glance executive summary are also available, together with a compendium of 50 health worker experiences. Learn more: Climate change is a threat to the health of the communities we serve: health workers speak out at COP28 Investing in the health workforce is vital to tackle climate change: A new report shares insights from over 1,200 on the frontline In 2023, 4700 health practitioners, primarily from districts and facilities in countries of Africa and Asia, came together for the first time to discuss how climate change has been affecting the health and wellbeing of the local populations they serve.  This report synthesizes their experiences and insights. It also presents the background of why and how they came to connect and learn from each other, how the Geneva Learning Foundation (TGLF) created this chance for health practitioners to communicate their observations to each other and the outside world, and how TGLF plans to provide additional opportunities for practitioners to share ideas on working with local communities to address climate-related health challenges. While there is increasing scientific evidence of the health impacts of climate change, statistics in scientific publications give only a partial picture of the profound changes that the world is going through, and how the most disadvantaged populations are being affected. Embedded in their communities, health practitioners have a unique perspective on how these global changes are playing out at a local level – how is climate change being experienced within communities and, in particular, how is it affecting people's health, healthcare needs and access to services? What this tells us about climate change and health The experiences shared here are not intended to prove that climate change is happening or that it is affecting human health. Many rigorous scientific studies have demonstrated these impacts beyond reasonable doubt. What they do is bring to life the reality of this scientific evidence for health workers facing a changing climate and managing the impacts of climate change in LMICs. They demonstrate the new reality for health workers, who are witnessing changes to the physical and mental health of the communities they are associated with, driven by climate change and its interactions with other environmental disruption.  Indeed, for communities, climate impacts are not experienced in isolation, but result from a complex set of interactions. Solutions will need to be similarly multifaceted. In particular, climate change is presenting additional challenges to often fragile health systems, emphasizing the need to strengthen their resilience and ability to withstand both extreme events and additional demand.  But the experiences shared are also testament to the resolve of many to tackle these challenges and mitigate the impacts of climate change on the health of their communities. Health workers have dedicated their lives to helping others and are coming up with ways to counter climate change and to help those affected. This reflects a critical but as yet under-valued set of local actors working to address climate change. "My primary objective is to make a substantial contribution to curtailing desertification, which would necessitate a decrease in the excessive felling of trees. These trees play a pivotal role as a primary source of income for the local population. To achieve this, I am committed to creating alternative income-generating activities for the youth, thereby providing them with sustainable opportunities while also safeguarding the environment." Moctar Traore Man, District, Mali Why this matters This unique project provided an opportunity for more than 1200 health workers to share eyewitness accounts of the changes they are seeing. It has helped to create a common understanding of climate change impacts and their health consequences among health practitioners from disadvantaged and developing settings. Although specific impacts are dependent on local context, it is clear that many aspects of climate change and their health consequences are shared across different settings. This suggests that such health practitioners have many common interests and concerns, arguing for the importance of providing opportunities for them to connect, share experience and learn from one another.  The work has also highlighted the potential to harness the drive and commitment of health workers and their intimate and trusted relationships with local communities. Several examples were provided of collaborative work with local communities to meet the challenges head on. As demonstrated in other areas of TGLF work, bringing people together to share experiences and learn from each other can be a highly effective way of disseminating knowledge – and also highly motivating for those involved. The climate change discourse may sometimes be dominated by endless global discussions and protracted negotiations about emissions target-setting. While these difficult conversations are going on, real change may also come from providing committed groups such as health workers in the Global South with the platforms to meet, share experiences and develop community-led and context-specific plans to protect health in the face of climate and other environmental challenges. 

Zenodo