Crosscurrents

Goalball emboldens blind athletes on the court and in their lives

12 min · 21. mai 2026
episode Goalball emboldens blind athletes on the court and in their lives cover

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Every Wednesday night in Berkeley a group of athletes gets ready to practice their sport. The first thing they have to do is line the court with a tactile marker––string taped to the floor around the perimeter––because this game relies on just two senses, hearing and feeling.  This is goalball, a sport invented for blind and low vision people which involves hurling a heavy ball filled with bells at each other.  It is sort of the opposite of dodge ball because players are trying to block the ball with their bodies. It might sound painful! So KALW's Rachel Longan visited a goalball tournament and later even padded up to play to find out if it is worth the risk.

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episode Sights + Sounds: 'The Compton's Cafeteria Riot' immersive play cover

Sights + Sounds: 'The Compton's Cafeteria Riot' immersive play

Late on a summer night in 1966, a cop put his hands on a customer at a popular gathering space for trans women and drag queens. Coffee was thrown in his face, and a riot erupted right there at Compton's Cafeteria in the Tenderloin. This moment was one of the first documented acts of LGBTQ+ resistance in the country.  For the past year, an immersive play called The Compton's Cafeteria Riot has been bringing audiences into the historic event as diners inside the cafeteria. The play is produced by the Tenderloin Museum. One of its co-writers, Donna Persona, is a trans rights activist, and Mary Vice is an actor turned drag queen in the play. They spoke to KALW's Jeneé Darden, host of the Sights and Sounds show. Here's an excerpt from their conversation.

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