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Arts & CultureArts & Culture

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The Best Movie Moments of 2025
The Best Bay Area Theater We Saw in 2025
A collage of three album covers. On the left is an illustration of Michael Sneed dunking a basketball. In the center is a vintage-looking photo of Jane Handcock in a studio. On the right is a blurred shot of Spiritual Cramp in front of San Francisco City Hall.
The 20 Best Bay Area Albums of 2025
Overhead view of six elegant Japanese dishes served in a partitioned wooded box.
The Best Dishes I Ate in 2025
Woman in a grocery store loading fresh produce intp her shopping cart.
San Francisco’s Only Free Grocery Store Is Featured in a New PBS Special
A fall-season dinner table viewed from above with six people sharing dishes. A pumpkin sits at the center of the table.
Friendsgiving 101: A History of the Made-Up Holiday and How to Celebrate it
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A painting of a ram, bleeding from a chest wound into a golden chalice marked with a red cross, stands with a cross in its mouth displaying a pink and blue flag with a white cross on the flag. The ram has a halo.
‘Be Not Afraid’ Is a Cathartic Cathedral of Queerness
A young Asian man and a middle aged Asian woman cling to each other playfully as they take a windswept walk on the beach. The ocean and a pier are visible behind them.
‘Rosemead’ Tells a Tragic — and True — Story
A man in the dark at a laptop, the screen glow of which shines on his figure
A Collective Future, Made of Whispers
A black and white image of a 1940s-era woman standing near trucks and cars.
The Indian American Essayist Who Championed Social Justice and Feminism
Black and white photo of a 1930s-era white woman with dark, neat hair.
The Jewish ‘Red Angel’ Who Withstood Incarceration for Workers’ Rights
An older Arabic woman stands on a lawn looking windswept but joyful.
The Palestinian Therapist, Teacher and Music Lover Who Built Cultural Bridges
Unsigned and Hella Broke: The East Bay’s Dirt-Hustling 1990s Hip-Hop Subculture
A Black man in a yellow printed tank top and headband sits looking off to the left
Spice 1 Talks Growing Up in Hayward, Running From Cops and Breakin’ at the Mall
Remembering Anticon and Hip-Hop’s Reckoning With Weirdness
KQED’s Arts & Culture desk brings daily, in-depth cultural commentary and coverage.
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In 2025, Writing Letters Helped Me Reconnect With What Matters

In post-grad life, texts and email feel cold and fleeting, but postage and paper are forever.
A painting of a ram, bleeding from a chest wound into a golden chalice marked with a red cross, stands with a cross in its mouth displaying a pink and blue flag with a white cross on the flag. The ram has a halo.

‘Be Not Afraid’ Is a Cathartic Cathedral of Queerness

KT Seibert’s new show at Moth Belly Gallery meditates on religious iconography and transgender culture.
A young Asian man and a middle aged Asian woman cling to each other playfully as they take a windswept walk on the beach. The ocean and a pier are visible behind them.

‘Rosemead’ Tells a Tragic — and True — Story

The new movie stars Lucy Liu as an ailing mother to Joe, a teenager living with mental illness.
A close up photograph of a young tabby cat's face.

We Need to Talk About Kevin: My Favorite Cat Is a Sociopath

Sometimes a momentary disappointment is fate’s way of opening the door to something far better.

Frank Gehry, Whose Designs Defied Gravity and Convention, Dies at 96

Gehry transformed modern architecture with exuberant buildings such as the Walt Disney Concert Hall and the Guggenheim Museum.

2025 Was the Year of the Great Crash Out

Celebrities, politicians and everyday people lost it this year.

These Four Concerts Gave Me Life in 2025

A Destiny’s Child reunion, LaRussell at SFMOMA and other shows reminded me that music heals.
Funding for KQED Arts & Culture is provided by:

The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, Akonadi Foundation, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, Yogen and Peggy Dalal, Diane B. Wilsey, the William and Gretchen Kimball Fund, Campaign 21 and the members of KQED.