50 Years of LGBTQ Pride in Albuquerque | Full Episode
This week on New Mexico in Focus, Albuquerque celebrates 50 years of LGBTQ Pride. Author and community leader Dr. PJ Sedillo joins Host Nash Jones to look back at the city's first Pride parade. Later, Sedillo walks us through the parade's long history, including the move in the late ‘90s to incorporate and grow Albuquerque Pride. The New Mexico Higher Education Department has created a new scholarship for Native American students. The program offers a full ride to certain colleges and universities in the states surrounding New Mexico. Nathana Bird, director of the Higher Education Department's Indian Education Division, spoke to Nash about why she wants to help Indigenous students pursue higher education outside the state. A new study released by the state Health Department shows that fewer New Mexicans — adults and children — are smoking. Anthony Garcia, director of the department's Nicotine Use Prevention and Control Office, joins Nash to break down the numbers. The Glade Run recreation area outside Farmington is an outdoor haven for hikers, birders and dirt bikes. In Focus correspondent and Capital & Main reporter Jerry Redfern takes us to the northwest New Mexico trails, where the area is not only home to piñons and junipers — but hundreds of oil and gas wells as well. Host: Nash Jones Segments: Albuquerque Pride’s First Years Correspondent: Nash Jones Guest: Dr. PJ Sedillo, Author, “If These T-Shirts Could Talk...” How Albuquerque Pridefest 2026 Honors Its Roots Correspondent: Nash Jones Guest: Dr. PJ Sedillo, Author, “If These T-Shirts Could Talk...” Scholarship Helps Native Students Attend Out-of-State Colleges Correspondent: Nash Jones Guest: Nathana Bird, Director, Indian Education Division, New Mexico Department of Higher Education New State Data Shows Fewer Kids are Smoking, Vaping Correspondent: Nash Jones Guest: Anthony Garcia, Director, Nicotine Use Prevention and Control Office, New Mexico Department of Health Capital & Main: Oil Wells on the Bike Trail Correspondent: Jerry Redfern Guest: Mike Eisenfeld, Energy and Climate Program Manager, San Juan Citizens Alliance -- 0:00 Intro 02:55 Albuquerque Pride’s First Years 16:27 How Albuquerque Pridefest 2026 Honors Its Roots 28:43 Scholarship Helps Native Students Attend Out-of-State Colleges 39:12 New State Data Shows Fewer Kids are Smoking, Vaping 52:25 Capital & Main: Oil Wells on the Bike Trail This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support NMPBS: https://bit.ly/donatetonmpbs Subscribe to the NMPBS channel for more clips: / @nmpbs Enjoy full episodes of your favorite NMPBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App. Learn how: https://www.newmexicopbs.org/what-we-... FOLLOW NMPBS Instagram: / nmpbs Facebook: / newmexicopbs Linkedin: / knme-tv-new-mexico-pbs Website: https://www.nmpbs.org FOLLOW NEW MEXICO IN FOCUS Instagram: / nm_in_focus

New Black Advisory Board; Debate on Wastewater Use | Full Episode

Warsaw Pride 2026: Poland makes history | Pulse of Culture

The Plantation That Hid the South’s Darkest Secret | Abandoned Americana | S2 E02 | Full Episode

InterSexional People | Extraordinary Documentary

What do tech pioneers think about the AI revolution? - The Engineers, BBC World Service

Historian Timothy Snyder on ENDING Trump Nightmare FOR GOOD | PoliticsGirl

John Oliver: Why Everything is a Scam: FIFA, Mergers, & Information Literacy

A History of the Castro Neighborhood in San Francisco | KQED

Three Decades of Pageantry at Albuquerque Pride

Pueblo Farming Methods For Your Resilient Garden

Supreme Court Approves Rio Grande Water Access Deal

Gay Cruise Myths & Facts | JustJoeyT #Gay #Cruise #Advice

A Life of Rules: Inside Ultra-Orthodox Jewish Communities | ENDEVR Documentary

I Investigate the Most Extreme Ancient Village in the United States

The Eugenics Crusade | Full Documentary | AMERICAN EXPERIENCE | PBS

How Albuquerque Pridefest 2026 Honors Its Roots

Is Pride Still Necessary? Conservative vs Liberal Gays | Middle Ground

Down-Ballot Winners and Losers of 2026 Primary Elections

Inside Texas’s Most Conservative County (2% Democrat)

