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KQED Releases GPS Audio Tour of the Mission in Collaboration With Detour

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Mission-detour-credit-Brian-L.-FrankKQED and San Francisco travel startup Detour have spent the last six months collaborating on an interactive audio tour of one of San Francisco’s most popular and most contentious streets — 24th Street in the Mission. For more than 50 years, 24th Street has been the heart of San Francisco’s Latino neighborhood. Now the latest wave of tech money is changing the area faster and more drastically than ever before. Evidence of gentrification lives on every block of San Francisco, but 24th Street and the Mission embody the question at the forefront of San Francisco’s identity: What does it mean to belong to a place in the midst of unprecedented change?

The Mission Detour is narrated by the “Mayor of the Mission,” Roberto Hernandez. Roberto is a lifelong Mission resident and activist who still lives on the same street he grew up on, and knows everyone in the neighborhood. On this interactive walk, Roberto takes you deep into the Mission with people who intimately love the neighborhood, but in very different ways. Roberto introduces you to all kinds of locals, from Latinos who treasure the neighborhood’s traditions, to tech-worker newcomers drawn to the neighborhood’s buzz. Their voices guide you down the main drag and back alleys of 24th Street to reveal the places and stories that make the Mission the culturally unique place that is.

The Detour features a dozen stops including Balmy Alley, La Palma Mexicatessen, Garfield Park, Haus Coffee, Mission Girls and Precita Eyes Mural Studios. The tour also features a soundtrack of musicians like Tommy Guerrero and John Vanderslice. By the end of the Detour, you’ll understand why change agents and preservationists alike celebrate the Mission’s sense of place and want to belong there -- and that a statement like "I belong" can mean two different things. As Roberto will tell you, “If you're saying it to yourself, it's empowering, but if you're saying it to someone else, it can mean 'You don't belong.' And who gets to belong is a real emotional topic around here.”

The Mission Detour goes live in the Detour app on Thursday June 9. On Saturday June 18, Detour and KQED will be co-hosting a group event in celebration of the project. Reserve free tickets through the Eventbrite listing to join the producers and narrators of this project for a group walk of this Detour. Thirty people are also able to claim tickets on the Eventbrite listing to join for an afternoon party that day at Precita Eyes Mural Studios.

Download the Detour app for free at: https://itunes.apple.com/app/id886455839

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Available for Android at the end of June. Android users who sign up for the June 18, 2016 event will get advance access to the Android app.

 

ABOUT KQED

KQED serves the people of Northern California with a public-supported alternative to commercial media. Home to one of the most listened-to public radio stations in the nation, one of the highest-rated public television services and an award-winning education program, and as a leader and innovator in interactive technology, KQED takes people of all ages on journeys of exploration — exposing them to new people, places and ideas. As other news organizations have shrunk, KQED has expanded its efforts to cover the issues and events that are important to the Bay Area. As the most trusted source of news in the Bay Area, KQED is a multiplatform operation with offices and bureaus in San Francisco, San Jose, Sacramento, Fresno and Los Angeles. Stories from all KQED news programs are featured online at KQED.org/news.

About Detour

Detour is a small travel and tech startup based in San Francisco. Detours are immersive audio tours that guide you deep into neighborhoods and their histories, narrated by people who are intimately connected to the place and its stories. Detour audio tours are taken via the Detour app, and use GPS to play narration, music, and sound effects along the route of the tour. The experience is often described as "like walking around in a documentary" or "walking around in an episode of This American Life."

Questions?

Contact Juliet Hinely, juliet@detour.com

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