WDET 101.9 FM26%
WDET welcomes Kim Hunter as the new host of This Island Earth 73%
By WDET Staff92%
7/18/2026, 3:59:00 PM
BS Summary: This article contains 20 faulty reasoning types, including Halo Effect, Framing Effect, and False Dilemma, with Appeal to Emotion as the most egregious example at 29.3% saturation with 154 hits. Analysis detected 881 faulty-reasoning hits from 525 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 66.2% and a BS Rank of 73% (4,869 of 17,815 articles). This article is worse (more manipulative) than 72.70% of the article peer group.
When Ismael Ahmed signed off each week with the reminder that “we are all brothers and sisters on this Island Earth,” it wasn’t simply the closing line of a radio show.
It was a philosophy that guided decades of his work as a broadcaster, community leader and one of Detroit’s great cultural bridge builders.
Following Ismael's passing earlier this year, listeners have shared stories about how This Island Earth introduced them to new music, new cultures and new ways of seeing the world.
His legacy lives on not only through the countless lives he touched, but through the enduring belief that music has the power to connect people across cultures, languages and borders.
Today, WDET is honored to announce the next chapter of that legacy.
Beginning Sunday, August 9, lifelong Detroiter Kim Hunter will become the new host of This Island Earth, WDET's weekly journey through the music and cultures of the world.
For many longtime WDET listeners, Kim Hunter's voice will be a familiar one.
In the 1990s, he co-hosted Radio Free Earth alongside the late Ismael Ahmed, introducing listeners to music and conversations that celebrated Detroit's rich cultural diversity and the traditions of communities around the globe.
Kim's career has spanned work in Detroit's auto and steel plants, television and radio production, and media relations for social justice organizations throughout Michigan.
An accomplished writer, he has published two books of poetry and a collection of short stories and received a Kresge Literary Arts Fellowship in 2012.
“I'm grateful for the chance to rejoin WDET,” Hunter said.
“And once again share music and culture from around the world and right here in Detroit.”
While the host may be changing, the heart of This Island Earth remains the same.
For decades, the program has celebrated the sounds, stories and traditions of cultures from around the world while reflecting the extraordinary diversity that defines metro Detroit.
It's a program rooted in curiosity, discovery and the belief that music can help us better understand one another.
At a time when our communities can often feel divided, This Island Earth continues to offer something increasingly rare: a chance to listen across cultures, discover new perspectives and recognize that we have far more in common than what separates us.
“One of WDET's responsibilities is to reflect the incredible diversity of the communities we serve,” said Adam Fox, Program Director for WDET.
“Metro Detroit is home to people from every corner of the world, and This Island Earth reminds us that every culture has a story worth hearing and music worth sharing.
Ismael Ahmed built a program that connected people through curiosity, compassion and joy.
While no one can replace Ismael, we're honored that Kim Hunter will lead the next chapter of this remarkable program.
Kim brings his own voice, a deep connection to Ismael's legacy, and a genuine passion for the music and cultures that make Detroit such a vibrant place.”
Join us as we welcome Kim Hunter to This Island Earth beginning Sunday, August 9, airing Sundays on WDET 101.9 FM and streaming anytime at WDET.org.
Analysis
Hover over highlighted words in the article to view the associated bias or fallacy analysis.