About this episode
When KitKat, a beloved bodega cat, was killed by a Waymo in San Francisco in late October of this year, the incident quickly went viral. It ignited grief and outrage. It also renewed scrutiny of autonomous vehicles. But in a city where hundreds of animals are hit by vehicles each year, why did this incident — and this particular cat — hit such a nerve?
We hear from Oscar Palma, the first reporter on the scene, about what unfolded the night KitKat was killed. Then, Mission Local managing editor Joe Eskenazi and KQED reporter Sydney Johnson explore the limits of autonomous vehicles and why one cat’s death resonated so deeply in a rapidly gentrifying San Francisco.
Guests:
Sydney Johnson, reporter at KQED
Oscar Palma, reporter at Mission Local
Joe Eskenazi, managing editor at Mission Local
Further Reading/ Listening:
KitKat, liquor store mascot and ‘16th St. ambassador,’ killed — allegedly by Waymo — Oscar Palma, Mission Local
San Francisco Supervisor Calls for Robotaxi Reform After Waymo Kills Neighborhood Cat — Sydney Johnson, KQED
How Kit Kat Was Killed: Video Shows What a Waymo Couldn’t See — Heather Knight, The New York Times
Driverless car startup Cruise's no good, terrible year — Dara Kerr, NPR
Cruise admits lying to feds about dragging woman in San Francisco — Kevin Truong, The San Francisco Standard
Waymo hits dog in S.F. weeks after killing Mission bodega cat — Kelly Waldron, Mission Local
Dog hit by Waymo in SF put down by family after suffering 'severe pelvic trauma' — Alex Baker, KRON4
The self-driving taxi revolution begins at last — The Economist
Read the transcript