Information about plays

list: List of plays
retrieve: Information about a specific play by ID

GET /v2/plays/3562010/?format=api
HTTP 200 OK
Allow: GET, HEAD, OPTIONS
Content-Type: application/json
Vary: Accept

{
    "id": 3562010,
    "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3562010/?format=api",
    "airdate": "2025-10-06T12:08:12-07:00",
    "show": 64763,
    "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/64763/?format=api",
    "image_uri": "https://ia800501.us.archive.org/33/items/mbid-4d9f5934-0b1a-4098-b19c-e393b7cc17fb/mbid-4d9f5934-0b1a-4098-b19c-e393b7cc17fb-38573029874_thumb500.jpg",
    "thumbnail_uri": "https://ia600501.us.archive.org/33/items/mbid-4d9f5934-0b1a-4098-b19c-e393b7cc17fb/mbid-4d9f5934-0b1a-4098-b19c-e393b7cc17fb-38573029874_thumb250.jpg",
    "song": "I Bet You Look Good on the Dancefloor",
    "track_id": "82ef4792-c26f-40c6-ba6a-f8f2bc5b4843",
    "recording_id": "f5e93176-0829-4823-a5be-3333e226824b",
    "artist": "Arctic Monkeys",
    "artist_ids": [
        "ada7a83c-e3e1-40f1-93f9-3e73dbc9298a"
    ],
    "album": "Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not",
    "release_id": "4d9f5934-0b1a-4098-b19c-e393b7cc17fb",
    "release_group_id": "6c9c4985-3628-3070-b956-b538f30c9bea",
    "labels": [
        "Domino"
    ],
    "label_ids": [
        "f27235b7-7666-4d70-a2c7-9f7b1981eaa0"
    ],
    "release_date": "2006-01-01",
    "rotation_status": null,
    "is_local": false,
    "is_request": false,
    "is_live": false,
    "comment": "#566 on KEXP LISTENERS' countdown of the greatest albums of all-time.\n\n\"I Bet You Look Good On The Dancefloor\" was the Arctic Monkeys' first single. The band had already built a following, so it was no surprise when it shot to the top of the singles chart in their native UK.\n\nThey started garnering attention in 2004 when their demo tapes circulated on various streaming services. Record companies came calling, but they rejected the big labels, signing instead with the independent Domino Records.\n\nWhen the song was released none of the band members were older than 20.\n\nThe lyrics, \"Dancing like a robot from 1984\" refer to John McClure, a friend of Arctic Monkeys frontman Alex Turner who was known for his questionable dance moves. The robot is a breakdancing move popular in the '80s but ill advised in modern times unless you're really good. https://tinyurl.com/yn34ayjh\n\nhttps://arcticmonkeys.com/\nhttps://www.kexp.org/donate/",
    "location": 1,
    "location_name": "Default",
    "play_type": "trackplay"
}