Information about plays

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

GET /v2/plays/3614065/?format=api
HTTP 200 OK
Allow: GET, HEAD, OPTIONS
Content-Type: application/json
Vary: Accept

{
    "id": 3614065,
    "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3614065/?format=api",
    "airdate": "2026-02-06T18:06:36-08:00",
    "show": 65857,
    "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65857/?format=api",
    "image_uri": "https://ia801901.us.archive.org/9/items/mbid-b85cc9f7-a904-305c-ac25-cb9dace9b896/mbid-b85cc9f7-a904-305c-ac25-cb9dace9b896-21570862443_thumb500.jpg",
    "thumbnail_uri": "https://ia601901.us.archive.org/9/items/mbid-b85cc9f7-a904-305c-ac25-cb9dace9b896/mbid-b85cc9f7-a904-305c-ac25-cb9dace9b896-21570862443_thumb250.jpg",
    "song": "Lost in the Supermarket",
    "track_id": "6a11e44b-b7b9-3339-8983-89cbd846c3e2",
    "recording_id": "cc520cbe-3ecb-4bdd-80c1-1ee5d51ff90e",
    "artist": "The Afghan Whigs",
    "artist_ids": [
        "2feb192c-2363-46d6-b476-1c88a25cb294"
    ],
    "album": "Burning London: The Clash Tribute",
    "release_id": "e63cb563-3a71-46f7-8ba4-5307fe1e846d",
    "release_group_id": "b7ead732-37ea-37e8-8dfe-9c51fb3e5780",
    "labels": [
        "Epic Records"
    ],
    "label_ids": [
        "74d4bedc-649c-4855-89ec-c3ec02e68861"
    ],
    "release_date": "1999-04-21",
    "rotation_status": "Library",
    "is_local": false,
    "is_request": false,
    "is_live": false,
    "comment": "Here is the Afghan Whigs covering The Clash for the 1999 tribute album, benefitting the High Risk Youth Program of the Children's Hospital in Los Angeles.  The angelic backup vocals were provided by Seattle's own Christine Wells.\n\nOriginally sung by Mick Jones, the supermarket in question was the International, located at 471–473 Kings Road, beneath the World's End Estate. 31 Whistler Walk was where Joe Strummer lived at the time with his girlfriend Gaby Salter, her two younger brothers, and her mother.\n\nThe song's lyrics describe someone struggling to deal with an increasingly commercialised world and rampant consumerism. https://tinyurl.com/4ute2yay",
    "location": 1,
    "location_name": "Default",
    "play_type": "trackplay"
}