Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 55:56 — 25.6MB) | Embed
By Art Hughes
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 55:56 — 25.6MB) | Embed
By Art Hughes
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 56:27 — 25.9MB) | Embed
Native graphics and images are at the heart of the new art exhibition “Pivot” at the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center in Albuquerque. What’s different is the images are all on skateboard decks. The creators of the show say it melds together the resilient Native work adapted to a decidedly non-Native medium.
GUESTS
Landis Bahe (Diné/Navajo), creator and co-curator of the PIVOT exhibit, tattoo artist and painter
Kandis Quam (Zuni), co-curator of the PIVOT exhibit
Elroy Natachu Jr. (Zuni), artist
Mallery Quetawki (Zuni), artist
Break 1 Music: Just Lie Down (song) Black Belt Eagle Scout (artist) Mother of My child (album)
Break 2 music: Smoke Dance One (feat. Frazer Sundown) (song) DJ Shub (artist) PowWowStep EP (album)
By Art Hughes
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 56:24 — 25.8MB) | Embed
It’s the day to question (more than usual) every news article, social media post, and conversation. Every year, April Fools’ Day recalibrates our gullibility meter. We’ll spend an hour getting the absolute truth from Native comedians and others about what makes things funny.
GUESTS
Howie Miller (Cree from the Paul Band First Nation) – comedian and actor
Darrell Lawrence Felipe (Acoma Pueblo) – entertainer
Rob Fairbanks (Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe) – comedian known as The Rez Reporter
Brett Mooswa (Makwa Sahgaiehcan First Nation) – comedian
Break 1 Music: Truck Stop Cheii (song) James Bilagody (artist) Sacred Stage (album)
Break 2 Music: 10000 Generations (song) Khu.éex’ (artist)
By Art Hughes
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 56:29 — 25.9MB) | Embed
Itinerant farm work means putting in long, hard hours. It’s a job most people pass up. But it’s long been an avenue for employment for people from south of the U.S. border. Numbers are hard to come by, but one survey found the number of Indigenous farmworkers in California alone reached 140,000. On a day set aside to recognize noted farmworker advocate Cesar Chavez, we’ll get a better understanding of the role Indigenous people play in working the nation’s agricultural economy.
GUESTS
Chuy Martinez, cultural activist and a co-founder of the Recuerda a César Chávez Committee
Matt Nelson, executive director of Presente.org
Felipe Guevara, workers’ rights attorney at the New Mexico Center on Law and Poverty
Rosalinda Guillen, founder of Community to Community
BREAK MUSIC (BROADCAST ONLY)
Break 1: People of the Sun (song) Rage Against the Machine (artist) Evil Empire (album)
Break 2: 10000 Generations (song) Khu.éex’ (artist)
By Art Hughes
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 56:25 — 38.7MB) | Embed
Native Americans are well-represented on the wrestling mat at the high school and college levels. The NCAA wrestling championships have just ended and athletes and coaches are already eyeing prospects for next season. We’ll hear about notable Native wrestlers and find out the appeal wrestling presents for Native athletes.
GUESTS
Mark Branch (Kaw Nation) – head wrestling coach for the University of Wyoming Cowboys
Kirk Bahr, outgoing wrestling coach at Menominee Indian High School in Shawano, WI
Zach Blankenship (Cherokee and Navajo) – senior at Bixby Oklahoma High School and a wrestling recruit for Oklahoma State University
Seth Duckworth (Muscogee (Creek) Nation) – wrestling reporter for Pistols Firing
Break 1 Music: Electric Pow Wow Drum (song) The Halluci Nation (artist) A Tribe Called Red (album)
Break 2 music: 10000 Generations (song) Khu.éex’ (artist)
By Art Hughes
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 56:25 — 38.7MB) | Embed
More than 42,000 Native Americans fought in Vietnam. Nearly all were volunteers. We’ll take time on Vietnam Veterans Day to honor all those who served during what was initially called “a policy action” – and hear the stories of heroism and healing from and about those who were there.
GUESTS
Michael Coon (Muskogee Creek ) – Vietnam War-era veteran
Tinisha Mitchell (Muskogee) – president of the Broken Arrow Intertribal Veterans Association
Walter Larney (Absentee Shawnee and Seminole) – lance corporal in the United States Marine Corps
Gerald Williams (Seminole) – Cold War veteran
Break 1 Music: Remembering the Warrior (song) Porcupine Singers (artist) Alowanpi – Songs of Honoring – Lakota Classics: Past & Present, Vol. 1 (album)
Break 2 music: 10000 Generations (song) Khu.éex’ (artist)
By Art Hughes
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 56:25 — 38.7MB) | Embed
A series of troubling incidents around the country appear to harken to a time of unchecked discrimination, racism and basic disregard for Native people. A South Dakota hotel owner publicly announces a ban on all Native Americans. Students at an Oklahoma school forcibly cut off a Kickapoo first grader’s hair. And a Texas high school doubles down on fake headdresses and other made-up imagery to bolster its “Cherokee values” brand. How, after all the media interviews, op-eds, awareness campaigns and personal pleas for change, can such ignorance of fundamental respect keep surfacing in 2022?
GUESTS
Tara Houska (Couchiching First Nation) – attorney and co-founder of Not Your Mascot
Nick Tilsen (Oglala Lakota) – CEO of the NDN Collective
Break 1 music: The Real People (song) RiverFlowz (artist) RiverFlowz (album)
Break 2 music: 10000 Generations (song) Khu.éex’ (artist)
By Art Hughes
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 56:25 — 38.7MB) | Embed
Chef Pyet DeSpain takes cooking to the Next Level, Tulalip citizens are cleared of illegal shellfish trafficking, and a Midwest tribal consortium gets funding to create cultural instructional videos. Those are some of the food highlights that are on The Menu with our resident foodie Andi Murphy.
GUESTS
Jerry Jondreau (Wiikwedong), owner of Dynamite Hill Farm
Joey VanAlstine (Little Travers Bay Bands of Odawa Indians), chairman of Ziibimijwang Inc. and vice president of the of the National Association of Food Distribution Programs on Indian Reservations
Hazen Shopbell (Tulalip), sitting council member for the Tulalip Tribes, entrepreneur and treaty fighter
Mentioned during the show:
Article: “Tribal leaders allege state intentionally ignores treaty rights”
Inter-Tribal Council of Michigan’s “Anishinaabek Cooking Resources”
Chef Stephanie Pyet DeSpain on the Toasted Sister Podcast:
Break 1 Music: The Menu Song (song) Arigon Starr (artist) The Red Road – Original Cast Recording (album)
Break 2 music: Sisters (song) The Halluci Nation (artist) Nation II Nation (album)
By Art Hughes
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 56:25 — 38.8MB) | Embed
Affording the basics is becoming harder every day as inflation continues to creep higher. Add to that the rising costs for gas and lingering supply-chain breakdowns. And a new study reminds us that people of color pay a steeper cost during economic hard times than the rest of the population. Shawn Spruce examines where and how inflation is surfacing and points out some hopeful signs that put the current financial concerns in context. This is an encore show so we won’t be taking live phone calls)
GUESTS
Eric Henson, research fellow at The Harvard Project on American Indian Economic Development and lecturer at Harvard University
Toni Stanger-McLaughlin, CEO of the Native America Agriculture Fund
Richard Driskell, director for retail operations for FireLake Discount Foods and the FireLake Express Grocery stores in Tecumseh and McLoud for the Citizen Potawatomi Nation
Break 1 Music: Oldest Rabbit Dance Song (song) William Horncloud (artist) Rabbit Dance Songs of The Lakota (album)
Break 2 music: Sisters (song) The Halluci Nation (artist) Nation II Nation (album)
By Art Hughes
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 56:25 — 38.7MB) | Embed
After decades of legal and political battles have pushed Nevada’s Yucca Mountain out of discussion as the permanent nuclear waste repository. But that means tribes like the Prairie Island Indian Community and the Yakama Nation in Washington will have to endure waste storage at temporary holding sites nearby.
GUESTS
Mike Childs Jr. (Prairie Island Indian Community) – treasurer for the Prairie Island Indian Community
Rose Ferri, project tracking, resource analyst, and cultural resource lead for the Yakama Nation’s Environmental Restoration Waste Management Program
Jonathan Perry (Diné) – director of the Eastern Navajo Diné Against Uranium Mining and president of the Becenti Chapter on the Navajo Nation
Jesse Deer In Water (citizen of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma) – community organizer for Citizens’ Resistance At Fermi Two, or “CRAFT”
BROADCAST-ONLY MUSIC BEDS (Tune In Live 1-2pm ET)
Break 1 music: For the Light (song) Digging Roots (artist) For the Light (song)
Break 2 music: Sisters (song) The Halluci Nation (artist) Nation II Nation (album)