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Anastacia-Renee
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the ethically immoral podcast
Volume Five: Chapter Seventeen – Our Conversation with Anastacia-Reneé
In Volume Five: Chapter Seventeen, we welcomed Educator, Writer, Poet, Playwright, and Author of the poetry collection “Here in the (Middle) of Nowhere”, Anastacia-Reneé. (From anastacia-renee.com): Anastacia-Reneé (She/They) is a queer writer, educator, interdisciplinary artist, playwright, former radio host, TEDX speaker, and podcaster. She is the author of (v.) (Gramma/Black Ocean), Forget It (Black Radish);...
2025-06-01
00 min
The Ethically Immoral Podcast
Volume Five: Chapter Seventeen - Our Conversation with Anastacia-Renee
In Volume Five: Chapter Seventeen, we welcomed Educator, Writer, Poet, Playwright, and Author of the poetry collection "Here in the (Middle) of Nowhere", Anastacia-Reneé.(From anastacia-renee.com):Anastacia-Reneé (She/They) is a queer writer, educator, interdisciplinary artist, playwright, former radio host, TEDX speaker, and podcaster. She is the author of (v.) (Gramma/Black Ocean), Forget It (Black Radish); Sidenotes from the Archivist (HarperCollins/Amistad, ), and Here in the (Middle) of Nowhere (HarperCollins/Amistad). Side Notes From The Archivist was selected as one of “NYPL Best Books of 2023,” and, The American Library Associations (RUSA) “Notable Books of 2024...
2025-06-01
2h 02
Yawpcast
Anastacia-Reneé, "Get Home Before the PBS Street Lights Go Out"
Poet of the Week, May 19–25, 2025. Full text of the poem & interview: brooklynpoets.org/community/poet/anastacia-renee
2025-05-19
03 min
Download Best Full-Length Audiobooks in Literature, Fairy Tales & Folklore
Here in the (Middle) of Nowhere by Anastacia-Renee
Please visithttps://thebookvoice.com/podcasts/1/audiobook/693843to listen full audiobooks. Title: Here in the (Middle) of Nowhere Author: Anastacia-Renee Narrator: Anastacia-Renee Format: Unabridged Audiobook Length: 2 hours 21 minutes Release date: March 12, 2024 Genres: Fairy Tales & Folklore Publisher's Summary: In this bold hybrid collection of poetry, flash fiction, and Afrofuturism sci-fi, the award-winning interdisciplinary writer and author of Side Notes from the Archivist explores what happens when god is a Black woman in a town. What happens when there are multiple universes in the middle of nowhere? And what if in each universe there reigned other Black woman gods? One million versions of go...
2024-03-12
2h 21
Download Best Full Audiobooks in Literature, Poetry
Here in the (Middle) of Nowhere by Anastacia-Renee
Please visithttps://thebookvoice.com/podcasts/1/audiobook/693843to listen full audiobooks. Title: Here in the (Middle) of Nowhere Author: Anastacia-Renee Narrator: Anastacia-Renee Format: Unabridged Audiobook Length: 2 hours 21 minutes Release date: March 12, 2024 Genres: Poetry Publisher's Summary: In this bold hybrid collection of poetry, flash fiction, and Afrofuturism sci-fi, the award-winning interdisciplinary writer and author of Side Notes from the Archivist explores what happens when god is a Black woman in a town. What happens when there are multiple universes in the middle of nowhere? And what if in each universe there reigned other Black woman gods? One million versions of god, and on...
2024-03-12
2h 21
Get Latest Full Audiobooks in Literature, Short Stories
Here in the (Middle) of Nowhere by Anastacia-Renee
Please visithttps://thebookvoice.com/podcasts/1/audiobook/693843to listen full audiobooks. Title: Here in the (Middle) of Nowhere Author: Anastacia-Renee Narrator: Anastacia-Renee Format: Unabridged Audiobook Length: 2 hours 21 minutes Release date: March 12, 2024 Genres: Short Stories Publisher's Summary: In this bold hybrid collection of poetry, flash fiction, and Afrofuturism sci-fi, the award-winning interdisciplinary writer and author of Side Notes from the Archivist explores what happens when god is a Black woman in a town. What happens when there are multiple universes in the middle of nowhere? And what if in each universe there reigned other Black woman gods? One million versions of god, an...
2024-03-12
2h 21
The Seattle Public Library - Author Readings and Library Events
Jennifer Baker and Dennis Norris II With Anastacia-Renee and Jessica Rycheal
"Everyday People" is a thoughtfully curated anthology of short stories that presents new and renowned work by established and emerging writers of color. Editor Jennifer Baker and writer Dennis Norris II will talk about their contributions to the collection, and then be joined by Civic Poet Anastacia-Renee and Jessica Rycheal for readings and conversation."Everyday People" illustrates the dynamics of character and culture that reflect familial strife, political conflict, and personal turmoil through an array of stories that reveal the depth of the human experience. Representing a wide range of styles, themes, and perspectives, these selected stories depict moments that...
2023-09-15
57 min
The Seattle Public Library - Author Readings and Library Events
Speak to Me! Poetry Readings
Seattle Civic Poet Anastacia-Renee will host Speak to Me! an intergenerational reading series showcasing emerging and seasons poets. Speak to Me! Volume IV will feature readings by Carolyne Wright, Lee Smith, Jekeva Phillips, Kamari Bright and Tara Hardy.Anastacia-Renee is Civic Poet of Seattle and former 2015-2017 Poet-in-Residence at Hugo House. She is the author of four books: Forget It (Black Radish Books), (v.), (Gramma Press), Answer (Me) (Argus Press), and 26 (Dancing Girl Press), and her poetry, prose and fiction have been published widely.Carolyne Wright's new book is This Dream the World: New and Selected Poems (Lost Horse Press, 2017...
2023-09-15
1h 11
Dr. Andy's Poetry and Technology Hour
Lois P. Jones, William O'Daly, Anastacia-Renee, and Juna Brothers
On the 5/17/23 edition of Dr. Andy’s Poetry and Technology Hour:Four excellent guests! First, poet and radio host Lois P. Jones talks with Dr. Andy about her radio show Poets Cafe and the hidden figures who elevate artists to their full potential, then shares a poem on the latter subject. Quadruple threat (poet, translator, writer and editor) William O’Daly shares thoughts on mythopoetic poetry and translating Pablo Neruda, then a poem from his new book The New Gods. Poet Anastacia-Renee discusses her new book Sidenotes from the Archivist, finding the balance between community and personal growth, and...
2023-05-18
1h 02
Town Hall Seattle Arts & Culture Series
227. Anastacia-Reneé with Quenton Baker: Black Culture Through a Feminist Lens
Side Notes from the Archivist is a preservation of Black culture viewed through a feminist lens. The Archivist leads readers through poems that epitomize youthful renditions of a Black girl coming of age in Philadelphia’s pre-funk ’80s; episodic adventures of “the Black Girl” whose life is depicted through the white gaze; and selections of verse evincing affection for self and testimony to the magnificence within Black femme culture at-large. In her uniquely embracing and experimental style, Anastacia-Reneé documents and celebrates diverse subjects, from Solid Gold to halal hotdogs; as homages and reflections on iconic images, from Marsha P. Jo...
2023-05-11
1h 04
Don’t Miss The Full Audiobook Everyone Is Talking About — So Immersive!
Side Notes from the Archivist: Poems by Anastacia-Renee
Please visithttps://thebookvoice.com/podcasts/1/audiobook/601129to listen full audiobooks. Title: Side Notes from the Archivist: Poems Author: Anastacia-Renee Narrator: Anastacia-Renee Format: Unabridged Audiobook Length: 1 hour 33 minutes Release date: March 14, 2023 Genres: Poetry Publisher's Summary: The award-winning, genre-crossing writer demonstrates her power as a funkadelic and formidable feminist voice in this rich and beautiful collection of verse and image—a multi-part retrospective that traverses time, space, and reality to illuminate the expansiveness of Black femme lives. Voted one of the Best Books of 2023 by the New York Public Library. Side Notes from the Archivist is a preservation of Black culture viewed th...
2023-03-14
1h 33
Access Essential Full Audiobooks in Literature, Poetry
Side Notes from the Archivist: Poems by Anastacia-Renee
Please visithttps://thebookvoice.com/podcasts/1/audiobook/601129to listen full audiobooks. Title: Side Notes from the Archivist: Poems Author: Anastacia-Renee Narrator: Anastacia-Renee Format: Unabridged Audiobook Length: 1 hour 33 minutes Release date: March 14, 2023 Genres: Poetry Publisher's Summary: The award-winning, genre-crossing writer demonstrates her power as a funkadelic and formidable feminist voice in this rich and beautiful collection of verse and image—a multi-part retrospective that traverses time, space, and reality to illuminate the expansiveness of Black femme lives. Voted one of the Best Books of 2023 by the New York Public Library. Side Notes from the Archivist is a preservation of Black culture viewed th...
2023-03-14
1h 33
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Season 4 Episode 1: We're Back! Now what? What now?
After a two year gap we are back. We've missed you. Check in on what Anastacia and Reagan have been up to during the pandemic and how we're framing our 4th and final season.
2022-08-12
52 min
In The Moment podcast
125. Guilaine Kinouani with Anastacia-Reneé: Living While Black
Mental health professionals are in high demand now more than ever. In the U.S. alone, around a third of the population sought therapy services in 2020. But mental health practitioners aren’t immune to issues of deep structural racism and white supremacy; if they aren’t recognized and consciously dismantled, the potential for further harm to Black people persists, and mental, physical, and emotional wellness remain out of reach. Over the past 15 years, radical psychologist Guilaine Kinouani has focused her research, writing, and workshops on how racism affects physical and mental health. Her new book Living While Black...
2022-02-28
38 min
sorry to podcast this
Mistakes and Freedom (w/ Ebo Barton)
Danielle Holland and Alex Moshchevitin kick off this week on STPT discussing the origins of pride, corporate opportunism, and the right to exist without being prosecuted. F--k your rainbow-washing, support Black trans women!Then, artist and educator, Ebo Barton (they/them/he/him) joins the show. Barton and hosts dive into writing to make sense of oneself in the world, exploring history through the creations of artists, and getting out of the way of the youth. They got this.For this special episode, Ebo shares two poems (Mistakes and Freedom, Cut Me Loose) from his...
2021-06-16
1h 13
SoundPages Podcast
Mabuhay – Troy Osaki
Troy Osaki’s project for the 2020 Jack Straw Writers Program is a chapbook manuscript of poems that he began writing after visiting the Philippines for the first time in 2017. In his conversation with curator Anastacia-Renée, they discuss poetry’s ability to create social change, his history with Youth Speaks, and cultural and familial connections. “I really learned that not only is . . . writing a way to get through the complicated things in life and to process, but it really, truly has the power to go beyond that and imagine new ways and what’s possible.” Music by SassyBlack...
2021-06-09
00 min
SoundPages Podcast
Iktome – Jose Trejo-Maya
2020 Jack Straw writer Jose Trejo-Maya’s project is an extract of his poetry that is intended for a three-dimensional museum exhibit based on the Tonalpohualli, a Mesoamerican conception of time. In his conversation with curator Anastacia-Renée, they discuss his organic writing process, his connection to the immigrant experience, and listening to the voices of his ancestors. “It just comes to me from what I know and the experience I have — it’s the people, the elders that have been with me. So, they tell me . . . to speak when you’re spoken to. And it’s just a refraction of where I co...
2021-04-29
00 min
SoundPages Podcast
Exhibits – Arianne True
Arianne True’s project for the 2020 Jack Straw Writers Program is a poetic “museum” that creates a safe space to engage in difficult subjects such as childhood sexual abuse. In her conversation with curator Anastacia-Renée, they discuss the ritual of writing, engaging with experimental forms, and creating visceral experiences with words. “Through poetry, you can put an experience that you had or are having into someone else’s body and not make them think about it, but you can really help them experience it in a way that is safe and contained, and structured.” Music by SassyBlack, p...
2021-03-24
00 min
SoundPages Podcast
Uhuru – Jeffrey Lee Cheatham II
2020 Jack Straw writer Jeffrey Lee Cheatham II’s project is a graphic novel titled Uhuru, a pirate adventure story centering Black characters. In his conversation with curator Anastacia-Renée, they discuss the lack of Black representation in children’s literature, professional wrestling and Archie comics, and creating Black stories that expand beyond a monolithic experience. “One of the big things that really got me into creating my children’s book stories was the fact that every time I would read a story that had a Black protagonist, it always dealt with New York, Harlem, the country, civil rights or slavery...
2021-03-04
00 min
SoundPages Podcast
Naia – Helen K. Thomas
2020 Jack Straw writer Helen K. Thomas’s project is a collection of short stories that feature Black girl protagonists from the Pacific Northwest. In her conversation with curator Anastacia-Renée, they discuss Young Adult fiction and expanding representation of young Black girls in those stories. “To be a part of that and to choose to be a part of that is something that I don’t take lightly and is something that I really, really honor because . . . I see how it’s changing the world. And I see how it’s creating compassion. And I see how it’s really moving...
2021-02-17
00 min
Hoo’s At The Writing Center
S3E2 - Celebrating National Black History Month
Hello, world! With February being Black History Month, we wanted to dedicate this episode to talking about our favorite stories from Black authors and a little about the history behind Black History Month and ways that we can celebrate beyond just the month of February. Be sure to check out the list below for our list of favorite authors and writers, some book and movie recommendations, links to Seattle U's Black Student Union and ways to support them, Black-owned bookshops doing online orders, and more!Discourse Resources:History Behind Black History Month...
2021-02-11
24 min
SoundPages Podcast
A Resurrection – Rob Arnold
Rob Arnold’s project for the 2020 Jack Straw Writers Program is a poetic memoir that tackles the complex legacies of familial trauma. In his conversation with curator Anastacia-Renée, they discuss cross-genre writing, the distance and connection created by language, and matching linguistic precision with visual expansion. “I started thinking about these things in a much more in-depth way. Every single noun became like a hyperlink, like I could dive in deep into the history. So, I was able to kind of turn my poems from these tiny, little jewels into much more developed pieces.” Music by SassyBl...
2020-12-31
00 min
SoundPages Podcast
Breath – Ching-In Chen
2020 Jack Straw writer Ching-In Chen’s project is a series of experimental prose poems inspired by their relationship to breath, and the Texas Tax Day Flood of 2016. In their conversation with curator Anastacia-Renée, they discuss their process of creating in a hybrid genre, representation in art, and creating within community. “What surprised me is I never knew what people would get out of my work. The people who I never would have imagined would respond to my work, would start talking to me and coming up to me . . . it sparked these conversations with other artists or with community member...
2020-12-23
00 min
SoundPages Podcast
Giant – Michelle Goodman
Michelle Goodman’s project for the 2020 Jack Straw Writer’s Program is a creative nonfiction piece that deals with dying and grief. In her conversation with curator Anastacia-Renée, they discuss navigating the balance between telling the truth and what remains untold, shaping nonfiction, and writing as an act of understanding. “I’ve always liked telling true life stories. I think it helps us make sense of life and the world and helps other people feel less alone when they read and relate to a story that speaks to them.” Music by SassyBlack, produced as part of the Jack St...
2020-12-03
22 min
SoundPages Podcast
Insubordinate – Ebo Barton
2020 Jack Straw writer Ebo Barton’s poetry project is both a printed work and an audiobook. In their conversation with curator Anastacia-Renée, they discuss the differences between spoken word and page poetry, the pressure on artists to constantly produce, and what it means to share work aloud. “When I say the stage is my church, it actually is my church and that’s what I’m doing for me at that point in time. And if somebody grabs onto it, cool, but I’m gonna keep going.” Music by SassyBlack, produced as part of the Jack Straw Artist...
2020-11-19
00 min
SoundPages Podcast
Body – Wrly T. McCutchen
Wryly T. McCutchen’s project for the 2020 Jack Straw Writer’s Program is part of a “drag-a-licious” show of “of weird, solo, interdisciplinary, poetry-fueled content.” In their conversation with curator Anastacia-Renée, they discuss the physical nature of their work, their destructive poetry practice, and the importance of sharing one’s work. “Poetry offers the opportunity to use language in this way that breaks it and messes it up. . . . And also there’s often an emphasis on what’s not there or what’s been taken out . . . it’s something that I’ve been thinking about, in terms of life values and political v...
2020-11-05
00 min
SoundPages Podcast
Ezekiel – Elaina Ellis
2020 Jack Straw writer Elaina Ellis’s poetry project could be described as a book-length exploration of the story of Ezekiel, but that’s just the beginning. In her conversation with curator Anastacia-Renée, they discuss bringing one’s whole self to the creative process, love-bombing, and the multiple resonances, from the erotic to the traumatic, that can be found in both sacred texts and modern life. “That is how the book of Ezekiel opened up for me this etymological rabbit hole — and then this image of an angel lifting somebody up by a lock of his hair. But it wasn’t like...
2020-10-28
00 min
sorry to podcast this
Now Is The Time To Create (w/ Anastacia-Renee)
This week on STPT, Daemond Arrindell returns to #STPT to co-host with Danielle Holland. They get into where they are currently finding joy, from coffee rituals to pumpkin patches and we learn that Daemond hates clowns! Then, writer, educator, interdisciplinary artist, TEDx speaker and podcaster, Anastacia-Renee joins the pod. They dive into heartbreak and creation, reaching for the ancestors, and speaking to the Lorde (Audre). Anastacia-Renee shares two new poems with our listeners. sorrytopodcastthis.com - anastacia-renee.com--- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
2020-10-21
1h 13
Intimate Conversations with Dani Tirrell
Conversation 20 - Anastacia-Renee
Dani Tirrell and guest Anastacia-Renee talk about Queer Mama Crossroads, being a queer Mother and being present in her joy. “Black love looks like Afrofuturism rocking a retro shirt and re-(purposed) commitment. Hair a mess of love, lips blinking with “yes,” eyes moist with home.” Anastacia-Renee is a multigenre writer, educator, interdisciplinary artist and Deep End Podcast co-host. She is a 2020 Arc Fellow(4Culture),recipient of the 2018,James W. Ray Distinguished Artist Award for Washington Artist (Literary), Seattle Civic Poet (2017-2019),Poet-in-Residence at Hugo House (2015-2017), and Jack Str...
2020-09-21
59 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Black Healing Live from Town Hall PT 2- Rocky Lester and Taqueet$
On Sept 6, 2020 The Deep End hosted it's Season 3 Finale livestreaming through Seattle Town Hall. The theme was Black healing and we interviewed Mary Williams, Victoria Santos, Rocky Lester, and Taqueet$. Mary Williams is an anthropology student at the University of Washington who is studying coping strategies for viral Black death. She is the co-founder of Blackout Healing and co-organized the Blackout of the Capitol Hill Occupied Protest on Juneteenth, re-center the protest on Black healing and Black lives from Black death. Victoria Santos is the Co-director of Young Women Empowered. She is a healer and t...
2020-09-21
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Black Healing live from Seattle Town Hall PT1
On Sept 6, 2020 The Deep End hosted it's Season 3 Finale livestreaming through Seattle Town Hall. The theme was Black healing and we interviewed Mary Williams, Victoria Santos, Rocky Lester, and Taqueet$. Mary Williams is an anthropology student at the University of Washington who is studying coping strategies for viral Black death. She is the co-founder of Blackout Healing and co-organized the Blackout of the Capitol Hill Occupied Protest on Juneteenth, re-center the protest on Black healing and Black lives from Black death. Victoria Santos is the Co-director of Young Women Empowered. She is a healer and t...
2020-09-21
00 min
Life On The Margins
We the People
Find the "LIVE" video version of this episode : HERE0:00 - Town Hall Episode Introduction1:30 - Host Introduction7:32 - Spoken Word from Jessica Rycheal10:30 - Conversation with Dr. Julian Perez37:00 - Spoken Word from Naa Akua40:20 - Conversation with Ijeoma Oluo____________________________________________________________Jessica Rycheal is a Multi-disciplinary Storyteller and Creative Director from Macon, Georgia. Since relocating to Seattle in 2014, Jessica has carved space for herself in the pacific northwest with a decade of experience in brand strategy and design, and a blossoming presence in the f...
2020-07-22
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
B.J. Star
BJ STAR (they/them) is an experience designer, facilitator, and consultant invested in transformational learning, building powerful teams, and transitioning to a life-affirming society. BJ began as a trainer with Generation Waking Up and The Work That Reconnects, and has grown several organizations that strengthen Black, POC, womxn, and youth leadership throughout the country. Today they are an independent facilitator at BJSTAR Consulting and a member of the Wildfire Project. BJ currently supports organizations such as Young Women’s Leadership, Healing Justice Podcast, Color of Change, 350.org, SustainUS, National Bail Out, OPAL Environmental Justice, and Amazon Employees fo...
2020-05-10
00 min
In The Moment podcast
62. Frank Wilderson with Anastacia Renee: Afro-Pessimism And Modern Slavery
In this week’s interview, correspondent Anastacia Renee talks with Author Frank B. Wilderson III about Afro-pessimism—an intellectual movement that theorizes blackness through the lens of perpetual slavery. Wilderson contends that Black struggles cannot be conflated with the experiences of any other oppressed group. Rather than interpreting slavery through a Marxist framework of class oppression, He asserts that the social construct of slavery—as seen through pervasive, anti-black subjugation and violence—is hardly a relic of the past, but an almost necessary force in modern civilization. Wilderson illustrates the theories of Afro-pessimism through his own lived experien...
2020-05-04
43 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Paulina Lopez
Originally from Ecuador, Paulina has made Seattle her home over the past 15 years and has been with DRCC/TAG for eight years. Paulina has over 25 years of experience working with issues of civil rights, social justice, equity, education, and diversity. She has and continues to demonstrate commitment and engagement in the community through the advocacy of multiple important civic policies including access to a safe, clean environment for families in the area. Paulina created and co-led our Duwamish Valley Youth Corps Program and worked as a Community Engagement Director, advocating for community members to participate in the...
2020-04-26
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Susan Balbas
Susan Balbas is the co-founder and executive director of Na’ah Illahee Fund (Mother Earth in the Chinook language), a Seattle-based nonprofit organization with a mission to support and promote the leadership of Indigenous womxn in the ongoing regeneration of Indigenous communities in the Pacific Northwest. She holds a Bachelor of Business Administration and a Master of Science in Teaching. Her career has been within nonprofit and business management, and she has served on multiple boards and committees locally and nationally. Susan is active within climate, environmental and social justice movements as well as in philanthropy.
2020-04-19
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Brenetta Ward
Brenetta Ward is a Seattle-based fiber artist and third generation quilter. Her work has been exhibited at the National Afro-American Museum; Textile Center: A National Center for Fiber Art; Ethnic Heritage Art Gallery; Tacoma Art Museum; Northwest African American Museum and Spelman College Museum of Fine Art. Selected pieces have been published in Spirits of the Cloth and included in public and private collections. As a fiber artist, she believes quilts have the power to nurture our spiritual needs for creativity, beauty and comfort.
2020-04-12
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Dre Say and Jacqueline Wu
Dre Say is really beyond their ancestor’s wildest dreams. They are a member of the CID [Chinatown/International District] Coalition and also a member of Got Green. Dre’s primary interests are engaging people disconnected from politics and organizing, and fighting against displacement in South Seattle. Jacqueline Wu is a second-generation Chinese-Filipino American, who was born and raised in Los Angeles. She moved to Seattle to attend the University of Washington for undergraduate where she majored in American Ethnic Studies and History (Honors). During undergraduate, Jacqueline interned with OCA-Asian Pacific American Advocate Greater Seattle Chapter (formerly know...
2020-04-05
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Episode 12: Loretta Ross
Loretta J. Ross is a Visiting Professor of Practice in the School of Social Transformation at Arizona State University teaching "Reproductive Justice Theory and Practice" and "Race and Culture in the U.S." for the 2018-2019 academic year. Previously, she was a Visiting Professor at Hampshire College in Women's Studies for the 2017-2018 academic year teaching "White Supremacy in the Age of Trump." She was a co-founder and the National Coordinator of the SisterSong Women of Color Reproductive Justice Collective from 2005-2012, a network founded in 1997 of women of color and allied organizations that organize women of color in the r...
2020-03-29
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Dr. Carl Livingston
Carl Livingston is the lead professor in the Political Science Department at Seattle Central College (SCC). A graduate of Notre Dame Law School, he has been an adjunct Business Law professor at Seattle Pacific University’s School of Business and at South Seattle College. He was chair of the panel appointed by the Seattle City Council that reported on the inadequate preparations of the 1999 WTO Ministerial Conference in Seattle. Carl is the author of a scholarly article entitled “Affirmative Action on Trial: The Retraction of Affirmative Action and the Case for its Retention” published by the Howard Law Journal publis...
2020-03-22
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Maritess Zurbano
Maritess Zurbano is the only Filipino-American magician in history. She performs and lectures on magic around the world. Her prose has won awards and grants including a Hedgebrook Residency. Her performances, plays, and prose details how she became a Las Vegas magician in a male-dominated field. These works have been produced in NYC theater festivals and across the country. Her books are currently being shopped to publishers, and opinion pieces at Ms. Magazine and The Seattle Times. Her play, "Make Maritess Zurbano Disappear" runs March 8-10 in Seattle. She's also working on a YA novel and her second memoir
2020-03-15
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Patricia Valentine Jones
Patricia Valentine Jones was born and raised in Chowchilla, California. She moved to Sacramento in 1960, married and had two daughters. As a young person she sang in a 125 voice community choir. The Voices of Inspiration traveled to Seattle to sing at the worlds fair in 1962. Little did she know she would move to Seattle in 1982 to marry and live. She began her work career as a Cosmetologist in California and continued her profession in Seattle at a couple salons around town. Patricia worked as a house cleaner with “Extra Hands” to learn her way around Seattle. She then returned to Beauty...
2020-03-08
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Natasha Ria El-Scari
Natasha Ria El-Scari is a writer, Cave Canem fellow, and educator for over a decade. Her poetry, academic papers, and personal essays have been published in anthologies, literary, online journals and even as decor in a restaurant in London. She has opened for and introduced many great writers, singers and activists, and has been featured at a host of universities and venues nationwide. Born and raised in Kansas City, Missouri, Natasha has a BA from Jackson State University and a MA from the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Natasha’s Black Feminist approach is reflected in her writing, poetry and per...
2020-02-23
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Lashanna Williams
Lashanna (she/her) is a graduate of the University of Michigan and Washington’s own Northwest Academy for the Healing Arts. During a massage, her goal is always a flowing conversation between her hands and your tissue. "My touch is not a pointed deep touch, yet we access deep tissues without you leaving in pain. Causing pain is counter-intuitive to how I want to walk this life. " Lashanna practices from an in home studio that creates an environment that bathes you with light energy. The grounds are lush with herb and vegetable gardens, chickens and love. Access to he...
2020-02-16
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Omitosin Fayemi
There are times when just one healing practice or modality won’t achieve the balance and healing that some need. Omitosin, The Spiritual Curator, brings many gifts, spiritual tools and workshops to help her clients with their personal transformation…Her collection of healing tools is vast and she supports clients on their path with loving kindness and non judgement. Using intuitive Ifa readings, reiki, chakra balancing, ritual, coaching, as well as crystals, and other tools, Omi assists clients in getting an understanding of their own energy and healing. Her intuitive and mediumship gifts help them “see the unseen...
2020-02-09
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Riz Rollins
writer and dj riz rollins (just 'riz' to his friends) has been a presence in the seattle music landscape where he hosts a variety and electronica show on 90.3 fm for almost thirty years. a stalwart in both the club and event scene, he has played alongside a diverse roster of artists that includes nirvana and james brown, die antwoord and funkadelic, amon tobin and osunlade. proficient with a plethora of styles that include disco, hip hop, house, world, r&b,ambient, jazz and gospel he regrets that he won't be slugging his vinyl on this trip, but maybe he'll in...
2020-02-02
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Tommy Pico
Tommy “Teebs” Pico is author of the books IRL, Nature Poem, Junk, Feed, and myriad keen tweets including “sittin on the cock of the gay.” Originally from the Viejas Indian reservation of the Kumeyaay nation, he now splits his time between Los Angeles and Brooklyn. He co-curates the reading series Poets with Attitude, co-hosts the podcasts Food 4 Thot and Scream, Queen! and is a contributing editor at Literary Hub.
2020-01-26
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Jessica Rycheal
Jessica Rycheal is a Multi-disciplinary Storyteller, Photographer, and Creative Director from Macon, Georgia. Her work embraces vulnerability as an act of resistance, as she weaves themes of healing, resilience, and self-preservation across a loom of visual arts and spoken word. She has been featured in the Northwest African American Museum, Bainbridge Island Museum of Art, NPR, Seattle Times, and City Arts Magazine.
2020-01-19
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
C. Davida Ingram
C. Davida Ingram is an award-winning artist and civic leader born in Chicago and based in Seattle, Washington. Her artwork, curatorial projects, and writing all discuss race and gender via lens-based media, social practice, performance art, lyrical essay and installation art. Ingram has exhibited at the Frye Art Museum, Northwest African American Museum, Bridge Productions, Intiman Theater, Town Hall in Seattle, Evergreen College and more. Her writing has appeared in Arcade, Ms. Magazine blog, The James Franco Review, and The Stranger.
2020-01-12
00 min
Raising Rebels
The false safety of proximity to whiteness (Pt. 2 w/ Anastacia-Renee)
When you think of a safe neighborhood in your mind’s eye are you envisioning a white neighborhood? Why is that? Are you low-key promoting white supremacy in the quest for freedom?Whiteness, and proximity to it, is both safe and harmful. How do we talk to our children about that harm within the safety? What do we do when those “safe” white spaces backfire? What happens when other parents at school assume you are the help? Join our host, Noleca, and our special guest Anastacia-Renee for part 2 of this Raising Rebels special! Hosted on Aca...
2020-01-09
34 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Azure Savage
AZURE SAVAGE is a black trans man in his senior year of high school. He wrote You Failed Us as a response to the racial injustice within the education system. After releasing the book, Savage has started to pursue speaking opportunities, workshops, and meeting directly with people working in Seattle Public Schools. He is working towards creating more understanding of the harm caused to students of color in order to inform actions taken by the district. Aside from book-related opportunities, Savage also has a strong voice at his high school around sexual assault education. All of his interests come fro...
2020-01-05
00 min
Raising Rebels
“I rode down the hill anyway. No hands.” (Pt. 1)
So many parenting anxieties are based in the need for safety. Parents want to keep their children safe. And safety is on the path the freedom. But what cultural sacrifices are we willing to make in the name of “safety?” And are they really worth it in the end? Join our host, Noleca, and multi-genre writer, performance artist, educator and mother of 2, Anastacia-Renee, as they discuss the very rational anxieties that come along with parenting free black children and how internalized oppression makes us a key boundary to their freedom. Find...
2020-01-03
32 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Virgie Tovar live from Seattle Town Hall
Virgie Tovar is an author, activist and started the hashtag campaign #LoseHateNotWeight. In 2018 she was named one of the 50 most influential feminists by Bitch Magazine. She is the founder of Babecamp, a 4-week online course designed to help women who are ready to break up with diet culture. In 2012, Tovar edited the anthology Hot & Heavy: Fierce Fat Girls on Life, Love and Fashion and in 2018 The Feminist Press published her manifesto, You Have the Right to Remain Fat, which was placed on the American Library Association's Amelia Bloomer List. Her new book, FLAWLESS: Radical Body Positivity for Girls of Color, co...
2019-11-17
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Dr. Eric Darnell Pritchard (Cameo from Dr. Stanlie James)
Born and raised in Queens, NY, Eric Darnell Pritchard is an award-winning writer, cultural critic, and an Associate Professor of English at the University at Buffalo, State University of New York. A self-described "Black queer feminist alchemist," he writes and teaches about literacy and rhetoric and their intersections with fashion, beauty, popular culture, identity, and power. He is author of Fashioning Lives: Black Queers and the Politics of Literacy (Southern Illinois University Press, 2016), winner of three book awards, and editor of “Sartorial Politics, Intersectionality, and Queer Worldmaking,” a special issue of QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking (Michigan State Universit...
2019-11-10
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Dr. David Glisch-Sanchez
David Luis Glisch-Sánchez is an award winning teacher and Assistant Professor of Global Gender and Sexuality Studies at the University of Buffalo, in Buffalo, New York. His work as a scholar and teacher focuses broadly in the areas of the sociology of emotions, Latinx studies, women of color feminisms, queer of color critique, and public policy and the law. He is also founder of Soul Support Life Coaching, which is a coaching practice he created to help individuals, groups, and organizations live and operate more intentionally on the principles of Love, Courage, Equity, Fairness, and Balance. Lastly, he i...
2019-11-03
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Kwame Morrow
Kwame Morrow is a husband, father of three, son, and brother. He is an active member of his community, and an urn in which his ancestors reside. He describes himself primarily as a soul having a human experience. Kwame earned his BA in Business Administration Finance from The Evergreen State College with a focus on international trade. He graduated from Goddard college with his Master's of Education with an emphasis in early childhood and community leadership. Kwame is an administrator at his family's business, Kidus Montessori, which has been in existence for over 30 years. Kidus Montessori serves children ages 1...
2019-09-29
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Live from We Out Here Part 2 - Nyema Clark
This Episode was recorded live at Langston Hughes from We Out Here, a festival of black excellence curated by Michael B. Maine. Nyema Clark is farm boss at Nurturing Roots on Beacon Ave & S Graham St. in Beacon Hill. A native to south Seattle, Nyema’s entrepreneurial chops shine in her efforts as a beginning urban farmer. Proprietor of Avenue South, a line of natural health and beauty products, Nyema is deeply dedicated to the wellness and healing of her community. Come say hey at a Thursday farm stand, be embraced by her radiating love, and get a t...
2019-08-04
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Live from We Out Here Part 1- Inye Wokoma
Live from We Out Here Part 1, a festival of black excellence curated by Michael B. Maine. The Deep End interviewed Inye Wokoma. Inye Wokoma’s family has lived in the Central District since the 1940s. As a journalist, filmmaker and visual artist, he explores themes of identity, community, history, land, politics and power through the lens of personal and visual narratives. His work is informed by a deep social practice that prioritizes the utility of his art to the collective welfare of his community. Three of his most recent projects, A Central Vision, An Elegant Utility, and Th...
2019-07-28
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Esmy Jimenez
Esmy Jimenez. Born in Mexico but raised in rural Washington, Esmy Jimenez is a multimedia journalist and writer. After attending USC in Los Angeles, she moved to Seattle where she was a 2016 apprentice for The Seattle Globalist. Esmy’s work has appeared in High Country News, the Washington Post’s The Lily, National Native News, and NPR. She is additionally a Maynard Fellow and Next Gen Radio alum. When she’s not running around, you can usually find her talking about eating or eating while talking.
2019-07-21
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Black Doulas Matter: Rokea Jones and Kristin Travis
Join us for a conversation about motherhood with two amazing black doulas and activists literally bringing us life! Rokea Jones is a Seattle Native and a mother to her brilliant two year old daughter. Rokea is currently a Community Based Outreach Doula serving the African-American community at Open Arms Perinatal Services. She is also a certified PALS doula serving the Seattle area. Rokea is a certified lactation educator and is a local leader in the current cohort of Health Connect One’s Birth equity leadership Academy. Rokea is a staunch advocate for reproductive justice and birth equity si...
2019-06-16
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Lama Rod Owens
Lama Rod Owens was officially recognized by the Kagyu school of Tibetan Buddhism after receiving his teaching authorization from his root teacher the Venerable Lama Norlha Rinpoche when he completed the traditional 3-year silent retreat program at Kagyu Thubten Chöling Monastery (KTC) outside of New York City. It was during this time that he dealt with years of past pain and trauma and found forgiveness and compassion for himself, what he views as a critical step before truly being able to help others. Since coming out of retreat he has completed his Master of Divinity degree at Har...
2019-06-09
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
K. Wyking Garrett
K. Wyking Garrett is the President & CEO of Africatown Community Land Trust and chief strategist for the Africatown community development initiative in Seattle, WA. A third generation community builder and recognized change agent, Wyking designs programs and initiatives that catalyze, mobilize and activate communities for policy change and social impact. He has been a co-catalyst for several Seattle based initiatives including precedent-setting real estate development projects Liberty Bank Building and Africatown Plaza, Umoja PEACE Center, Hack The CD, Black Dot business incubator and Africatown Center for Education Innovation. He was a founding director of the African American H...
2019-05-26
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Chef Tarik Abdullah
Chef Tarik Abdullah is a chef, artist, innovator, and community activist. His culinary creations honor traditions using spices spanning from North Africa, South East Asia and the Mediterranean; and inspired by the tastes and flavors of his childhood. Growing up in a Muslim family and broader community where ethnic foods were the norm, his artistry comes through not only in his food, but in his everyday interactions with people - sharing his passion for cooking with the younger generation by teaching week-long summer camps called “In the Kitchen with Chef T”, or the current Project Midnight Mecca. Abdullah also appe...
2019-05-19
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Evan Flory-Barnes
Grammy-winning Seattle double bass player (Macklemore & Ryan Lewis), composer and vocalist, Evan Flory-Barnes, is a sorcerer. Able to concoct large, swelling scores with symphonies following his precise baton or manifest nuanced, delicately woven narratives on his solo upright bass, the Emerald City virtuoso offers elegant, honest, approachable and magical music. With deep influences in hip-hop’s boom-bap, classical music’s delicacies and rock ‘n’ roll’s power, Flory-Barnes is a fire, centralized and for any to be made warm. Known for his bass versatility, Flory-Barnes recently began stepping out center stage – singing “Move On Up” to an audience of thousands during...
2019-05-12
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Sharon Chang
S H A R O N H. C H A N G is an award-winning Author Photographer Activist with a lens on racism, social justice and the Asian American diaspora. She is author of the critically acclaimed academic book Raising Mixed Race: Multiracial Asian Children In a Post-Racial World and her newly released memoir, Hapa Tales and Other Lies: A Mixed Race Memoir About the Hawai’i I Never Knew. Her writing has also appeared in BuzzFeed, ThinkProgress, Racism Review, Hyphen Magazine, ParentMap Magazine, South Seattle Emerald, The Seattle Globalist, AAPI Voices and International Examiner. Sharon was named 2015 Social Jus...
2019-05-05
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Georgia McDade
Georgia Stewart McDade, a Louisiana native who has lived in Seattle more than half her life, loves reading and writing. As a youngster she wrote and produced plays for her siblings and neighbors and collaborated with church youth to write plays for special occasions. Earning a Bachelor of Arts from Southern University, Master of Arts from Atlanta University, and Ph. D. from University of Washington, the English major spent more than thirty years teaching at Tacoma Community College but also found time to teach at Seattle University, the University of Washington, Lakeside School, Renton Technical College, and Zion Preparatory...
2019-04-28
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Dr. Ersula Ore
Dr. Ersula J. Ore is the Lincoln Professor of Ethics in The School of Social Transformation and Assistant Professor of African & African American Studies, and Rhetoric at Arizona State University. Her work as a race critical rhetorician maps the suasive strategies of aggrieved communities as they operate within a post-emancipation historical context. In Lynching: Violence, Rhetoric & American Identity (University Press of Mississippi, 2019), Ore examines lynching as a rhetorical strategy and material practice interwoven with the formation of America’s national identity and with the nation’s need to continually renew that identity. Specifically, the book draws connections between the rhet...
2019-04-21
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Ebo Barton
Ebo Barton is a Black and Filipino, Transgender and Non-Binary, poet and educator. As a representative of Seattle, they've been on 4 National Slam Teams and participated at 3 Individual World Poetry Slams. Their most notable poetry slam accolade is placing 5th in the world in 2016. Ebo curated and directed, How to Love THIS Queer Body of Color: An Unapology and wrote and directed the award-winning play, Rising Up. You may have seen Ebo's work in Adrienne: A Poetry Journal by Sibling Rivalry Press, SlamFind, Write About Now, Button Poetry and All Def Poetry. They and their work have been featured in...
2019-04-14
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Naa Akua
Naa Akua, Citizen University, Poet-in-Residence, is a queer poet, emcee, and actor. They are, poetry teacher at The Northwest School and WITS writer-in-residence at Franklin High School. Intentionality, love, and encouragement is the focus of Akua’s work that can be found in tracks like “The Elements” or “Till It All Goes Away” from their mixtape Odd(s) Balance (on SoundCloud.com). Recently, Naa Akua was a cast member of Book-it Repertory Theater’s adaptation of T. Geronimo Johnson’s “Welcome to Braggsville”. Naa is currently a cast member for Theater Schmeater’s production of “Welcome to Arroyo’s” and in a original boilesqu...
2019-04-07
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Gerry Ebalaroza-Tunnell
Gerry Ebalaroza-Tunnell is the founder of Co3 Consulting: Co-Creating Cohesive Communities. She is a Doctoral candidate in the department of Transformative Studies and Consciousness at the California Institute of Integral Studies and identifies as a Pacific Islander born and raised on the island of O’ahu, Hawaii. Gerry is a dynamic educator who co-mingles humor and philosophy, making her teachings easy to apply. She is a fantastic facilitator who demonstrates that the best gift we can give ourselves and others is the practice of resilience; our ability to promote positive emotional perceptions, manage our stress-induced reactions and ad...
2019-03-31
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Amanda Johnston
Amanda Johnston earned a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from the University of Southern Maine. She is the author of two chapbooks, GUAP and Lock & Key, and the full-length collection Another Way to Say Enter (Argus House Press). Her poetry and interviews have appeared in numerous online and print publications, among them, Callaloo, Poetry, Kinfolks Quarterly, Puerto del Sol, Muzzle, Pluck!, No, Dear and the anthologies, Small Batch, Full, di-ver-city, The Ringing Ear: Black Poets Lean South, and Women of Resistance: Poems for a New Feminism. The recipient of multiple Artist Enrichment grants from the Kentucky Foundation...
2019-03-24
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Michael B. Maine
Michael B. Maine. Seattle-based photographer and creative director. He combines an understanding of business, art, and social systems to bring about awareness and action around issues such as homelessness, media literacy, and human trafficking. Committed to volunteer service in the community, Michael is currently the board president of both Reel Grrls, a youth media program that teaches young people how to express themselves through film and B.E.S.T (Business Ending Slavery and Trafficking), a collaborative non-profit that's working to reduce sex trafficking by establishing best practices, alliances, and policies with and through business. Michael holds a...
2019-03-17
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Introducing Zion and Ha'aheo
The Deep End is committed to youth empowerment. Our interns have been with us from day 1, running tech, developing our social media, and lending their voices to our content. Special shout out to Emma Reid and Aisha Al Amin who have been the primary hosts of our youth segment The Caring Corner with features from Zaria Ali, Eyerusalem Mesele, Nasra Ali, and Layla Mohumad. Emma and Aisha have decided to transition into more behind the scenes roles, so in Season 2 we will be welcoming some new voices. Fresh on the mic are Zion Thomas and Ha'aheo Auwae-Dekker. Ha'a has...
2019-03-13
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Quenton Baker
Quenton Baker is a poet and educator from Seattle. His current focus is anti-blackness and the afterlife of slavery. His work has appeared in Jubilat, Vinyl, Apogee, Pinwheel, The James Franco Review, and Cura. He is a two-time Pushcart Prize nominee and the recipient of the 2016 James W. Ray Venture Project award and the 2018 Arts Innovator Award from Artist Trust. He is the author of This Glittering Republic (Willow Books, 2016).
2019-03-10
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Nacala Ayele
Nacala Ayele is the creator and owner of “FLY! Culinary Tours” where she has traveled to Ghana, Kenya, Guatemala, Jamaica, Trinidad, and The Bahamas to gather recipes, meet culinary historians, and gather stories of Black people of the African diaspora through food. She is enamored with the richness of Black foodways; from the creativity of African pre-colonial dishes enjoyed and dishes created in slavery, to the ingenuity used to craft meals using cultural food products brought from Europe. The history of Black folks can be found in the cultural, social, and economic practices relating to the production and consumption of fo...
2019-03-03
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Dr. Maxine Mimms
Maxine Mimms was born on March 4, 1928, in Newport News, Virginia, to Isabella DeBerry Buie and Benson Ebenezer Buie. Influenced by her grandparents' love for Marcus Garvey and educational lectures by Howard Thurman and other black leaders at nearby Hampton University, Mimms attended Booker T. Washington School and graduated from Huntington High School with highest honors in 1946. She earned her B.A. degree from Virginia Union University in 1950. In the early 1950s, Mimms served as a social worker in Detroit, Michigan. There, she was married and would eventually earn her Ph.D. in educational administration from Union Graduate School.
2018-12-02
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Gabriel Teodros
Gabriel Teodros is a musician and writer from South Seattle who first made a mark with the group Abyssinian Creole, and reached an international audience with his critically-acclaimed solo debut Lovework. Over the ten years since he has set stages on fire all across the US, Canada, Mexico, Cuba, Ethiopia and South Africa; often in combination with workshops on creative writing, music, history, science fiction and media literacy.
2018-11-25
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Black Imagination
This mini-deep end was produced by our intern Aisha Al Amin. Aisha, Eyerusalem, and Damme took a field trip into the Black Imagination of Natasha Marin, Imani Sims, Rachel Ferguson, and Amber Flame. This experiential art exhibit debuted on January 27, 2018 in Core Gallery. https://www.seattleglobalist.com/2018/01/12/why-core-gallerys-black-imagination-is-so-necessary/71383
2018-11-15
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Jordan Chaney
Jordan Chaney is a spoken word poet, author, public speaker, teacher, mentor, and all-around creative residing in Eastern Washington’s wine country. Awarded the 2017 Commitment to Diversity award by AACCES, Jordan also guest speaks at colleges on race, politics, and social justice. He is the author of WOLF seven poems – a book on race, politics, and social justice, Art of the Spoken Word – a workbook for enhancing communication skills, creativity, and confidence, Rocket Fuel for Dreamers, a poetry book about love and manifesting one’s dreams, and Double-Barreled Bible, a collection of urban poems that blend Ea...
2018-11-11
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Howie Echo Hawk
Join us for a chat with comedian Howie Echo-Hawk. Howie is an enrolled member of the Pawnee Nation (Kitkehaki band), and a member of the Mentasta Athabaskan Upper Ahtna people. The youngest of 8 siblings (5 sisters and 2 brothers), he comes from the Echo-Hawk family on his dad's side, and the Kelly family on his mother's. He writes, talks, sings, laughs and confronts in various mediums, but mostly he just wants Native people to have their voices heard. Other interests include equity and true decolonization. We also have two special guests from the You Got This Podcast, Laila and Nasra.
2018-11-04
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Ijeoma Oluo
Ijeoma Oluo is a Seattle-based writer, speaker, and Internet Yeller. She’s the author of the New York Times Best-Seller So You Want to Talk about Race, published in January by Seal Press. Named one of the The Root’s 100 Most Influential African Americans in 2017, one of the Most Influential People in Seattle by Seattle Magazine, one of the 50 Most Influential Women in Seattle by Seattle Met, and winner of the of the 2018 Feminist Humanist Award by the American Humanist Society, Oluo’s work focuses primarily on issues of race and identity, feminism, social and mental health, social justice, the art...
2018-10-27
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
The Deep End Holiday Party Live from Virago Gallery
Anastacia and Reagan unpack some of the magic from the Deep End, talk about their goals for 2018, take questions from listeners and as always ask the deep ish.
2018-08-11
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Joshunda Sanders
Joshunda is a Bronx native obsessed with moving stories about black women from the margins to the center of everything. She writes fiction, journalism, poetry and essays. She was the receipt of a 2017 Hedgebrook Writing Residency and selected as one of four Young Women Empowered Teaching Artists. She has presented and lectured on college campuses across the country including at Old Dominion, Princeton, Bard, Iona and Pittsburg State University. Her work has appeared in the DAME Magazine, Bellevue Literary Review, Buzzfeed, Salon, Publishers Weekly, The Week, Bitch Magazine, Gawker, Kirkus Reviews and many other outlets. Her books include: Single & H...
2018-08-05
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Eze-Basil Oluo
Eze-Basil is an accountant, a teacher, a public speaker, a public relations and community engagement specialist. He is a socio-economic and political rights crusader and a wealth creation and distribution strategist. He was a founding Administrator of PROUD TO BE ETCHE- a 10,000+ member community based organization redesigning social constructs and economic & political inclusivity in Nigeria.He is currently the elected Secretary General of Rivers State Foundation USA. He has worked with Governments, Corporations, Nonprofits and a host of community based organizations.
2018-07-23
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Nikkita Oliver
Nikkita is a Seattle-based writer, teaching artist, attorney, and organizer. Her writing has been published in the South Seattle Emerald, Crosscut, the Establishment, Last Real Indians, The Seattle Weekly, and the Stranger. Oliver holds a J.D. and Masters of Education from the University of Washington. She is also the case manager for Creative Justice, an arts-based alternative to incarceration, and has worked for arts organizations such as Writers in the Schools and Arts Corp. Nikkita is one of the Seattle Mets 2018 50 Most Influential Women in Seattle, and the recipient of the 2018 UW Women’s Center Woman of...
2018-07-15
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Dåkot-ta Alcantara Camacho
Dåkot-ta was born in Snohomish Territory and raised in Tscha-kole-chy (within a predominantly diasporic Chamorro community. Their lineage comes from Låguas yan Gåni [Law-gwas zan Gaw-knee) (the archipelago known as the Mariånas Islands, and specifically the largest island known as Guåhan - incorrectly pronounced as Guam by the Western world). Dåkot-ta grew up in the Seattle hip hop underground and social justice movement excercising a life long passion and skill for rap. Attending the University of Wisconsin-Madison as a First Wave Hip Hop Scholar, Dåkot-ta graduated with a degree in Gender and Women's...
2018-07-08
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Dr. Deniece Dortch
Dr. Deniece Dortch is a Visiting Assistant Professor in Higher Education Administration at George Washington University in Washington DC.Her research and teaching grapples with systemic oppression across multiple axes. She is especially interested in how psychological violence and fear is experienced, manifested and reproduced in the academy. Her most recent projects explore intra-racial relationships, racial agency and their effects on persistence in higher education. Dr. Dortch was a postdoctoral research fellow at the University of Utah where she created the African American Doctoral Scholar’s Initiative, a comprehensive mentoring program focused on graduate student socialization into th...
2018-07-01
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Stacy Torres
Stacy Torres is a somatic healer, a health justice organizer and a facilitator. Stacy created her practice Everyday Medicine to offer culturally relevant healing in Queer,Trans, Disabled, People of Color communities(QTDPoC) in Seattle. Her practice centers developing a liberated legacy of changemakers, caregivers, activists/organizers, healers, artists, spiritual and thought leaders. She is a founding member of The Well on Beacon, a POC centered Health Justice Collaboration Project in Seattle, WA.
2018-06-24
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Episode 9: Rell Be Free
Jerrell G. Davis aka RELL BE FREE is a proud product of the South End who brings creative artistry and radical activism together thru music, education, and community. Rell is a founding member of Washington Building Leaders of Change (WA-BLOC), which serves out of Rainier Beach HS working with scholars, teachers, and administration in a number of transformative capacities; coordinates an innovative community and youth led crime reduction project with the Rainier Beach Action Coalition called the "Corner Greeters"; Rell is also one of the founding core members of the groundbreaking Seattle Peoples Party. On top of all that...
2018-06-13
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Episode 8: Bettina Judd
Born in Baltimore and raised in Southern California, Bettina Judd is an interdisciplinary writer, artist and performer. She is an alumna of Spelman College and the University of Maryland and is currently Assistant Professor of Gender, Sexuality and Women's Studies at the University of Washington. Most recently, her collection of poems titled Patient. won the Black Lawrence Press Hudson Book Prize and was published in November of 2014.
2018-02-19
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Afam Ayika
Our guest for the day is Afam Ayika. Afam is a father, martial artist, and the co-founder of Rainier Beach Restorative Justice Project and restorative justice coordinator. Deep End Interns Emma and Aisha pilot their new segment Caring Corner.
2018-02-01
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Episode 6 Live from the Black Zone: Shontina Vernon
The Deep End goes to the Black Zone for a special live episode with Shontina Vernon. Shontina is an artist and social justice activist most noted for her genre bending storytelling and performance style. Working across forms, using live music, choreography, multimedia, and poetic narrative, she tells the stories of marginalized communities, unapologetically privileging the lens of people of color and women.
2018-01-07
00 min
Live Wire with Luke Burbank
"Word on the Street" with Ken Jennings, John Roderick, Anastacia-Renée, Emmy Favilla, and Laura Gibson
Omnibus podcast hosts Ken Jennings and John Roderick give a glimpse of what stories are inside their audio time capsule for future generations (and/or alien invaders), BuzzFeed grammar wiz Emmy Favilla breaks down the problem with punctuation, Seattle’s Civic Poet Anastacia-Reneé shares what it’s like to have an identity that encapsulates everything the president hates, and singer-songwriter Laura Gibson utilizes her newly acquired MFA to improvise musical CliffsNotes about literary classics.
2017-12-18
55 min
Live Wire with Luke Burbank
"Word on the Street" with Ken Jennings, John Roderick, Anastacia-Renée, Emmy Favilla, and Laura Gibson
Omnibus podcast hosts Ken Jennings and John Roderick give a glimpse of what stories are inside their audio time capsule for future generations (and/or alien invaders), BuzzFeed grammar wiz Emmy Favilla breaks down the problem with punctuation, Seattle’s Civic Poet Anastacia-Reneé shares what it’s like to have an identity that encapsulates everything the president hates, and singer-songwriter Laura Gibson utilizes her newly acquired MFA to improvise musical CliffsNotes about literary classics.
2017-12-18
55 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Amber Flame
Amber Flame is a writer, composer and performer, whose work has garnered artistic merit residencies with Hedgebrook, The Watering Hole, Vermont Studio Center, and Yefe Nof. Flame’s original work has been published in diverse arenas, including Winter Tangerine, The Dialogist, Split This Rock, Black Heart Magazine, Sundress Publications, FreezeRay, Redivider Journal and more. A 2016 Pushcart Prize nominee, Jack Straw Writer and recipient of the CityArtist grant from Seattle's Office of Arts and Cultural Affairs, Amber Flame's first full-length poetry collection, Ordinary Cruelty, was recently published through Write Bloody Press. Flame joins the Hugo House in Seattle as the 2017 poet...
2017-12-17
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Episode 4: Dani Tirrell
Dani Tirrell is a dance artist, performer, choreographer and dance educator. Dani has danced with Jazz and Spirit Dance Theater of Detroit, Monroe Ballet Company, Full Circle Dance Company, Natural Locz Dance Company and Dani Tirrell Dance Theater which he founded and serves as Artistic Director. Dani also created Color Lines Dance Ensemble for youth dance artist ages 12 to 18. Currently his work focuses on the queer, gender non-conforming and black experience. Dani also incorporates House, Vogue, Whacking and Contemporary movement in his artist practice and work. Dani teaches throughout the Seattle area with Northwest Tap Connection and Mass...
2017-12-03
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Jade Solomon Curtis
Jade Solomon Curtis, born in Texas, is a choreographer, dance artist and founder of Solo Magic, a non-profit arts initiative collaborating with innovative artists to create socially relevant multi-disciplined performances highlighting dance; “Activism is the Muse". A celebrated soloist of Donald Byrd’s Spectrum Dance Theater for four seasons, Curtis is also the subject of an Emmy Award winning short film, Jade Solomon Curtis directed by, Ralph Bevins. 2017 began with Curtis being awarded SeattleDance’s first “Dance Crush Award” for Performance/Choreography in the riveting workshop of “Black Like Me”. Curtis received her BFA in Dance Performanc...
2017-11-12
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Haji Basim
Join the Deep End for a magical mystery tour with Haji Basim. Haji is a singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist who created a new genre of positive acoustic music titled Urban Folk. He is also the founder and guide instructor of Holistic Method Music.
2017-11-05
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
Episode 1: Cristina Orbe
Join the Deep End for an interview with musician and plant whisperer Cristina Orbe. Drawing from her experience stewarding FEEST from an idea into a nationally recognized food justice and youth leadership development organization, Cristina offers workshops and talks on a variety of topics including, Collaborating Across Difference, Power and Influence, Equitable Hiring Practices, Financial Healing, Feminine Leadership, Cultivating Imagination and Vision, Values Driven Leadership and more. In this episode she talks about her ancestry and the healing she has received from plants.
2017-11-05
00 min
The Deep End Friends Podcast
The Deep End Origin Story
The Deep End is an exploration of liberation, healing, hope, joy, and wholeness. What does it mean to be free? What are people of color doing to heal themselves and the world? Join co-hosts Reagan Jackson and Anastacia Renee for a series of in-depth interviews. Hear from incredible people from all walks of life about their journeys, what they are doing to thrive and how they are contribution to broader movements of empowerment and liberation. About Us: Reagan Jackson is a writer, artist, international educator, prayer practitioner, and seeker of truth. She is a Program Manager...
2017-11-04
00 min