When most people talk about sidewalks, they are referring to pathways of raised pavement next to streets that make it easy for pedestrians to walk from one place to another. They make the modern world a little more human. This lesser known Sidewalks is a podcast. Sidewalks should come out most days…
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. accepting the Nobel Prize for Peace on December 10, 1964 in Oslo. Full speech here: https://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/1964/king-acceptance_en.html I recently encountered excerpts from the speech underneath the waterfall at the Yerba Buena Gardens in San Francisco. I thought it was worth sharing on this Martin Luther King Day.
My Grandpa Sol passed away earlier this week, so I'm re-sharing this episode... The audio comes from a shoddy 2012 iPhone recording I made when home for my last summer before college graduation. I was trying to interview people about how the Bay Area changed in their lifetime. It was generally a dumb idea for a project—you can't really describe a place beyond your own experience of it—but Grandpa Sol sat patiently through my fumbling questions. Even though I hadn't set up the interview to ask for advice, he overflowed with it, and stuck pearls of wisdom wherever he could in his answers. This is a small selection of those pearls.
Sorry that Sidewalks has been pretty inactive in the past few months. I’ve been busy, but I’ve also felt really confused about the show’s purpose in an uncertain world. As I record this, it’s the week Donald Trump was elected President of the United States, and everything about this world feels even less certain. From the beginning, Sidewalks has been about experimenting in short little bursts with what radio can be. What does it mean to listen? What does it mean to capture a moment? When I started the show I wanted to come up with a new answer to those questions every single day somewhat randomly with whatever felt right. Right now, I feel like everything we do needs purpose. There are too many forces fighting for hate, greed, and ignorance. We need to consciously and actively work for love, generosity, and wisdom. Sometimes that might mean making things to warm the heart, and sometimes that might mean facing ugly truths. It also, for now, means letting go of the super-short restriction of this show when something longer seems more appropriate. Anyway, on Wednesday night as I was waiting for a flight out of Reagan International Airport. I called my grandparents, whom I love, and who are good-hearted people. They also watch Fox News, listen to conservative radio, and voted for a man who has insulted and threatened every ideal I care about. I asked them if I could record the conversation, and that’s this episode. I should say that this is just one conversation between a family of people who are not as directly threatened by this election. This conversation has three privileged white people, myself included, clumsily and ignorantly discussing race from a position of safety. I’m putting it here, not to engender sympathy for the more troubling things my grandparents say, nor to demonize them either. I’m also not putting this here with any kind of presumption that I know what I’m talking about or have any sense of what we should be doing now. I put this up here because after asking and answering 60 times about why we listen and why we capture moments, I have some answers to pencil in for now: We listen to understand each other and ourselves. We capture moments to learn from them as we move forward.
Telling It Like It Is: On terrible truths & beautiful truths. *Produced by Molly Jean Bennet @mollyjeanbennett / @mollyjeanbee Adapted from an essay Molly wrote on Medium. Inspired by Michael Schmeltzer @mschmeltzer01 And by Donna Minkowitz @minkowitz Photo by Molly Jean Bennett
Searching for a cat interpreter. * Produced by Colleen Leahy
Almost every webcomic made the same joke today for April Fool's. We made an audio version. Art by Colleen Leahy
I walk around dressed up like the black swan... * Produced by Colleen Leahy
The band Sauna, while on their last tour, tells the story of their first.
Is Donald Trump like the Jewish folklore figure Haman? One piñata thinks so.
First day of crab season, nobody is crabbing... * Produced by Casey Martin
When you feel you need to be really quiet, you are as loud as possible. *Produced by Piers Gelly
Do you think the Pope watched the World Cup? * Produced by Andrew Potoczak
Education and activism around cars parked in bike lanes. * Produced by Jack D'Isidoro
What do you want more than anything else in the world? * Produced by Colleen Leahy
Trying to understand gravitational waves. * Produced by Colleen Leahy
Sofia is The Girl Who Knows. * A version of this piece was originally produced for Third Coast's Short Docs competition.
Mark went on a walk with his Grandma last winter. It was cold out. * Produced by Mark Bramhill, Host of Welcome To Macintosh
Father Sebastian believes in love. * Produced by Austin Mitchell of Profiles: NYC
But Not This Stranger You've Been Since Friday *produced by Matthew Barnes