Podcasts about Fort Defiance

  • 46PODCASTS
  • 58EPISODES
  • 51mAVG DURATION
  • 1MONTHLY NEW EPISODE
  • Jan 11, 2025LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about Fort Defiance

Latest podcast episodes about Fort Defiance

the Fallout Feed
the Fallout Feed #493: Roundtable S16 Steel Dawn Q8-9 Feedback

the Fallout Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2025 151:27


Jess Ray and Andrew chat Game Play: KING BABY!Feedback from Suliore, Lee, Vanessa and Pip-Boy SteveFallout Top 5 from Wasteland Wil: Excuses to the Vault-Tec Sales RepTasty Iguana Bits: Will Shen interview, Fixin' Snakey, Developer Direct, Top 50 All Time Video GamesTerminal Velocity from Fort Defiance, part 1 w/ SulioreLate SHOUTS!Join our Discord:https://discord.gg/cVSN65jJoin in the Roundtable Fun with our Character Generators!Fallout 76: https://tinyurl.com/F76GeneratorFallout 4: https://tinyurl.com/Fallout4GeneratorFallout New Vegas: https://tinyurl.com/NewVegasGeneratorFallout 3: https://tinyurl.com/F3GeneratorDONATE:  https://fightcf.cff.org/site/TR/?fr_id=7889&pg=team&team_id=90760Shop:  optimistic.threadless.com/Patreon:  https://www.patreon.com/asapodcastingEmail: thefalloutfeed@gmail.comWeb: http://www.asapodcasting.com/#/the-fallout-feed/Insta: https://www.instagram.com/asapodcastingTwitter: https://twitter.com/TheFalloutFeedFB: facebook.com/groups/askyrimaddictpodcastSupport the show

The Kirby on Sports Podcast
Strasburg v Riverheads PLAYOFFS ROUND 2

The Kirby on Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2024 5:03


The Strasburg Rams have earned their right to move on to Round Two of the Playoffs in Region 2B. The Rams defeated Fort Defiance last week and they will host Riverheads this Friday Night. Hear from Rams Head Coach, Tripp Lamb about the victory last week as well as getting set for a Riverheads team that has been known to be a very physical football team. Stay tuned for more High School Sports coverage to come on The Kirby on Sports Podcast. A huge thanks to our sponsors! PM+ Reserves Shenandoah Primitives Transformative Alignment Group Mark Francis with ICON Real Estate Barrett Pest and Termite Services Mark Lynch with Guild Mortgage Shenandoah Music www.kirbyonsports.com --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thekirbyonsportspodcast/support

The Kirby on Sports Podcast
Strasburg v Fort Defiance PLAYOFFS ROUND 1

The Kirby on Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2024 5:06


The Strasburg Rams claimed a thrilling victory over Central in their final regular season game. The Rams have a home playoff game against Fort Defiance, Rams Head Coach Tripp Lamb discusses their final game against Central and preparing for Fort Defiance at home. Stay tuned for more High School Sports coverage to come on The Kirby on Sports Podcast. A huge thanks to our sponsors! PM+ Reserves Shenandoah Primitives Transformative Alignment Group Mark Francis with ICON Real Estate Barrett Pest and Termite Services Mark Lynch with Guild Mortgage Shenandoah Music www.kirbyonsports.com --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thekirbyonsportspodcast/support

The GloucesterCast Podcast – Good Morning Gloucester
GloucesterCast 745 Gloucester Schooner festival 9/1/24 Live From Fort Defiance Livestream Link to Join Here-www.facebook.com/goodmorninggloucester

The GloucesterCast Podcast – Good Morning Gloucester

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2024


GloucesterCast 745 Gloucester Schooner festival 9/1/24 Live From Fort Defiance Link to Join Here-www.facebook.com/goodmorninggloucester Link to Join Here-www.facebook.com/goodmorninggloucester Audio Podcast Click Here- Video Podcast Click here-

Pro Politics with Zac McCrary
Jim Margolis, Founding Partner of Democratic Media Firm GMMB

Pro Politics with Zac McCrary

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2024 54:46


Jim Margolis, partner at GMMB media, is a pioneering Democratic media consultant who is featured in the new documentary, The Bigger Hammer, by filmmaker Keith Gaby that focuses on the message war behind the Obama vs. McCain 2008 race (now available on Amazon). In this conversation, Jim talks his path to politics through student activism in Kalamazoo, managing House campaigns, and working on the Hill before partnering with Frank Greer to start GMMB. He also goes in depth on his work for the Obama Presidential campaigns and shares some of his favorite stories and spots from a career atop the world of political media.IN THIS EPISODEJim's early entry into politics as a high schooler in Kalamazoo, MI...Why a narrow loss in one of the first races he worked was "the best thing that ever happened" to him...Jim talks the important role Congressman Howard Wolpe played in his development...Lessons learned from his early days as a campaign manager and Hill Chief...A one-of-a-kind story from Kent Conrad's upset 1986 Senate win in North Dakota...How his partnership with Frank Greer started and Jim's early days as an ad-maker...A deep dive into Jim's role spearheading media on the Obama '08 presidential campaign...Why Jim had the '08 Democratic Convention stage dramatically changed at the last minute...Jim's 101 on producing political conventions...Jim on working for two of his most prominent Senate clients, Barbara Boxer and Harry Reid...What got Jim in Harry Reid's doghouse for a couple of weeks...Jim talks the evolution of his firm GMMB over the years...Jim breaks down the art of political ad-buying...Jim's advice to the next generation of political media consultants...AND 3/10/83, Brock Adams, Africanists, Mark Andrews, David Axelrod, blue suits, Quentin Burdick, the Chicago Tribune, Cinderella years, Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, crazy hats, Fred Davis, disease implications, Byron Dorgan, ending apartheid, extra chips, fancy Florida hotels, Dianne Feinstein, Fort Defiance, Wyche Fowler, game show sets, good ears, Larry Grisolano, herculean tasks, Anita Hill, Paris Hilton, Invesco Stadium, John Kerry, Jim Messina, Michigan State University, Walter Mondale, Robby Mook, mosquito nets, Navajo reservations, David Plouffe, punch cards, Bernie Sanders, tax commissioners, Western Michigan University...& more!

Broken Boxes Podcast
Unsettled Scores: Conversation with Raven Chacon

Broken Boxes Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2024


This episode marks the second time featuring artist and friend Raven Chacon on Broken Boxes. The first time I interviewed Raven was in 2017, when I visited with him at the Institute of American Indian Arts where he was participating in a symposium on Indigenous performance titled, Decolonial Gestures. This time around, we met up with Raven at his home in Albuquerque, NM where recurring host and artist Cannupa Hanska Luger chatted with Raven for this episode. The conversation reflects on the arc of Ravens practice over the past decade, along with the various projects they have been able to work on together, including Sweet Land (2020), an award-winning, multi-perspectival and site-specific opera staged at the State Historical Park in downtown Los Angeles, for which Raven was composer and Cannupa co-director and costume designer. Raven and Cannupa also reflect on their time together traveling up to Oceti Sakowin camp in support of the water protectors during the resistance of the Dakota Access Pipeline. Raven provides context to his composition Storm Pattern, which was a response to being onsite at Standing Rock, and the artists speak to the long term impact of an Indigenous solidarity gathering of that magnitude. Raven speaks about being named the first Native American composer to win the Pulitzer Prize or Voiceless Mass, and shares the composition's intention and performance trajectory. To end the conversation, Raven shares insight around staying grounded while navigating the pressures of success, travel and touring as a practicing artist, and reminds us to find ways to slow down and do what matters to you first, creatively, wherever possible. Raven Chacon is a Pulitzer Prize-winning composer, performer, and installation artist from Fort Defiance, Navajo Nation. As a solo artist, Chacon has exhibited, performed, or had works performed at LACMA, The Renaissance Society, San Francisco Electronic Music Festival, REDCAT, Vancouver Art Gallery, Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Borealis Festival, SITE Santa Fe, Chaco Canyon, Ende Tymes Festival, and The Kennedy Center. As a member of Postcommodity from 2009 to 2018, he co-created artworks presented at the Whitney Biennial, documenta 14, Carnegie International 57, as well as the two-mile-long land art installation Repellent Fence. A recording artist whose work has spanned twenty-two years, Chacon has appeared on more than eighty releases on various national and international labels. His 2020 Manifest Destiny opera Sweet Land, co-composed with Du Yun, received critical acclaim from the Los Angeles Times, the New York Times, and The New Yorker, and was named 2021 Opera of the Year by the Music Critics Association of North America. Since 2004, he has mentored over 300 high school Native composers in the writing of new string quartets for the Native American Composer Apprenticeship Project (NACAP). Chacon is the recipient of the United States Artists fellowship in Music, The Creative Capital award in Visual Arts, The Native Arts and Cultures Foundation artist fellowship, the American Academy's Berlin Prize for Music Composition, the Bemis Center's Ree Kaneko Award, the Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants to Artists Award (2022) and the Pew Fellow-in-Residence (2022). His solo artworks are in the collectIons of the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Smithsonian's American Art Museum and National Museum of the American Indian, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Getty Research Institute, the Albuquerque Museum, University of New Mexico Art Museum, and various private collections. Music Featured: Sweet Land, Scene 1: Introduction (feat. Du Yun & Raven Chacon) · Jehnean Washington · Carmina Escobar · Micaela Tobin · Du Yun · Raven Chacon · Lewis Pesacov. Released on 2021-09-24 by The Industry Productions

Front Porch Talks.
10/29/23- WBTX Program – Brooke Pangle Testimony

Front Porch Talks.

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2023 30:19


We are joined on today's broadcast of HOPE Talks by Brooke Pangle. Brooke was born and raised in Mount Sidney. She graduated from Fort Defiance high school and then went to Bridgwater College where she met her husband Morgan Pangle, who she now attends Church of the Nazarene in Harrisonburg with. Brooke joins us today to share her testimony. We pray that today's broadcast will be a half hour of hope for your life. We would also like to invite you to take an anonymous 8 question survey to help give us some feedback on the podcast. You can take the survey by clicking the link below https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/HopeTalks

The Philip Duff Show
#29, St. John Frizell, owner of Fort Defiance and Gage & Tollner, Brooklyn, NY

The Philip Duff Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2023 137:31 Transcription Available


I sat down with St. John Frizell, who founded Fort Defiance bar in Brooklyn's Red Hook neighbourhood back in 2009, and brought Gage & Tollner, long the most vaunted fine-dining restaurant in Brooklyn since it opened in 1879, back to life in 2021 (yep, 2021!) after it lay dormant and closed for almost two decades. I met St. John when he taught a seminar I attended on the subject of playboy travel and food & drinks writer  Charles H. Baker, Jr., at Tales of the Cocktail, around 2006 or 2007; in fact, his seminar inspired the first-ever cocktail menu at door 74 (which I opened in Amsterdam in 2008), which was all Charles H. Baker, Jr., cocktails. We kicked it for several hours and it's all here: laundry tips for white shirts, why martinis now cost $21, St. John's exciting new side hustle as a liquor smuggler, why he'll open more Sunken Harbor Clubs but not more Gage & Tollners, world premiere of the Sunken Harbor Club Membership Scheme, serving Hearsts, the old Pegu Club,  having to relearn the art of concentration, and a whole bunch more. We were fuelled solely by coffee, so me and St. John should really do this again some time with a drink in hand!St. John on IG: St John Frizell (@stjohnfrizell) • Instagram photos and videos Gage & Tollner on IG: Gage & Tollner (@gage.and.tollner) • Instagram photos and videos Fort Defiance on IG: Fort Defiance (@fortdefiance) • Instagram photos and videos  Get in touch with Duff!Podcast business enquiries: consulting@liquidsolutions.org (PR friends: we're only interested in having your client on if they can talk about OTHER things than their prepared speaking points or their new thing, whatever that is, for a few hours. They need to be able to hang. Oh, and we won't supply prepared or sample questions, or listener or “reach” stats, either.) Retain Philip's consulting firm, Liquid Solutions, specialised in on-trade engagement & education, brand creation and repositioning: philip@liquidsolutions.org Philip on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/philipsduff/ Philip on Facebook: Philip Duff Philip on X/Twitter: Philip Duff (@philipduff) / Twitter Philip on LinkedIn: linkedin.com Old Duff Genever on Instagram: Old Duff Genever (@oldduffgenever) • Instagram photos and videos Old Duff Genever on Facebook: facebook.com Old Duff Genever on X/Twitter: https://twitter.com/oldduffgenever?lang=en www.oldduffgenever.com...

e-flux podcast
Raven Chacon: Solos

e-flux podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2023 32:06


An excerpt from Raven Chacon's performance Solos, followed by a conversation with Xenia Benivolski, recorded live at e-flux on April 27.  Solos, is a series of short, improvised works performed in quick succession. Using a variety of acoustic and electronic instruments, Chacon's experimental compositions range from sparse, minimalistic soundscapes to complex, multi-layered works that incorporate voices, noises, and found sounds. Raven Chacon is a Pulitzer Prize–winning composer, performer, and installation artist from Fort Defiance, Navajo Nation. Since 2004, he has mentored more than three hundred Native high school composers in writing new string quartets for the Native American Composer Apprentice Project (NACAP). As a solo artist, collaborator, and a member of Postcommodity from 2009 to 2018, Chacon has exhibited, performed, or had works performed at the Los Angeles County Museum of Ar, The Renaissance Society, San Francisco Electronic Music Festival, REDCAT, Vancouver Art Gallery, Haus der Kulturen der Welt, SITE Santa Fe, Ende Tymes Festival, New York, the Whitney Biennial, documenta 14, Carnegie International, and Carnegie Museum of Art. Chacon is the recipient of a United States Artists Fellowship, a Creative Capital Award, Native Arts and Cultures Foundation Artist Fellowship, the American Academy's Berlin Prize, the Bemis Center's Ree Kaneko Award, and the Pew Center for Arts & Heritage's Fellowship-in-Residence. Xenia Benivolski writes and lectures about visual art, sound, and music. She is the curator of the project You Can't Trust Music which is an online e-flux exhibition.  

The Movie Draft House
The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent (2022)

The Movie Draft House

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2023 47:30


Welcome back! We're new theme cruisin' and this month we've decided to re-draft previous themes each week! Which means it's Nic Cage month (week) again and this week we reviewed the 2022 film The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent starring Nic Cage as Nic Cage telling us the story of Nic Cage. The film also stars everyone's favorite dad, Pedro Pascal. Tiffany Haddish also makes an appearance. Tune in to find out why Jeff loves the name Pedro so much, why Paddington 2 is a classic, and who's on the 90's action film stars Mount Rushmore... IMDB synopsis..."Moviestar Nick Cage is channeling his iconic characters as he's caught between a superfan and a CIA agent." Music this week (because we're hitting different themes each week) is once again brought to you by the Nashville, Tennessee folk duo Fort Defiance with their song "Love as Strong as Doubt". Catch their music wherever you get yours! Web Spotify Instagram Follow the podcast on Twitter @moviedrafthouse Mark - @iheardyouliked Jeff - @PodcastsbyJeff

Radio Imbibe
Episode 63: Flaming Drinks for the Holidays, with St. John Frizell

Radio Imbibe

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2022 14:09


In 2017, St. John Frizell, owner of Fort Defiance and co-owner of Gage & Tollner in Brooklyn, wrote an essay for Imbibe about the enduring appeal of fire rituals in winter. For this episode, Frizell returns to the topic to discuss flaming punches for the holidays, the history of flaming drinks, and best practices for preparing flaming cocktailsRadio Imbibe is the audio home of Imbibe magazine. In each episode, we dive into liquid culture, exploring the people, places, and flavors of the drinkscape through conversations about cocktails, coffee, beer, spirits, and wine. Keep up with us at imbibemagazine.com, and on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook, and if you're not already a subscriber, we'd love to have you join us—click here to subscribe.  

Even the Trunchbull
Episode 36 - Trauma (The Silver Sword and Chester Nez and the Unbreakable Code)

Even the Trunchbull

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2022 44:02


content note: This episode features two books about experiences of war. The first is about a family of Polish refugees trying to reunify at the end of WW2, and the second is about a young Navajo boy sent to residential school and later drafted to create a code for the US Marines.   Our books this month are both about experiences of people who lived through World War II, and the theme that connects them is Trauma. Our chapter book is a classic and favourite from Matt's childhood, The Silver Sword, by Ian Serraillier. It's the story of a journey of three children, plus one adopted pickpocketing jack-the-lad, wending their way through post-war Europe in 1946, trying to reunite with their parents in Switzerland. There are always soldiers, be they German, Russian, British or American, and sometimes they help, and sometimes they don't. It's a book that really breaks down the simplistic Goodies vs Baddies narrative about WW2 and we highly recommend it.   Our picture book is Chester Nez and the Unbreakable Code: A Navajo Code-Talker's Story, by Joseph Bruchac and illustrated by Liz Amini-Holmes. It's a non fiction account of the life of Betoli, or Chester, as he comes to be called, being sent away from his people and parents, to residential school at Fort Defiance. At school he is taught that the Navajo way is wrong, Navajo language is wrong, and is taught English and how to pray the Catholic way. In spite of this, Chester holds on to his home culture and spirituality. Years later, when the US join WW2, they need an unbreakable code, and enlist Chester and a few other young Navajo men to use Navajo to create an unbreakable code. It works, and helps the US to win the war. Chester returns from the front, traumatised, but the Navajo people take care of him using a ceremony called the Enemy Way, which sets him back on the right path, the way of beauty. This is a part of history neither of us knew about until we read this book, and it's incredibly clear and beautiful. We recommend seeking it out.   Here's an episode of the Stuff You Should Know podcast all about the Navajo code talkers: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/how-the-navajo-code-talkers-worked/id278981407?i=1000424660224   Chester Nez's autobiography: https://blackwells.co.uk/bookshop/product/9780425247853?gC=5a105e8b&gclid=Cj0KCQjwk5ibBhDqARIsACzmgLSeIeqicyJQAe5Z7rQzRMqivUQY3s148nwsX-CjS2mTbv6CzFst0B8aAjQHEALw_wcB   Here's an article about Ian Serraillier's experience as a conscientious objector in Quaker magazine The Friend: https://thefriend.org/article/once-upon-a-war-time   What A Wonderful Day is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License by Shane Ivers of silvermansound.com

YAC Sports Podcast
Episode 210

YAC Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2022 108:47


Joe and Leland recap the high school football games from the week before. College football, NFL, and high school volleyball games too. Dan Rolfe joins to talk about Fort Defiance football.

Native Talk Arizona
Native Talk Arizona - airdate 05/31/2022

Native Talk Arizona

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2022 50:15


Guests include:Desiree Jones, with the University of Arizona Cancer Center Office of Community Outreach and EngagementMonique Nakai will tell us about Rez Refuge, a community center located in Fort Defiance, AZConnor Chee, Navajo pianist and composerShawn Zephier, owner of SweetermoccsSupport the show

5 Plain Questions
Raven Chacon

5 Plain Questions

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2022 32:15


Raven Chacon is a composer, performer and installation artist from Fort Defiance, Navajo Nation. As a solo artist, Chacon has exhibited, performed, or had works performed at LACMA, The Renaissance Society, San Francisco Electronic Music Festival, REDCAT, Vancouver Art Gallery, Ende Tymes Festival, and The Kennedy Center. As a member of Postcommodity from 2009-2018, he co-created artworks presented at the Whitney Biennial, documenta 14, Carnegie International 57, as well as the 2-mile long land art installation Repellent Fence.   A recording artist over the span of 22 years, Chacon has appeared on more than eighty releases on various national and international labels. His 2020 Manifest Destiny opera Sweet Land, co-composed with Du Yun, received critical acclaim from The LA Times, The New York Times, and The New Yorker, and was named 2021 Opera of the Year by the Music Critics Association of North America.   Since 2004, he has mentored over 300 high school Native composers in the writing of new string quartets for the Native American Composer Apprenticeship Project (NACAP). Chacon is the recipient of the United States Artists fellowship in Music, The Creative Capital award in Visual Arts, The Native Arts and Cultures Foundation artist fellowship, the American Academy's Berlin Prize for Music Composition, the Bemis Center's Ree Kaneko Award, and in 2022 will serve as the Pew Fellow-in-Residence.   His solo artworks are in the collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Smithsonian's American Art Museum and National Museum of the American Indian, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Getty Research Institute, the University of New Mexico Art Museum, a various private collections. Website: www.spiderwebsinthesky.com IG: Ravenchcn Twitter:@Raven_chacon

Down the Road on the Blue Ridge Music Trails of North Carolina

The Happy Valley community lies between Lenoir and Blowing Rock along the Yadkin River. This fertile valley is so scenic and peaceful that early settlers gave it the name “Happy Valley.” The valley was home to General William Lenoir, for whom the Caldwell County seat of Lenoir was named. His home, Fort Defiance, is on the National Register of Historic Places, open regularly to visitors, and also hosts several public events a year.

Down the Road on the Blue Ridge Music Trails of North Carolina

The Happy Valley community lies between Lenoir and Blowing Rock along the Yadkin River. This fertile valley is so scenic and peaceful that early settlers gave it the name “Happy Valley.” The valley was home to General William Lenoir, for whom the Caldwell County seat of Lenoir was named. His home, Fort Defiance, is on the National Register of Historic Places, open regularly to visitors, and also hosts several public events a year.

Grounded with Dinée Dorame
Episode 44 - Aliandrea Upshaw (Diné), University of New Mexico Student-Athlete (Track & Cross Country)

Grounded with Dinée Dorame

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2022 69:27


Aliandrea “Ali” Upshaw (Diné) is a member of the University of New Mexico Track & Cross Country team. She is from Fort Defiance, Arizona and is born for the Charcoal-Streaked Red Running into Water clan. Although Ali is academically classified as a sophomore, she competes athletically as a freshman due to NCAA COVID-19 sports reclassifications. Her freshman season at UNM was cut short due to the pandemic but in her first full cross country season at UNM this past fall, she placed fifth at the Mountain West Conference Championships which earned her First Team All-Mountain West honors. The Lobos finished first in their conference for the 14th consecutive year and placed third at the NCAA Division I National Championships. Prior to signing with UNM, Ali was a high school standout at St. Michael Indian School on the Navajo Reservation– she was her class valedictorian and two-time individual state champion leading her team to a state title. She was named a high school “Runner of the Year” on three occasions by the Navajo Times and like many other Grounded Pod guests, she is an alumna of the Wings of America national team. Ali is currently majoring in Biology and minoring in Native American Studies, with the goal of attending medical school or pursuing veterinary medicine.   In this episode: Wings of America Grounded Pod Ep. 13 – Dustin Martin Grounded Pod Ep. 14 – Beth Wright Running Medicine (running group based in New Mexico)   Follow Ali Upshaw: Instagram: @ali.mae24   Follow Grounded Pod: Instagram: @groundedpod Twitter: @groundedpod Facebook: facebook.com/groundedpodwithdinee   Subscribe, Listen, & Review on: Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Soundcloud | Stitcher   Show music by Jacob Shije (Santa Clara Pueblo, NM).

YAC Sports Podcast
Episode 182

YAC Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2022 71:32


This week the guys preview the upcoming state playoffs in basketball for Buffalo Gap and Fort Defiance, talk some college basketball, and much more on this week's episode.

fort defiance buffalo gap
Inside Julia's Kitchen
Meet St. John Frizell

Inside Julia's Kitchen

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2022 48:17


This week on Inside Julia's Kitchen, host Todd Schulkin welcomes writer, bartender and restaurateur St. John Frizell of Brooklyn's Gage & Tollner, Sunken Harbor Club and the Fort Defiance General Store. They discuss opening a tiki bar in Brooklyn, what makes a great cocktail and some exciting expansion plans in the works. As always, St. John shares his Julia Moment.  Photo Courtesy of Lizzie MunroHeritage Radio Network is a listener supported nonprofit podcast network. Support Inside Julia's Kitchen by becoming a member!Inside Julia's Kitchen is Powered by Simplecast.

American Countryside
Fort Defiance Never Fired a Shot

American Countryside

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 3:00


Most cities don't renovate a Civil War fort that never fired a shot.  Then again, one could make the case that  because the fort never...

The Movie Draft House
Snake Eyes (1998)

The Movie Draft House

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2021 60:15


Happy Thanksgiving! In the last episode of Cage month the boys roll the dice and hope it doesn't come up snake eyes. Will we finally get Nick Un-Caged? This week Mark and Jeff discuss the value of proper security systems, Gary Sinise and the parallels to Ransom, and Mark learns the pedigree of Brian De Palma. Also... IT"S DRAFT NIGHT! Synopsis from IMDB: A shady police detective finds himself in the middle of a murder conspiracy at an important boxing match in an Atlantic City casino. IMDB synopsis "Haunted by the patients he failed to save, a monumentally burned-out Manhattan ambulance paramedic fights to maintain his sanity over three increasingly turbulent nights." Our music this month is brought to you by the Nashville, TN folk duo Fort Defiance with the song "Haunts"; catch their music wherever you get yours! Spotify YouTube Instagram Twitter Follow the pod on Twitter @moviedrafthouse Mark on Twitter @iheardyouliked Jeff on Twitter @PodcastsbyJeff

The Movie Draft House
Bringing Out the Dead (1999)

The Movie Draft House

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2021 42:28


We're back, y'all, with a brand new show!  In the midst of Nicholas Cage month here on the pod, we reviewed the 1999 Martin Scorsese-directed film Bringing Out the Dead.  Some would call the film "his greatest success" but those people don't exist and that quote is made up.  Jeff summons the courage not to completely mail this one in, while Mark does his best to act interested.  We don't get into any corners but you can listen to hear us ruminate on better films by the auteur himself.  Starring Nic Cage, John Goodman, Ving Rhames, and Patricia Arquette.   IMDB synopsis "Haunted by the patients he failed to save, a monumentally burned-out Manhattan ambulance paramedic fights to maintain his sanity over three increasingly turbulent nights." Our music this month is brought to you by the Nashville, TN folk duo Fort Defiance with the song "Haunts"; catch their music wherever you get yours!   Spotify YouTube Instagram Twitter Follow the pod on Twitter @moviedrafthouse Mark on Twitter @iheardyouliked Jeff on Twitter @PodcastsbyJeff

The Movie Draft House
Drive Angry (2011)

The Movie Draft House

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2021 69:30


When you sit down to watch a Nick Cage movie, you want it to take you on a ride.  Love it or hate it, Drive Angry is a masterpiece of madness.  Undeniably entertaining, but is is good?  Jeff & Mark have very different opinions on this one, surprise surprise, and it gets quite heated.  But we both agree, The Accountant steals the movie.  Also, this episode features our first ever ad read. Staring Nick Cage, Amber Heard, and William Fichtner. Directed by Patrick Lussier or... loser?  Music this month is brought to you by the blues/folk duo Fort Defiance from Nashville, Tennessee.  The featured song is "Haunts" and you can find their music wherever you stream yours! Fort Defiance Website Spotify YouTube Twitter Instagram Follow the Draft House on Twitter @moviedrafthouse Mark on Twitter - @iheardyouliked Jeff on Twitter - @PodcastsbyJeff

The Movie Draft House

Welcome back, congregation! So happy you could join Pastor Mark and Reverend Jeff as we invite you, once again, to the Church of Cage.  It's November and that means new theme!  This month's theme is Nicolas Cage and we've lined up some bangers for your ears!  This episode Mark and Jeff review the 2021 indie film Pig directed by Michael Sarnoski, starring Nicolas Cage, Alex Wolff, and Adam Arkin.  IMDB synopsis: "A truffle hunter who lives alone in the Oregonian wilderness must return to his past in Portland in search of his beloved foraging pig after she is kidnapped." Come for the review, stay for the Jesus talk.  No cap. Music this month is brought to you by the blues/folk duo Fort Defiance from Nashville, Tennessee.  The featured song is "Haunts" and you can find their music wherever you stream yours! Fort Defiance Website Spotify YouTube Twitter Instagram Follow the Draft House on Twitter @moviedrafthouse Mark on Twitter - @iheardyouliked Jeff on Twitter - @PodcastsbyJeff

YAC Sports Podcast
Episode 160

YAC Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2021 99:20


Joe and Leland recap Waynesboro's win over Staunton, Wilson's comeback win over Spotswood, and Riverheads rolling over Tazwell. Coach Rolfe comes on to talk about Fort Defiance and their win over Rockbridge. The guys talk volleyball then go into college football and so much more.

Brooklyn Magazine: The Podcast
St. John Frizell on Gage & Tollner and Fort Defiance

Brooklyn Magazine: The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2021 29:06


An award-winning writer, bartender and owner of Red Hook's beloved Fort Defiance, St. John Frizell is part of the team—with partners Sohui Kim, and Ben Schneider—that has re-opened Gage & Tollner. After years of fundraising, research, blood, sweat and tears, the trio were set to re-open the landmark restaurant on March 15 2020—the week the world went into lockdown. The restaurant finally officially reopened on April 15 and it is, by just about any measuring stick, a triumph. Frizell discusses that roller coaster, plus Fort Defiance's own innovative pandemic pivot. Brooklyn news and views you can use: bkmag.com Email: hello@bkmag.com Follow along on Facebook: Brooklyn Magazine Twitter: @brooklynmag Instagram: @brooklynmagazine Follow Brian Braiker on Twitter: @slarkpope

Real Native Roots: Untold Stories Podcast
Bonus: Connecting with Compassion

Real Native Roots: Untold Stories Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2021 54:22


Real Native Roots: Untold Stories would like to acknowledge nurses for their contributions to keeping our communities healthy and safe. Nurses are honored nationwide during the month of May. In honor of nurses, we would like to lift up Carol Dahozy from Fort Defiance, AZ.    Carol’s grandmother and mother were nurses. Carol decided to become a nurse when she observed how a family member was treated in a hospital setting. Surviving the challenging demands of the nursing program, overcoming the language barrier, Carol spent 40 years in the field. Carol remains active in the healthcare arena and currently serves on the Board of Directors with the Native Health Urban Clinic in Phoenix, AZ.   Join us in hearing Carol's journey, stories from the field, and her excitement for future nurses. Ahé'hee (Thank you) Carol.   #RealNativeRootsPodcast #RealNativeRootsUntoldStories  www.realnativeroots.com

Ohio Business Podcast
Rescuing Animals with Lisa Weaner of the Fort Defiance Humane Society

Ohio Business Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2021 37:14


Lisa Weaner, Executive Director Lisa has been involved with the Fort Defiance Humane Society since 2017, first as a board member, then as Executive Director, starting in January of 2019. Before joining the Humane Society, Lisa worked for 26 years in operations and project management. Most recently, she served as Senior Vice President of Enterprise Operations at MaritzCX in Toledo. Now she brings all that she learned in business operations to the business of animal care! Lisa is responsible for the overall operational management and day-to-day financial, scheduling, staffing, and communication management. As a life-long animal lover, Lisa has always had a passion to be involved with animal rescue. She also has her own group of “rescues” with 2 dogs and 4 cats.

The MODUS Files - A Fallout 76 Enclave Podcast Series
The Last Days of Appalachia - Episode 2 "Bitter Defiance"

The MODUS Files - A Fallout 76 Enclave Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2021 27:29


August 18th 2095 “Operation Touchdown” has failed. Paladin Taggerdy and her best men died in a valiant stand in the Glassed Cavern. Now the Scorched are massing, Scorchbeasts fill the air, and the horde is bearing down on the remaining defenders of Fort Defiance. We relive the final day of the Appalachian Brotherhood of Steel and learn the fates of the Knights, Squires and Scribes who fought and died in our Fallout 76 Podcast Mini-Series, “The Last Days of Appalachia - Bitter Defiance.”

Interplace
Guns, God, and Gold

Interplace

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2021 18:57


Hello Interactors,Welcome to the third in a series on the role surveying and cartography played in the establishment of the United States. Today we continue further west into Ohio in the lead up to the 1800s. The U.S. government needed money to fulfill their dreams of being a global superpower. And it all hinged on Jefferson’s plan to extract money from neatly surveyed squares of land occupied by sovereign Indigenous nations who had been here for thousands of years. They were not going to give easily and they never will.As interactors, you’re special individuals self-selected to be a part of an evolutionary journey. You’re also members of an attentive community so I welcome your participation.Please leave your comments below or email me directly.Now let’s go…THE SEVEN RANGES RAGE ON“Regulating the grants of land appropriated for Military Services, and for the Society of the Brethren, for propagating the Gospel among the Heathen.”This is the title of the Land Act of 1796. It was enacted on June 1 of that year, nearly a decade after the United States’ chief Geographer, surveyor, and mapmaker, Thomas Hutchins, had died after surveying the Seven Ranges just west of the Ohio River. The gridding and partitioning of land further west into Ohio continued to progress. The decade leading up to the Land Act was filled with increased Indigenous resistance, botched surveys by scandalous land speculators, and an eager and anxious government who needed money for their military and land from the ‘heathens’. The Seven Ranges did not produce the kind of revenue Congress had anticipated. It was risky business for individual settlers to forge into territories of unhappy native occupants who had no allegiance to Thomas Jefferson’s cartesian adherence. The government was offering land to colonizers for cheap, at one dollar per acre, but you risked your life squatting on land unprotected from Indigenous land and water protectors. So many colonizers just waited for land speculators to buy the land so they could buy it at a discounted price – plus interest. Settlers also had to pay for the survey that proved to the government and their neighbors that it was ‘their’ land. This meant the surveys mapping their plats and townships were sloppily produced or not made at all. Sometimes land companies would provide squatters security and protection from violence they may encounter. But it was rare. Tribal nations in this area were accustom to dealing with invaders. They had a history of negotiating with both the English and the French prior to the Revolutionary War. The French needed Indigenous allies given they were outnumbered by the British colonizers. At the beginning of the French and Indian War, in 1754, there were nearly two million in the British colonies and only 60,000 among the French colonies. The Indigenous nations would sometimes pit the English and French against each other in hopes of securing and maintaining land for themselves. After the Revolutionary War, there was a third country vying for Indigenous land, the United States. The fight for land with this nation by Indigenous nations continues to this day. You can read more about the Land Back movement and it’s importance to future healthy interactions of people and place here.A FOOLING OF HARD KNOXRecall from a previous post that it was the end of the French and Indian War, in 1763, that Thomas Hutchins was working for the British army. He was surveying and securing land along the Ohio River for the British and allied Indigenous nations. Twenty one years later, in 1781, Hutchins became the chief Geographer for the United States helping Jefferson with the details of the Land Ordinance of 1784. The original plan for the dicing up of American land. And now, after platting the Seven Ranges and Hutchins’ passing in 1789, the Ohio surveying experiment had been overrun by land speculators, squatting settlers, and angered Native nations. But these fierce, proud, intelligent Indigenous nations were once again ready to negotiate alliances with the global super-powers. Including upstarts like the United States.By this time political and military negotiations were led by a White Mohawk leader, Joseph Brant. Brant was born in Ohio to parents that had been raised with the Iroquois in the New York area. He grew up in a multi-cultural world among settling French, Irish, German, English, and his Mohawk people. He was able to speak all the dialects of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy and was educated in 1761 at what was to become Dartmouth College. He rose into leadership positions both within his Mohawk tribe and the British Army and was feared by the United States due to his ability to negotiate with the British and the French. He was also a skilled warrior unafraid to fight for the rights of the people he and his parents grew up with. A fight that had already begun. The Northwest American War, also known as the Ohio War, began the year Hutchins’ set out to survey the Seven Ranges in 1785.The allied Indigenous nations were about to do battle with Washington’s newly appointed Secretary of War, Henry Knox. The United States had secured their own Indigenous allies from the south, the Chickasaw and Choctaw. But the United States military was outnumbered. Knox had to recruit Kentucky squatters who were untrained but motivated by the prospect of land and bounty from the brown scalps of Indigenous men, women, and children. The United States was also poor. Proceeds from the land Hutchins had surveyed west of the Ohio River were barely trickling in. But Knox was determined, telling his Commander stationed at a fort in what is now Cincinnati, “…extending a defensive and efficient protection to so extensive a frontier, against solitary, or small parties of enterprising savages, seems altogether impossible. No other remedy remains, but to extirpate, utterly, if possible, the said Banditti (bandits).”The Miamis and Shawnees were able to fool Knox’s first attempts to destroy their villages. They would desert their grounds and then ambush the troops after watching them set fire to their homes. Defeated, Knox went on to recruit 500 more from Kentucky and issued stronger demands to his commanders. They destroyed the Miami’s largest villages and took 40 women and children hostage. They then sent word to villages up the Wabash river to surrender or risk being exterminated. Knox wrote,“Your warriors will be slaughtered, your towns and villages ransacked and destroyed, your wives and children carried into captivity, and you may be assured that those who escape the fury of our mighty chiefs shall find no resting place on this side of the great lakes.”ENTER “MAD ANTHONY” Back in New York, Secretary of Treasury, Alexander Hamilton needed a plan. The country continued to bleed money and he needed more land in Ohio to be surveyed and gridded into a ledger so he could balance the governments finances. On July 20, 1790 he established the General Land Office which included the position of Surveyor General.  Hamilton determined 100 acres and upward were to be sold to land companies for 30 cents per acre. The land could be paid for in gold, silver, or public securities – many of which were war credits earned during the revolutionary war. Land could also be sold with a two year credit plus six percent interest. Townships were 10 miles square and the surveys had to be paid for by the land companies or their land-seeking colonial settlers.This was attractive to would-be land owners, many of whom migrated from Europe where they had no hope of ever owning a piece of property. This was a dream come true, if not for the nightmare of violence occurring throughout Ohio. George Washington was recruiting, and Indigenous warriors were killing, mercenaries from Kentucky and Tennessee at a rate of four for every one trained U.S. soldier. But he knew this was the price you pay to become a global power like England, France, or Spain. He knew he needed their land to raise the money necessary to build a stronger army, but no matter the size of troops he was sending in to battle, they were losing terribly. The Indigenous people of Ohio were not going to give in. They never have and they never will.Washington needed a new approach. He pulled Major General “Mad Anthony” Wayne out of retirement in Georgia to lead the “Legion of the United States”. This was the first army organized under the direction of the Congress and Executive branches after the adoption of the Constitution. It demonstrates both a shift in attitude from the state and from George Washington who needed victories over his enemies and their land. “Mad Anthony” was known, even by Washington, to be unreliable making him an odd choice for leading a newly formalized federal army. But he earned that nickname for a reason. He developed a reputation in the Revolutionary War for being temperamental and ruthless. And he was an alcoholic. Washington probably knew he needed a military leader like this to exert monstrous acts of violence on innocent children and women and men of all ages.Wayne and his troops made their way to the northwest corner of Ohio to Fort Defiance in the middle of allied Indigenous nations. He sent word to the Shawnee, “In pity to your innocent women and children, come and prevent the further effusion of your blood.”The Shawnee refused to back down. So on a rainy August 20th, 1794, Wayne ordered his men to destroy their crops, fields, and homes. They proceeded to murder innocent women, children, and old men. After just one hour of “Mad Anthony”, the Shawnee were overwhelmed and were forced to accept defeat. The U.S. soldiers continued destroying crops and homes for three days and fifty miles in their retreat to Fort Defiance. Known as the Battle of Fallen Timbers, this led to the signing of the Treaty of Greenville and it set the tone for the United States’ ‘shock and awe’ approach to military force over sovereign nations – and the displacement and murder of innocent Indigenous people here and abroad. It was enough to earn Wayne his own fort in what is now known at Fort Wayne, Indiana.FEASTING ON A BUNCH-OF-GRAPESThe Greenville Treaty opened up ¾ of the what was to become the state of Ohio to white colonial settlers. Hamilton’s newly formed General Land Office and the Surveyor General could now continue the carving up of land into neatly ordered squares. Two years later, the Land Act of 1796 was passed. It was time to divvy up the land for “military purposes” and “for propagating the Gospel among the Heathen.”Jefferson’s Land Ordinance called for land to be set aside for veterans of the Revolutionary War. This chunk of curvilinear land in Ohio was called the U.S. Military Reserve. The Land Act also designated land for the “Society of the United Brethren”, also known as the Moravian Church. These are the protestant missionaries I mentioned last week. A band of Moravians had taken in members of a Lenape tribe and moved west to Ohio to escape the warring tensions in the original 13 colonies only to be innocently murdered by a group of U.S. minutemen from Philadelphia dispatched by George Washington.More Moravians had settled in Ohio along the Muskingum River in the middle of the Military Reserve designated in the Land Act. They had converted more Indigenous people to Christianity after the brutal defeat in the Battle of Fallen Timbers. The U.S. Government wanted to encourage more conversions, so they granted them land. The Land Act also put into writing very precise methods of surveying, slicing, plotting, and platting by an empowered Survey General. The U.S. Government could no longer rely on land companies and eager, greedy speculators to conduct shoddy surveys. Section 1 of the Act reads as follows (comments and translations provided by C. Albert White):“Sec. 1. A Surveyor General shall be appointed. He shall engage skillful surveyors as his deputies. He shall survey the lands northwest of the Ohio River and above the mouth of the Kentucky River (in Kentucky) in which Indian title has been extinguished (Greenville Treaty). He shall frame regulations and instructions for his deputies and they shall take an oath (to do proper work) and he may remove (fire) them for negligence or misconduct.”America’s first Survey General was none only than Rufus Putnam, one of the co-founders of the Ohio Company of Associates. He was the one I mentioned last week who gathered with his friends at the Bunch-of-Grapes tavern in Boston ten years earlier in 1786 – just one year after Jefferson negotiated the Land Ordinance of 1785. They drafted a plan for how to profit from the settlement in the Ohio territories, sent it to their friends in Congress to enact, and here Putnam was in charge of surveying and platting land ceded by force so that he, his buddies, and the United States could profit. Clear evidence of just how intertwined crony capitalism, cartesian cartography, Christianity, and White supremacy are rooted in the American government and military.Jefferson’s dream was finally coming true. The U.S. government was just hitting its stride. They now had an organized and methodical means of measuring and dissecting land for sale to citizens seeking land settlement and companies seeking financial settlement. All so the United States could amass a larger military as they headed west into the sunset, charting meridians on a map as they marched toward global domination. Subscribe at interplace.io

High Visibility: On Location in Rural America and Indian Country
What The Sound Carries: Raven Chacon

High Visibility: On Location in Rural America and Indian Country

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2021 80:19 Transcription Available


Today we have the chance to speak with Raven Chacon, and to learn more about the experiences that have shaped his work across a variety of forms – from his music compositions, to his visual scores and installations, through to his leadership in the Native American Composer Apprentice Project and his piece American Ledger No. 2, currently on view at the Plains Art Museum.  Raven Chacon's artist site:http://spiderwebsinthesky.com/This conversation moves across an array of lands and traditions– from Navajo Nation to Aristotle's Lyceum, from string quartets to heavy metal – and a presence that connects many of the pieces Raven discusses is his time as a guest with the Water Protectors at Standing Rock in 2016. Afterwards, he reflected on the experience, he wrote this: “The camps became the imagined microcosm of a North America where we were still the majority, self-sustained and self-governed, no other direct action than simply being alive and retaining our ways. What became apparent—even in the short time I was there and under the shadow of militaristic surveillance—was a shared experience: remembering one's identity, while at the same time re-imagining who we aimed to be. What was achieved there was not a funneling of a pan-Indian sameness, but rather a radial explosion of every potential dreamt history.”Raven Chacon is a composer, performer and installation artist from Fort Defiance, Navajo Nation. As a solo artist, collaborator, or with the Postcommodity, he has exhibited or performed at a wide range of institutions and spaces including the Whitney Biennial, documenta 14, San Francisco Electronic Music Festival, Chaco Canyon, and The Kennedy Center. Every year, he teaches 20 students to write string quartets for the Native American Composer Apprentice Project (NACAP). Raven is the recipient of the United States Artists fellowship in Music, The Creative Capital award in Visual Arts, The Native Arts and Cultures Foundation artist fellowship, and the American Academy's Berlin Prize for Music Composition.Works and connections mentioned in this episode:// Native American Composers Apprentice Project (excellent feature here by NPR Performance Today):https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V0U_C2iKIGY// An Anthology of Chants Operations LP:https://ravenchacon.bandcamp.com/album/an-anthology-of-chants-operations// The Ears Between Worlds are Always Speaking installation in Athens, Greece:http://www.postcommodity.com/TheEarsBetweenWorlds.html// Dispatch, a collaboration with Candice Hopkins:https://disclaimer.org.au/contents/unsettling-scores/dispatch// STTLMNT, An Indigenous Digital World Wide Occupation:https://www.sttlmnt.org/// American Ledger No. 2:http://spiderwebsinthesky.com/portfolio/items/american-ledger-no-2/// For Zitkála Šá series of prints at Crow's Shadow Institute for the Artshttps://crowsshadow.org/artist/raven/// Hungry Listening: Resonant Theory for Indigenous Sound Studieshttps://www.upress.umn.edu/book-division/books/hungry-listening// Radio Alhara:https://worldwidefm.net/show/ww-palestine-radio-alhara 

Changing the Lens Podcast w/ Angelena Swords Brocato
15. Abigail Gullo - Cocktail Talk!

Changing the Lens Podcast w/ Angelena Swords Brocato

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2021 58:59


 Abigail Deirdre Gullo was a performer and teacher before she combined both with her love of classic cocktails in those heady days at the turn of the 21st Century in New York City. After working at The Beagle and Fort Defiance she moved to New Orleans to run bar programs with Sobou and the award-winning Compere Lapin where she became the first Heaven Hill Bartender of the year and won best Hotel Bar Program in the United States at the Spirited Awards.Resources & References :@abigailgullo@drinkandlearnwww.drinkandlearn.com/podcastwww.ryegirlnyc.blogspot.com/

ECBRO BIGFOOT RADIO
VIRGINIA BIGFOOT EVENT NEWS 2021

ECBRO BIGFOOT RADIO

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2021 5:46


June 26 & 27 Its happening in Virginia The 3rd Annual Virginia Bigfoot Conference and Family festival. 691 Battlefield Rd. Fort Defiance, Va 24437 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ecbro-bigfoot/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ecbro-bigfoot/support

Aquí&Allá: Conversaciones con creadores de MX & EU

www.proartesmexico.com.mx Interview in English with Raven Chacon, by Peter Hay, Dec. 11, 2020. Entrevista en ingles con Raven Chacon, por Peter Hay. 11 de dec, 2020. Raven Chacon is a composer, performer, and installation artist from Fort Defiance, Navajo Nation. As a solo artist, collaborator, or with Postcommodity, he has exhibited or performed at Whitney Biennial, documenta 14, REDCAT, San Francisco Electronic Music Festival, Chaco Canyon, 18th Biennale of Sydney, and The Kennedy Center. Every year, he teaches 20 students to write string quartets for the Native American Composer Apprenticeship Project. Raven Chacon is the recipient of the United States Artists fellowship in Music, The Creative Capital award in Visual Arts, The Native Arts and Cultures Foundation artist fellowship, and the American Academy’s Berlin Prize for Music Composition. He lives in Albuquerque, NM. Raven Chacon es un compositor, intérprete y artista de instalaciones de Fort Defiance, de la Nación Navajo. Como solista, colaborador o con Postcommodity, Chacon ha expuesto o actuado en Whitney Biennial, documenta 14, REDCAT, Musée d'art Contemporain de Montréal, San Francisco Electronic Music Festival, Chaco Canyon, Ende Tymes Festival, 18th Biennale of Sydney, y el Kennedy Center. Cada año, enseña a 20 estudiantes a escribir cuartetos de cuerda para el Proyecto de Aprendizaje de Compositores Nativos Americanos (NACAP). Recibió la beca de artistas de Estados Unidos en música, el premio The Creative Capital en artes visuales, la beca de artista de la Fundación de Artes y Culturas Nativas y el premio Berlín de composición musical de la Academia Americana. Vive en Albuquerque, NM.

Darmstadt On Air
Darmstadt On Air #11: Stop just decolonizing

Darmstadt On Air

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2020 54:55


The New York based, Chinese born composer, multi-instrumentalist, vocalist and performer Du Yun will be teaching composition at the next Darmstadt Summer Course for the first time. She hosted the 11th edition of the Darmstadt On Air podcast and invited Raven Chacon to the talk, her collaborator in the opera production “Sweet Land” which was premiered in the beginning of 2020. Raven was born in Fort Defiance, Navajo Nation, Arizona, and is now working and living in Albuquerque, New Mexico as a composer, performer and installation artist. From 2009 to 2018, he was a member of the interdisciplinary arts collective Postcommodity, and since 2004, he teaches composition at the Native American Composer Apprenticeship Project (NACAP). In 2018, Raven visited the Darmstadt Summer Course as a lecturer and panelist. He and Du Yun met online on 13 August 2020 and talked about their composer collaboration, about dealing with traditions, with representation, lazy curation and about the fluidity of identity.

Small Town News
Lenoir, NC - Standard Extraterrestrial Racoons

Small Town News

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2020 61:52


Welcome the Lenoir, NC, "Where the High Country Ends!" Nestled in the Appalachain Mountains and originally settled by the Tucker Family, the area was known as Tucker's Barn beginning in 1765. When the area was incorporated in 1851, it was renamed Lenoir in honor of Revolutionary War general William Lenoir. General Lenoir's restored home, Fort Defiance, is a popular tourist attraction in the town. Lenoir is also part of the Overmountain Victory National Historic Trail, a trail that marks the marching route of the Patriot militia in the pivotal Kings Mountain campaign of 1780. The area was also a key player in the NC furniture industry beginning in the 1890s, and was the location of Broyhill Furniture's headquarters until 2018. Lenoir is also home to a Google server farm and a number of commercial nurseries. Lenoir has also been called home by many noteable people, including southern gospel bass singer, George Younce (Neil is a big fan!). Join us for today's episode, and get the low down on our home state!

Radio Imbibe
Episode 1: Welcome to Radio Imbibe

Radio Imbibe

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2020 40:37


For the pilot episode of Radio Imbibe, we talk to Alba Huerta of Julep in Houston and Ivy Mix of Leyenda in Brooklyn about the challenges of owning a bar during the COVID-19 crisis. We also chat with Matty Newton, the illustrator who tackled our July/August 2020 issue, about how he took on such a challenging project; ask Abigail Gullo from Ben Paris in Seattle to mix a favorite summer cocktail, the Old Cuban; and hear from Brooklyn bar owner St. John Frizell about his experiences with Fort Defiance and Gage & Tollner in the era of COVID-19, in an essay he wrote for our July/August 2020 issue. Radio Imbibe is the audio home of Imbibe magazine. In each episode, we dive into liquid culture, exploring the people, places, and flavors of the drinkscape through conversations about cocktails, coffee, beer, spirits, and wine. Keep up with us at imbibemagazine.com, and on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook, and if you're not already a subscriber, we'd love to have you join us--click here to subscribe.

In The Moment: Segments
Karen Williams Sits With SDPB's Jackie Hendry

In The Moment: Segments

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2020 19:41


In The Moment … July 9, 2020 Show 855 Hour 1 The COVID-19 infection rate on the Navajo Nation reservation has outpaced most other areas of the country, including New York City. Nearly eight thousand people have tested positive, and 382 people have died. Dr. Karen Williams is a hospitalist physician at Tsehootooi Medical Center in Fort Defiance, Arizona--one of the facilities within the Navajo Nation. On Friday the Great Plains Tribal Chairmen's Health Board hosted a webinar featuring Dr. Williams as she visited Rapid City. This week she talked with SDPB's Jackie Hendry about the ways the pandemic impacts Indigenous people throughout the country and her concerns for tribal communities in South Dakota. Health reporting on SDPB is supported by Monument Health of Rapid City Find us on: Apple , Spotify , and Google Play

YAC Sports Podcast
Episode 59

YAC Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2019 70:56


This week the guys talk about wins for Buffalo Gap and Riverheads. Fort loses to Rockbridge, Staunton loses a close one to Central and Wilson loses to Spotswood. Leland and Joe talk about the meltdown in Blacksburg, UVA's loss to Notre Dame and discusses upcoming games. The guys also talk about NFL and MLB in the A Block. Leland with help from Patrick Hite interviews the Fort Defiance volleyball coach Sue Leonard. 

YAC Sports Podcast
Episode 58

YAC Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2019 71:42


Hey it's Episode 58 and this week the guys talk about Draft's big win over Clarke and East Rock taking down Gap as well as some other HS football action from the weekend. Wilson volleyball continues to roll as Riverheads and Fort Defiance keep up the pace with them at the top of the Shenandoah District. In college football UVA completes the come back against ODU and UGA holds on to win against Notre Dame. Alex Flum joins us as well. Check out all this and more on the YAC Sports Podcast.

Daily News-Record Sports
Rocktown Sports Pod - May 28

Daily News-Record Sports

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2019 49:40


On this week's edition of the Rocktown Sports Pod, the crew breaks down the prep regional playoffs with closer looks at Turner Ashby baseball, Fort Defiance baseball, Page County baseball, Turner Ashby softball and Spotswood boys soccer before putting a wrap on the softball season at James Madison. Also, Harrisonburg Turks manager Bob Wease discusses his team ahead of the Valley Baseball League season.

Ball & Chain Podcast.
Ep. 53 Dongles & Air Force One

Ball & Chain Podcast.

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2018 53:52


On this week's Ball & Chain Podcast, Rebecca talks about her weekend covering the "Showdown on the Rez" in Fort Defiance, Arizona. Steve touches on the friendship of Joe Mauer and Justin Morneau following Mauer's retirement announcement from Major League Baseball. All that plus Viewer Mail on a packed edition of the Ball & Chain Podcast.

Who Am I Really?
074 – I Feel Some Of It Too

Who Am I Really?

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2018 23:32


Serena told me she had a similar experience to what a lot of adoptees feel, even though she grew up with her birth mother. I’m always talking about empathizing with others, so I wanted to hear her story. Serena told me about her birth on a Native American reservation in Arizona then her mother moving away. She was adopted by her father when he married her mother, but Serena never knew her biological father. When her paternal family called to say her birth father was ill, she was too stunned to act quickly, so she only met his relatives at his chaotic funeral. Take a moment to listen to the parallels between what I’ll call Serena’s “adoption adjacent” experience and those of other adoptees. Read Full TranscriptSerena:                        00:02               I don’t think I recognized the severity of his sickness. I didn’t… At that age, you still think you’re invincible and I had never had anyone that was even close to me die. So to have, you know, these people who are part of my paternal family, but I’ve never, I’ve never known call me and sort of dropped this sort of bomb. I think I just kind of froze. Voices:                        00:35               Who am I? Who am I? Who am I? Who am I? Who am I? Who am I in mind? Damon:                       00:47               This is who am I really a podcast about adoptees that have located and connected with their biological family members. I’m Damon Davis, and on today’s show is Serena. She called me from Virginia shortly after I met her at the Maryland Pod-casters Association meetup. She told me she had a similar experience to what a lot of adoptees feel, even though she grew up with her birth mother. I’m always thinking about empathizing with others. So I wanted to hear her story. Serena told me about her birth on a native American reservation in Arizona. Then her mother moving away, she was adopted by her father when he married her mother, but Serena never knew her biological father. When her paternal family call to say her birth father was ill, she was too stunned to act quickly, so she only met his relatives at a chaotic funeral. Take a moment to listen to the parallels between what I’ll call Serena’s adoption adjacent experience and those of other adoptees. This is Serena’s as journey. Damon:                       01:49               Serena was born on the Navajo reservation in Fort Defiance, Arizona, but her mother was only 18 at the time living with a friend because her own mother and grandmother had moved to Colorado. Her mother wanted to stay behind to finish high school at Window Rock, another Navajo reservation. That’s when she Serena:                        02:09               met a boy, fell in love. Got Pregnant. She was… My mom is so freaking smart. She is God. She puts anything, anything at all I I’ll ever do to shame. She gave birth to me and then very shortly after flew across the country and came to the DC area and went to… And

Life In the Carolina's Podcast
Outlander North Carolina

Life In the Carolina's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2018 36:17


Our guest on this episode of the Life in the Carolinas podcast is Beth Pittman, author and curator of the website and Facebook group “Outlander North Carolina.” Outlander is a series of 8 (soon to be 9) books that begins in Scotland in the 1940s but takes a dramatic turn when the main character travels back in time to America in the year 1743. The books have since become a television series, currently in its 4thseason, as well as a theatrical production. Beth has found herself enamored with the narrative, the historical elements, and the characters and she knows that she is not alone. Fans of the books are flocking to North Carolina historic sites such as Tryon Palace, Wilmington, Alamance Battleground, Edenton, Fort Defiance, and Western North Carolina, and Beth and others in the know believe that Outlander-related tourism will only increase as the North Carolina portions of the show begin to air. What sets the Outlanderseries apart from other historical fiction/fantasy is the thoroughly-researched and accurate historical aspects included by the author. In fact, Beth’s own interest in North Carolina’s history has been incited as her interest in Outlander has increased. In September 2018, Beth organized and hosted A Fraser Homecoming weekend at Leatherwood, which was attended by people from 20 different states and featured speakers, musicians, reenactors, educators, and naturalists specializing in 18thcentury America and North Carolina specifically. She was pleasantly surprised by the popularity of the event and has already set the date for next year’s Homecoming: October 3-6, 2019. Connect with Beth: https://outlandernorthcarolina.com/ https://www.facebook.com/groups/outlandernorthcarolina/ https://www.instagram.com/outlandernorthcarolina/

USA Classic Radio Theater
Classic Radio Theater for August 15, 2018 - White Man Magic

USA Classic Radio Theater

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2018 51:47


The Lone Ranger originally broadcast August 15, 1949, 69 years ago, White Man's Magic. General Yates and the soldiers at Fort Defiance are in an uneasy peace with the Bent-Leg tribe. Brace Beemer stars as the Lone Ranger.

The Speakeasy
Episode 268: John Tebeau

The Speakeasy

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2018 36:12


On the first episode of 2018, Damon is joined in studio by John Tebeau, a Brooklyn writer, artist, and bartender. He began a series of bar illustrations in 2013 out of an appreciation of architecture and community gathering places, later reporting on and writing about what made those bars special. Tebeau also works as a bartender at one of New York’s great neighborhood bars, Fort Defiance in Red Hook, Brooklyn. His new book, Bars, Taverns and Dives New Yorkers Love, is due out in March. The Speakeasy is powered by Simplecast

Live and Amplified #Livecast
EP. 37 #Livecast - Fort Defiance

Live and Amplified #Livecast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2017 68:32


Check out the Live and Amplified Project at https://www.facebook.com/liveNamplified/ We are a Music based Multi-Media Project, We feature independent musicians giving them the opportunity to showcase and talk about original content.Make sure you check out our Webseries and Music Videos at https://www.youtube.com/user/bleacherbumstv if you have any questions or comments please send them to westoakstreetproductions@yahoo.com

The Charlie Tonic Hour
Episode #266 The Charlie Tonic Hour - The Women's March

The Charlie Tonic Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2017 53:13


Ginny and Charlie talk everything from new bourbon to the women's march on this week's show. After a packed weekend that included stops at Kaze, Rockbottom Brewery, Righteous Room and a Food Fight at Maribelle's, Ginny talks about her experience at the local Women's March in Cincinnati. They end with a bourbon and rye whiskey from Rabbit Hole and music from Fort Defiance.

Corban Talks
Mark Charles - Chapel - September 14, 2016 (Part 2)

Corban Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2016 48:45


This podcast features Mark Charles, a speaker, writer, and consultant from Fort Defiance, Ariz., located on the Navajo Reservation. On September 12, Charles challenged and encouraged students to rethink their preconceived notions toward Native Americans. This talk is a continuation on the subject. “We don’t know what justice looks like when everything we have access to is tarnished,” he said. Additionally, he shared about U.S. historical relations with tribal members and commented the “Constitution is systemically racist.” Currently Charles is leading a project to host a public reading of the 2010 Department of Defense Appropriations bill (H.R. 3326) in front of the US Capitol in Washington DC. He is doing so because this bill contains an "Apology to the native peoples of the United States" and was not publicized by the White House or by Congress.

Corban Talks
Mark Charles - Chapel - September 12, 2016 (Part 1)

Corban Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2016 43:32


This podcast features Mark Charles, a speaker, writer, and consultant from Fort Defiance, Ariz., located on the Navajo Reservation. Charles challenged and encouraged students to rethink their preconceived notions toward Native Americans. “We don’t know what justice looks like when everything we have access to is tarnished,” he said. Additionally, he shared about U.S. historical relations with tribal members and commented the “Constitution is systemically racist.” Currently Charles is leading a project to host a public reading of the 2010 Department of Defense Appropriations bill (H.R. 3326) in front of the US Capitol in Washington DC. He is doing so because this bill contains an "Apology to the native peoples of the United States" and was not publicized by the White House or by Congress.

Music City Roots
MCR 11/04/2015 Minto Sparks, Fort Defiance, Hope Country, Kevin Gordon

Music City Roots

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2015 153:18


Setlist 11/04/2015 - Jim Lauderdale -   Minton Sparks Carnival Ride https://youtu.be/FC5e4N2EkE8 Streaker Desperation Time Flies Harrison, Do You Hear Me? Back Of The Bus   Fort Defiance Momma, I’m Fine https://youtu.be/rSR4esjcHHw Love As Strong As Doubt A Heaviness Not Meant For Me Call Off The Bets Grace   Hope Country I Need Grace Your Love Is Rich Turning My Wheels Let Love Grow https://youtu.be/7kOMH8SPAfs Slow Dance   Kevin Gordon Walking On The Levy All In The Mystery Letter To Shreveport Church On Time https://youtu.be/5c5dKsKHFjE          GTO Nashville Jam - Goodnight Irene https://youtu.be/JdwXlMGu6xU

Talking The Strain
The Strain "Fort Defiance" - Season 2 EP 3

Talking The Strain

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2015 20:50


Mike and Jesus get together to discuss the latest episode of #TheStrain. See more of The Strain at FXNetworks.com #tv #television #podcast #review #reviews #entertainment

Strain Podcast
s2e3 Fort Defiance - The Strain Podcast

Strain Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2015 57:27


Blaire and Kyle knock over some lab equipment and dodge the UV lights as they talk about "Fort Defiance," the third episode of season 2 of FX's "The Strain". They wonder how the show could be better, celebrate some small moments, and of course, shout out the #WIGTALK army. Based on the books by Del Torro.  Learn more, subscribe, or contact us at www.southgatemediagroup.com.  You can write to us at southgatemediagroup@gmail.com and let us know what you think.  Be sure to rate us and review the episode.  It really helps other people find us.  Thanks!

The Strain Reviews and After Show - AfterBuzz TV
The Strain S:2 | Fort Defiance E:3 | AfterBuzz TV AfterShow

The Strain Reviews and After Show - AfterBuzz TV

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2015 48:36


AFTERBUZZ TV – The Strain edition, is a weekly “after show” for fans of FX's The Strain. In this show, hosts Jacque Borowski, Zach Wilson, Matt Liberman, and Stephen Lemieux discuss episode 3. The Strain is a high-concept thriller that tells the story of Dr. Ephraim Goodweather (Corey Stoll), the head of the Centers for Disease Control Canary Team in New York City. He and his team are called on to investigate a mysterious viral outbreak with hallmarks of an ancient and evil strain of vampirism. As the strain spreads, Eph, his team, and an assembly of everyday New Yorkers wage war for the fate of humanity. Co-starring on the series are Mia Maestro, Sean Astin, Kevin Durand, Natalie Brown, Jonathan Hyde, Richard Sammel, Robert Maillet, Jack Kesy, Ben Hyland, and Miguel Gomez. Follow us on http://www.Twitter.com/AfterBuzzTV "Like" Us on http://www.Facebook.com/AfterBuzzTV For more of your post-game wrap up shows for your favorite TV shows, visit http://www. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Bloody Sunday: The Strain Podcast
Bloody Sunday S02E03: Bolivar & Company

Bloody Sunday: The Strain Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2015 57:03


This episode of Bloody Sunday covers Season 2 Episode 3 of The Strain titled “Fort Defiance”. The show continues to be fun to talk about, but not so fun to watch. Enjoy and, what the hell, rate & review us on iTunes.

Got Your Milk: FX's The Strain
The Strain: Season 2 Episode 3: "Fort Defiance"

Got Your Milk: FX's The Strain

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2015 81:51


Bubba (@FittenTrim) and guest host Catfish (@cjgman67) thrill to the latest glorious episode of the smash hit "The Strain" called "Fort Defiance." They discuss their favorite scenes, their spilt milk scenes, and how best to comfort a crying woman in a bread truck. Let us know your secrets to success by tweeting using #GotYourMilk or #GotYourMilkPodcast.

The Speakeasy
Episode 21: St. John Frizell

The Speakeasy

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2011 35:36


This week on The Speakeasy, Damon Boelte sits down with St. John Frizell, head of the Red Hook boîte, Fort Defiance. Tune in to learn more about how his personal journey as a bartender and how New Orleans cocktail culture influences John. Also learn what a Sumo Collins is and why David Wondrich approves of it. This episode was sponsored by Just Food.