Friday, March 28, 2014

45. Interview with Chris Stelly

45.  We interview Chris Stelly, the head of Louisiana Entertainment.  You may not have heard of this department, but it has been instrumental in the renaissance in Louisiana entertainment in film, television, music, and interactive games.  Louisiana has become a leader in the number of films made in a state, and along the way we have enjoyed a golden age for films and series about the Pelican State.  Listen in for a peek behind the scenes to learn how this happened.
  1. This week in Louisiana history. March 29, 1962. New Orleans--Parochial schools are ordered to desegregate by Archbishop.
  2. This week in Louisiana.  March 29, 2014
    Battle of the Gumbo Gladiators
    March 29, 2014
    Website
    318-425-4413
    101 Crocket St., Shreveport, LA 71101
    Battle of the Gumbo Gladiators, hosted by Volunteers for Youth Justice, is a gumbo cook-off fundraiser to help abused, neglected and at-risk children throughout Northwest Louisiana.
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Friday, March 21, 2014

44. Interview with Isabel Wilkerson, Part 2.

44.  Pulitzer Prize winner Isabel Wilkerson rejoins us to finish discussing her book The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America's Great Migration, which depicts the move of African-Americans away from the Jim Crow South to the north and west.  We focus on the experience of Dr. Robert Foster, who moved from Monroe, LA to California in search of opportunities to practice his profession.  We also learn more about the experience African-Americans had living in north Louisiana in the 1950s.
  1. This week in Louisiana history. March 21, 1861. Louisiana joins the Confederate States of America.
  2. This week in Louisiana.  March 28-29, 2014
    Smokin' Blues & BBQ Challenge
    March 28, 2014 - March 29, 2014
    800-542-7520
    Downtown Hammond, Hammond, LA 70401
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Friday, March 14, 2014

43. Interview with Isabel Wilkerson

43.  Pulitzer Prize winner Isabel Wilkerson joins us to discuss her book The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America's Great Migration, which depicts the move of African-Americans away from the Jim Crow South to the north and west.  We focus on the experience of Dr. Robert Foster, who moved from Monroe, LA to California in search of opportunities to practice his profession.  We also learn more about the experience African-Americans had living in north Louisiana in the 1950s.
  1. This week in Louisiana history. Winter 1713-1714. Louis Juchereau de St. Denis founded Natchitoches.
  2. This week in Louisiana.  March 20-23, 2014
    Louisiana Crawfish Festival/Redfish Cup
    8201 W. Judge Perez Dr.
    Chalmette, LA 70043
    504-271-0537 | 504-329-6411
    The Crawfish Festival will be held on Thurs. - Sun. at Torres
    Park. There will be live music, rides, games, food and lots of
    good crawfish.
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Friday, March 7, 2014

42. Interview with Debra Faircloth.

42.  We interview writer Debra Faircloth.  Debra has just released a book of short stories set in Louisiana, The Fifth Guest and Other Louisiana Stories.  We also have one of her stories, "Dinner at the Spindletop Cafe," posted on the Louisiana Anthology.  In addition to her writing, she has worked for many years as an advocate for victims of domestic abuse (Louisiana Domestic Violence Hotline 1-888-411-1333).  Join us as we learn both about her writing and her important work countering domestic abuse.
  1. This week in Louisiana history. March 8 1836 New Orleans is divided into three independent "cities": French Vieux Carre and two American areas:
    1. The First Municipality included the original city of New Orleans, now known as the Vieux Carre or French Quarter. It lay between Canal St. and Esplanade Ave. In 1852 it became the Second Municipal District.
    2. The Second Municipality, sometimes called the American Sector, lay above (upriver from) Canal St. It included the area of the city previously known as the Faubourg St. Mary. In 1852 it became the First Municipal District.
    3. The Third Municipality, below (downriver from) Esplanade Ave., included the section previously known as the Faubourg Marigny. In 1852 it became the Third Municipal District.
  2. This week in Louisiana.  March 14, 2014.
    Ghost Ships on the River
    236 Hwy. 61
    Jackson, LA 70748
    225-654-3775
    Port Hudson State Historic Site, Zachary - Ghost Ships on the River, 6:30 p.m. To commemorate Admiral Farragut's naval attack on the Confederate river batteries at Part Hudson (March 14-15, 1863), a park ranger will lead the visitors on a walk to Fort Desperate and will share stories with the visitors of paranormal phenomena that have taken place in and around the Port Hudson battlefield. The tour will then return to museum where the staff will conduct a special night firing of the site's three artillery pieces including the always popular 42- pounder cannon. There will also have a presentation at the site's pond with the model gunboat fleet and pyrotechniques about Admiral Farragut's attack on Port Hudson.
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Saturday, March 1, 2014

41. Interview with poet Mona Lisa Saloy, Part 2

41.  Part 2 of our interview with Mona Lisa Saloy, Author & Folklorist, Educator, and Scholar.  An award-winning author of contemporary Creole culture in poems about Black New Orleans before and after Katrina, as a Folklorist, Saloy documents sidewalk songs, jump-rope rhymes, and clap-hand games to discuss the importance of play.  As a poet, her first book, Red Beans & Ricely Yours,  won the T.S. Eliot Prize and the PEN/Oakland Josephine Miles Award and tied for a third. She's written on the significance of the Black Beat poets, on the African American Toasting Tradition, on Black & Creole talk, on conditions  and keeping Creole after the devastation of Hurricane Katrina, and her new book, Second Line Home,  is a refreshing collection of poems that captures the day-to-day New Orleans speech, contemplates family dynamics, celebrates New Orleans, and all in a way everyday people can enjoy.
  1. This week in Louisiana history. March 1, 1932 La. State Capitol Building completed (in just 14 months).
  2. This week in Louisiana.  March 4, 2014.  Mardi Gras!
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