561. Part 2 of our friend Kelly Jackson's return to the podcast to discuss her Metoyer documentary. “Kelly is the creator of the Cane River Film Festival. The film festival is sponsored by her historical preservation nonprofit – the Resurrection Fern Foundation.
Saturday, February 17, 2024
Thursday, February 8, 2024
560. Kelly Jackson, Part 1
560. Part 1 of our friend Kelly Jackson's return to the podcast to discuss her Metoyer documentary.
“Kelly is the creator of the Cane River Film Festival. The film festival
is sponsored by her historical preservation nonprofit – the
Resurrection Fern Foundation.
Saturday, February 3, 2024
559 C. J. Hunt
559. C.J. Hunt returns to the Podcast to discuss "Neutral Ground
— a documentary about memory, monuments, and how to break up
with the Confederacy. The Neutral Ground documents New
Orleans’ fight over monuments and America’s troubled romance
with the Lost Cause.
Thursday, January 25, 2024
558. Martha Boone
558. We talk to urologist Martha Boone about her work at the old Charity Hospital and the books she's written about it. "The Big Free is Charity Hospital and it’s 1982 in New Orleans, and Charity is a big medical free-for-all. Elizabeth is one of the first women in the toughest surgery department in America.
Saturday, January 20, 2024
557. Chad Adams
557. We're excited to have Chad Adams on the podcast to discuss his novel, How to Walk on a Marsh. “On his first ever hunting excursion as a young boy, James takes an uncalculated step in the delicate South Louisiana marsh that becomes the catalyst for a metaphor used by his dad which foreshadows his life: there’s an art to navigating the marshland, and the steps you take while on your journey can cause you to either sink or swim.
Saturday, January 13, 2024
556. Richard Sexton and Randolph Delehanty
556. Today we talk with Richard Sexton and Randolf Delehanty about the 2nd edition of their classic work, New
Orleans: Elegance and Decadence. The book focuses on the
interiors, furnishings, art collections, and gardens of a
handful of creative people in New Orleans in the 1990s. Dreamers
and urban pioneers, they included bohemian artists, artisans,
architects, preservationists, activists, antiquarians,
restaurateurs, and teachers, all living outside the American
mainstream.
Friday, January 5, 2024
555. Randy Gonzales. "St. Malo."
555. This week we talk to Randy Gonzales about his poetry book Settling
St. Malo. "I am excited about the launch of a book I spent
more than a decade writing. My research into Filipino Louisiana
started as a way to understand my family’s Filipino story. I
learned that without the fishermen at St. Malo, the shrimpers at
Manila Village, and the seamen who settled in New Orleans, my
Filipino ancestors may not have moved to Louisiana.
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