Episodios

  • Interview with Loretta Metoxen
    Dec 30 2025

    Episode Summary:


    One of our favorite episodes to work on was “Episode 6: Native Historians do Stand-up” about the WPA project to preserve the Oneida language and history. But that was not the first time we explored this story. We first traveled to Oneida, conducting interviews and digging into archives, when we produced our documentary Soul of a People. One of those interviews was with the remarkable Loretta Metoxen.


    Until her death in 2021, Metoxen was the Tribal Historian for the Oneida Nation, a position she served in for over two decades. She was tasked with preserving, documenting and interpreting her people’s history, culture, and traditions. Having learned directly from the WPA’s Oscar Archiquette, Metoxen is clear in her reflections on the groundbreaking work of the Oneida writers during the Depression and its huge impact today.


    To hear the full interview, consider joining our Patreon Community at www.patreon.com/PeoplesRecorder


    Additional Links:


    Learn more about Loretta Metoxen

    Oneida Nation Cultural Heritage Website

    Oneida Books Rediscovered


    Credits:


    Director: Andrea Kalin

    Interviewer: Oliver Lukacs

    Producers: Andrea Kalin, David A. Taylor, James Mirabello

    Interview Re-record and Editor: Ethan Oser

    Featuring Music from the Oneida Singers and Pond5


    For additional content, visit www.peoplesrecorder.info or follow us on social media: @peoplesrecorder

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    17 m
  • Interview with Studs Terkel
    Dec 18 2025

    Episode Summary:


    Studs Terkel was many things – a Pulitzer Prize-winning author, oral historian, radio legend, fiery populist, labor advocate and, above all, a master listener. For 45 years, his Chicago radio show invited everyday people to share their stories – the kind of history that often gets forgotten.


    In 2006, we turned the tables and asked Studs to tell us his story. This never-before-released interview was one of his last before his death at age 96. Before we left, he signed our copy of his book about the Depression, Hard Times, with a simple message: “Keep up the good work.”


    And that’s what we’re trying to do with The People’s Recorder – carry forward Studs’ legacy of person-first storytelling.


    To hear the full interview, consider joining our Patreon Community at www.patreon.com/PeoplesRecorder


    For just $5/month, you can have access to extended interviews, plus upcoming bonus episodes and AMA events. Support us on Patreon and keep these stories coming.


    Additional Links:


    Learn more about Studs Terkel

    Studs Terkel Radio Archives

    "Working" by Studs Terkel


    Credits:


    Host: Chris Haley

    Director and Interviewer: Andrea Kalin

    Producers: Andrea Kalin, David A. Taylor, James Mirabello

    Editor: Ethan Oser

    Featuring Music from Pond5


    For additional content, visit www.peoplesrecorder.info or follow us on social media: @peoplesrecorder

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    14 m
  • Interview with Douglas Brinkley
    Nov 20 2025

    Episode Summary:


    In 2006, award-winning filmmaker and producer Andrea Kalin sat down for an interview with bestselling author and renowned presidential historian Douglas Brinkley. Together, they discussed the social and political landscape of 1930s America, the Great Depression, and how the New Deal employed writers to document that unique moment in U.S. history.


    Now, for the first time ever, that insightful and inspiring conversation is available for you to enjoy.


    To hear the full interview, consider joining our Patreon Community at www.patreon.com/c/PeoplesRecorder.


    For just $5/month, you can have access to extended interviews, exclusive bonus episodes and Ask Me Anything events. Support us on Patreon and help keep these stories coming.


    Credits:


    Director and Interviewer: Andrea Kalin

    Producers: Andrea Kalin, David A. Taylor, James Mirabello

    Editor: Ethan Oser

    Featuring Music from Pond5


    For additional content, visit www.peoplesrecorder.info or follow us on social media: ‪@peoplesrecorder

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    19 m
  • Important Update!
    Oct 23 2025

    Episode Summary:


    Tune in for an important update on The People's Recorder!


    Host Chris Haley shares the state of the podcast now in the wake of recent funding cuts and also the exciting plans we have coming up over the next few months, including a sneak preview of "Gospel of Fear," our trilogy of episodes about Congressman Martin Dies, the playbook he used to attack the WPA and the Federal Writers' Project, and how we're all still feeling the impact of that playbook today.


    The People's Recorder is also now on Patreon! Support the podcast and help keep these stories coming and out in the world where they belong. Become a patron for only $5/month and receive access to exclusive interviews, bonus episodes, AMA events, and more!


    For more information and to sign up, visit: www.patreon.com/peoplesrecorder


    Image Description and Credit:

    Protestors in Center City Philadelphia, 1939, staging a symbolic "funeral" for the Federal Writers' Project, a Works Progress Administration program soon to be gutted by federal budget cuts. From the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.


    Episode Credits:


    Director: Andrea Kalin

    Producers: Andrea Kalin, David A. Taylor, James Mirabello

    Editor: Ethan Oser

    Featuring Music from Pond5


    For additional content, visit www.peoplesrecorder.info or follow us on social media: @peoplesrecorder

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    9 m
  • Bonus Content - Pictures of Belonging
    Apr 15 2025


    Episodes Summary:


    A beautiful and powerful art exhibition is touring the country right now, called Pictures of Belonging, which explores three artists of Japanese descent - Miki Hayakawa, Hisako Hibi and Miné Okubo. The exhibition puts these artists and their work in their rightful place in the history of American art.


    For this bonus episode, producer and lead writer David Taylor visits the exhibition at the Smithsonian American Art Museum and shares his insights about Miné Okubo, who was featured in Episode 9: Is This Land Your Land? She was a painter who was working with Diego Rivera on murals for the WPA when she was detained and sent to an incarceration camp during World War 2. She used her artwork to bear witness to the mass incarceration of Japanese Americans during the war.


    Links and Resources:


    Pictures of Belonging: Japanese American National Museum


    Pictures of Belonging: Smithsonian American Art Museum


    Citizen 13660 - a short film from the National Park Service


    Sincerely, Miné Okubo - a short biography from the Japanese American National Museum


    Further Reading:


    Citizen 13360 by Miné Okubo

    Miné Okubo: Following Her Own Road by Greg Robinson

    Peaceful Painter: Memoirs of an Issei Woman Artist by Hisako Hibi

    The Other American Moderns: Matsura, Ishigaki, Nora, Hayakawa by ShiPu Wang


    Credits:


    Director: Andrea Kalin

    Producers: Andrea Kalin, David A. Taylor, James Mirabello

    Editor: Amy Young

    Featuring music from Pond5


    Produced with support from the National Endowment for the Humanities, Florida Humanities, Virginia Humanities, Wisconsin Humanities, California Humanities and Humanities Nebraska.


    For additional content, visit peoplesrecorder.info or follow us on social media: @peoplesrecorder

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    8 m
  • Human Powered: Art Against the Odds
    Mar 6 2025

    The People’s Recorder was funded in part with a grant from Wisconsin Humanities. But did you know that Wisconsin Humanities also has their own podcast, Human Powered?


    Hosted by Adam Carr and Dasha Kelly Hamilton, Human Powered focuses on the power of the humanities in Wisconsin's prisons. We wanted to share an episode from that terrific show with you today.

    People in prisons are cut off from their families, their communities, and in some cases their own feelings. Making art in prison can be a way to affirm your humanity in a place that is often dehumanizing. So, when organizers of an exhibit of prison art put out a call for submissions, they were flooded with responses from incarcerated artists working without support, formal programs or materials. This episode tells the story of that exhibit.

    Guests:

    Joshua Gresl

    John Tyson

    Sarah Demerath

    Debra Brehmer

    Learn more about Human Powered at www.wisconsinhumanities.org/podcast


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    45 m
  • 10 A Creative Incubator
    Jan 24 2025

    Episode Summary:


    In the 1930s, the notion of making an incubator for creativity in a region devastated by the Great Depression got tested in Nebraska. This episode looks at what happened there when the Writers’ Project came to town, through a group of creatives from contrasting backgrounds, including a hobo, a nurse and a hardware store poet – all under the watchful eye of a university professor and a celebrated novelist.


    Starting from chaos, they ignited a surprising alchemy and made the Lincoln office one of the most productive Writers’ Project hubs in the country. The Season 1 finale listens in as Americans face war clouds on the horizon, and a national radio show asks, “Can we count on youth to uphold the American Way?”


    Speakers:

    Stephen Cloyd, librarian and historian

    Marilyn Holt, historian

    James Reidel, biographer and poet

    Douglas Brinkley, historian


    Links and Resources:


    Rudolph Umland and the Federal Writers' Project


    The Nebraska Federal Writers' Project - Lincoln City Libraries


    Mari Sandoz and the Writers' Project


    Weldon Kees reads his poem, "1926"


    WPA Guide to Nebraska (free PDF)


    Prairie Schooner


    Reading List:


    Vanished Act: The Life and Art of Weldon Kees, by James Reidel

    Nebraska During the New Deal, by Marilyn Irvin Holt

    Soul of a People by David A. Taylor

    The Worst Hard Time: The Untold Story of Those Who Survived the Great American Dust Bowl, by Timothy Egan

    The Collected Poems of Weldon Kees, edited by Donald Justice

    Crazy Horse, by Mari Sandoz


    Credits

    Host: Chris Haley

    Director: Andrea Kalin

    Producers: Andrea Kalin, David A. Taylor, James Mirabello

    Writer: David A. Taylor

    Editor: Ethan Oser

    Assistant Editor: Amy Young

    Story Editor: Michael May

    Additional Voices: Jared Buggage, Sam Hanks, JoJo Drake Kalin, Antonio Macias, James Mirabello, Mariko Miyazaki, Kate Rafter and Sarah Smack


    Featuring music and archival from:


    Aaron Copland

    Alexandria Symphony Orchestra

    Joseph Vitarelli

    Bradford Ellis

    Mike Sayre

    Ceiri Torjussen

    Pond5

    Library of Congress

    National Archives and Records Administration

    New York Public Radio Archives Collection

    Nebraska Public Media


    For additional content, visit peoplesrecorder.info or follow us on social media: @peoplesrecorder


    Produced with support from:


    National Endowment for the Humanities

    Humanities Nebraska

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    40 m
  • Bonus Content - Discussion with the FDR Library
    Dec 5 2024

    Episode Summary:


    The Franklin Delano Library and Museum is an amazing place which just celebrated its 75th anniversary. President Roosevelt had the idea to build the library on his family property in Hyde Park, New York, using private funds. And then he donated the library and its historical collections, including all of his personal and official papers, to the US Government. This started the precedent of Presidential Libraries that we continue today.


    Last month, we sat down with the FDR Library and its director Bill Harris and had a great discussion about the Federal Writers' Project, its impact then, and why it still matters today. Please join our host Chris Haley, writer-producers David Taylor and James Mirabello and historian Sara Rutkowski for a few highlights from that conversation.


    You can see the full discussion on the FDR Library’s YouTube channel here.


    Links and Resources:


    Franklin Delano Roosevelt Library and Museum


    "Rewriting America: New Essays on the Federal Writers' Project" with Sara Rutkowski


    Credits:


    Director: Andrea Kalin

    Producers: Andrea Kalin, David A. Taylor, James Mirabello

    Editor: Amy Young

    Featuring music from Pond5

    Featuring: Chris Haley, Bill Harris, David A. Taylor, Sara Rutkowski and James Mirabello


    Produced with support from the National Endowment for the Humanities, Florida Humanities, Virginia Humanities, Wisconsin Humanities, California Humanities and Humanities Nebraska.


    For additional content, visit peoplesrecorder.info or follow us on social media: @peoplesrecorder


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    6 m
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