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Murder, She Told

Kristen Seavey | QCODE

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Maine and New England true crime with original interviews and detailed documentary style storytelling. Murder, She Told is an award winning, true crime podcast shedding light on the cold cases, missing persons, and crime stories that often get overlooked of Maine, New England, and small towns from away. Murder, She Told uses detailed storytelling with an investigative twist, and weaves in original interviews with friends, family, and investigators close to the case. Rooted in deep research, ...
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Sounds of the World

William Montgomery and Hillary Lester

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Every week we will take off and travel to a new destination where we will discover some fascinating things about our musical world. Whether it is the classical world of London, the theater music of Japan, or the drums of Ghana, we will discuss pieces, important musical topics, and interview composers and song writers. Our world is a buffet of music and it is time to eat! We're an indie podcast, which means the two of us do all the work that goes into producing the show - that includes resear ...
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Coexistence

Coex Studios

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Earth’s shattered future. Humanity’s natural resources have been exhausted. When our planet is devastated by an atomic cataclysm, a new life emerges for a cross-section of humanity within the walls of a towering megastructure known as Tier City. A self-appointed governing body of world-leaders, called The Universal Council, control this New Earth. Tier City residents are force-fed Network propaganda by an influencer known only as The Preacher. Rachel is a young drone delivery pilot with ambi ...
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So Lit Song Lit

Cincinnati Song Initiative

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This is So Lit Song Lit, where we reimagine the repertoire by introducing less familiar songs through sound clips and lively discussion! Together we’ll be exploring songs by composers that you may or may not have heard of already, showing how they compare to standard works, and giving you a taste of what they sound like. Join us down the rabbit hole as we expand the song canon!
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Line For Line Podcast

Devon Booker

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Representing Kenosha, Wisconsin- KTown! Your special host Devon aims to display the beauty and authenticity in his hometown and shows why it’s such a great city and place to be. We have Local spotlights on businesses and individuals, Health & Wellness featuring prominent physicians and personal trainers, community activists and much much more.
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AirGo

Damon Williams and Daniel Kisslinger

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Subscribe on Apple Podcasts! https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/airgo/id1016530091 A podcast and radical media hub reshaping Chicago and beyond for the more liberatory and creative. Listen to longform humanizing conversations with artists, organizers, performers, comedians, scholars, and more who are reimagining Chicago and beyond toward liberation. Hosted by Damon Williams and Daniel Kisslinger.
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Shakespeare Alive

Shakespeare Birthplace Trust

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Theatre professionals, artists, vloggers and other guests from around the world join resident Shakespeare Birthplace Trust experts Paul and Anjna to discuss Shakespeare's place in the 21st century. We hear about their relationships with Shakespeare in the modern world and take a fresh look at Shakespeare in today's society.
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Everyday Yellow™

Charisse M. Williams

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Welcome to Everyday Yellow — a well-being podcast. I'm your host, Charisse M. Williams. Everyday Yellow is a podcast for anyone seeking to live a rich and meaningful life. It's especially for those who are high-achieving and ambitious but find themselves needing support balancing their professional success with personal well-being. If you're passionate about personal growth, curious about the science behind human flourishing, or simply looking for inspiration to bring more joy and meaning in ...
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Fine Minds

Fine Music Radio

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Fine Music Radio is broadcasting an exciting series of lectures co-ordinated by the University of Cape Town’s Centre for Extra-Mural Studies. The Fine Minds series aims to bring the intellectual stimulation of the centre’s busy annual Summer School directly to the armchair listener. Fifteen distinguished speakers over three years – including JM Coetzee and William Kentridge – will cover a wide range of topics. Fine Minds has been made possible by a grant from the Andrew W Mellon Foundation a ...
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In this episode of the Everyday Yellow™ podcast, we flip the script as regular host Charisse M. Williams takes the guest seat, while her long-time friend and fellow podcaster Pam Covarrubias steps in as host. Charisse, a leadership coach and community builder, is known for her work in supporting high-achieving women leaders. In this special role re…
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Howard Swanson (1907-1978) studied at the Cleveland Institute of Music and went on to study at Fontainebleau with Nadia Boulanger. He was close with poet Langston Hughes and his settings of Hughes' texts are considered definitive. Swanson has a unique sound, which makes his music well-suited for more mature musicians, but is still very accessible f…
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For the past few years, Cairenn Binder and her team of students at Ramapo College of New Jersey’s IGG Center have been using investigative genetic genealogy (IGG) to identify human remains, solve violent crimes, and help exonerate the wrongfully convicted. In this exclusive episode of Murder, She Told, Cairenn gives a behind-the-scenes look at the …
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In this episode of the Everyday Yellow™ podcast, host Charisse M. Williams is joined by Alexzandra Strickland, a mind-body coach, yoga instructor, and energy practitioner who helps high achievers overcome stress through somatic techniques. Alexzandra, also known as Ally, shares her personal journey of battling chronic pain, advocating for her healt…
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In the fraught last week before the 2024 election, the guys search for some nuance with Maurice Mitchell, the National Director of the Working Families Party. A nationally-recognized social movement strategist, visionary leader in the Movement for Black Lives, and community organizer, Maurice breaks down the vision and approach of WFP’s strategy to…
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Undine Smith Moore (1904-1989) was a classical pianist who trained at several prestigious universities, and despite her professors urging her to become a professional, she chose to become a public school music teacher and professor. She preferred to compose vocal music; her songs have a sweep and line to them that make them a joy to play and sing. …
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In this episode of Everyday Yellow™, host Charisse Williams is thrilled to welcome Sonya Tinsley Hook, an inspiring executive coach and human resources leader. Sonya brings her energy and passion for helping people discover their unique strengths and using them to shine in both personal and professional life. With a background that includes youth p…
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1982 - Florida, Massachusetts. On a rainy Saturday evening in April 1982, 18-year-old Lynn Burdick was working alone at the Barefoot Peddlar, a small country store in the Berkshires. By the end of her shift, she had vanished—along with the cash in the register. Known for her reliability, Lynn’s disappearance immediately raised alarms. Less than an …
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In this episode of the Everyday Yellow™ podcast, host Charisse M. Williams sits down with Ebony Medina, an Experienced Registered Yoga Teacher (ERYT-500), mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) facilitator, and founder of the Ebony Yoga Foundation. Ebony shares her powerful journey from living with lupus, which left her bedridden, to regaining h…
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The guys welcome Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò, a brilliant philosopher and movement thought leader, to the pod. Táíwò is the author of Reconsidering Reparations and Elite Capture, two staples of the emergent abolitionist canon that have helped shape emergent movement ideology over the last decade. He talks with Dame and Kiss about who we mean when we …
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Known as a symphonic composer, Florence Price was the first African-American female to have one of her composition performed by a major orchestra in the US. Her music was rediscovered in 2009 in her old summer home, which has led to many of her works being recently published and premiered. Also an excellent pianist, her art songs include some virtu…
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In this episode of the Everyday Yellow™ podcast, host Charisse M. Williams sits down with Meagan Davies, an executive therapist and founder of Well Atlanta, to discuss the importance of mental health for high-achieving individuals. With over five years of experience in the counseling field, Meagan specializes in working with women who juggle multip…
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The guys talk with Maya Dukmasova and Alejandra Cancino from Injustice Watch about their new multipart investigation The Tenant Trap. The series, which is available now and linked below, found that tenants are regularly facing eviction and informal displacement at buildings with histories of serious safety violations, while the court system puts pr…
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2020 - Manchester, New Hampshire. On February 19, 2020, 22-year-old Chandler Innarelli was shot while sitting in a car in an alley in Manchester, NH. Chandler was waiting for his girlfriend and their newborn baby to come meet him to go visit his sister. Four years later, his murder remains unsolved. Since that day, Chandler’s mother, Amy, has worke…
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In this episode of the Everyday Yellow™ podcast, host Charisse M. Williams sits down with Aisha Crumbine, a life and leadership coach who helps high-achieving individuals transition from mere success to a life filled with significance and fulfillment. Aisha’s unique approach focuses on doing what some find unfathomable: putting oneself first. Toget…
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The guys keep it within the medium, chopping it up with award-winning journalist and storyteller Yohance Lacour. Yohance is the host of You Didn’t See Nothin’, a Peabody and Pulitzer-winning podcast about a 1997 hate crime on the South Side of Chicago that introduced him to the world of investigative journalism, examining how its ripple effects hav…
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William Grant Still (1895-1978) was the first African-American to have a symphony performed by a major US orchestra (Symphony No. 1-"Afro-American" in 1931), to have an opera performed by a major US opera house (Troubled Island by New York City Opera in 1949), to conduct a major US orchestra (the New Orleans Symphony Orchestra in 1955), and to have…
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In this episode of the Everyday Yellow™ podcast, our host Charisse M. Williams chats with Pam Covarrubias, a coach, clinical EFT practitioner, speaker, and podcaster known for her work in supporting first-generation women and femmes in the U.S. Together, they explore the importance of owning your voice, standing in your power, and rejecting cultura…
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1983 - Plymouth, Massachusetts. On a cold night in February 1983, Barry Pinto, 26, and his wife, Dena, 24, were brutally shot in their own home, while their infant son sat helpless in a nearby playpen. The crime scene hinted that the couple might have known their killer, yet investigators struggled to uncover a clear motive. Forty years later, the …
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In this episode of the Everyday Yellow™ podcast, our host Charisse M. Williams chats with Noelle Cordeaux, a PCC-level coach and strategist with a background in sexuality studies. Together, they dive into the world of coaching, positive psychology, and what it means to truly flourish. Noelle breaks down some key ideas like flourishing, well-being, …
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The guys lock in with Prof. Lester Spence, whose decades of scholarship about Black politic-building, hip-hop, and the sociopolitical turn toward neoliberalism help all of us make sense of the contradictions our culture, political system, and economy pretend don't exist. He's the author of Stare In the Darkness: The Limits of Hip-hop and Black Poli…
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R. Nathaniel Dett was a Canadian-American composer and concert pianist with a degree from Oberlin College. His arrangements of spirituals use the piano to great effect in bringing out the text--he also has an extensive repertoire of choral music. Hall Johnson was a professional violinist/violist who formed many choirs, the most famous of which (the…
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In this episode of the Everyday Yellow™ podcast, Charisse M. Williams has a heartfelt conversation with Dr. Terence Lester, a storyteller, public scholar, speaker, community activist, and founder of Love Beyond Walls, a nonprofit organization raising awareness about poverty and homelessness. Dr. Lester shares his journey from experiencing homelessn…
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On this episode, the guys welcome writer John Perkins. Best known for his politically and socially significant text Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, in which he describes playing a role in a process of economic colonization of Third World countries on behalf of what he portrays as a cabal of corporations, banks, and the United States government,…
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1951 - Brunswick, Maine. Police heard the woman’s screams before they even reached the door. They were responding to a late night break-in at the apartment of 56-year-old Lancelot Cooper, a prominent figure in the community. When they stepped inside, they found his wife, 45-year-old Eva Cooper, nude on the living room floor with a scarf over her he…
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In this episode of the Everyday Yellow™ podcast, Charisse M. Williams has a heartfelt conversation with Brandi Shelton, an entrepreneur, wife, mother, and founder of Just Add Honey Tea Company. Since starting her business in 2006, Brandi has grown her tea company beyond her wildest dreams, bringing joy, warmth, and community to her customers. Brand…
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Sometimes a simple title doesn't even come close to encapsulating who someone is or why they are important to the fabric of our city. This episode's guest Eric Williams is definitely one of those people. He is the owner of The Silver Room, a Chicago institution and brand whose mission is to create a global community through art and culture, as well…
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Samuel Coleridge-Taylor was a British composer and conductor with strong ties to the United States. His songs have a very "salon-music" feel to them, romantic and accessible for audiences. His daughter Avril was also a composer-conductor and we would love to find out how to access her music, so if anyone knows, please reach out! Recordings featured…
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To download the episode transcript, please click here. In this very first episode of Everyday Yellow™, host Charisse M. Williams warmly welcomes you to a well-being podcast all about living a rich and meaningful life. Charisse shares her inspiring journey from nonprofit leadership to embracing her passion as a full-time coach, highlighting how to l…
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This episode's guest is Rev. Tanya Lozano Washington, the co-founder of community health and care organization Healthy Hood Chicago. Tanya talks about how she came to understand the links between personal and communal health, the lineages she stewards as a member of one of Chicago's most impactful movement families, and the complicated relationship…
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1989 - Dunbarton, New Hampshire. In November of 1989, 14-year-old Sonya Moore disappeared. At first, her mother thought it was typical Sonya behavior. After all, the teenager had a habit of staying out late and skipping school. But when Sonya missed an important appointment, the pit in her stomach began to grow. Despite her daughter’s independence,…
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“How do you not take mental health seriously…it’s where I’m going to use my Superpowers!” Artist Shelbiee Arreguin is creatively helping others overcome the stigma of mental health through art therapy. With a degree in Fine Arts and currently obtaining a Masters in Clinical Mental Health Counseling, Shelbiee hopes to empower today’s youth by utiliz…
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Harry Thacker Burleigh was the first Black composer to have a major influence on classical music, both by his own compositions and by his influence on Antonín Dvořak. His art songs were composed before his collection of spirituals and have recently been collected and edited by Louise Toppin, Ann Sears and Jean Snyder (who also wrote a biography of …
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“I’m going to change the world one day!” Lilly Dempski is inspiring the world through dance. She’s more than just a dance student, she’s a dance teacher, and founder of Dance for Hope, fundraising for cancer through dance. Traveling internationally to broaden her horizons and bring different techniques to the classroom, Lilly continually envisions …
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As Chicago gears up for the 2024 Democratic National Convention, we get in tune with movement lawyer and professor Sheila Bedi, who breaks down some of the changes in CPD policy that Chicagoans engaging in direct action should know about. We also talk about the beautiful, challenging, and important ways Sheila has provided care and protection for b…
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1974 - Swampscott, Massachusetts. In the shadows of the early-December afternoon, somebody with a baseball bat beat the life out of 15-year-old Henry Bedard Jr. He had been on his way home to wrap a Christmas gift, and was found the following day in a well-travelled patch of woods that was popular amongst the town’s youth. Henry was a good kid from…
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In this episode of AirGo, we sit down with State Senator Robert Peters for a deep dive into the current political landscape and the transformative initiatives he's championing. Senator Peters explores how he contributed to the abolition of cash bond in IL, his commitment to getting tangible policy passed in contribution to movement, and the approac…
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Season 3 drops starting August 20th, this time on Tuesdays! This season, Toni Marie and Ellen focus on Black composers, with an incredible array of guest hosts and performers. Make sure to subscribe and tell all your friends, colleagues, and students, you won't want to miss this season! So Lit Song Lit is a production of Cincinnati Song Initiative.…
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“Basketball was my Sanctuary…I played for the love of it.” Baton Rouge native, and former NBA player, Tyrus Thomas discusses his love for basketball, where his passion originated, and his journey from LSU to becoming the 4th Overall pick in the NBA. As Tyrus transitions in his career from being a player to coaching, he highlights the importance of …
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Tiffany Yancey is best known for her lead role as Laura Cowan in Investigation Discovery's "House of Horrors" and, most recently, her first independent film "Love Him Or Leave Him," which she wrote, co-produced, and stars in. She was honored with the Robert Anthony Award for contributing to the film industry. Tiffany's acting journey began after sh…
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Dr. Marshall Woods, a licensed clinical psychologist with a unique interest in the intersection between psychology and film, shares her contributions to platforms such as The Huffington Post, the former American Psychological Association’s PsycCRITIQUES, and Thrive Global and Medium. Her book, Best Psychology in Film, has evolved into a podcast and…
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Host Katherine Marshall Woods interviewed Yaa Asantewaa Faraji about her film Daylight. Yaa Asantewaa Faraji is a Los Angeles-based screenwriter, spoken word poet, and author of Calabama, a 2021 Amazon Best-Selling anthology published by World Stage Press.psychmindedmedia
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Host Kathrine Marshall Woods interviewed Yaa Asantewaa Faraji about her film Daylight. Yaa Asantewaa Faraji is a Los Angeles-based screenwriter, spoken word poet, and author of Calabama, a 2021 Amazon Best-Selling anthology published by World Stage Press.psychmindedmedia
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Host Katherine Marshall Woods, Psy.D. interviews filmmaker Elias Hinojosa about his award-winning film, Widow. Elias Hinojosa is an actor, writer and director based in Los Angeles, CA. Born along the border of Mexico in the Rio Grande Valley, he graduated from the University of Texas at Austin, where he studied film from Prof. Matthew McConaughey. …
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Maceo “Tendaji” Lester is a filmmaker based in Baltimore, MD. His work ranges from music videos, narrative film, documentaries and wedding videography. Lester received his BA in Mass Communications at Virginia State University. Years later he enrolled at the Maryland Institute College of Art where he received his MFA in Film. His love of music, spo…
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The film is based on a true story. Film producer Alexandra Miles had been out of treatment for a few years. Back in 2018, she was at an eating disorder treatment center in Southern California. There, she met a young woman who changed her life. The woman who changed Miles’s life is Kendra Williams, whom she called “Blackbird” because she had a black…
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Katherine Marshall Woods, Psy.D., is a licensed clinical psychologist, faculty member at The George Washington University, television host and coproducer of Best Psychology in Film. In this episode Katherine interviews Donnie Hue Frazier, III, filmmaker, producer, writer, and business owner about his film, ROUX’S BLUES: Promise Me, You’ll Be There.…
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