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Ep. 50: Meet Charles Robert Bone: “One of the most recognizable figures in Nashville’s legal, political and development circles."

Climbing the Charts with Angie Lawless and Brandon Miller

Release Date: 05/28/2025

Ep. 50: Meet Charles Robert Bone: “One of the most recognizable figures in Nashville’s legal, political and development circles. Ep. 50: Meet Charles Robert Bone: “One of the most recognizable figures in Nashville’s legal, political and development circles."

Climbing the Charts with Angie Lawless and Brandon Miller

Every city has a family who shapes it. New York City had the Rockefellers. St. Louis had the Bushes. Boston had the Kennedys. Nashville has the Bone family. They are attorneys by trade but political powerhouses and real estate tycoons in practice. In this episode of Climbing the Charts, Angie Lawless and Brandon Miller sit down with Charles Robert Bone. The Nashville Post called the attorney turned developer “one of the most recognizable figures in Nashville’s legal, political and development circles.” His resume defends that descriptor. Before joining Southwest Value Partners as...

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Ep. 49: Nashville Unhoused: Understanding Homelessness in Nashville show art Ep. 49: Nashville Unhoused: Understanding Homelessness in Nashville

Climbing the Charts with Angie Lawless and Brandon Miller

In March, the mayor’s office announced the closing of one of the city’s oldest and lagest homeless encampments — Old Tent City. The 40-year-old site sits just outside downtown, on Anthes Drive. 120+ people have called this area underneath I-24 home. The city says these individuals will be placed in transitional housing. Metro plans to provide the unhoused with access to the wrap around services so they can succeed and find stability. In this episode of Climbing the Charts, Angie Lawless and Brandon Miller sit down with April Calvin, the Director of Nashville’s Office of Homeless...

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Ep. 48: Spirit of Bipartisanship: Nuclear Energy in Tennessee show art Ep. 48: Spirit of Bipartisanship: Nuclear Energy in Tennessee

Climbing the Charts with Angie Lawless and Brandon Miller

Nuclear energy is part of Tennessee’s past and present. Oak Ridge played an important role in the Manhattan Project during WW2, and today, 48% of our state’s energy comes from nuclear energy. In this episode of the Spirit of Bipartisanship, hosts Angie Lawless and Brandon Miller sit down with Republican Rep. Clark Boyd, who chairs the business and utilities subcommittee where nuclear energy is a conversation, and Democratic Rep. Sam McKenzie, a retired Oak Ridge physicist, to learn about the push to build a first of its kind nuclear reactor right here in Tennessee.  

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Ep. 47: The Spirit of Bipartisanship: Medicaid Expansion and Tennessee show art Ep. 47: The Spirit of Bipartisanship: Medicaid Expansion and Tennessee

Climbing the Charts with Angie Lawless and Brandon Miller

Tennessee is 1 of 10 states that has not expanded Medicaid. It is estimated that more than 150,000 Tennesseans would qualify for coverage if the state opted to expand the program.  In this episode of the Spirit of Bipartisanship, hosts Angie Lawless and Brandon Miller sit down with Republican Reps. Brock Martin and Pat Marsh and Democratic Rep. Jesse Chism to hear the arguments against and for expansion.  

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Ep. 46: The Spirit of Bipartisanship: Unpacking the Partisanship in Tennessee’s House of Representatives show art Ep. 46: The Spirit of Bipartisanship: Unpacking the Partisanship in Tennessee’s House of Representatives

Climbing the Charts with Angie Lawless and Brandon Miller

American politics are polarizing, but in no place are they more polarizing than in the Tennessee State House.  Two years ago, the Republican-ruled supermajority expelled two Democratic lawmakers after they led spectators in a chant “Gun control now!” and “No action, no peace!” The controversy was ignited by the Covenant School Shooting and Republican lawmakers’ failure to enact gun reform. Since then, the divide has only deepened. But lawmakers on both sides of the aisle agree it's about more than expulsions. In this episode of the Spirit of Bipartisanship, hosts Angie Lawless...

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Ep. 45: The Spirit of Bipartisanship: Discharging Mental Health Patients in Tennessee show art Ep. 45: The Spirit of Bipartisanship: Discharging Mental Health Patients in Tennessee

Climbing the Charts with Angie Lawless and Brandon Miller

Tennessee Republican State House Rep. Jody Barrett is proposing legislation that would change the discharge process of individuals who are involuntarily committed to mental health facilities in Tennessee. Under Barrett's bill, the CEO of an inpatient treatment facility would be required to notify the court when an individual is eligible for discharge. The court would hold a hearing and decide whether to release or return a patient. Currently, the courts are not notified. Barrett says the legislation will  provide much needed oversight and transparency in the discharge process. Those...

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Ep. 44: The Spirit of Bipartisanship: Free School Lunches in Tennessee show art Ep. 44: The Spirit of Bipartisanship: Free School Lunches in Tennessee

Climbing the Charts with Angie Lawless and Brandon Miller

17% of children in Tennessee face food insecurity. TN Democratic State House Rep. John Ray Clemmons proposed legislation to provide free school meals — breakfast and lunch — to all TN children regardless if they meet federal SNAP benefit requirements. This isn’t the first time Clemmons has introduced this legislation. He’s brought this bill forward every year since 2018. It has yet to prevail. In this episode of the Spirit of Bipartisanship, Angie Lawless and Brandon Miller sit down with Republicans Rep. Ron Travis and Rep. Todd Warner and Clemmons to discuss the legislation.

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Ep. 43: Inside the Tennessee Legislature with Longtime Nashville Lobbyist, Brian Bivens show art Ep. 43: Inside the Tennessee Legislature with Longtime Nashville Lobbyist, Brian Bivens

Climbing the Charts with Angie Lawless and Brandon Miller

Tennessee’s legislature isn’t just partisan—it’s often polarizing. Inside the House chambers, Democrats and Republicans disparage one another, at times—outside, they rarely engage. Has the proverbial political aisle been stretched too far to reach across?  It wasn’t always this way. There was once camaraderie and compromise. Few understand this culture shift better than Brian Bivens. The East Tennessee native has spent the last 25 years lobbying elected officials. But Bivens bent ears long before he was in the business of bending ears. His father, Steve Bivens, served in the...

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Ep. 42: America the Polarized: How Personalities and Primaries Have Shaped U.S. Politics show art Ep. 42: America the Polarized: How Personalities and Primaries Have Shaped U.S. Politics

Climbing the Charts with Angie Lawless and Brandon Miller

David French is a dissenter. The attorney turned conservative political commentator abandoned the Republican party in 2016. His reason? Donald Trump. The evangelical Christian was disgusted by the controversial candidate, his lack of character and authoritarian beliefs. Since then, his critiques of the MAGA movement have only grown — so too has his voice.  In 2019, French became the Senior Editor of the Dispatch, an online conservative news outlet. Four years later, he left. In 2023, French joined the New York Times as an op-ed columnist. Last August, he penned one of his most read...

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Ep. 41: He Steered the City Through COVID, Now, He’s Reimagining Nashville show art Ep. 41: He Steered the City Through COVID, Now, He’s Reimagining Nashville

Climbing the Charts with Angie Lawless and Brandon Miller

When Nashville identified its first case of coronavirus in March 2020, the city was between Public Health Department directors and as unprepared as the rest of the world for what was to come.  Dr. Alex Jahangir, a trauma surgeon acting at that time as chair of the Metro Nashville Board of Health, unexpectedly found himself head of the city's COVID-19 Task Force and responsible for leading it through uncharted waters. Now, he’s reimagining a new Nashville. Jahangir is the co-chair of Imagine Nashville, a citywide study that explores the needs of Nashville’s residents and imagines goals...

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Every city has a family who shapes it. New York City had the Rockefellers. St. Louis had the Bushes. Boston had the Kennedys.

Nashville has the Bone family. They are attorneys by trade but political powerhouses and real estate tycoons in practice.

In this episode of Climbing the Charts, Angie Lawless and Brandon Miller sit down with Charles Robert Bone.

The Nashville Post called the attorney turned developer “one of the most recognizable figures in Nashville’s legal, political and development circles.” His resume defends that descriptor.

Before joining Southwest Value Partners as Managing Director of Real Estate Investment, Bone was the President and CEO of Bone McAllester Norton, a prominent Nashville law firm.

He is also the founder of Phoenix Boats, a bass boat manufacturer based in Winchester, TN, the Southern Steak & Oyster, a beloved restaurant in SoBro, and Acme Feed & Seed, a popular, multi-level restaurant, bar, and event space located on Lower Broadway. Bone has served on several boards, including: The Community Foundation of Middle TN, the Oasis Center, and Hands On Nashville.

Most recently, Bone has taken on a key role in one of the most transformative projects in Nashville’s modern history—Nashville Yards. The massive mixed-use development is redefining the city’s skyline and economic future, blending innovation, entertainment, and urban vibrancy in the heart of downtown.

The Nashville Democrat has also worked on local, state, and federal campaigns including, but not limited to: former Mayor Karl Dean’s gubernatorial race, Harold Ford’s 2006 Senate race, and both of former President Barack Obama’s campaigns.