Throwback Episode: Not All White Women with Race2Dinner
Release Date: 06/05/2020
That's What She Did Podcast
Sarah Eagle Heart is an Emmy-winning social justice storyteller, activist, media strategist, and producer focused on advocacy on behalf of Indigenous Peoples. She is an internationally accomplished executive with a diverse background in tribal, corporate, and non-profit organizations. Her creative projects are rooted in her worldview as an Oglala Lakota raised on Pine Ridge Indian Reservation supporting narrative change for healing and impact. In This Episode: The power of following your intuition and tapping into your spiritual beliefs to achieve your goals Why narrative change is a key step...
info_outline S7E10: BIPOC Podcast Creators with Tangia Renee and Maribel Quezada SmithThat's What She Did Podcast
Tangia Renee is doing something a little different and coming out from behind the mic to be a guest on her own show, sort of. After working hard on a new project Tangia Renee and Maribel Quezada Smith are here to talk about the launch of BIPOC Podcast Creators. An online community and consulting firm that aims to help BIPOC creators in podcasting reach beyond the 101 and grow in the industry. In This Episode: What is BIPOC Podcast Creators and why it needs to exists The personal experiences that led Tangia & Maribel to creating the community Our main goals for changing...
info_outline S7E8: Seeing The World Through Afro-Latinx Eyes with Dash Harris MachadoThat's What She Did Podcast
Dash Harris Machado is a Peabody-award-winning multimedia journalist and entrepreneur currently based in Panama. She is the producer of NEGRO: A docu-series about Latino Identity, a decade-long, ongoing web-based docu-series that explores AfroDiasporic identity, colonization, the historical and present-day class, and color complex, and hierarchy among Latinxs throughout the Americas. She is also the co-founder of AfroLatino Travel.
info_outline S7E7: Trusting The Wisdom of Your Own Voice with Kim Guerra of Brown Badass BonitaThat's What She Did Podcast
I am thrilled to introduce you to Kim Guerra, the founder of Brown Badass Bonita and one of my favorite online small businesses. Brown Badass Bonita is a brand and movement that she considers to be a work of self-love and an expression of her love for her community. Guerra is the author of “Mariposa” and “Mija”: both collections of bilingual poems, affirmations, and revolutionary love letters.
info_outline S7E6: Speaking From The Comfort of Your Privilege with Bree Davis of CityCast PodcastThat's What She Did Podcast
Bree Davies is a multimedia journalist and arts community advocate born and raised in Denver. Rooted in the world of Do-It-Yourself arts and music, Davies co-founded and produced several music and arts festivals and has toured the country with various bands. Parallel to a decade-long practice in arts and organizing, Davies has also cultivated a career as a reporter, writer, producer and host- she's currently the first ever host of daily news podcast City Cast Denver, which launched in March 2021.
info_outline S7E5: Building Community and Calling Out Bullsh!t with Erika RighterThat's What She Did Podcast
Erika Righter is a social worker-turned small business owner. Since coming to Colorado, she has worked with youth experiencing homelessness and in the foster care system, rural families, and with low-income older adults. In 2012, Erika founded Hope Tank, a gift store that gives back in the heart of the Baker neighborhood. She uses retail to connect the over 40,000 customers who come into Hope Tank every year, to organizations doing important work in our community.
info_outline S7E4: It’s Not Just a Women’s Issue with Dusti GuruleThat's What She Did Podcast
Today we have Dusti Gurule to talk about how reproductive rights are not just a women’s issue and how she is building collective community power through her work at Colorado Organization for Latina Opportunity and Reproductive Rights (COLOR). Dusti is an organizing and community-building expert and is here to share about how movements are created at a local level and grow from that point.
info_outline S7E3: How Two Unexpected Beekeepers Are Revitalizing Detroit And Inspiring The Next Generation With Nicole Lindsey of Detroit Hives.That's What She Did Podcast
Detroit Native, Nicole Lindsey is the Co-Founder and Co-Executive Director for Detroit Hives; a 501c3 nonprofit working to create sustainable communities for people and pollinators by transforming vacant lots into pollinator-friendly spaces.
info_outline The Rise of JusticeTech and How It’s Impacting Criminal Justice In America with Marcia Chong RosadoThat's What She Did Podcast
Marcia Chong Rosado is one of less than 30 Latinas in the U.S. in the venture capital (VC) field. Focusin on BIPOC founders, she is passionate about using her expertise to help scale BIPOC led tech startups. Learn about her journey into the VC world and her focus on helping train and fund underrepresented entrepreneurs. She is currently dedicating herself to help elevate an entirely new tech industry, JusticeTech. Tech startups, often led by BIPOC, identified leaders.
info_outline S7E1: How To Inspire A Movement Through Storytelling With Farzana DoctorThat's What She Did Podcast
Farzana Doctor is a Toronto-based award-winning writer, activist, and psychotherapist working to ban female genital cutting in her Dawoodi Bohra community. In her latest book, Seven, Farzana blends beautiful storytelling with social justice, using the pages of Seven to tell the story of female genital mutilation and its impact on the communities where it is practiced.
info_outlineWe are podcasters united to condemn the tragic murders of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor and many many others at the hands of police. This is a continuation of the systemic racism pervasive in our country since its inception and we are committed to standing against racism in all its forms.
We believe that to be silent is to be complicit.
We believe that Black lives matter.
We believe that Black lives are more important than property.
We believe that we have a responsibility to use our platforms to speak out against this injustice whenever and wherever we are witness to it.
In creating digital media we have built audiences that return week after week to hear our voices and we will use our voices to speak against anti-blackness and police brutality, and we encourage our audiences to be educated, engaged, and to take action.
Here are three ways podcasters and content creators can participate:
- Read this statement on your next show release & post the above statement and graphic to your social media feeds.
- George Floyd Memorial Fund: https://www.gofundme.com/f/georgefloyd
- Minnesota Freedom Fund: https://minnesotafreedomfund.org/
- Black Visions Collective: https://www.blackvisionsmn.org/
- Campaign Zero: https://www.joincampaignzero.org/
- Black Lives Matter: https://www.Blacklivesmatter.com
- Minneapolis NAACP: https://www.paypal.me/mplsnaacp4050B
- Donate a portion of show proceeds and ask audience members to donate to any of the following:
- Text “Floyd” to 55156 to sign a petition a demand justice for George Floyd
- Sign-up at Color of Change: https://colorofchange.org/ to be notified of more opportunities to take action
- Sign A petition & Ask Your Audience To Sign: