On Sunday, August 22nd, we hosted a screening of Corner Store’s first short film Ms. Adeline. It was a time.
Read MoreThis week, we are reading "Paradise on Fire" by Jahnari Pruitt and reflecting on what it might be saying about our life together in South Bend.
Read MoreThis week on the podcast, we enjoy a conversation with Alex Ann Allen, a South Bend-based artist best known for spending the past couple of years painting murals all across the city.
Read MoreOn Friday, October 8th, we are gathering inside a former Studebaker factory building to listen to stories about South Bend's people, ingenuity, and progress.
Read MoreThis week, we are reading "Where We Are" by Gerald Locklin and reflecting on what it might be saying about our life together in South Bend.
Read MoreThis week, we enjoy a conversation with Joe Mittiga. Joe is a husband, father, and the second-generation owner of Corby's Irish Pub in the East Bank neighborhood.
Read MoreThis week on South Bend on Purpose, we are reading a selection from Galway Kinnell’s poem “When You Have Lived a Long Time Alone” and reflecting on what it might be saying about our life together in South Bend.
Read MoreThis week, we enjoy a conversation with Antonius Northern, a public servant in the truest sense—whether as an activist, artist, resident, or municipal employee, he has a record of bringing goodness to the city.
Read MoreThis week on South Bend on Purpose, we are reading selections from Audre Lorde’s poem “New York City 1970” and reflecting on what it might be saying about our life together in South Bend.
Read MoreThis week, we enjoy a conversation with Beth Graybill, a resident of South Bend's near-west side historic neighborhood, who is refreshingly thoughtful about her decision to make a life here.
Read MoreThis week on South Bend on Purpose, we are reading Alice Walker’s poem “We Alone” and reflecting on what it might be saying about our life together in South Bend.
Read MoreTonight at 9:00 PM, A Juneteenth Celebration will premiere on WNIT Public Television, presented by Dr. Marvin Curtis and the South Bend Symphony Orchestra.
Read MoreThis week, we enjoy a conversation with Mayor James Mueller about his time leading our City government during the pandemic.
Read MoreThis Saturday, Marvin Curtis and the South Bend Symphony Orchestra will present a special film on Juneteenth, the first time the company has performed to celebrate the emancipation of enslaved Africans in Galveston, Texas, in 1865.
Read MoreThis week on South Bend on Purpose, we are trying something new. Our friend John Garry is joining the show to share "prose for the city" with us—shorter episodes that will contain a poetry reading and guided reflections.
Read MoreThis week we welcome Pam Blair to South Bend on Purpose. Pam is a local artist and organizer of the Poetry Den—a community-based safe stage for the spoken word hosted at the Civil Rights Heritage Center.
Read MoreWe could go up on the tracks? is one of my favorite texts to send. Last year, I made a short film about what happens next. Today, here’s episode two, produced by Ryan Blaske.
Read MoreA couple of weeks ago, I met up with Ryan Blaske and Nik Guiney for a Saturday morning stroll in Miami Village, a neighborhood on South Bend’s southeast side anchored by a string of storefronts, churches, homes, and a cemetery along Miami Street.
Read MoreIn 1919, Busse Baking company built a new, modern bakery in the heart of South Bend's Near Northwest neighborhood. Today, a team of incremental developers is reimagining the building as a collaborator village.
Read MoreOn Christmas morning, after coffee and monkey bread with my wife Kristen and friend Ryan Blaske, we bundled up, grabbed a couple of film cameras, and set out for a snowy stroll down Prairie Avenue.
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