One year since the murder of Eric Logan and just weeks since the murder of George Floyd, our city is in the streets calling for justice. This week, we listen to these calls at the largest protest of the month in downtown South Bend.
Read MoreWe could go up on the tracks? is one of my favorite texts to send. This is a short film of what happens next.
Read MoreA list of stories curated by Belt Magazine editor Ryan Schnurr on the long history of racism and police violence in the Midwest—and what to do about it.
Read MoreToday, local painter Alex Ann Allen announced a raffle for her new piece titled George Floyd, with 100% of the proceeds going to Black Lives Matter South Bend.
Read MoreThis week we welcome Jenny Casas to the podcast. Jenny is a reporter for New York Public Radio’s Narrative Unit who traveled to South Bend to reported on the story of Better Homes of South Bend: an early African American building co-op formed by Studebaker employees.
Read MoreThis weekend, hundreds of people filled the streets of South Bend in response to the murder of George Floyd at the hands of a Minneapolis police officer.
Read MoreSince moving closer to South Bend, long walks are becoming a part of Ryan Blaske’s routine. Today he shares photographs and reflections from one such walk.
Read MoreThis week we welcome our friend Chuck Fry to the podcast to discuss his road to South Bend, how he learned to tell stories with film, why he got out of bed to start creating things during quarantine, and the internal battles that come with being a full-time artist.
Read MoreToday, fourteen regional musicians worked with South Bend Venues Parks and Arts to release a new music video featuring an arrangement of the late Bill Withers’ “Lean on Me” with an original verse from Heyzeus, and production from Chuck Fry, Ryan Blaske, Eli Kahn, and Buddy Pearson.
Read MoreOn this forty-fourth episode, we record remotely for the first time and are joined by Jason Miller, the founding pastor of South Bend City Church, for a long conversation about the state of belonging amid the pandemic.
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