エピソード

  • George Neiden, German sausage maker. Maple Heights. Ohio.
    2024/10/03
    German sausage maker George Neiden, who owns and runs the Old Country Sausage Kitchen in Maple Heights, Ohio, talks with folklorist Lucy Long about learning and plying his trade – (and the delight he takes in creating new sausage flavors!) -- for her Occupational Folklife Project “Ethnic Grocers in the Urban Midwest.”
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    6 分
  • Jade Sato, Asian American Farm Owner. Brighton, Colorado.
    2024/09/26
    Jade Sato, the founder and owner of Minoru Farm in Brighton, Colorado, talks with documentarian Katelyn Reuther about being part of a growing movement of Asian American farmers, many of them women, who are experimenting with raising and marketing Asian heritage crops, like sisho, ginger and gobo root, for a rapidly diversifying American palate. Their talk is part of Reuther’s Occupation Folklife Project “Finding Roots: Asian American Farmers in Contemporary America.”
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    7 分
  • Emily Daniels, Agricultural Pilot. South Hampton, New Jersey.
    2024/09/19
    Emily Daniel, one of a small but growing number of female agricultural pilots – or, as they are often referred to, “crop dusters” – talks with documentarian Ellen Kendricks about learning to fly planes as a teenager, career challenges, and managing a small family-owned crop spraying business that services farms from New Jersey to Maryland and Texas and Kansas.
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    6 分
  • Alfred Quijance, Fisherman and Subsistence Harvester. Seldovia, Alaska.
    2024/09/12
    Alfred Quijance talks with documentarian Josh Wisneski for the Alaska Marine Conservation Council’s Occupational Folklife Project “Beyond the Breakwater: Gulf of Alaska Small Boat Fishermen.” He talks about growing up in the remote Alutiiq/Sugpiaq community of Old Harbor on Kodiak Island; learning about traditional Native American seining, fishing and harvesting; and leaving at age 13 to find work on fishing boats and canneries throughout the state of Alaska.
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    6 分
  • April Matson, Pitt Stop Food Concession Manager, Ransomville Speedway. Ransomville, New York.
    2024/09/05
    April Matson, Manager of the Pitt Stop food concession at the legendary Ransomville Speedway, a family-owned dirt track racecourse in western New York, talks with folklorist Edward Millar about her job, about why food is such an important part of the Speedway experience, and about preparing popular local specialties -- including 'flat dogs' and hand cut fries.
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    6 分
  • David Swett, Owner, Swett’s Restaurant. Nashville, Tennessee.
    2024/08/29
    David Swett, the owner of Swett’s Restaurant, a family-owned establishment and culinary landmark in Nashville, Tennessee since 1954, talks with documentarian Candacy Taylor about running an African American family business, working in the food industry and his pride in Swett’s history as part of her larger project “The Green Book: Documenting African American Entrepreneurs.”
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    6 分
  • Jeremy Presar, Rural Mail Carrier, US Postal System. Bukhannon, Kentucky.
    2024/03/28
    Jeremy Presar is a mail carrier for the U.S. Postal Service based out of the French Creek, West Virginia Post Office. Now in his sixth year as a mail carrier, he tells folklorist Emily Hilliard about his 70-mile route, delivering to 600 mailboxes, the challenges posed by animals, weather and being bi-racial in a largely White area as well as the pride he takes in working for America’s “vital lifeline.”
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    7 分
  • Shanda Dunn, Peer Support Worker, Voices of Hope. Lexington, Kentucky.
    2024/03/21
    Shanda Dunn of Lexington, Kentucky, talks with folklorist Ethan Sharp about being a Peer Support Worker as part of his larger Occupational Folklife Project “Hope for Recovery.” Shanda explains how she overcame her own complicated past and struggles with substance abuse to train and now, to work alongside clinicians as a counselor for others recovering from substance abuse disorders.
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    6 分