14 episodes

Welcome to the Yes, and Cafe, a podcast where we explore, learn, and create with ordinary people who do extraordinary things.

Yes, and Cafe uncg

    • Education

Welcome to the Yes, and Cafe, a podcast where we explore, learn, and create with ordinary people who do extraordinary things.

    Yes, and Cafe - Episode 14: Living a Life of Value

    Yes, and Cafe - Episode 14: Living a Life of Value

    We speak with Lia Miller, Executive Director of the Creative Aging Network, and Alexis Brown, graduate student in Communication Studies at UNC Greensboro.

    • 31 min
    Yes, and Cafe - Episode 13: Creating New Possibilities

    Yes, and Cafe - Episode 13: Creating New Possibilities

    We welcome 2021 with an episode that offers hope despite the state of our polarized political landscape. Omar Ali, who typically co-hosts our show, steps over to the other side of the microphone. A historian and scholar of independent politics, Professor Ali has been a long-time community organizer. He shares his insights on the heels of the release of the new edition of his book, In the Balance of Power: Independent Black Politics and Third Party Movements in the United States. “I’m optimistic because I’m seeing cultural changes afoot that are creating new possibilities,” he says. As a special treat, Matt Bryant, our producer, joins the show as co-host, and offers a story about collaboration between unlikely fellow travelers. We hope you listen. Happy New Year everyone!
    "Just as race was created as a way of dividing and conquering poor people… across American History in order to control labor and power, ideology has been used in the same way to divide people against each other who actually have much in common. To me we’ve been bamboozled, hoodwinked, as Malcolm would say, into thinking that there are these great divides between us, when in fact they’re relatively superficial… The more important thing, that is, being a fellow human being, a fellow citizen, these things are much more important than ideological differences." – Dr. Omar Ali

    • 37 min
    Yes, and Cafe - Episode 12: History Speaks: Unsung Heroes of the Civil Rights Movement Visual History Project

    Yes, and Cafe - Episode 12: History Speaks: Unsung Heroes of the Civil Rights Movement Visual History Project

    On this week’s episode we learn about a collaborative project to document untold stories of the Civil Rights Movement, the Unsung Heroes Project. We speak with Matthew Barr, a filmmaker and professor of media studies, who obtained funding for the project through the Carnegie Mellon Foundation. Also joining us are assistant professor Torren Gatson, who lends his expertise to the project as a historian and mentor, and Antigre Farmer, a recent UNCG graduate who conducted many of the interviews. About the project, Gatson says, “Those that held onto these stories for so long are given an opportunity to share … with a generation that may be completely unaware of them.” Farmer represents this generation, and participating in the project has sparked her interest in screen writing and given her a sense of being grounded in Greensboro’s history. Farmer was particularly moved by the story of Willena Cannon, who witnessed the Greensboro Massacre in 1979.  “How strong she stayed throughout the entire process was inspiring to hear,” says Farmer. To access the interviews collected as part of the Unsung Heroes Project, go to http://libresearch.uncg.edu/unsung_heroes/.

    • 25 min
    Yes, and Cafe - Episode 11: Giving Voice to the Voiceless

    Yes, and Cafe - Episode 11: Giving Voice to the Voiceless

    Afrique Kilimanjaro comes from a family with a distinguished history of contributions to the Civil Rights movement. Inspired by interactions with Dr. Martin Luther King, her parents Vicky and John started the Carolina Peacemaker in 1967. Today Afrique continues this legacy as managing editor and publisher of the paper, which has won multiple awards under her stewardship. Afrique speaks on the Yes, and Cafe about the role of the black press in sharing stories that might be overlooked by the mainstream press.  “We’ve been covering stories like this, black lives matter, throughout the decades,” she says. “The folks who are in the black press, we’ve always known that our lives and the lives of people of color who we know really do matter.” Also joining the conversation is Omar Obregon Cuebas, a Greensboro local and former campus leader at UNC Greensboro, who is currently pursuing a pre-med degree in philosophy at Emory University. 

    • 30 min
    Yes, and Cafe - Episode 10: A Step in this Grand March Towards Freedom

    Yes, and Cafe - Episode 10: A Step in this Grand March Towards Freedom

    We speak with Chancellor Franklin D. Gilliam, Jr., as he begins his sixth academic year as Chancellor of UNC Greensboro.  In the midst of a global pandemic and the resurgence of the Black Lives Matter Movement, he shares his personal experience of becoming the first Black chancellor of a non-HBCU in the UNC System. “The beauty of universities is that they can be a space of discovery, and they can also be a space for real dialog,” he says, “At the same time, they can be institutions that reify existing structures of bias and discrimination.” In light of this, Chancellor Gilliam discusses the call to become “anti-racist”, and speaks about the tremendous potential of UNCG as an unusually diverse campus. “We’re diverse on a number of dimensions,” he says. “The campus is not dominated by any one group… What’s interesting about this is that when students come out of their classes, they’re likely to see somebody that looks like them… That’s the power and beauty of this campus. We’re all in one place. It’s a good step in this grand march towards freedom.”  
    UNCG student Luis Mejia Cruz, a chemistry student who immigrated to Greensboro from Mexico City when he was nine years old, also joins the conversation. Luis shares his thoughts on the importance of connecting with our history, and talks about how the pandemic has sparked connections within his community.  

    • 33 min
    Yes, and Cafe - Episode 9: A Moment of Change

    Yes, and Cafe - Episode 9: A Moment of Change

    In the midst of the pandemic, how many of you are reevaluating your lives and considering making dramatic changes?  Today’s Yes, and Café guest is someone who did just that. After Law School, Xan Marshall secured a series of what may sound like dream jobs, working for firms in New York City and Washington DC in medical malpractice and corporate law.  It wasn’t a good fit, so she bravely embarked on a new path.  “I quit kind of abruptly, took a year to travel the world.  During that year I just decided to dive deep into myself and figure out what it is that I care about and what it is that I want to put out into the world… and that is social advocacy and civil rights.”  Today Xan does transformational work with the Reform Alliance, an organization started by rappers Jay-Z and Meek Mill that focuses on reducing the number of people under control of the US criminal justice system--currently 6.6 million.  We are joined in this episode by recent UNCG graduate Tsion Hailu. 

    • 30 min

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