3 episodes

Welcome to Still Here: Modern Stories of Resilience, Indigenously Told. Still Here is a podcast about beating the odds told from an indigenous worldview hosted and produced by Jenni Monet (Laguna Pueblo).   Every other week, each episode features a diverse mix of commentary, interviews, and rich audio storytelling shaped by writers, leaders, and everyday people.  From Alaska to Zambia, join us as we explore an indigenous rising up that's helping define contemporary life for the world's First Peoples.

Still Here Jenni Monet

    • Society & Culture
    • 4.0 • 1 Rating

Welcome to Still Here: Modern Stories of Resilience, Indigenously Told. Still Here is a podcast about beating the odds told from an indigenous worldview hosted and produced by Jenni Monet (Laguna Pueblo).   Every other week, each episode features a diverse mix of commentary, interviews, and rich audio storytelling shaped by writers, leaders, and everyday people.  From Alaska to Zambia, join us as we explore an indigenous rising up that's helping define contemporary life for the world's First Peoples.

    Journalism and the Indigenous Narrative

    Journalism and the Indigenous Narrative

    When Covering Indian Country Becomes Headline News



    In early September, Indian Country Today Media Network called it quits -- a startling revelation to all who either patronized the website and magazine or were contributing writers.  That’s because ICTMN told no one that they were having financial problems, forcing their sudden “hiatus”.

    Since then, there has been a steady dialogue that has emerged in the absence of ICTMN, a publication that many agree was imperfect, but also, was better than what currently exists in the media ecosphere:  a mostly aggregated climate of news content generated from outside journalists explaining the Indigenous narrative.

    In this special relaunch of Still Here, we’re taking a look at the State of Indigenous Journalism.  It’s in trouble.



     

    • 12 min
    Deep Freeze at Standing Rock

    Deep Freeze at Standing Rock

    This battle over the Dakota Access Pipeline at Standing Rock is far from over.  In fact, some would say, it’s about to get real.

    In this episode of Still Here comes a closer look at some of the new challenges emerging at the start of a new year – for the water protectors, for the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and for a new North Dakota governor who, on day one, came out in favor of the $3.8 billion dollar energy project.

    In this final week before Donald J. Trump takes the presidential oath of office, there are other concerns that could sway the direction of the pipeline struggle.    Right now, the focus is on Mother Nature. There’s fear of massive and dangerous flooding where the water protectors remain.

    • 17 min
    Welcome to Still Here

    Welcome to Still Here

    Welcome to Still Here:  Modern Stories of Resilience, Indigenously Told.



    In this preview episode, host Jenni Monet is at the Sacred Stone Camp near the Standing Rock Sioux reservation where thousands of people have gathered from across Indian Country and the Indigenous world to fight a pipeline.  It's also where Still Here symbolically launches its first pilot episode.



    Over the course of the next several weeks, we'll take you to places where leaders, thinkers, and everyday doers are confronting life's dilemmas in their own indigenous way. The movement building at Standing Rock is just one example of what you can expect to hear on the podcast.



     



    Listen and subscribe now and be sure to check out the website at stillherepodcast.com

    • 5 min

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