Turning Corners

Wade Roush

Inspiring stories about the people and organizations working to bridge old divides, heal the land, and make life better in the Four Corners states of New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, and Colorado. www.turningcorners.org

Episodes

  1. Signs of resistance: A sonic postcard from the Sounds Like America project

    2 days ago

    Signs of resistance: A sonic postcard from the Sounds Like America project

    Hey folks, Wade Roush here, back in your email inboxes and podcast feeds after a busy spring.I will confess I’m old enough to remember America’s 200th birthday celebrations in 1976. For a nine-year-old kid, the bicentennial was kind of a big deal, featuring not just the usual fireworks but—in my rural Michigan county alone—special art projects and exhibitions, cannons and twenty-one-gun salutes, and the dedication of a new courthouse building. And from television I remember the tall ships in New York, the opening of the Air & Space Museum in Washington D.C., and the addition of the big curvy red-white-and-blue bicentennial star to NASA’s huge Vehicle Assembly Building at Cape Canaveral. I wasn’t really old enough at that time to understand the pain that Vietnam, Watergate, and the oil shocks had inflicted on the America of the mid-1970s, but I could still feel the country coming together for a brief, collective sigh of relief. You’ll forgive me, then, if I’m less enthused about the 2026 sequel. We could have paused this year to reflect once again on our big, complicated nation’s past and future. But our country’s current leader personalizes and tarnishes everything he touches, and the official semiquincentennial celebration has devolved into little more than canceled musical performances, MMA on the White House lawn, and an empty and dystopian “Great American State Fair” flanked by an algae-filled reflecting pool. I seem to remember that Declaration of Independence had something to say about what happens when a government inflicts to too many injuries on its people. Oh yes, here it is: “But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.” Well, some folks are working on that. The elections of 2026 and 2028 will be opportunities for U.S. voters to peacefully throw off their current despots. And to rally hope and keep up the pressure for that kind of change, millions of people have turned out for the three No Kings protest events held around the country, including here in Santa Fe, New Mexico. The best way I can think of to celebrate the real meaning of Independence Day is to bring you some audio tape I collected here in Santa Fe at the March 28, 2026, No Kings event—which, put together with its counterparts in over 2,000 other locations, turned out to be the largest single-day protest in American history. I originally made today’s piece for Hub & Spoke’s Sounds Like America project, but I also wanted to share it with you here. For Sound Like America we’re inviting independent audio producers all 50 states to send us short pieces that capture the unique sounds of the places where they live. The project is designed to bridge our divides, explore our vast differences and commonalities, and draw out the kind of audio we might not hear on the radio. We’re putting these wonderful and inspiring pieces out there via our podcast, Hub & Spoke Presents, and you can browse all of the submissions (or submit one yourself!) at our website. Meanwhile there’s a new, full episode of Turning Corners coming very soon, so stay tuned! And may you enjoy Independence Day in your own way. Transcript Hub & Spoke Sonic ID: Hub & Spoke Audio Collective. Wade Roush: Okay, so you’ve got an upside down American flag. What does that mean to you? Protester:: Uh, to me, this means America in distress. Um, I, I don’t love what this country is doing. I don’t feel represented by it. And I feel like we’re heading in the wrong direction. So that’s kind of my, my message here. Wade Roush: Today on Turning corners, a sonic postcard in honor of Independence Day. It’s a short piece I recorded here in Santa Fe, New Mexico, as part of a year-long Hub & Spoke project called Sounds Like America. I like to think of the project as our way to celebrate the original meaning of the 4th of July, in a nation where the voice of the people should matter more than the voice of the man who’d like to be king. Wade Roush: Hi. This is a great sign on both sides. Protester: Thank you. Wade Roush: So I’m with a project called Sounds Like America. It’s a podcast collective, and we’re making sonic postcards. And I’m here today documenting this. I love to ask people to just read their signs to me. Protester: Oh, fabulous. Wade Roush: Would you mind? Are you are you game for that? Protester: Yeah. Michelle should read this side and I’ll read the other side. Wade Roush: Okay, okay. Okay. So what are we looking at? Protester: We’re looking at a six foot by three foot banner that we had especially made for today. And on the front of or on one side of the banner, it says, stop spending money on violent attacks and harming the earth. Stop taking over sovereign nations and U.S. voting rights. Stop oppressing our immigrant neighbors and anyone who is other. Stop pretending that this is for the good of all. Use the 25th amendment. Impeach now. Wade Roush: Thank you. Nice rendition. Protester: Thank you. Wade Roush: It’s a great sign. So much good content. Let’s do the other side. Protester: When the people are strong in their inner direction and firm in their attitudes, evil in government and in society can find no place in which to grow. Number 18 working on what’s been spoiled. Wade Roush: And this is from the I Ching? Protester: The Carol Anthony version. Yeah. And again, use the 25th amendment impeach. Now. Wade Roush: Can I ask, are you from New Mexico? Protester: Absolutely. Wade Roush: What does it mean to be here today? Protester: It feels very good and it feels really important. Totally essential. Wade Roush: You found a perfect spot to stand and hold your sign so visible right here. Protester: Thank you so much. Wade Roush: Yeah. Thanks for doing this. Protester: Yeah. Thank you for doing this. Wade Roush: Okay. Speaker: This is not who we are. Speaker: Esto no es lo que somos. Speaker: It is not who we dream of being. Speaker: No es lo vamos de ser. Speaker: These are not the actions of the America that we love. Speaker: Estas no son las acciones de la America qué amamos Speaker: They invaded Los Angeles, they raided Chicago. They surged in Minneapolis. But in every case, the American people showed up to meet them, and they were not armed with guns and knives. But in the words of the Boston of the band here with whistles and cell phones. Protester: So we hold our signs up and our flags every Saturday morning. And I’m telling you, the number of people cheering, flashing, their lights, beeping their horns has grown tremendously in the last 12 months. And the people giving us their finger has decreased in the same proportion. It’s like people are waking up. Wade Roush: That’s great. What is it? Can you read the sign for me? Protester: Turn that one around. That one says our lands, not your loot. Loot LOOT. Wade Roush: So what does this sign mean to you? Protester: It means that we have to stop these a******s from stealing our public lands. Succinctly put. Is that succinct enough? Wade Roush: That’s succinct enough. Thank you. Wade Roush: Would you mind just reading your sign for me on on mic? Protester:: No Turd Reich. T-U-R-D. In Santa Fe, New Mexico or America. Wade Roush: Are you from Santa Fe? Protester: Yes, I live here. Yes. Wade Roush: So what does it mean to you to be here today? Protester: Doing my civic duty, trying to get rid of this b******t that’s going on in our country right now. It’s going to take us years to recover from this and the damage that this man’s doing and his administration, not just him. Uh, it’s it’s beyond ridiculous already. Wade Roush: Ma’am, I love your sign. Which one? This one. The resistance sign. Thank you. So I’m with a radio project called Sounds Like America. We’re making sonic postcards today. Would you mind just reading your sign to me? Protester: Absolutely. Join the resistance. Wade Roush: And what’s that symbol in the middle? Protester: It’s the Rebel Alliance symbol from Star Wars. Wade Roush: It absolutely is. That’s why I love it. I had a sign at one of the previous ones where I quoted Mon Mothma’s speech from the Senate at length. So great. Protester: I have a magnet on the back of my car that says I have friends everywhere with the symbol. Yeah. I’m like, if you if you know, you know, that’s that’s how I look at it. Wade Roush: Exactly. We can spot each other in the crowd. What does it mean to you to be here today? Protester: It’s so special to me to live. First off, to live in New Mexico and to know the the value that native New Mexicans place on the diversity of cultures and, and, and peoples that make up this state. I’m just really proud to be here and to, and to join in that. Um, that, that defense because I feel like everyone, all of us need defense now. We need to be defended against our own our own government. Wade Roush: Thank you so much. Thank you. All right. May the force be with you. Protester: And with you. Wade Roush: Thank you. Thanks. Protester: Thank you. Wade Roush: Would you mind reading your sign for me? Protester: My sign says Ante Naranja Social Club. It’s a spoof on a a brand called Antisocial Social Club. It’s just simple. It’s fun to look at. And I, you know, added the words that I wanted to add. Wade Roush: And can you translate it? Speaker 12: It means Anti-orange A******s Social Club. Wade Roush: That’s what I thought. Yeah. I love it. Are you from here? Are you from New Mexico? Speaker 13: Yes, I live here in Santa Fe. Wade Roush: Awesome. What does it mean to you to be here today? Protester: Being part of a community and raising our voice and joining energy, you know, and making our voices heard that way. Wade Roush: Absolutely. Yeah. I’ve been to every rall

    15 min
  2. 6 Feb

    Whose private mountain? Pueblo artists reclaim Tewa Country at the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum

    Welcome to Turning Corners: inspiring stories about the people and organizations working to make life better in the Four Corners states of New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, and Colorado. It’s a new podcast produced in Santa Fe, NM, by me, Wade Roush. For this very first episode of the show, I went inside Santa Fe’s Georgia O’Keeffe Museum to talk with artists and curators about a daring new exhibit called “Tewa Nangeh/Tewa Country.” It’s an act of community storytelling, meant to both illuminate and soften some of the old boundaries and tensions between indigenous artists and the Anglo art establishment O’Keeffe represented. The exhibit features the work of a dozen artists from the six Tewa-speaking pueblos of northern New Mexico. All express in different ways their love of the vibrant land their people have inhabited for hundreds or thousands of years—and all grapple with the way O’Keeffe, still America’s most famous female artist, repeatedly framed the landscape around Ghost Ranch and Abiquiu as an empty, silent realm that she alone could properly interpret. “It’s my private mountain,” O’Keeffe once said of Tsi-p’in or Cerro Pedernal, the striking flat-topped mountain visible from her home. “It belongs to me. God told me that if I painted it enough, I could have it.” In point of fact, the mountain is on U.S. Forest Service land, and is the site of Tsi-p’in-owinge, a ruin that was the ancestral home of the people of Nambe, Ohkay Owingeh, Pojoaque, San Ildefonso, Santa Clara, and Tesuque pueblos. So O’Keeffe’s quote—even if it was meant in a poetic or tongue-in-cheek way—rings in modern indigenous ears as a provocation. And indeed, for Jason Garcia, the Santa Clara Pueblo artist who co-curated the Tewa Nangeh exhibit, it served as an organizing theme. He worked with curators at the O’Keeffe Museum and with the contributing artists to gently overturn the idea that any one artist can speak for an entire region. To find out how, listen to the podcast using the player above, or find it in your favorite podcast app. The full transcript is below. FEATURED VOICES Jason Garcia, who also goes by Okuu Pin (Turtle Mountain), is an artist from Santa Clara Pueblo in New Mexico who specializes in clay tiles and printmaking. He co-curated of the Tewa Nangeh/Tewa Country exhibit (2025-2026) at the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum. Garcia’s work documents the ever-changing cultural landscape of his home, including cultural ceremonies, traditions, and stories, and also draws on 21st-century popular culture, comic books, and technology. Garcia’s juxtaposition of traditional and contemporary materials and techniques connects him to his Ancestral past, landscape, and cultural knowledge. He studied fine arts at the University of New Mexico (Bachelor’s, 1998) and the University of Wisconsin (MFA, 2016). Bess Murphy, PhD, is the Luce Curator of Art and Social Practice at the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe, New Mexico. She joined the O’Keeffe Museum in 2022, and Tewa Nangeh/Tewa Country, which she co-organized with Jason Garcia, is her first curated show at the museum. She earned a bachelor’s degree from Bard College and a PhD from the University of Southern California, and from 2015 to 2022 she was the creative director and curator of the Ralph T. Coe Center for the Arts in Santa Fe. Michael Namingha is a photographer and silkscreen artist who hails from Ohkay Owingeh Pueblo in New Mexico and the Hopi tribe in Arizona. His work, which often features surrealistically altered images of the natural landscape, has been featured in solo and group exhibitions at galleries and museums around the world, from New Mexico to Arizona, California, Indiana, Maine, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Texas, and Virginia, as well as Canada, Germany, and Japan. He splits his time between Santa Fe and Brooklyn, where his studio is located. He studied strategic design and management at the Parsons School of Design. Wade Roush is the creator and host of Turning Corners. He’s an MIT- and Harvard-trained freelance science and technology journalist, editor, and audio producer who has written for publications such as Science, MIT Technology Review, Xconomy, and Scientific American. From 2017 to 2025 he produced the tech-and-culture podcast Soonish. He’s the co-founder of the Hub & Spoke audio collective, the author of Extraterrestrials from the MIT Press, and the editor or co-editor of three volumes of hard science fiction: Twelve Tomorrows (2018), Tasting Light (2022), and Starstuff (2025). TRANSCRIPT [ Hub & Spoke sonic ID ] [Turning Corners theme music] Jason Garcia: And the image is a portrait of Georgia O’Keeffe standing within the Tewa landscape with the mountain Tsi-Pin, also known as Cerro Pedernal. And there’s a sign that’s a billboard that says welcome to O’Keeffe country. And then over the top of O’Keeffe it says Tewa Country. Wade Roush: Today on Turning Corners, a visit to Tewa Country. That’s the name of a new exhibit at Santa Fe’s Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, where Jason Garcia from Santa Clara Pueblo is one of the show’s stars and curators. He says the exhibit’s designed to change the way we think about New Mexico’s most famous artist and the people who actually live on the land she painted. [ theme music ] Georgia O’Keeffe archival tape: When I got to New Mexico, that was mine. As soon as I saw it, that was my country. I had never seen anything like it before, but it fitted to me. Exactly. That’s something that’s in the air. It’s just different. The sky is different. The stars are different. The wind is different. I shouldn’t say too much about this, because other people may get interested and I don’t want them interested. Wade Roush: Georgia O’Keeffe’s paintings of giant flowers had already made her a popular figure on the New York art scene by 1929, when she spent her first summer in northern New Mexico. She came here because she was looking for an escape from the social whirl orchestrated by her famous husband, the photographer Alfred Stieglitz. And later she told interviewers over and over that she realized right away that New Mexico was special. It was where she would find everything she needed to reinvent herself as a painter. Specifically, a painter of landscapes. Georgia O’Keeffe: The cliffs over there. You look at it and it’s almost painted for you. You think. Until you try. I tried to paint what I saw. I thought someone could tell me how to but I found nobody could. They could tell you how they painted their landscape. But they couldn’t tell me to paint mine. Wade Roush: That very first summer in New Mexico, O’Keeffe bought a Model A Ford. One day she was taking driving lessons near the village of Abiquiu when she got her first glimpse of a rugged, picturesque canyon called Ghost Ranch. She recalled thinking that day, “This is my world.” Years later she bought an adobe house at the mouth of the canyon, and in 1949, after Stieglitz had died, she started living there full-time. Now, I’ve been to the Ghost Ranch house, and here’s the thing. From the central courtyard there’s a view of a mountain with a striking flat-topped silhouette. The Spanish called this mountain Cerro Pedernal and the people of the local Tewa-speaking pueblos call it Tsi-Pin, which means Flint Mountain or Flaking Stone Mountain. O’Keeffe started painting the mountain, from different vantage points and in different light. In fact, Pedernal became such a potent symbol for her that she ended up painting it 29 times. And many years later, in 1977, she was speaking to a reporter from Newsday when she said something interesting about Pedernal. She said, quote, “It’s my private mountain. It belongs to me. God told me if I painted it enough, I could have it.” You can understand why she felt this way. It’s very common for modern artists to fall in love with a subject, to paint them endlessly, and to end up feeling a kind of poetic but authentic ownership of this subject they know so well in every season, at every time of day. Just ask Claude Monet or Paul Cezanne what it’s like to fall in love with a mountain. O’Keeffe’s connection to Pedernal was so strong that she chose to have her ashes scattered over it when she died in 1986. To her, she was its spiritual owner. But of course, she wasn’t. To get legalistic about it—the mountain is on U.S. Forest Service land. More importantly, It’s the site of a ruin called Tsi-p’in-owinge that’s one of the ancestral homes of the people of the six pueblos of northern New Mexico that share the Tewa language—namely Nambe, Ohkay Owingeh, San Ildefonso, Santa Clara, and Tesuque. The point is, indigenous people have been calling the lands around Tsi-P’in home and representing the mountain in their own traditions for a very long time. But the fact is that O’Keeffe’s fame as a painter grew to eclipse that of just about every other artist in New Mexico. In that context, a phrase like “My private mountain” becomes the grist for some understandable tension and resentment. And that’s why I was standing recently in the middle of the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum with artist Jason Garcia from Santa Clara Pueblo, looking at a piece of clay tile that he painted in the style of an old comic book cover. Jason Garcia: So we talk about O’Keeffe country and this terminology, this myth, mythological term, uh, for this area. And uh, one of the pieces that I do have in the work is, uh, you know, greets the visitor as they come into, uh, this gallery space, which is a, uh, entitled tales of suspense number 134. And the piece is called Welcome to Tewa country. And so the tile is made from hand processed clay hand gathered clay that’s been gathered near Santa Clara Pueblo. And then it’s painted with different mineral pigments that have been gathered in different areas of northern New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado and

    47 min
  3. Welcome to Turning Corners (Trailer)

    27 Jan

    Welcome to Turning Corners (Trailer)

    Welcome to Turning Corners—a new podcast offering inspiring stories about the people and organizations working to make life better in the Four Corners states of New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, and Colorado. It’s produced in Santa Fe, NM, by me, Wade Roush. I feel like we’re immersed every day in discouraging news about how our broken politics and failing institutions are keeping us from accomplishing real change. You know, the kind of change that could lift people up and remind us that we really are in this together. But here in the West and Southwest there are a lot of real people doing creative, groundbreaking work to strengthen communities, bridge old divides, reduce inequality, and save the planet. They’re bring their unique cultures and histories to bear. They also bring a uniquely Southwestern type of courage and public spirit, along with a can-do, no-b******t attitude. They’re tackling hard problems—and so they don’t always succeed. But I think their stories can be an inspiration for people all over the country. And I’m starting this show because I want to bring those stories to you. Episode 1—about a groundbreaking new exhibit at the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe, New Mexico—is coming very soon. Subscribe to Turning Corners on Substack to get that episode and every future episode (plus full transcripts) in your email inbox. Or hit follow or subscribe in your favorite podcast app. TRANSCRIPT Georgia O’Keeffe archival tape: When I got to New Mexico, that was mine. As soon as I saw it, that was my country. I had never seen anything like it before, but it fitted to me exactly. That's something that's in the air. It's just different. The sky is different. The stars are different. The wind is different. Wade Roush: That was the voice of Georgia O’Keeffe. She was the most famous painter ever to depict the southwestern United States, and probably the most famous woman painter in American history, period. And when it comes to New Mexico, I kinda know what she was talking about. My name is Wade Roush. I’ve been writing for the last 30 years or so about science, technology, innovation, history, and culture. The three places I’ve spent the most time in my life are Michigan, Massachusetts, and California. But a few years ago, for my first real vacation after the pandemic, I decided to visit Santa Fe. And just like Georgia O’Keeffe, I immediately fell in love with the place, and felt like it fitted me exactly. I moved here permanently in 2023. And the more time I’ve spent here trying to absorb the complicated history of my adopted home city, the more I’ve come to see that what defines this land today and makes it so special isn’t just its air and its sky and its stars but its people. There’s something special about the mix of people and ideas here in the Southwest and about the way communities here think about big challenges. You know how people say that New Englanders are a little frosty, and Midwesterners are super polite, and Californians are friendly, at least in a superficial way? Well, having lived in all those places, I can tell you that those stereotypes are all just…stereotypes, but they’re also based on something a little bit real about the cultures of those regions. And here in the West and the Southwest, I think what you can say is that people are generally no-nonsense and maybe a bit cantankerous, with an independent streak and a deep attachment to the land. That’s true here in New Mexico and I think it’s also true in the other Four Corners states of Colorado, Utah, and Arizona. Now, from 2017 to 2025 I made an indie podcast called Soonish that was sort of about technology and sort of about national politics. But after I moved here to Santa Fe I felt an urge to start a different show that’s more tied to this region and this community. I feel like we’re immersed every day in discouraging news about how our broken politics and failing institutions are keeping us from accomplishing real change. You know, the kind of change that could lift people up and remind us that we really are in this together. But here in the West and Southwest, there are a lot of real people doing creative, groundbreaking work to strengthen communities, bridge old divides, reduce inequality, and save the planet. They’re bring their unique cultures and histories to bear. They also bring a uniquely Southwestern type of courage and public spirit, along with a can-do, no-b******t attitude. They’re tackling hard problems -- and so they don’t always succeed. But I think their stories can be an inspiration for people all over the country. And I’m starting this show because I want to bring those stories to you. The Four Corners monument on Diné land is the only place in the country where the boundaries of four states all meet up at one geometrical point. In fact there’s a bronze marker there where if you stand right on top of it, you can be in all four states at once. What I like most about the Four Corners monument is the way it unites four states with such amazing people, such beautiful landscapes, such ancient cultures, such a huge role in America’s westward expansion in the 19th century, and such unique ways of adapting and innovating for the 21st century. That’s why I’m calling the show Turning Corners. Our first episode is coming very soon, and when you hear it you’ll understand why I wanted to start with Georgia O’Keeffe. There’s an exhibit running right now at the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum here in Santa Fe that does something remarkable. It acknowledges that, from one perspective, O’Keeffe became almost too famous. Her images of New Mexico grew so familiar over the decades that tourist agencies started calling the land she painted “O’Keeffe Country.” But as you can imagine, the label didn’t sit well with the people who have actually occupied that land for thousands of years. Meaning members of the six Tewa-speaking pueblos of northern New Mexico. The new exhibit starts to reverse decades of erasure by spotlighting a dozen Tewa artists, each with their unique way of expressing their love of the landscape. Bess Murphy [curator, Georgia O'Keeffe Museum]: I think there's absolutely space for critique of O'Keeffe in the exhibition…Not an implicit critique of O'Keefe as an individual, but maybe an implicit critique of the idea of having one iconic figure speak for an entire place. Wade Roush: That’s all coming up in Episode 1 of Turning Corners. To hear it, just go to turningcorners.org, or hit subscribe or follow in your favorite podcast app. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.turningcorners.org

    5 min

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Inspiring stories about the people and organizations working to bridge old divides, heal the land, and make life better in the Four Corners states of New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, and Colorado. www.turningcorners.org