Sticky Note Conversations

Erika Washington

To keep my thoughts in order and my to-do lists remotely manageable I create arrays of sticky notes on my desk and wall. New idea? Stick note! Someone I want to meet with? Sticky Note! Need to remember to pay a parking ticket? Write it on a sticky note. Over the course of the last year, I have wanted to create a podcast that allowed me to dive deep into conversations with interesting people.. I wanted to have real conversations that were more than sound bites or regurgitated talking points about fluffy topics. My hope is that each episode feels like old friends catching up. Revealing great information but also humanity, struggle, victory, joy, grief, and possibly, a flicker of transcendence. I hope you will enjoy these as much as I do creating them. Join me here every Saturday as I pull a new sticky note off my desk.

  1. Alexis Hill - "Go Your Own Way"

    1 day ago

    Alexis Hill - "Go Your Own Way"

    Host Erika Washington interviews Washoe County Commission Chair and gubernatorial candidate Alexis Hill during Nevada’s midterm primary season. Hill shares her background as a mother and career public servant and explains why she decided to run for office. She highlights county efforts to address homelessness by shifting to a coordinated regional model focused on housing outcomes, reporting reductions in street homelessness and housing about 68 people per month, while emphasizing the need for more permanent supportive housing and opposing criminalization of homelessness. Hill also discusses mental health initiatives, including reopening an inpatient youth behavioral health facility with 92 beds, and local zoning reforms to encourage “missing middle” housing such as ADUs and fourplexes. She supports temporary rent caps, campaign finance reform, and modernizing Nevada’s tax system by taxing wealth, billionaires, and corporations, criticizes corporate incentives, questions the sustainability of film tax credits, and defines democracy as participation that requires stronger state engagement and county oversight. (00:00) - Intro (02:04) - Meet Alexsis Hill (03:49) - How She Got Into Politics (07:04) - Accomplishments as County Commissioner (12:02) - Solving Homelessness (22:04) - Missing Middle Housing & Rent Caps (27:24) - Campaigning Statewide (30:00) - Why She's Running for Governor (33:45) - Are All Politicians Bought and Paid For? (35:40) - Tax Reform & Revenue (41:10) - Film Tax Credit & Economic Development (45:32) - Democracy & Civic Engagement (48:36) - Bridging Nevada's Racial & Political Divides (55:00) - The Nevada Dream (58:12) - Closing & Where to Find Her

    1 hr
  2. Revisiting: Claytee White "Fight the Power" A Tribute To Dr. Ruby Duncan

    23 May ·  Bonus

    Revisiting: Claytee White "Fight the Power" A Tribute To Dr. Ruby Duncan

    In this replay episode, host Erika Washington talks with Claytee White, recently retired founding director of UNLV’s Oral History Research Center, about how the center was built through training and fundraising to preserve Las Vegas history and how the public can access UNLV’s library archives and digitized oral histories. They revisit Ruby Duncan’s life and impact following her recent death, including her leadership in the welfare rights movement, her lobbying for food stamps and WIC, and the multicultural organizing connected to national leader George Wiley and the March 6, 1971 “Storming Caesars Palace” march. White describes Operation Life’s long-running community work—opening the West Las Vegas library, creating clinics and employment programs, and establishing Ruby Duncan Manor—and they discuss sustaining momentum through voting, policy engagement, and continued activism as rights are rolled back. (00:00) - SNC S3 Claytee White - Ruby Duncan Final (01:50) - Introduction & Tribute to Ruby Duncan (04:04) - Clay T. White & the Oral History Research Center (04:50) - How UNLV Started Collecting Las Vegas History (08:19) - Learning Las Vegas History & Meeting Ruby Duncan (11:54) - The Oral History Project & Documenting the African American Community (16:43) - Ruby Duncan's Work & Operation Life (18:40) - The Welfare Rights Movement & Food Stamps in Nevada (21:12) - Operation Life's Lasting Legacy (34:00) - Storming Caesars Palace & the Multicultural Movement (36:37) - Keeping the Momentum: Democracy & Civic Engagement (45:34) - Ruby Duncan's Legacy (52:08) - Accessing UNLV's Oral History Archives (54:31) - The American Dream & Closing Tribute

    1 hr
  3. Dawn Blagrove - "This Woman's Work"

    9 May

    Dawn Blagrove - "This Woman's Work"

    Host Erika Washington welcomes back Dawn Blaigrove, executive director of Emancipate NC, to process the Supreme Court decision weakening Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act and what it means for Black political power. They argue that chasing temporary wins and constant crisis response has prevented long-term strategy, succession planning, and “inoculation” against policymakers’ whims. Dawn urges building bottom-up power by taking over local governments, school boards, and municipal systems, creating cooperative, self-sustaining community pillars (education, safety, health, food, shelter, security) that can function with, without, and against government. They discuss collective economic responsibility, urging Black people with means to materially support others to create breathing room for long-term decisions, reject leader-centered celebrity politics, fund Black-led organizing, and still vote while holding elected officials accountable and pushing reforms, including Supreme Court reform. (00:00) - Introduction (01:54) - How We Keep Ending Up Back Here (03:04) - Building Local Power & Inoculating from Policymakers (06:00) - Sovereign Spaces & Co-ops (09:04) - Ruby Duncan, Welfare Rights & The Cycle of Fighting (11:27) - Long-Term Planning vs. Survival Mode (18:20) - Economic Solidarity: Each One Help Three (24:25) - Funding Our Own Liberation (42:11) - Vested Interests in Black Pain (53:46) - The Voting Rights Act & Supreme Court Decision (01:00:26) - What This Means for the 2026 Midterms (01:07:22) - Voting Is a Process, Not Just an Act (01:12:36) - Radical Imagination & Strategic Planning

    1hr 16min
  4. Claytee  White - "Fight the Power" A Tribute to Dr. Ruby Duncan

    2 May

    Claytee White - "Fight the Power" A Tribute to Dr. Ruby Duncan

    Host Erika Washington dedicates this special episode of Sticky Note Conversations to the late Dr. Ruby Duncan (1932–2026), her friend and mentor, recounting Duncan’s move from Louisiana to Las Vegas and her leadership as co-founder of Operation Life and president of the Clark County Welfare Rights Organization, including the 1971 protest that shut down Caesars Palace and her work to bring food stamps to Nevada. Erika interviews retired UNLV Oral History Research Center founding director Claytee D. White about why documenting Las Vegas history matters, how the center collected oral histories of the Black community, and Ruby’s multicultural coalition-building, lobbying, and community programs such as WIC offices, a West Las Vegas library, clinics, employment efforts, and Ruby Duncan Manor. They discuss ongoing threats to voting and civil rights, the need for sustained civic action, and Ruby’s legacy of education, equity, and systemic change. (00:00) - SNC S3 Claytee White - Ruby Duncan Final (01:50) - Introduction & Tribute to Ruby Duncan (04:04) - Clay T. White & the Oral History Research Center (04:50) - How UNLV Started Collecting Las Vegas History (08:19) - Learning Las Vegas History & Meeting Ruby Duncan (11:54) - The Oral History Project & Documenting the African American Community (16:43) - Ruby Duncan's Work & Operation Life (18:40) - The Welfare Rights Movement & Food Stamps in Nevada (21:12) - Operation Life's Lasting Legacy (34:00) - Storming Caesars Palace & the Multicultural Movement (36:37) - Keeping the Momentum: Democracy & Civic Engagement (45:34) - Ruby Duncan's Legacy (52:08) - Accessing UNLV's Oral History Archives (54:31) - The American Dream & Closing Tribute

    1 hr
  5. Revisited: DaMareo Cooper - "Democracy Is Right in Front of Us"

    25 Apr ·  Bonus

    Revisited: DaMareo Cooper - "Democracy Is Right in Front of Us"

    In this episode of Sticky Note Conversations, host Erika Washington sits down with DaMareo Cooper, co-executive director of Popular Democracy. Erika and DaMareo engage in a rich discussion on topics such as the challenges of creating innovative social justice initiatives, the importance of grassroots organizing, and the current state of democracy in the United States. DaMareo shares valuable insights from his 15+ years of activism, including book recommendations and reflections on the intersections of race, class, and policies. The conversation also delves into the importance of the 14th Amendment, the potential impact of reparations, and the need for long-term community investments. This episode serves as a thought-provoking dialogue on how to foster a more cohesive and equitable society. (00:00) - Introduction and Host's Creative Struggles (01:42) - Guest Introduction: DeMareo Cooper (05:17) - Defining Democracy and Its Challenges (07:16) - Historical Context and Constitutional Amendments (14:11) - Current Political Climate and Social Issues (16:36) - Community and Organizational Roles (21:04) - Economic Inequality and Racial Capitalism (32:07) - Religion and Social Responsibility (43:10) - The Dilemma of Black Men Voting for Trump (44:13) - The Struggles of Black Communities and Political Disillusionment (47:17) - The Importance of Long-Term Investment in Black Men (54:26) - Building Power in Black and Brown Communities (01:10:19) - The Role of the 14th Amendment in Civil Rights (01:14:08) - Reparations and the Path to Equity (01:19:42) - Envisioning the American Dream (01:22:51) - Conclusion and Final Thoughts

    1hr 24min

About

To keep my thoughts in order and my to-do lists remotely manageable I create arrays of sticky notes on my desk and wall. New idea? Stick note! Someone I want to meet with? Sticky Note! Need to remember to pay a parking ticket? Write it on a sticky note. Over the course of the last year, I have wanted to create a podcast that allowed me to dive deep into conversations with interesting people.. I wanted to have real conversations that were more than sound bites or regurgitated talking points about fluffy topics. My hope is that each episode feels like old friends catching up. Revealing great information but also humanity, struggle, victory, joy, grief, and possibly, a flicker of transcendence. I hope you will enjoy these as much as I do creating them. Join me here every Saturday as I pull a new sticky note off my desk.