Compost, Cotton & Cornrows

Dominique Drakeford

Compost, Cotton & Cornrows is a podcast centering Black sustainability leaders across fashion, agriculture, wellbeing and beyond. Through storytelling, culture, and climate conversations, the show explores how ancestral wisdom and modern practices can cultivate regenerative futures. Hosted by Dominique Drakeford, each episode unearths powerful insights that shift the narrative of environmental justice.

  1. 9H AGO

    Episode 30 | The Black School: A Copper-Colored Schoolhouse Rooted in Self-Determination, Joy, Art & Radical Black Education in New Orleans’ Seventh Ward

    In this impact interview, Dominique Drakeford sits with Shani Peters and Joseph Cuillier, co-directors of The Black School in New Orleans, to explore what it truly means to build a Black-led institution rooted in care, love, and collective imagination. Drawing from the wisdom of bell hooks, Malcolm X, Paulo Freire, and the Black radical tradition, they unpack sustainability not as maintenance of broken systems, but as the commitment to making what is good last for our people, our communities, and the land. From their foundational questions “What do you love about your community” and “What do you want to change about your community” to their belief that Black youth are already experts of their own realities, this conversation reframes education as a communal, creative, and liberatory practice Grounded as a physical schoolhouse in the Seventh Ward, one of the oldest Black neighborhoods in the country, Shani and Joseph speak candidly about generational trauma, Hurricane Katrina, environmental chaos, and the realities young people face stepping into adulthood at this moment in history. They share how The Black School responds with a holistic, constellational approach that connects land, food, art, economics, spirit and joy, alongside tools like the Black School Process Deck that make Black radical frameworks accessible and actionable. This episode is a powerful meditation on building institutions that do not replicate harmful models, but instead protect Black space, honor joy as resistance and invite community ownership as a pathway to true sustainability and self-determination.  https://theblack.school/ Compost, Cotton & Cornrows: the space where Black & Afro-Indigenous Vanguards are redefining sustainability through storytelling! @Compost_Cotton_Cornrows

    51 min
  2. DEC 24

    Episode 29 | From Red Bottoms to Rich Soil: Niya Brown Matthews on Healing Through Growing, Building Community and Finding Your “Why” as a Self-Taught First-Generation Farmer in ATL

    In this episode of Compost, Cotton & Cornrows, Dominique Drakeford sits with Niya Brown Matthews, a self-taught, first-generation farmer and community educator. Niya reframes growing as a practice of awareness and responsibility. The garden becomes a living classroom, teaching us to observe patterns, respect timing and respond instead of control. Sustainability, she explains, is bigger than self. It is legacy, alignment, and community stewardship. When we strip away perfectionism and curated aesthetics, we are left with the essential question: why are we doing this, and can it last? Nature answers when we are present enough to listen. Niya’s journey reflects range and resolve. She speaks of her pivot from a fast-paced corporate life in Atlanta filled with red bottoms, boardrooms and constant motion to building a farm space alongside her husband during the pandemic with the intention to heal, slow down and restore their relationship to food. That choice reshaped their health, clarified their purpose and deepened their responsibility to the community. Growing food is named for what it is: an urgent and necessary currency. One that builds resilience, restores health and strengthens community power. If we pay attention to the land, the body, and the climate, the future gives us aligned instruction.  Compost, Cotton & Cornrows: the space where Black & Afro-Indigenous Vanguards are redefining sustainability through storytelling! @Compost_Cotton_Cornrows

    40 min
  3. DEC 17

    Episode 28 | Jordan King: A 23-Year-Old Jamaican Scientist With a Master’s in Biology Doing Climate Research in the Everglades While Rockin’ a Nature Grill

    Jordan King steps into Compost, Cotton & Cornrows as proof that climate science does not have to be sterile, inaccessible or stripped of culture to be credible. Jamaican-born and trained in Marine Environmental Sciences and Biology, Jordan reframes the Everglades not as a distant wetland, but as a living system under siege by climate change, unchecked development, and disrupted freshwater flow. From flocculent organic matter to the importance and impact of carbon, Jordan translates complex ecological processes into truth you can feel, making it painfully clear how one shift in the system sets off a chain reaction that touches everything downstream including us. But this conversation is not just about science. It is about who gets to be a scientist. This 23 year old with a beautiful nature inspired grill weaves rap, fashion, art and cultural expression into research, rejecting the idea that brilliance must look buttoned-up to be valid. We talk about free graduate education, fieldwork waist-deep in Everglades water and why Gen Zers are hungry to engage with climate work when they can finally see themselves reflected in it. This episode is about advocating for ecosystems, telling the truth about climate systems and using every tool available to reach people where they are.  Compost, Cotton & Cornrows: the space where Black & Afro-Indigenous Vanguards are redefining sustainability through storytelling! @Compost_Cotton_Cornrows

    37 min
  4. DEC 10

    Episode 27 | Coochie, Culture & Colonialism: Jasmine Duke Remixes the Alchemy of Herbal Women’s Wellness

    Jazmin Duke enters this conversation like a wellness renegade dismantling everything we thought we knew about our bodies, our cravings and the colonial food systems that dictate them. She traces her journey from a painful menstrual cycle to a plant-powered lifestyle rooted in ancestral science, exposing the violent parallels between animal agriculture and slavery and asking a searing question: If our ancestors turned scraps into soul food under captivity, why are we still eating what they were forced to eat - now that we have the freedom and knowledge to evolve? As a longtime vegan, Jazmin breaks down the genius of Black herbal lineage, menstrual sovereignty and the radical truth that women’s wellness is not new, it really is memory. And she does it with unapologetic cultural flair that’s reminding us that Black women have always been the blueprint, always been the botanists, and always been the ones remixing survival into brilliance. But Jazmin doesn’t just remember, she is unapologetically building. In a landscape where the women’s wellness industry is overwhelmingly white and clinically sterile, she conjures Kitty Coo - a luxury women’s wellness brand that refuses to flatten femininity into beige minimalism. Her products feel like ancestral alchemy dipped in neon: vibrant packaging, playful design and her girly-girl aesthetic that is as scientific as it is spiritual, as joyful as it is rebellious. From okra’s hidden legacy as an ancestral aphrodisiac to the microbiome as a blueprint of liberation, Jazmin reveals how pleasure, period health and sexual literacy are political acts and why Black women cannot be erased from an industry they created. This is most certainly a cute conversation about self-care but it’s also a reclamation of knowledge, power and divine intelligence that feels like someone finally turned the lights back on. https://kittycoowellness.com/ Compost, Cotton & Cornrows: the space where Black & Afro-Indigenous Vanguards are redefining sustainability through storytelling! @Compost_Cotton_Cornrows

    49 min
  5. DEC 3

    Episode 26 | Stories Make Markets: Sherrell Dorsey on Strategies for Funding Futures and the Politics of Climate Tech

    Sherrell Dorsey enters this conversation with the certainty and clarity that sustainability is a return to our original intelligence and is the design lab where climate tech, capital, innovation and narrative control decide who gets to build tomorrow. In this episode she traces the ways climate action becomes transformative when rooted in storytelling, culture and technological fluency. Sherrell breaks down how fashion, beauty and wellness shaped her early understanding of systems and how those nonlinear experiences led her into the climate tech landscape. She explains that sustainability demands a deep reconnection to self and to the earth and insists that we already possess the regenerative solutions we need. The real barrier is not innovation but access and subsequently the power that money brings. Sherrell details the importance of learning how technology moves, who funds it and how narratives create entire worlds that shape our desires, economies and sense of possibility. As the conversation unfolds Sherrell reveals the urgent need for Black communities to unapologetically show up with precision in policy rooms, funding environments and climate negotiations. She examines the emerging universe of green tech investments, the rise of climate funds and the limitations of venture capital for long term climate solutions. Sherrell offers a strategic framework for negotiating community benefit agreements, building institutional power and moving from reaction to proactive civic engagement that’s also rooted in care. She argues that AI and climate technology will determine economic mobility for the next decade and warns that the train has already left the station. This episode calls listeners to build relationships, become fluent in the language of power and step into rooms that were not designed with us in mind. It is a masterclass in understanding sustainability as an ecosystem of storytelling, infrastructure and political strategy. https://www.sherrelldorsey.com/ Compost, Cotton & Cornrows: the space where Black & Afro-Indigenous Vanguards are redefining sustainability through storytelling! @Compost_Cotton_Cornrows

    53 min
  6. JUL 3

    Episode 24 | She’s Been Fighting for the Planet Since She Was 8 — Now Maya Penn’s Environmental Animated Short Is In Collaboration with Viola Davis & Whoopi Goldberg

    In this vivid and electric episode of Compost, Cotton & Cornrows, Dominique Drakeford is joined by the incomparable Maya Penn — youth climate solutionist, award-winning animator, founder, and unapologetic disruptor shifting culture through creativity and care. Maya opens up about the realities and responsibilities of being a youth activist at the forefront of climate justice — carving space in a movement that often tokenizes youth while demanding labor without systemic support. With nearly two decades of experience (yes, starting at age 8), Maya reflects on how her early curiosity became a catalyst for global advocacy — and why today’s youth activism must go beyond awareness to radically rebuild systems from the root. They dive deep into the need to center climate justice — not as a trend, but as the core framework for collective liberation — reminding us that climate is not a siloed issue, it’s the multiplying force behind everything we care about. Maya also shares her passion for animation as activism, lifting the veil on her groundbreaking film ASALI: Power of the Pollinators — a visually lush, emotionally charged environmental short she wrote, directed, and animated, featuring a powerhouse cast (Whoopi Goldberg, Viola Davis, and more). Through Upendo Productions, Maya is proving that art, especially from the margins, can shift the world. Tune in for a journey into: 🌀 The growing pains and power of Gen Z climate leadership 🌺 ASALI: Power of the Pollinators and animation as climate education 🛑 How environmental injustice shows up community and conversation 📣 Why we must center climate justice — not just “climate change” 🖤 Storytelling, cultural preservation, and the spiritual nature of sustainability This episode is a love letter to young visionaries — and a reminder that the revolution will be illustrated. https://mayasideas.com/ https://www.asali.movie/ Compost, Cotton & Cornrows: the space where Black & Afro-Indigenous Vanguards are redefining sustainability through storytelling! @Compost_Cotton_Cornrows

    46 min
  7. JUN 26

    Episode 23 | Abena Boamah-Acheampong Ain’t Here for Ashiness: Leading Ethical Beauty with Ghanaian Shea Butter & Radical Supply Chain Care

    What happens when you infuse radical transparency, ancestral ingredients, and community-rooted ethics into the beauty game? You get HanaHana Beauty—and a founder like Abena Boamah-Acheampong who's shaking the table with intention. In this dynamic episode of Compost, Cotton & Cornrows, Dominique Drakeford dives deep with Abena to explore the spiritual, political, and deeply personal layers of building a brand that refuses to compromise. From sourcing shea butter directly from cooperatives in Ghana and paying double the asking price, to redefining what it means to sustain—not just the earth, but the people behind the product—Abena doesn’t just talk the talk, she walks it with grace and grit. This isn’t your average clean beauty convo. It’s a powerful meditation on ethical sourcing, supply chain storytelling, and dismantling beauty industry norms with the audacity to be real. They unpack: ✨ The sacred power of simplicity in Black body care ✨ Why marketing must reflect the diversity of Blackness ✨ The tension between financial growth and founder sustainability ✨ Healing through community, faith, and the beauty rituals of our elders ✨ Unlearning overconsumption and resisting the Amazonification of our needs If you’ve ever felt the pull to align your beauty practice with your values—or you’re a founder striving to do business differently—this episode is your balm and your blueprint. hanahanabeauty.com  Compost, Cotton & Cornrows: the space where Black & Afro-Indigenous Vanguards are redefining sustainability through storytelling! @Compost_Cotton_Cornrows

    43 min
5
out of 5
8 Ratings

About

Compost, Cotton & Cornrows is a podcast centering Black sustainability leaders across fashion, agriculture, wellbeing and beyond. Through storytelling, culture, and climate conversations, the show explores how ancestral wisdom and modern practices can cultivate regenerative futures. Hosted by Dominique Drakeford, each episode unearths powerful insights that shift the narrative of environmental justice.

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