Voices of OKC

Jed Chappell

Voices of OKC is a podcast born in the heart of Oklahoma City, recorded inside the brand-new studio at City Center, a space created to amplify the voices and stories shaping our community. Hosted by Jed Chappell, whose own journey of redemption and transformation fuels his passion for service, Voices of OKC shines a light on the people and stories that bring hope, healing, and change to our city. From community leaders to everyday heroes, each episode is an authentic conversation about resilience, faith, and the power of second chances. City Center, located in the heart of OKC, is more than just a building; it’s a hub of hope where families and youth find resources, mentorship, and support. The Voices of OKC studio extends that mission, giving our community a platform to share stories that inspire and connect. Join us as we celebrate Oklahoma City through the lens of hope, one voice at a time.

  1. Relationships Matter More Than Programs: Christian Matthews on Mentoring Oklahoma City Youth

    3d ago

    Relationships Matter More Than Programs: Christian Matthews on Mentoring Oklahoma City Youth

    Most people see after-school programs as activities, games, and homework help. Christian Matthews sees something deeper. As Program Coordinator at City Center, Christian spends his days helping students navigate challenges that often have nothing to do with academics. Behind many behavioral issues are stories of loneliness, bullying, family struggles, anxiety, and a longing to be understood. In this conversation, Christian shares how God unexpectedly led him to City Center, what he's learned about loving people unconditionally, and why relationships remain the foundation of lasting transformation. He also opens up about his personal faith journey, his work as an artist and musician, and the difficult decision to step away from growing opportunities in music in order to pursue deeper obedience and spiritual growth. If you're a parent, mentor, teacher, coach, or community leader, this episode offers valuable insight into what young people need most from the adults around them. Episode Highlights • How Christian discovered his calling to work with youth • Why emotional safety matters for young people • Helping students process difficult situations at home • The connection between self-awareness and personal growth • Lessons learned through mentorship and service • Christian's journey from rapper to faith-driven artist • Why self-love and identity matter for the next generation • What gives him hope for Oklahoma City's youth Connect with Christian Instagram: @hecallsmechristian Learn More About City Center 🌐 City Center City Center champions youth and families in under-resourced communities by creating empowered pathways to relief and restoration.

    30 min
  2. Before They Break: GNWY on Mental Health, Purpose & Hope

    May 13

    Before They Break: GNWY on Mental Health, Purpose & Hope

    Some students are carrying pain they do not yet have words for. They may not know if they are angry, sad, scared, overwhelmed, or simply tired. They just know something feels off. And too often, the adults around them rush to correct behavior before they understand what is underneath it. In this episode of Voices of OKC, Jed Chappell sits down with Jordan Miller and Stuart Bennett from Generation Why, a mental health advocacy team serving students through school assemblies, creative arts, mentorship, media, internships, and purpose-driven programming. Generation Why speaks in schools about mental health, anti-bullying, and suicide prevention. But what makes their work powerful is not only the message. It is the way they deliver it. They use rap, spoken word, dance, live painting, DJing, photography, videography, and storytelling to create an environment where heavy conversations can become a little easier to enter. Jordan shares why vulnerability is central to the work. Stuart talks about the importance of asking better questions and giving students time to answer. Together, they describe what it means to meet young people where they are, help them name what they are feeling, and show them that there are more options than the obstacles in front of them. This conversation is about mental health. It is about purpose. It is about mentorship. And it is about the kind of adults young people need in the room. Not perfect adults. Present adults. In This Episode Jed, Jordan, and Stuart talk about: Generation Why’s mission and school-based work Mental Health Awareness Month Anti-bullying and suicide prevention Why creative arts help open up hard conversations The power of asking students “why” and waiting for the answer Healthy vulnerability in mentorship The WHY Lead program at John Marshall How people can volunteer, sponsor schools, pray, give, and share the work Why students need mentors who help them see more options for their future Links Mentioned Generation Why: https://www.pursueyourwhy.org/ Donate to Generation Why: https://www.pursueyourwhy.org/ Generation Why Instagram: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/mental-health-breakthroughs-for-young-adults-families/id1653016005 Urban Bridge: https://www.urbanbridge.org/ Boys & Girls Clubs of Oklahoma County: https://www.bgcokc.org/ John Marshall High School / OKCPS: https://www.okcps.org/ Chicken N Pickle OKC: https://chickennpickle.com/oklahoma-city/ City Center: https://okcitycenter.org About Voices of OKC Voices of OKC is a podcast from City Center featuring thoughtful conversations with people helping shape Oklahoma City through leadership, service, creativity, restoration, and hope. Learn more about City Center: https://okcitycenter.org

    39 min
  3. Life Needs Vision: Carey Conley on Vision, Mental Health, and Young Adults

    May 6

    Life Needs Vision: Carey Conley on Vision, Mental Health, and Young Adults

    Some people feel behind before they have even had a fair chance to begin. Behind in their career. Behind financially. Behind relationally. Behind the version of life they thought they were supposed to have by now. Carey Conley hears that often from young adults. And in this episode of VOICES of OKC, she talks with Jed Chappell about why vision matters so deeply in that season of life. Carey is an author, speaker, and vision leader who helps people create a clear written vision for their lives. Her story also carries deep grief. After losing both her husband and son to suicide, Carey chose to build her life around purpose, hope, and helping others find direction through pain. This conversation moves through grief, mentorship, mental health, young adults, negative self-talk, and the courage it takes to start. Carey shares how a mentor helped her realize she could create a life with intention, and why she now wants young adults to understand that their life can carry purpose even when the path is unclear. For City Center, this conversation matters because so much of our work with students is about helping young people see beyond the pressure of the moment. They need more than instruction. They need vision. They need mentors. They need safe places where someone can help them see what is already inside them. Key themes in this episode: Why many young adults feel like they are already behind The role of written vision in grief, purpose, and healing How negative self-talk can shape a person’s future Why mentorship matters at every age How to take the first step before everything feels clear Why every person’s life deserves vision What gives Carey hope right now Guest: Carey Conley Website: https://www.careyconley.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/carey.conley/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/careyconleyinc/ Facebook: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC2QiVK5LIIA0CeneDEeAcsw Carey’s Podcast: https://www.careyconley.com/podcast Free eBook mentioned in this episode: Vision is Victory https://bit.ly/VisionisVictory Additional resource from Carey Conley: Keep Looking Up: Transforming Grief into Hope After Tragedy https://www.amazon.com/Keep-Looking-Up-Transforming-Tragedy/dp/0996699929/ Watch and follow VOICES of OKC: Podcast Website: https://www.voicesofokc.com YouTube: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/voices-of-okc/id1847725322 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3nUpFLOsHGVtrN8tZz6nlM Podbean: https://voicesofokc.podbean.com Learn more about City Center: https://okcitycenter.org Content note: This episode includes discussion of suicide, grief, and mental health. If you or someone you love is in crisis in the U.S., call or text 988 for the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.

    22 min
  4. Hope in Hard Places: Jabee Williams on OKC, Violence, and Hope

    Apr 29

    Hope in Hard Places: Jabee Williams on OKC, Violence, and Hope

    What does peace look like before it becomes a headline? Sometimes it looks like a phone call before a fight turns into a shooting. Sometimes it looks like a trusted person sitting down with two families. Sometimes it looks like fixing an air conditioner because the heat in a house is adding fuel to somebody’s grief. In this episode of Voices of OKC, Jed Chappell sits down with Jabee Williams — artist, Emmy Award winner, entrepreneur, and community advocate — for a conversation about Oklahoma City, violence, art, proximity, and hope. Jabee shares about growing up on Oklahoma City’s Eastside, losing people he loved to violence, and the responsibility he feels to show young people that their world can be bigger than the block, the neighborhood, or the cycle they inherited. He also talks about two major pieces of his work: Live Free Oklahoma, a community violence intervention effort working to reduce gun violence and build safer communities across Oklahoma. With Love OKC, an art initiative helping young people tell their stories through murals, creative expression, and public art. This conversation is about more than programs. It is about presence. It is about why the people closest to the pain often carry the clearest wisdom. It is about what Oklahoma City can become when social development matters as much as economic development. And it is about why hope is not a soft idea. Sometimes hope is the very thing that keeps someone from giving up on their city. In This Episode Jed and Jabee talk about: Growing up on Oklahoma City’s Eastside The reality of violence and incarceration in families and neighborhoods Why credible messengers matter What community violence intervention actually looks like The role of art, murals, and storytelling in healing Why development must include the people most affected by it The future Jabee still hopes to see in Oklahoma City Links Mentioned Jabee Williams: https://www.mynameisjabee.com/ Jabee on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mynameisjabee/ Live Free Oklahoma: https://livefreeoklahoma.com/ Live Free Oklahoma on Instagram: https://www.withloveokc.org/ With Love OKC on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/withloveokc/ Juneteenth on the East: https://www.withloveokc.org/juneteenth STAAR Foundation: https://www.staarfoundation.org/ Urban Bridge: https://www.urbanbridge.org/ Boys & Girls Clubs of Oklahoma County: https://www.bgcokc.org/ Millwood Public Schools: https://www.millwoodps.org/ Oklahoma City Public Schools — Emerson South: https://emersonsouth.okcps.org/ City Center: https://okcitycenter.org About Voices of OKC Voices of OKC is a podcast from City Center featuring thoughtful conversations with people helping shape Oklahoma City through leadership, service, creativity, restoration, and hope. Learn more about City Center: https://okcitycenter.org

    26 min

About

Voices of OKC is a podcast born in the heart of Oklahoma City, recorded inside the brand-new studio at City Center, a space created to amplify the voices and stories shaping our community. Hosted by Jed Chappell, whose own journey of redemption and transformation fuels his passion for service, Voices of OKC shines a light on the people and stories that bring hope, healing, and change to our city. From community leaders to everyday heroes, each episode is an authentic conversation about resilience, faith, and the power of second chances. City Center, located in the heart of OKC, is more than just a building; it’s a hub of hope where families and youth find resources, mentorship, and support. The Voices of OKC studio extends that mission, giving our community a platform to share stories that inspire and connect. Join us as we celebrate Oklahoma City through the lens of hope, one voice at a time.