A Public Affair Podcast By Douglas Haynes Ali Muldrow Carousel Bayrd Allen Ruff & Esty Dinur cover art

A Public Affair

A Public Affair

By: Douglas Haynes Ali Muldrow Carousel Bayrd Allen Ruff & Esty Dinur
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Episodes
  • The Fight Over Line 5 Is Far From Over
    Mar 27 2026

    On today’s show, host Esty Dinur is in conversation with four guests–Joe Bates, Matthew Borke, Rob Lee, and Gracie Waukechon–who are fighting against the reroute of the Enbridge Line 5 pipeline around the Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa reservation in northern Wisconsin. Enbridge has begun construction on the reroute though the legal battle has not been fully resolved.

    Joe Bates discusses how he uses his drone to observe the construction. He’s captured footage of the new easement where Enbridge plans to use horizontal directional drilling to install the new pipeline. Matthew Borke says that what we’re hearing from the Trump administration is a forked-tongue message. He encourages folks to stay informed about the legal proceedings.

    Gracie Waukechon says that this issue is personal. In light of the threat that the pipeline poses to the lands and waters of the region she says, “I feel as if my future has been taken away from me.” She’s also worried about the future of resistance in light of a contract that Ashland County officials signed last month for policing protests.

    Rob Lee talks about how Enbridge is starting to break ground on construction of the reroute, but it’s not a foregone conclusion that they will get final approval. He reminds listeners that the oil that passes through Line 5 passes from Canada and back to Canada, which should concern people across the political spectrum.

    Joe Bates is a Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa tribal elder and water protector.

    Matthew Borke was raised in southern Michigan and graduated as a Chef from Northern Michigan University’s Culinary Arts program. Matthew has been organizing for the complete shutdown of Enbridge Line 5 since 2017 locally, nationally, and internationally.

    Rob Lee is a Senior Staff Attorney at Midwest Environmental Advocates. His work spans a wide range of environmental and public health issues. His areas of focus include PFAS contamination, oil pipelines, Clean Water Act compliance, wetlands and waterways, the Great Lakes, Wisconsin’s Public Trust Doctrine, hazardous substances, mining, and open government.

    Gracie Waukechon/Meyāwāēw (May-yow-way) is a member of the Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa and a Menominee Descendant. She resides near the Menominee Reservation with her family. Gracie is a student at the College of Menominee Nation and interns at the Sustainable Development Institute.

    Featured image of the proposed Line 5 reroute via the Wisconsin DNR.

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    The post The Fight Over Line 5 Is Far From Over appeared first on WORT-FM 89.9.

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    54 mins
  • Yo Quiero Dinero! Storytelling with Midwest Mujeres
    Jun 13 2023

    It takes the average Latina, 12 extra months to earn what the average White, non-Hispanic man earns. That is because Latinas are only paid .55 cents to the dollar of […]

    The post Yo Quiero Dinero! Storytelling with Midwest Mujeres appeared first on WORT-FM 89.9.

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    53 mins
  • Public Theater in Times of National Crisis
    Mar 26 2026

    On today’s show, guest host Bert Zipperer is in conversation with scholar Gianni Cicali about the famous children’s play Pinocchio and how it speaks to the vital importance of the arts during times of national crisis, from the 1930s to today. Next month marks the 200th birthday of Pinocchio’s creator, Carlo Collodi.

    They discuss the 1930s Federal Theater Project production of Pinocchio. The play was produced by Yasha Frank with the children theater division of the WPA. The program employed people who were unemployed during the Great Depression and offered low-cost tickets so more people could access the theater. The FTP production of Pinocchio played nationwide for two years and on Broadway until June 1939 when Congress and the House Unamerican Activities Committee killed the production.

    Gianni Cicali is a specialist in the history of Italian theater (Renaissance, Baroque and 18th-century). He holds an Italian “laurea vecchio ordinamento” (M.A. equivalent) and doctoral degrees from both Italy (Università di Firenze) and Canada (University of Toronto). His interests focus on Italian theater, opera and culture from the 15th to the 18th century; Renaissance and Baroque religious theater; cinema; migrations to the Americas of Italian theater professionals (19th-century New Orleans).

    Featured image: of a photo from the Federal Theatre Project’s production of Pinocchio via Library of Congress.

    Did you enjoy this story? Your funding makes great, local journalism like this possible. Donate here

    The post Public Theater in Times of National Crisis appeared first on WORT-FM 89.9.

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    55 mins
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