Make the Impossible Possible: Lynchburg, VA (pop. 79,697) PART 1 episode artwork

EPISODE · Jan 9, 2023 · 1H 2M

Make the Impossible Possible: Lynchburg, VA (pop. 79,697) PART 1

from Small Town Big Arts · host Media Squatch

This month and next month, I am excited to share a part of my own story. From 2012 to 2015 I was straddling a tenure track position at a liberal arts college while also running a small theatre company here in Lynchburg, VA (pop. 79,697). I was plugged into the arts locally (I grew up in a nearby county) and I was very aware of the Academy of Fine Arts (later renamed the Academy Center of the Arts) and its efforts to restore a historic theatre that had laid dormant for nearly 60 years. The project all in all would cost a total of 30 million dollars and the efforts to build belief around its viability had stalled. The narrative in Lynchburg was that this project was just not possible. I too believed this narrative until some important community leaders that I speak with over the next two episodes changed my mind. In 2015 I would take a leap of faith and leave my teaching position and my theatre company to become the Executive Director of the organization. I was lucky enough to become a part of a team that changed the organization's narrative and made the impossible possible. Over two podcasts I interview some key board members that were part of an organizational transformation that lead the Academy Center of the Arts out of a period of austerity, negativity, and debt and into an era that would see a completed 30 million dollar restoration project, the quadrupling of its operating budget, and emerge debt free. How did this happen? Hear from a group of leaders who through volunteerism provided expertise and credibility to a struggling but important community project and changed the culture of the institution and perhaps even the wider community. In Part 1 (January 2023), we will speak with three former Academy board members. Sackett Wood (CEO of Moore and Giles, former board president), George Dawson (retired CEO of Centra Health and former chairmen of the capital campaign for the theatre), and John Fees (retired Executive Chairman of BWXT and former board member/fundraiser/construction committee member). These former board member discuss how credibility was brought to both the capital project and the organization and how organizational change in a small town arts organization can happen.

This month and next month, I am excited to share a part of my own story. From 2012 to 2015 I was straddling a tenure track position at a liberal arts college while also running a small theatre company here in Lynchburg, VA (pop. 79,697). I was plugged into the arts locally (I grew up in a nearby county) and I was very aware of the Academy of Fine Arts (later renamed the Academy Center of the Arts) and its efforts to restore a historic theatre that had laid dormant for nearly 60 years. The project all in all would cost a total of 30 million dollars and the efforts to build belief around its viability had stalled. The narrative in Lynchburg was that this project was just not possible. I too believed this narrative until some important community leaders that I speak with over the next two episodes changed my mind. In 2015 I would take a leap of faith and leave my teaching position and my theatre company to become the Executive Director of the organization. I was lucky enough to become a part of a team that changed the organization's narrative and made the impossible possible. Over two podcasts I interview some key board members that were part of an organizational transformation that lead the Academy Center of the Arts out of a period of austerity, negativity, and debt and into an era that would see a completed 30 million dollar restoration project, the quadrupling of its operating budget, and emerge debt free. How did this happen? Hear from a group of leaders who through volunteerism provided expertise and credibility to a struggling but important community project and changed the culture of the institution and perhaps even the wider community. In Part 1 (January 2023), we will speak with three former Academy board members. Sackett Wood (CEO of Moore and Giles, former board president), George Dawson (retired CEO of Centra Health and former chairmen of the capital campaign for the theatre), and John Fees (retired Executive Chairman of BWXT and former board member/fundraiser/construction committee member). These former board member discuss how credibility was brought to both the capital project and the organization and how organizational change in a small town arts organization can happen.

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Make the Impossible Possible: Lynchburg, VA (pop. 79,697) PART 1

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Big Old Life: Heather Blackbird interviews people on planet earth. Heather Blackbird loves asking questions. This podcast is a learning experience. Join me, Heather Blackbird, as I talk to people about their lives. Frequency of new episodes is a little all over the place and I'm learning as I go. Big Old Life is a small way of talking about the vastness of life, one person at a time. If you are reading this or found this podcast it's probably because someone you know gave you a link to it. :) Explicit Dawg Town Jeff Farris Just a couple of bros riffing the bits with no direction but to entertain after a long day of working the grocery store. Enjoy. Explicit Chinook Realm Religion and crime collide when a gruesome murder rocks the isolated community of Chinook, Montana. Local Deputy Ruth Vogel thought she was answering a routine animal control call, only to find a mangled corpse on the frozen embankment. Her small town is whipped into a frenzy and everyone is quick to point their fingers at a drug-addicted teenager, but Ruth suspects connections to a powerful religious group. Enter Agent Loro, an enigmatic FBI investigator tracking an evangelical cult that may have roots right here in Chinook. Loro and Ruth form a cautious partnership to find the killer—but as the mystery winds through Ruth’s life, her family, and her church, she’ll discover something more sinister than murder is afoot.Binge all episodes of Chinook exclusively and ad-free by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Start your free trial by wondery.com/links/chinook v Explicit Southern Senpais Nicholas Killian and Derek Johnson II Far from the far East, two American Southerners explore Japanese culture in Southern Senpais! Hosted by Derek Johnson (@derek.johnsonii) and Nicholas Killian (@nicholaskilliann), they discuss popular Japanese anime, manga, and video games from a Southern eye. Tune in as they navigate the culture from the perspective of two guys that grew up in small rural towns! Explicit

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This episode was published on January 9, 2023.

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This month and next month, I am excited to share a part of my own story. From 2012 to 2015 I was straddling a tenure track position at a liberal arts college while also running a small theatre company here in Lynchburg, VA (pop. 79,697). I was...

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