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PODCAST · society

Doug Has Questions

Doug Has Questions is a podcast dedicated to thoughtful conversation that leads to better understanding, connection, and inspiration. Host Douglas Olerud draws on his life experience to explore the stories of the people he’s met along the way.

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    Episode 24: Stuart DeWitt; From Trapping Lines To Fishing Grounds In Southeast Alaska

    Send us Fan MailHe grew up in Haines, Alaska with a bike, a beach, and more wilderness than rules and it shaped everything that came after. My guest, longtime local Stuart DeWitt, walks me through the moments that built his edge: early hunting trips, learning to trap from old-school mentors, and the kind of outdoor freedom that turns into real capability when things go sideways.Then we get into the working life. Stuart shares what it really takes to survive in commercial fishing in Southeast Alaska, from gillnet salmon to Dungeness crab and halibut fishing under the IFQ quota system. We talk about why diversification matters, how risk decisions get made, and the wild chain of events that led to buying a 45-foot boat in Hawaii, building a cradle, barging it to Seattle, and driving it back north. It’s a masterclass in timing, relationships, mechanical problem-solving, and being prepared when luck shows up.We also don’t dodge the hard parts: viral encephalitis as a kid, the brutal reality of hospitals full of sick children, the politics of fisheries management, allocation pressure, hatchery economics, and what happens when prices crash. On the personal side, Stuart reflects on coaching youth basketball, building confidence through small wins, and what he hopes his kids remember about work ethic, reliability, and family.Subscribe for more conversations rooted in Haines and Southeast Alaska, share this with someone who loves fishing or small-town stories, and leave a review if it hits home. What’s the biggest risk you’ve taken that ended up changing your life?

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    Episode 23: Kim Larson; Eight Kids, Nine Hours, Zero Quiet

    Send us Fan MailA licensed daycare in a small town sounds simple until you hear what it actually demands: nine-hour days, strict ratios, constant trust from parents, and almost no margin for error. We sit down with Kim Larson, a longtime in-home child care provider in Haines, Alaska, to trace how she got here and why her work has quietly held up families for decades. From Kansas roots to growing up in Anchorage, Kim’s path is full of grit, humor, and the kind of consistency that kids and communities depend on.Then the story turns. Kim walks us through the December 2020 storm and the Haines landslide that took her daughter Jenae. We talk about the chaos of those first hours, the community search, and the strange ways grief shows up later: songs that stop you cold, anniversaries you try to spend out of town, and the exhausting reality of living near reminders that never get fixed. Kim also shares how Jenae’s Playground came to life, turning love and loss into a space built for kids, joy, and memory.We also get practical and political about the child care shortage in rural Alaska: why home-based care can be more reliable than a center, how staffing rules can shut programs down overnight, and how a federal food reimbursement program can fail the “last provider standing” because nobody will travel to do an inspection. If you care about child care, community resilience, disaster recovery, and what real support looks like after trauma, this conversation stays with you. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs it, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.

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    Episode 22: Thom Andriesen; What Does A Small Town Owe Its Volunteers?

    Send us Fan MailA Disney crew, a Gold Rush story, and a tiny Alaska town that had to pull off big-league logistics in the dead of winter. We’re joined by longtime Haines resident Tom Andriesen, a familiar face to anyone who’s spent time around town, and he walks us through how White Fang ended up filming entirely in the Chilkat Valley and what it took to make it happen day to day.Tom shares the behind-the-scenes reality of movie production in Southeast Alaska, from scouting and paperwork to moving trailers, tents, restrooms, security, and keeping sets safe in remote locations like Chilkoot Lake and Nataga Creek. Along the way, we hear about meeting actors, housing animal trainers, and why film workflows looked so different in the 35mm era.We also zoom out into the fuller Haines story: growing up between Seattle and Alaska summers, his family’s Alaska-made art and gift shop hustle, and the fairgrounds accident at age 12 that led to 13 surgeries and later changed his career path after an engineering degree. Tom talks candidly about decades as a volunteer firefighter and EMT, the strain of middle-of-the-night calls, and why small towns depend on people who keep showing up. If you love Haines Alaska history, White Fang filming location stories, volunteer EMT life, or the real mechanics of tourism in Southeast Alaska, you’ll find a lot here.Subscribe for more local conversations, share this with a friend who loves Alaska stories, and leave a review if you want to help the show grow. What’s one moment in your life that changed everything without warning?

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    Episode 21: Michael Marks; From Woodstock To Haines

    Send us Fan MailA kid in Queens watches planes at LaGuardia, runs a small-time “slug” hustle on coin machines, and then gets stopped cold by a store owner and a furious mom. Years later, that same kid hitchhikes across America at 16, goes to Woodstock, and somehow ends up getting paid to draw Bert and Ernie for Sesame Street. Michael Marks’ story is one of those rare life arcs that connects real cultural history to the day-to-day work of building community, and it all lands in an unexpected place: Haines, Alaska.We talk through Michael’s path from art school and CalArts to commercial illustration, then into teaching and arts education programs funded through grants. From there, he becomes Santa Clarita’s first cultural arts coordinator and helps build concerts in parks, public art, festivals, and the unglamorous but essential systems that make events safe and possible. He also shares what it was like during the 1994 earthquake, when “arts department” gear like canopies, chairs, and supplies instantly turned into emergency response infrastructure.The conversation comes home to Haines: why he and his wife fell for Southeast Alaska, how fishing changed his idea of living well, and why he keeps saying yes to local boards and volunteer work. We dig into Elder Rock Lighthouse restoration and the push to open it to the public, plus the ongoing effort to keep the Chilkat Center active, from performances to a Steinway-focused concert, all while facing real challenges like travel logistics, film licensing costs, and even finding a piano tuner.Subscribe for more long-form conversations, share this with someone who loves arts and small-town stories, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show.

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    Episode 20: Charlotte Olerud; What We Owe The People Who Stay

    Send us Fan MailOne decision, one returned phone call, one job opening in a tiny Southeast Alaska town and a whole family history gets rerouted. I’m sitting down with my mom, Charlotte Olerud, to capture the stories people have been asking for for years: growing up between Fort St. John and rural Minnesota, learning to work early, and watching my grandpa keep going after losing an arm in a brutal construction accident. These are the kinds of details that don’t show up in official records, but they explain everything about how a family thinks, survives, and loves.We follow the leap to Haines, Alaska in 1964, when “we’ll try it for nine months” turns into a lifetime. We talk about what small town Alaska used to feel like when freight arrived once a month, when catalogs mattered, and when community was the safety net. Mom shares what it was like teaching home economics and PE, helping start what became the Southeast Alaska State Fair, and then building a family business that grew into Alaska Sport Shop and Olerud's Market Center, plus the unexpected chapters like bringing Sears to town and stretching every dollar to keep it all afloat.Then we get to the moments that changed us: a house fire that forced a reset, the economic shock after the sawmill shutdown, and the high-stakes gamble of the commemorative Winchester rifle tied to the American Bald Eagle Foundation. Finally, we talk about the hardest turn, my dad’s 1987 accident and what decades of care giving really require, from rehab limits to daily pain to rebuilding a life around new constraints. It’s also a conversation about what remains: baking, quilting, passing skills to kids and grandkids, finding purpose, and counting blessings.If you connect with stories about resilience, care giving, entrepreneurship, and Haines Alaska community history, subscribe, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review so more people can find the show. What family story do you wish you had recorded?

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    Episode 19: Aaron Davidman; A Director Explains Why American Solitaire Is About Community Over Fear

    Send us Fan MailA gun store in Alaska. A filmmaker from Berkeley. A quiet movie about a noisy country. We talk with director writer producer Aaron Davidman about American Solitaire and the long road from early theater mentors to a feature film built for real conversations, not talking points.We get into what shaped Aaron’s craft from intense conservatory training to learning how to direct, fund raise, market, and keep going when the first edit feels like a catastrophe. He shares how research trips and interviews about firearms and gun violence led him to a veteran-centered story focused on reintegration, moral weight, and the moments people hide behind a “fine” exterior. We also unpack why language matters in suicide prevention, including the shift toward saying “die by suicide,” and how loneliness can quietly push people toward harm.Then we go straight into the hard stuff: firearm safety, safe storage, training, background checks, straw purchases, and the trust gap that makes “common sense gun reform” so difficult. From the perspective of a working gun store owner, we talk about what can realistically happen at the counter, when to slow a transaction down, and why community screenings and post-film discussions can change behavior the way designated drivers changed drunk driving norms.Subscribe for more grounded conversations, share this with someone who wants nuance over noise, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.

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    Episode 18: Jimmy Yoakum; What If Policing Started With Grace Instead Of Force

    Send us Fan MailA police chief doesn’t just arrive in a town like Haines, Alaska with a clean slate. Every choice gets remembered, every interaction becomes part of the story, and trust is earned one conversation at a time. That’s why I wanted to sit down with Haines Police Chief Jimmy Yoakum and let you hear the full arc, from where he comes from to how he plans to lead.Jimmy opens up about growing up in Tennessee, learning in junior high that he was adopted, and the complicated mix of curiosity and peace that comes with searching for biological family. From there we follow a career that spans ROTC, Army intelligence, the messy reality of post-9/11 activations, and decades in law enforcement during a period when policing culture, community expectations, and public scrutiny all changed fast. He also shares the surprising detour into teaching criminal justice, where phones and AI tools collide with student motivation and what “real learning” even means now.We get practical about what leadership looks like in the Haines Police Department today: body cameras and transparency, tightening report writing for courtroom credibility, reviewing policies and evidence procedures, improving communications tech, and building better intelligence ties to address narcotics and potential trafficking concerns in Southeast Alaska. Then the conversation turns personal again as Jimmy explains how faith informs his work, what “grace” means when you still have to enforce the law, and why he dreams of creating nature-based trauma retreats for veterans and first responders using dogs, horses, and the outdoors.Subscribe, share this with a friend in Haines or anywhere, and leave a review if this conversation gives you something to think about. What part of Jimmy’s story hit you the hardest?

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    Episode 17: Rashah McChesney; From Texas To Alaska: Building Trust Through Local Journalism

    Send us Fan MailA local newspaper can feel quaint until you see the bill: thousands per month just to print, plus a supply chain that depends on flights, couriers, and weather. We sit down with Rashah McChesney, owner and publisher of the Chilkat Valley News, to talk about what it really takes to keep community journalism alive in Haines, Alaska when the old ad-driven model is collapsing and every “easy” fix comes with trade-offs.Rashah shares her winding path from East Texas to Alaska, from music school to photojournalism, from a draining metro newsroom to the kind of small town reporting where you can actually close the loop with people. We get candid about student loans and higher education costs, why “objective journalism” is more practice than promise, and how trust breaks when communities stop engaging and only one side will talk. The conversation also goes straight at the modern media ecosystem: social media outrage, national cable incentives, and why local news gets unfairly blamed for the worst behavior of national platforms.Then we zoom in on the business decisions that decide whether a paper lives or dies: newsletters, subscriptions, community events, print frequency, and what happens to accountability when the watchdog disappears. If you care about local government transparency, civic engagement, and the future of small town newspapers, this one is for you. Subscribe, share with a friend who says “the media,” and leave a review with your take: what would make you support local journalism?

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    Episode 16: Tom Wayes; Chasing Lines, Building Gear, Racing Rocks: The Relentless Pursuit Of Flow

    Send us Fan MailA 400-foot ski hill in Pennsylvania shouldn’t produce a heli-ski guide who opens Alaskan lines, designs technical gear, and races a 900-horse rock car at 140 on dirt—but here we are. We sit down with guide and multi-sport athlete Tom Wayes to trace the decisions, near-misses, and outrageous stories that shaped a life built on edge.Tom takes us from late-blooming collegiate gates to the big-mountain crucible, where Europe doubled as a gear lab and sponsors arrived through grit and proximity. He breaks down what makes Haines so singular—Sanitarium to the river, the sheer east face of Mount Krauss, the Trinities—and how real guiding happens: clear landmarks instead of shadow lines, exit plans before entries, and sluff management that treats moving snow like a living system. We dig into why mentorship and naming runs matter, how a run list becomes a circuit, and how to keep joy alive while making database decisions under a rotor wash.We go further: MI-8 drops in Kamchatka and eight-to-ten-thousand-foot runs over steaming geology. A split-second Sochi rescue after a partner’s internal bleed. The design logic behind lighter airbag packs, static rad lines, and radios you can key through a shoulder pocket. Then we pivot to wildfire hazard tree work—cranes, cat-faced pines, utility corridors after megafires—where ropes, fatigue, and consequence echo the alpine. Finally, King of the Hammers: chassis, shocks, corrected time, winch math in the dark, and what a violent rollover teaches you about pace and poise. And yes, the legendary Tahoe bear story—no pistol, just a SOG tomahawk at twelve inches—that proves skill shows up when plans don’t.If you’re curious about heli-skiing in Alaska, avalanche strategy, technical outerwear, off-road racing, or how to carry hard-won knowledge forward, this one hits deep. Listen, share with a friend who lives for big lines and big ideas, and drop a review to tell us which moment stuck with you most.

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    Episode 15: Al Badgley; From Baytown To Haines: A Life Of Service

    Send us Fan MailA cabin burns to the ground on a winter night without phones. A young volunteer watches a ragtag crew of neighbors save what they can and decides to spend the next three decades running toward the worst moments in people’s lives. That’s the hinge of Al Badgley’s story, and it opens into a rich, surprising life that stretches from Texas bayous to the Chilkat Valley.We start in Baytown, Texas, where hunting trips counted as vacations and a pipeline inspector father taught Al to love water and work. He carries those threads to Alaska: earning a wildlife and fisheries degree, tagging 1,200 salmon in a 12-hour shift, dipping fourteen pinks in one scoop, and piloting fish wheels and sonar rigs on remote rivers. The field stories are wild—helicopter hops in the Brooks Range, catfish that eat doves off a pond—but they also hint at what comes next: logistics, stamina, and a feel for people under pressure.After the house fire, Al leans into service: volunteer firefighter in 1981, then the borough’s paid firefighter in 1988. He levels up through EMT-1, EMT-2, EMT-3, teaches Firefighter One locally so working parents can certify, and builds prevention into the town’s yearly rhythm—escape ladders for kids, smoke rooms, real extinguishers, and “Safety Talk” on KHNS so everyone hears simple, usable advice. He explains modern fire tactics with clarity—why you don’t blast water into the obvious flames, how closed doors save rooms—and talks honestly about the emotional weight of EMS calls in a place without easy backup.There’s a brutal turn: a 25-foot fall from a cottonwood stand, a military helicopter on a sandbar, nine and a half hours of spinal surgery, and the stubborn walk off the ferry two weeks later. Al shares what recovery really took—stair counts, careful limits, community kindness—and how he returned to the water with five freezers, longlines, shrimp pots, and a clear sense of what matters. The throughline is simple and strong: neighbor helping neighbor, training that sticks, and a steady voice when the room goes quiet.If you love true small-town stories, lessons from frontline responders, and Alaska’s fishing-and-firefighter DNA, you’ll find a lot to hold onto here. Listen, share with a friend who serves, and leave a review to help more people find these conversations. Then tell us: what’s one way you’ll show up for your neighbors this week?

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    Episode 14: Travis Kukull; What If A Restaurant Could Feed A Town’s Soul?

    Send us Fan MailA slice of fresh bread on a Sunday night can shape a life. Travis joins us to share how those early kitchen memories, a scientist father’s quiet example, and a teenage “pop-up” at home set him on a winding path from Shoreline to Maui, New York, and finally Haines, Alaska—where Deer Heart now serves as both restaurant and community anchor.We dig into the reality of restaurants after the pandemic—rents, payrolls, composting bills—and why so many spots shutter despite packed dining rooms. Travis doesn’t sugarcoat the math, but he also shows how a different model can work: staff-first training, scratch cooking, menu pivots that follow the season instead of a spreadsheet, and deep ties to local producers. From foraged mushrooms and high-tunnel gardens to buying whole birds through Alaska’s poultry exemption, he explains how to build a resilient, hyper-local supply chain that keeps money (and meaning) in town. The result is food that tastes like place—chicken liver mousse from yesterday’s harvest, prawn-stock paella crowned with cured salmon roe, and pizzas that turn backyard produce into main events.Beyond the plate, we talk sustainable food systems with teeth. Travis earned a master’s from the Culinary Institute of America and brought it home, designing a small but mighty ecosystem where growers can sell a harvest in one day, kitchens waste almost nothing, and diners learn to trust change. He also shares why he helped launch community potlucks through the chamber and how a hot meal can cut winter’s isolation, spark new business connections, and improve real health outcomes. It’s an honest, hopeful conversation about craft, leadership, and the magic that happens when a restaurant decides to feed more than hunger.Subscribe, share, and leave a review to help more curious listeners find the show. Then tell us: what local ingredient or tradition would you love to see on your neighborhood menu?

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    Episode 13: Reba Hylton; How A Tourism Director Balances Growth, Wildlife, And Community Needs

    Send us Fan MailA love story to place doesn’t always start pretty. For Reba Hylton, it began with a mother who worked fields and fought racism, a softball swing that opened college doors, and a gut feeling that life had to be wilder. Alaska answered. Reba learned to read rivers, run tours, and solve problems the way guides do: watch, decide, commit. From guiding and managing Skagway operations to joining White Pass and rescuing the Bennett–Yukon run, she turned marketing into impact and impact into community value. Later, at Skagway Brewing, she proved how targeted storytelling and the right influencer can transform a small business.Public service added steel. On the Skagway Assembly during the pandemic and a dangerous rockslide, she chose safety over short-term gain, working dockside to keep visitors and workers out of harm’s way. That clarity of purpose shapes her return to Haines as Tourism Director. We talk candidly about what Haines wants—and doesn’t want. No megaships. A dock that works better for mid-size calls. Smaller, higher-value cruise traffic. Stronger berth reliability so entrepreneurs can invest. More road travelers, more shoulder-season wins, and marketing that respects the realities of ferries and winter travel.We also go deep on bears, the weir, and the Chilkoot corridor. Reba lays out practical steps: tighter coordination with Fish and Game and State Parks, limiting bus sizes, and exploring a boardwalk to guide visitors safely while protecting habitat. And we unpack Free Ride: why the borough’s investment isn’t just about one weekend’s sales tax, but long-tail exposure that showcases Haines beyond heli-skiing—hiking, carving, rafting, fishing, and the everyday beauty locals cherish.This is a blueprint for sustainable tourism in a small Alaska town: protect wildlife, welcome the right visitors, and build a year-round economy that keeps restaurants open and families rooted. If you care about community, conservation, and smart growth, you’ll find plenty to argue with—and plenty to steal.Enjoyed this conversation? Subscribe, share with a friend who loves Alaska, and leave a review to help others discover the show.

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    Episode 12: Dr. Marnie Hartman; What If Your Hardest Struggles Become Your Superpower?

    Send us Fan MailWhat if the hardest things you’ve lived through could become your superpower? We sit down with Dr. Marnie Hartman—physical therapist, yoga teacher, author, and death doula—whose life moved from the precision of competitive gymnastics to the intimate, human work of helping a rural Alaska town heal. From Orange County’s boutique sports clubs to a basement room next to a utility closet in Haines, Marnie shares how discipline, empathy, and a bluebird pass day pulled her toward a different kind of success.We explore the inflection points: launching a rehab program in a place where everyone knows your name; discovering pain science and realizing pain lives in the nervous system, not just in tissues; and using yoga as a bridge—breath, attention, and values—to change a person’s experience of pain. Marnie takes us inside the making of Pain Science Yoga Life, written to help clinicians and teachers integrate neuroscience and yoga in real-world care. She also opens the door to death doula work and Death Cafés, where tea, cake, and honest talk about mortality make room for presence, clarity, and gentler lives.This is a story about foundations and falling, about compassion as a verb, and about letting joy be a measure of health. It’s also a love letter to Haines: the trust of small-town life, the courage to start something new, and the shared work of showing up for each other. If you’ve ever wondered how to navigate chronic pain without losing yourself, how to talk about death without shutting down, or how to choose play over perfection, this conversation will meet you where you are and invite you a step further.If this resonates, share it with a friend, subscribe for new Thursday drops, and leave a review to help more curious listeners find the show. What part of Marnie’s journey will you carry into your day?

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    Episode 11: Bill Thomas; A Veteran’s Journey Through Alaska, War, And Public Service

    Send us Fan MailA life can hold multitudes, and Bill Thomas’ story proves it. Born and raised in Haines with deep Tlingit roots, Bill carries us from Main Street memories and Chilkat dancers to the hot ramp at Bien Hoa, where a young crew chief learned to keep planes—and people—alive. He talks about flying VIP missions in U-21s, the daily reality of fear, the rare medal signed by General Creighton Abrams, and the strange return home through welded bus doors and jeering crowds. You’ll hear the humor too: mess hall standoffs, a monkey fed on grasshoppers, and the long-running code of “never leave home without your crew chief.”We shift from war to work, tracing how Bill helped secure ANCSA recognition for Klukwan Inc., negotiated land selections, and built a vertically integrated logging operation on Long Island that kept profit with shareholders—roads, cutting, longshoring and all. Then come the policy fights: securing funding for DIPAC’s hatchery, pushing the Renewable Energy Fund that still powers rural hydro and wind, backing ferries that actually pencil out, and delivering harbors and highways that changed daily life. He’s candid about what’s broken in fisheries—escapement first, interception capped, trawler bycatch addressed, and 32-inch rules reconsidered if we care about the future run. On ferries, he argues for short hops supported by road links over a patchwork of costly, empty sailings.Woven through is a call to remember the people who built this place for real: Tlingit code talkers Jeff David and George Lewis—sworn to secrecy for decades—deserve monuments and lessons our kids can learn from. Bill’s voice is straight, warm, and unsparing. If you care about Alaska—its communities, fisheries, ferries, and the people who show up when it’s hard—you’ll find a dozen reasons to lean in and rethink what progress looks like.Enjoy the conversation? Subscribe, leave a review, and share this with a friend who loves true Alaska stories. Which moment stayed with you?

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    Episode 10 Lilly Boron; From Off-Grid Alaska To The Superintendent’s Office

    Send us Fan MailA World War II tent. A Yamaha piano hauled off a swaying dock. Five bears on the playground. A cancer diagnosis delivered in a plastic-lined hallway. And a small town that kept showing up. This conversation with superintendent Lilly Boron is a sweeping, human story about grit, grace, and what schools must become to truly serve kids today.We start with Lilly’s off-grid childhood in coastal Alaska—hauling water, tracking tides, and learning classical guitar in a homestead cabin. She grew into a teacher who could also rebuild servers, write databases, teach Spanish one chapter ahead, and turn a culinary class into a thriving, student-run kitchen. Then life swerved: breast cancer forced a reckoning that later shaped her leadership through COVID, the Beach Road slide, and community-wide grief. She opens up about the day she became principal as the state shut down, the “honk joyfully” recess plan to clear bears, and the daily staff circles that steadied people through loss.From there we dig into the big questions of modern education. What do we teach when Google knows everything? Lily argues for adaptability, stewardship, critical reading, and real connection as core outcomes—especially in a world warped by social media and AI. We talk neuroscience, dopamine loops, and why a tighter phone policy can actually make students happier. We unpack staffing churn, culture-building, and the difference between belonging and ownership. And we reflect on how schools can be the place where joy multiplies and grief is halved.If you care about student wellbeing, teacher support, or how communities stay whole in hard times, this one will stay with you. Follow, share with a friend who loves education done right, and leave a review with the one idea you’d bring to your local school.

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    Episode 9: Joe Hamilton; Hard Work, Human Connection, And A Warranty That Built A Brand

    Send us Fan MailWhat turns a humble birding shop into a global optics leader? A leap of faith, a relentless work ethic, and a belief that service beats slogans. Sitting down at Vortex HQ with CEO Joe Hamilton, we trace the arc from a dentist-turned-retailer to a family business that learned retail on the floor, listened to customers asking for binoculars, and built Eagle Optics before consolidating everything under a brand you now see everywhere: Vortex.Joe shares the big unlock—finding the “bright spot” and doubling down. In their case, it wasn’t a spec sheet; it was the VIP Warranty and the human experience behind it. From fixing glass shot through by an accidental discharge to mailing a chew toy with repaired binoculars, Vortex turned service into stories that spread. We dig into why that works, how it scales, and what it costs when the goal isn’t quarterly optics but lifelong loyalty. The lesson is clear: put people at the center, and the metrics follow.We also dive into culture: hiring for belief before resumes, protecting independent retailers as true partners, and investing in employees with an on-campus preschool that reduces stress and builds community. Joe breaks down “Be the Buffalo”—running into storms to get through them faster—and how that mindset guided risky moves like dealer-direct distribution and new product lines. If you’re building a brand, leading a team, or just curious how a warranty can become a movement, you’ll walk away with practical ideas and a renewed respect for care as a strategy.Enjoy the conversation, then tell us: what company has shown up for you in a way you’ll never forget? If this story moved you, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find it.

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    Episode 8: Cesre McQuaid: A Counselor’s Journey Through Trauma, Faith, And Community Healing

    Send us Fan MailWhat if healing starts with a simple truth: your body already knows the way? Licensed counselor Cesre McQuaid joins us to share how a life-altering NICU crisis awakened her faith, redirected her career, and taught her the power of real-time support. From that hospital room to leading crisis response in Alaska, she unpacks what actually helps in the hardest moments: clear words, steady presence, and practical tools the nervous system can trust.We talk through the 2020 Haines landslide and what it means to care for a whole town under stress. Cesre explains why brains in shock need kindergarten-clear messaging, why fight-or-flight lingers until the body believes the danger is truly over, and how somatic awareness helps people sleep, think, and reconnect. She offers accessible techniques—like a body scan and a “support in the chair” exercise—that you can use anywhere to downshift from overwhelm to grounded focus. For leaders, caregivers, and neighbors, this is a field guide to trauma-informed communication that actually lands.We also get honest about generational trauma, resilience, and the role of community. Funding matters, but so do potlucks, parks, peer support, and a trained Crisis Intervention Team ready to show up when uncertainty hits. Cesre’s story makes big ideas feel human: integrate the past instead of letting it define you; share grief to halve its weight; share joy to double it. If you’re curious about trauma therapy, crisis communication, EMDR, or somatic healing, you’ll find both insight and practice you can start today.If this conversation resonates, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review to help others find it. And tell us: which grounding practice are you going to try this week?

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    Episode 7: Vince Hansen; What Does It Mean To Have Enough?

    Send us Fan MailWhat does it take to build a life anchored in service, humility, and real hope? We sit down with Vince Hansen—former city administrator and borough manager, longtime deacon, firefighter, and hospice volunteer—to chart a remarkable journey from pear orchards in Northern California to leadership and ministry in Alaska. Vince grew up one of ten kids, working paper routes and orchards alongside migrant laborers, learning early that dignity doesn’t depend on status. A teenage heart scare and a startling moment of peace at a tiny concert reshaped how he saw limits, purpose, and the presence of grace. Years later, a cardiologist cleared him, a career pivot took him north, and a Denali summer introduced him to Jancy, whose partnership carried them through decades of family and service.We explore the tightrope of local governance—annexation wounds, consolidation, code merging, and the reality that staff time, not slogans, often decides what gets done. Vince shares how he learned to keep steady under pressure, absorb criticism without becoming cynical, and coax tense neighbors into simple conversations that solved “big” problems. He also opens up about faith as a practice, not a pose: humility, letting go when control vanishes, and choosing to see the image of God in difficult people. That posture led him into hospice work and the profound task of preparing the dead for burial—quiet, exacting service that reframes what a good life looks like.We talk about the fourth quarter of life: choosing priorities, loving grandkids well, showing up for your town, and embracing the freedom of “enough.” If you’ve ever wondered how to carry faith into public work, how to lead through division without hardening your heart, or how to find meaning beyond achievement, Vince offers hard-won wisdom and stories you won’t forget—yes, including an eight-second bull ride and a very strategic exit.If this conversation resonates, follow the show, leave a review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, and share it with a friend who could use a dose of courage and hope.

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    Episode 6: Gershon Cohen; From Philly To The Fjords

    Send us Fan Mail A broken engine, a borrowed wheel, and a room packed with glossed-over facts—sometimes the biggest turns come from the smallest moments. We sit down with Gershon Cohen, longtime Haines resident, potter, scientist, and environmental advocate, to trace a path from North Philadelphia to the Bering Sea and into the hearings that reshaped Alaska’s cruise ship standards.Gershon shares how a NOAA observer stint in Dutch Harbor opened his eyes to Alaska’s scale, how pottery became both livelihood and meditation, and why a single community meeting changed his career. He walks us through the “magic pipes” era of cruise ship dumping, the fairy-tale logbooks exposed in federal court, and the hard policy work of closing loopholes, winning a ballot measure, and proving that clean water and strong tourism can live together.We also dig into Haines’ economic puzzle: why big ships favor Skagway, how small ships can outspend per person, and where a one-ship-a-day model fits. Then we switch from critique to construction—tiny homes built with local wood, year-round jobs in milling and trades, tidal power to cut diesel and power winter greenhouses, and entrepreneurship that already ships worldwide from small shops. The throughline is practical: diversify income, reduce reliance on extraction, and design growth we can actually sustain.Underneath it all is a challenge to how we talk as a town. Three-minute comments were built to quiet people, not solve problems. We make the case for real town halls with shared facts and civil debate across differences—because the pace of change from AI to climate won’t slow down for us. What we can control is Haynes. If we want good schools, steady work, and a place our kids choose to stay, we’ll need to build it together.If this conversation resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review. New episodes drop every Thursday—join us and add your voice to the mix. 

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    Episode 5: Andrew Cremata; How A Bread Route, Big Fish, And A Pandemic Shaped A Small-Town Mayor

    Send us Fan Mail What happens when a saltwater-obsessed kid from Tampa grows up on Cuban bread routes, learns to fish for dinner, and then moves to Alaska to rebuild his life—and ends up mayor? Andrew Cremata sits down with us to trace that winding path and the big ideas it shaped: subsistence vs sport, fisheries and trawlers, faith and persuasion, ferries and bureaucracy, and why access decides whether small towns thrive or fade.We start with family—Florida heat, a grandmother’s stories from pre‑revolution Cuba, and those early lessons in gratitude pulled from the piers. Andrew contrasts the variety of Gulf fishing with Alaska’s raw abundance, then makes the case that respect for the resource is more than etiquette; it’s policy. He unpacks Florida’s net‑ban recovery as proof that smart limits fuel rebirth, and questions why Alaskans can’t keep a single king salmon while industrial bycatch rages offshore.The conversation turns inward. Raised in a strict faith and preaching door to door by eight, Andrew learned how to talk to anyone—a skill he later brought to entrepreneurship, writing for Fish Alaska, and finally to public office. He doesn’t preach certainty; he argues for humility, calling money our “modern god” to explain pharma incentives, health theater, and why polarized media eats communities from the edges inward. Then he goes granular: containerizing ore as a hard compromise, rebuilding trust in tourism with caps that match capacity, and treating docks like lifelines, not afterthoughts.If you care about Alaska ferries, you’ll hear the unvarnished version. Funds promised, studies multiplied, Norway trips taken—and Skagway still stares at a failing float. Andrew’s solution is localist and practical: reclaim control where possible, pair shore power with hydro, and build redundancy before rockslides make the decision for you. Access isn’t a luxury in Southeast; it’s how groceries, healthcare, and winter culture survive.We close on housing and hope, rejecting buzzwords in favor of math. Real affordability is constrained by build costs, utilities, and land; trusts and incentives help, but only if they match a town’s true goals—seasonal beds, year‑round families, or both. Through it all, Andrew keeps the same compass: respect the fish, talk to your neighbors, plan ten years out, and fight for access.Enjoy the stories, the candor, and the practical takeaways on fisheries management, small-town leadership, ferry strategy, and sustainable tourism. If this resonated, subscribe, share with a friend who loves Alaska, and leave a review with the moment that hit you hardest. 

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    Episode 4: Harry Rietze; From Smokehouse Dreams To 4 Million Pounds

    Send us Fan MailA plywood smokehouse recipe, two commercial smokers, and a head full of cannery memories—that’s where Harry Rietze started. What followed was nine lean years, a gutsy pivot, and a methodical buildout that turned a tiny smoke operation into a modern plant moving four million pounds with a 60-person crew. We dig into what actually changed the trajectory: tender service that let gillnetters stay on the grounds, steady equipment upgrades, recruiting seasoned hands from the shuttered Excursion Inlet plant, and the patience to reinvest every dollar until the numbers finally worked.  We open up the notebooks on risk and resilience: the 2017 capex push with a fish pump, ice machine, and auto header while credit was maxed; the decision to move from artisan smoked products to fillet and H&G volume; and the early retail experiments, from a fish-and-chips cart to a cross-border play in Whitehorse. Then there’s the sunshine strategy—spotting a seafood gap in California’s Coachella Valley, building a winter storefront, and growing it with word of mouth and hands-on presence. Along the way, Harry shares how the business stays balanced across salmon, halibut, dungeness crab, shrimp, and black cod, with chum making up the lion’s share of volume.  Resource health anchors the conversation. We talk Chilkat strength versus Chilkoot concerns, why conservative closures matter, and how halibut allocation feels in a world of packed charter docks and airport fish boxes. Harry’s candid about the need for processors to show up at Board of Fish and task force meetings and about the role local processors play in keeping tax dollars and jobs close to home. Woven through it all is a family thread—from a dad’s dream and a mom’s classroom legacy to kids cleaning fish at the table and weekends spent on the water.  Subscribe for more grounded stories at the intersection of small-town grit, seafood supply chains, and real entrepreneurship. If this conversation sparked a thought, share it with a friend, leave a review, and tell us: what would you tackle first—tender service, retail expansion, or policy engagement?

  22. 5

    Episode 3: Rick Dunning; Saying No Can Save Lives: A Pilot’s Lessons From LAB To Major Airlines

    Send us Fan MailThe sky rarely hands out straight lines. Rick Dunning’s journey proves it—line boy in Indiana, a bruising exit from Embry‑Riddle, and a leap to Southeast Alaska that rewired everything. We sit with Rick, now a Delta captain, to unpack the tightrope of judgment that bush flying in Lynn Canal teaches: learning routes like a hometown map, respecting weather more than ego, and understanding that the bravest call is often a clear no.  From there, the story climbs through the regional ranks—Haynes Airways to Horizon—where Alaska’s VFR instincts meet IFR structure, de‑ice systems, and two‑pilot choreography. Rick opens up about the industry’s cycles at US Air: a furlough, a cluster of fatal accidents that eroded morale, and the complicated math of accountability when causes differ but headlines don’t. Then 9/11 reshaped the cockpit—Kevlar doors, hardened procedures, and flight attendants bearing more of the cabin burden. The job became safer, and in some ways, colder. Yet the joy stayed: a late sun over the Four Corners, a good brief, a clean divert executed without drama.  We also talk medevacs and ethics—the calls that weigh more than weight and balance. Pushing for a patient can be humane; pushing past margins is gambling with three lives. Rick’s rule is simple and hard: live to fly the next sortie. Woven through the aviation is a thread of community and chance: a postwar tank farm that brought families to Haines, a mentor who yelled but believed, a high‑school basketball game that led to a marriage and a lifetime of summers spent serving burgers on the Fourth and Friday nights at the Legion. Grit built the hours; people built the pilot.  If stories of resilience, real‑world airmanship, and the places that make us resonate with you, hit play, then share this with a friend who loves aviation. Subscribe for more candid conversations, and leave a review with the toughest decision you’ve ever made under pressure.

  23. 4

    Episode 2: Bart Henderson; A Guide’s Life That Shaped A Community And An Industry

    Send us Fan MailA river can teach you how to build a life—and a town. We sit down with legendary boatman and entrepreneur Bart Henderson to chart the line from Vernal’s early raft culture and Grand Canyon miles to first descents in Ethiopia and the bold move that helped reimagine Haines, Alaska, as an adventure hub. The stories are gripping: a waterfall misread that changed how he leads, improvised jungle rescues, and two hippo attacks on the Omo that turned rafts into confetti. Through it all, Bart’s ethos stays steady—scout, respect the current, and choose the safest line that still delivers the magic.  The second half shifts from survival to strategy. Bart recounts founding Chilkat Guides, pitching cruise lines that swore their guests couldn’t raft, and then selling out 60 seats in a week. He helped launch the flight-and-float model with LAB, creating a seamless experience that scaled to thousands of visitors each summer. At Glacier Point he pieced together land, access, and 30-foot canoes to deliver a lake-to-glacier journey—an experience now framed by the unmistakable speed of glacial retreat.  What emerges is a practical blueprint for sustainable tourism in small ports. Bart makes the case for a one-ship-at-a-time boutique strategy, the crucial role of the Fast Ferry while Haines grows its own inventory, and why the “four ships a week” threshold flips the local economy from scraping by to thriving. We explore carrying capacity for rivers and communities, working with Chilkat Indian Association to ease pressure on Chilkat Lake, and how clear vision can replace fear of becoming “the next Skagway.”  Come for the whitewater lore—stay for the civic playbook. If this conversation sparked ideas or gave you a new way to think about growth, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review. What would your ideal one-ship boutique port look like?

  24. 3

    Episode 1: Duck Hess; How A Bear Attack, A Business Battle, And A River Built A Legacy

    Send us Fan Mail A brown bear mauling, a river business built from nothing, and a small Alaska town trying to find its future—our conversation with longtime Haines, AK resident and entrepreneur Duck Hess is a study in grit, ingenuity, and community. We trace Duck’s path from Oregon logging camps and Air Force intelligence to family logging in Southeast Alaska, the realities of owning bars in a boom‑bust town, and the spark that led him to launch Chilkat River Adventures with one boat and a van.  The story lifts when a chance meeting lands a Royal Caribbean deal that transforms a scrappy tour into a regional anchor. Duck explains how he redesigned boats for shallow water and salmon habitat—moving from inboard jets to wide, flat hulls with twin outboards and twin tunnels—reducing suction, pushing through five inches of water, and setting a standard other operators now follow. Not everything came easy. He opens up about conservation fights, expensive wake studies, and the unglamorous truth of entrepreneurship: legal bills, training captains on a living river, and making it right for guests when things go wrong.  Through it all runs a love for Haines that never fades. Duck shares why local storytelling beats scripts, how he tailors Duck’s Dynasty Tour for accessibility and weather, and what steady, predictable tourism—one large ship at a time, four to five days a week—could do for restaurants, year‑round jobs, and young families. The memories of his late friend Ron Martin add warmth, mischief, and heart, reminding us that community is the real safety net in remote places.  If you care about Alaska, small‑town economies, responsible tourism, and the craft of building something that lasts, this one will stay with you. Subscribe, share with a friend who loves Alaska stories, and leave a review telling us where you land on the big question: how should Haines balance growth and wildness?

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Doug Has Questions is a podcast dedicated to thoughtful conversation that leads to better understanding, connection, and inspiration. Host Douglas Olerud draws on his life experience to explore the stories of the people he’s met along the way.

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Doug Has Questions currently has 24 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

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Doug Has Questions is a podcast dedicated to thoughtful conversation that leads to better understanding, connection, and inspiration. Host Douglas Olerud draws on his life experience to explore the stories of the people he’s met along the way.

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Doug Has Questions has 24 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

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Doug Has Questions is created and hosted by Douglas.
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