PODCAST · society
Sidewalk Talks
by Riverfront Saginaw / Storyville
Random people, random topics, talking on random sidewalks in the City of Saginaw, Michigan.
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Music Reframed: SBSO’s “Pictures at an Exhibition” with Maestro Fouad Fakhouri
On Saturday, September 28th at 7:30 p.m., the Saginaw Bay Symphony Orchestra (SBSO) continues its 90th Season with Music Reframed: Pictures at an Exhibition at the historic Temple Theatre in downtown Saginaw. This ambitious program pairs one of the most celebrated orchestral works of all time with bold contemporary compositions performed by their creators.The evening culminates in Modest Mussorgsky’s iconic Pictures at an Exhibition, a vivid and dramatic orchestral masterpiece that has captivated audiences for more than a century. Featured guest artist Kebra-Seyoun Charles will perform their concerto Nightlife, following its recent world premiere at Carnegie Hall with the American Composers Orchestra. The concert will also feature the Michigan premiere of Trance, an original composition by SBSO Music Director Fouad Fakhouri. The single-movement work recreates the driving momentum and “beat drop” characteristics of EDM, building from bold heroic gestures to percussive propulsion led by tambourine and taiko drum, before culminating in powerful brass and rhythmic accents across the orchestra. Rooted in Fakhouri’s personal memories of youthful summers spent immersed in trance music, the piece channels joy, energy, and celebration.Fouad Fakhouri joins us in this episode of Sidewalk Talks to chat about the concert, being a conductor, the power of conflict and collaboration in both life and in music, and more. Timestamps: 00:00 Welcome and Concert Details00:27 Maestro Travel Story01:35 Why This Program Works02:32 Pictures at an Exhibition Explained04:53 Projected Art and Community Focus06:20 Keeping Classical Music Alive09:27 Ravel Orchestration Choices11:45 Conducting Mindset and Audience Energy15:20 Reframing the Score from the Piano Original18:39 Introducing Nightlife Double Bass Feature20:28 Nightlife Journey Concerto21:40 Meeting Kera and Saginaw Fit22:38 Double Bass in Treble23:06 Composer Soloist Dynamic25:21 Creative Tension and Conflict27:27 Socratic Disagreement and Growth29:48 Trance Origins and Rave Days31:45 Detroit Techno Roots33:44 Orchestrating EDM Energy36:09 Live Music Syncs Us40:22 Tickets and Final Thanks
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Local Journalism Matters with Justin Engel
In his first-ever podcast appearance, MLive journalist Justin Engel talks about his history and work in local journalism. The conversation centers on defining journalism and discusses misinformation, clickbait, and AI-generated content, and argues for news literacy and reading beyond headlines and comment sections. Justin and Phil emphasize the value of strong local media in the Great Lakes Bay Region, explain why journalism isn’t free and needs subscriptions to survive, and describe how reporting broadened Justin’s perspective by exposing him to different communities across the county. They close with advice to young aspiring journalists to follow the calling, adapt to changing formats, and keep learning—even when it means stepping outside comfort zones.00:00 First Podcast EVER00:36 Movie Podcasts & First Theater Memory 01:57 Why Star Wars Hit So Hard03:24 Favorite Films: Aliens, Almost Famous & the Power of a Great Scene04:51 Zodiac and Why Journalism Matters in the Real World06:21 Becoming a Journalist: Early Writing, High School Paper & Grandma’s Tip10:37 College to Career: Delta, SVSU, and Joining The Saginaw News13:05 What Is Journalism? Verification, Sources, and Getting It Right16:23 Context vs. Social Media Narratives 19:58 Scanner Traffic, Clickbait, and How Misinformation Spreads22:56 AI-Generated News & Clickbait: Why It Looks Real23:36 News Literacy 101: Verifying Sources in the AI Era24:57 Why Local Journalism Still Matters (and What Reporters Actually Do)30:03 Support Local News: Paywalls, Sharing vs. Stealing, and Sustainability34:38 How Reporting Changes You: Seeing Your Community Through Others’ Eyes38:12 Story Advocate Mindset: Curiosity, Craft, and Saginaw’s Storytelling Legacy42:33 Advice for Future Journalists: Follow the Calling & Learn the Business Side45:21 New Formats, On-Scene Video, and Final Thanks
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28
On the Road (and Back Again) with Jessica Shepherd
From Saginaw to living to an RV and back again! In this episode of Sidewalk Talks, Jessica Shepherd discusses her background in broadcasting and journalism, selling most of her belongings to travel full-time in an RV for about two and a half years, and work-camping around the country. She talks about life on the road and why she and her partner, Mark, chose to return home to Saginaw.00:00 Mic Check & Meet Jessica Shepherd 01:05 Writing Love Letters to Saginaw 03:13 How She Got Into Journalism: WSGW, MLive & Mentors06:02 Why She Left Saginaw: Career Moves to Grand Rapids & Kalamazoo07:38 Selling Everything to Live in an RV: Downsizing & Marie Kondo Mode09:11 How Van Life Became Real: Travel, Belonging & Not Feeling at Home12:04 Workamping Adventures: Campgrounds, Christmas Trees & National Parks14:36 Favorite Stops & Big Nature: Grand Tetons, Grand Canyon & Photography18:11 When the Adventure Felt Like Limbo: Disorientation, Work Challenges & Choosing Saginaw27:48 Choosing Your Good and Bad: The ‘Grass Is Greener’ Reality28:44 Saginaw’s Energy: The ‘Something in the Dirt and Water’ Feeling29:59 Genuine Friendliness & Community Grit (No Pretending)33:21 Why They Moved Back: Home, Real Estate, and the RV Transition35:16 One Last Hurrah: Beet Harvest Work-Camping After Buying the House36:38 Coming Home Hits Different: Love Letters, Old Town, and What’s New39:20 Get Out and Experience Saginaw: Food, Volunteering, and Finding Your People43:00 Stop Waiting to Be ‘Served’ a Community: Social Media vs Showing Up44:53 Quick-Fire RV Life Q&A: Tanks, Shells, Snacks, and Road Trip Anthems51:17 Final Advice: RV Life Won’t Fix You—Run Toward Something + Welcome Back
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Old World Pizzeria: From Fermentation and Rabbit Farming to New York-Style Slices in Saginaw
In this episode of Sidewalk Talks, Eric Shevchenko talks about bringing New York-style pizza to Saginaw with Old World Pizzeria. He talks about the power of food as a way to keep people connected, preserve culture, evoke emotion, and be a vehicle for creativity. Eric explains how pizza became his focus, including a 48-hour research trip to New York eating slices and revisiting favorites. Shevcenko talks about his obsessive experimentation with dough fermentation and hydration, creative menu, and OWP’s burnt Basque-style cheesecake. Eric recounts earlier experiences in Northern California, including raising rabbits for high-end restaurants near Napa and spending time around fine-dining creativity. He shares why he returned to Saginaw to care for his mother, his hopes for local food culture and security, and stories of customers traveling hours, crying, and calling the shop after a cheese slice. They also cover Eric’s appearance on the Netflix survival series Outlast in Alaska and hints of future projects for Old World Pizzeria.00:00 Ergonomic Chair Shenanigans & Mystery Knobs00:40 The Tinned Fish Obsession 03:10 From Preservation Food Co. to Fermentation Roots04:44 Old World Pizzeria: Going All-In on New York-Style Pizza05:39 48 Hours in NYC: Slice-Crawling for the Perfect Dough07:06 Creative Specials, Flop Ingredients & the ‘Burnt’ Cheesecake08:51 Pizza Origin Story: Midwest Shops, Skateboarding & San Francisco11:08 Food Memories, Dementia, and Why Comfort Food Matters13:58 Rabbit Farming to Fine Dining: Supplying Top Bay Area Kitchens18:27 Fine Dining Creativity, Old Town Food Scene & Pizza as a Vessel23:18 When a Cheese Slice Makes People Cry: Nailing the NY Balance25:49 Handling Haters: Taste Is Subjective 26:06 Why Come Back to Saginaw? Family, Roots & the “Vortex”26:46 From Rabbit Farm to Pizza Shop (and Rumors of Another Location)27:24 Old World Pizzeria 101: Price, Ingredients & “Clean” Pizza28:28 Behind the Counter: 5AM Dough, Desserts & Cookie Experiments30:01 Slice Culture: Fast Takeout, Choose-Your-Adventure & Hours31:15 Brother Chad’s Return: Nashville to Home Again32:29 Most Memorable Meals: Fine Dining vs. The People You’re With34:14 Netflix Survival Show ‘Outlast’: Getting Cast & Alaska Reality36:55 Cameras, Panic Attacks & What It Takes to Survive39:43 Ratings, Reality TV Frustrations & On-Camera Lessons44:53 Rapid Fire Pizza Takes + What’s Next for Old World (Wrap-Up)
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Ja'Maiya Ryan is Fashionable
Ja'Maiya Ryan is a Saginaw-based designer and she just released a new collection! In this episode of Sidewalk Talks, she talks about design, her history, and her love of not only designing, but creating accessible and beautiful accessories. 00:00 Celebrating the Win: The Iconic Happy Tears Photo00:21 Behind the Scenes: Finding the Right Fashion Program00:32 Hands-On Craft: Tools, Techniques, and Industry Collabs01:02 From Concept to Collection: The Millie’s Patent-Pending Journey01:12 Why It Matters: A Design Close to the Heart
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Brian Pruitt is Dreaming Again: Purpose, Partnership, Parenting
Brian Pruitt was heading into the NFL draft as one of the best running backs in the country, when he received a phone call that changed his life forever. On NFL draft night, he received a call from his agent that he would not be drafted due to spinal stenosis discovered at the NFL combine, a condition the league was then weeding out because of neck-injury risk. After three years of trying to return to the NFL as a free agent, Pruitt says a turning point came when his wife told him, “I need my husband back,” urging him to regain joy and purpose. He credits his mother Joyce Pruitt, mentors, and close friends for modeling persistence and helping him navigate failure by making his world small, protecting his next steps, and listening to only trusted voices. He explains how he recommitted to his second dream of speaking, took risks, began presenting himself as a speaker, learned to focus on serving audiences rather than impressing them to reduce stage fright, and grew his speaking work.The episode centers on themes of consistency and persistence in communities, relationships, and personal growth. Pruitt emphasizes the power of encouragement—especially from a spouse—and warns about “quiet quitting” in men who remain present but emotionally gone, connecting the topic to male loneliness and isolation. He discusses marriage as an ongoing process of “becoming one,” and identifies forgiveness as essential to sustaining a 30-year marriage, describing vows as choosing someone you are willing to be vulnerable with and potentially hurt by while trusting intent.As a father—who grew up without a present, safe father figure—Pruitt explains his “Superman vs. Clark Kent” view of parenting: children rarely need a superhero, but often need presence and everyday engagement. He says fatherhood has humbled and matured him, describing family as “five mirrors” that reveal blind spots, and offers the idea that fathers can’t be perfect but can be persistent, noting, “The life you’re living today is the legacy that you’re leaving for tomorrow.”On leadership, Pruitt argues leaders are human beings with titles, and home life affects work life. He teaches leadership principles meant to apply at work and at home, frames leadership as influence rather than rank, and uses a “leadership train” analogy to stress that every role matters and leaders must value perspectives throughout an organization. He highlights culture, the damage caused by fear-based environments, and the idea that “if you capture my heart, you can always have my hands.” The conversation closes with ways to contact him—pruittmotivational.com and powerofdad.org—and mutual appreciation for the power of in-person conversations.00:00 American Podcast Debut + Why Long-Form Conversations Matter01:24 Consistency: The Real Key to Changing Communities02:37 Meet Brian Pruitt: Father of Four, Speaker, and Power of Dad Founder05:14 Two Childhood Dreams: Football Stardom & Writing Speeches in His Bedroom08:14 NFL Draft Night Shock11:44 Dreaming Again: His Wife’s Wake-Up Call & the ‘Go Be Great’ Motto15:22 Speaking Life Into Men: Support, ‘Quiet Quitting,’ and Male Loneliness20:07 Marriage Is ‘Becoming One’: Commitment, Seasons, and Growing Together23:41 Building the Speaking Career: Taking Risks, Serving the Audience, Be Prepared28:36 Navigating Public Failure: Shrinking the Circle, Mentors, and Getting Back Up35:48 Twin Dads & Dad Life: Kids, Twins, and the Clark Kent vs Superman Fatherhood Lesson41:29 Take the Cape Off: Kids Just Need You Present42:19 Fatherhood as a Lifelong ‘Becoming’ (The Playbook Keeps Changing)43:58 From Self-Improvement to Selflessness: The Gift of Kids47:09 Family as Mirrors: Kids Expose Blind Spots (Phone, Tiredness)51:15 Legacy & Persistence: Showing Up Every Day (Win the Away Games)57:29 30 Years of Marriage: Forgiveness, Humility & Trusting Intent01:04:19 Leadership Is Human: Principles That Work at Home and at Work01:13:42 Culture & the Heart: Influence, Trust, and Why People Quit Bad Leaders01:18:30 Closing Thoughts: Where to Find Brian + The Power of Real Conversations
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Healthier Me with Alexandria Renee
In this indoor episode of Sidewalk Talks, the host sits down with Alexandria Renee over coffee to talk about local coffee shops, the Healthier Me podcast, and her work in public relations. Alexandria explains how Healthier Me began through Be Well Saginaw coalition partners after Saginaw County learned in January 2024 that it ranked number one in Michigan for obesity, with the goal of encouraging residents to talk to providers and pursue healthier lifestyles. Healthier Me just launched its second season, expanding the conversation to maternal health, mental health, and substance use. Alexandria previews Season 2 guests and stories, including Donna Clark of Emmaus House, Demetrius Braddock, journalist/PR professional Bob Johnson discussing infant death and safe sleep, and mental health advocate Charles Allen.Alexandria outlines what PR is—communicating an organization’s message, building trust, and telling your story—shares tips for handling negative reviews, budgeting for marketing, setting goals, and seeking specialized help. Viewers are directed to watch/listen to Healthier Me on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, and Spotify, visit Be Well Saginaw’s site for local resources, and connect with Alexandria through her work at CMU Health and her business Rewrite Media.00:00 Cold Open: Going Live + Coffee Talk (Mocha Love)01:07 Local Coffee Spots in Saginaw: Live Oak, Red Eye & Why Local Wins02:01 Meet Alexandria Renee + Sidewalk Talks Inside Edition02:44 What Is the 'Healthier Me' Podcast? Why It Started05:28 Season 1 vs Season 2: From Obesity to Maternal Health, Mental Health & Substance Use07:59 Season 2 Sneak Peek: Donna Clark, Recovery Stories & Powerful Guests15:37 The Spiritual Power of Face-to-Face Conversation (and Actually Listening)18:13 Lessons Learned: Weight-Loss Bias, 'Food Noise' & Compassion in Health Journeys23:00 Saginaw’s Obesity Ranking, Community Awareness & Be Well Saginaw Resources26:38 Her First Show: 'Stay Dumb' Podcast—The Meaning Behind the Name27:45 From Behind-the-Scenes PR to Facing the Camera (and the Fear)28:42 Getting Reps In: Facebook Live, Buying Gear, and Finally Hitting Record29:24 “Book Your First Five Guests”: The Fastest Way to Start a Podcast30:06 Recording Realities: Home Setup, Video Headaches, and Why Production Matters31:08 Meet the Producers: JNC Media, the Midland Studio, and Paying for Help33:24 Podcaster Lessons: Stop Overcomplicating and Just Start Talking36:21 PR 101: What Public Relations Actually Is (and Why It Matters)40:00 Handling Bad Reviews: Negativity Bias, Don’t Feed the Fire, Take It Offline47:19 PR & Business Strategy: Delegation, Budgeting Marketing, Goals + SWOT Planning50:12 Health, Shame, and Taking the First Step: Breaking the Loop55:29 Where to Find Her Work: Healthier Me, Rewrite Media, and Final Wrap-Up
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How READ Association of Saginaw County Helps Kids
Samantha Engel discusses the READ Association of Saginaw County, founded in 1966 to help children improve reading skills and discover the joy of reading. She shares her background as a historian at Dow Gardens and the Herbert H. and Grace A. Dow Foundation, then explains why she joined READ in January 2024. The episode outlines READ’s core mentor program—trained adult volunteers paired one-on-one with students for weekly sessions during the school year—along with a structured tutoring program based out of the Family Literacy Center at 100 S. Jefferson using the Barton System of Reading and Spelling for students needing foundational support. Engel also describes the Raising Readers Academy, a multi-week family literacy program that works with parents on practical at-home activities to reinforce reading skills. The conversation also previews National Reading Month events: free book fairs with vouchers for three new books per child on March 7 at Swan Valley Performing Arts Center (12–2) and March 14 at the YMCA in Saginaw (11–1), aiming to distribute about 1,500 books. Viewers are directed to follow READ on Facebook, visit readsaginaw.org, or email [email protected] for mentoring, tutoring, and program information.00:00 Welcome + Why We Love Books00:11 READ Association 101: Mission & Impact00:47 Samantha’s Background: From History to Community Work03:43 Making History Human (Yes, Even Founding Fathers)05:43 How She Found READ + What Mentoring Looks Like08:52 Beyond Mentors: Tutoring & Raising Readers Academy12:48 Giving Away Books + Libraries & the Libby App15:16 Are Audiobooks ‘Real’ Reading?16:11 March Events: Free Book Fairs & 1,500 Books20:26 How to Get Involved + Final Thanks
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Hurley Coleman Jr. & Hurley Coleman III: Providence, Progression, and Leadership in Saginaw
In the podcast’s first father-son episode, Phil interviews Bishop Hurley Coleman Jr. and Hurley Coleman III about their life paths, careers, and leadership in Saginaw. Hurley Coleman Jr. shares his upbringing and education, how he discovered parks and recreation as a career at Eastern Michigan University, and his work with Washtenaw County Parks, Saginaw County Parks, the City of Saginaw (including opening Andersen Water Park), and as Wayne County Parks and Recreation Director for 14 years. He explains how his father’s death led him back to Saginaw, where he eventually became pastor of the church his father started in 1957, and reflects on marriage to Sandra Coleman and raising three children. Hurley Coleman III, Executive Director/CEO of Saginaw County Community Action, explains CAC’s work in housing, food insecurity, senior outreach, emergency services, advocacy, and partnerships with faith-based communities. Together they discuss “progressive revelation” as providence, how diverse experiences prepare leaders for new contexts, and lessons from failure, planning, and strategy—especially entering CAC during COVID-era uncertainty. They explore leadership as cutting a path and building followership, the importance of culture and trust, consistency, and authenticity. Bishop Coleman connects parks-and-rec lessons about seasons and change to ministry, shares insights on hiring for creativity, and recounts how he assumed spiritual leadership after his father’s sudden death. Hurley Coleman III describes how leadership has changed him through the weight and responsibility of being ‘number one,’ and Bishop Coleman encourages him with Romans 8:28. The episode ends with mutual admiration, gratitude, and reflections on fatherhood, mentoring, and their shared commitment to serving the community.00:00 Father–Son Podcast Kickoff & Introductions00:37 Hurley Coleman Jr.’s Origin Story: Family, College & Finding Parks & Rec02:58 Career Turns: From Recreation Director to Pastor in Saginaw04:47 Hurley Coleman III: Leading Community Action & What CAC Does06:22 Before CAC: Sales, Church Operations, and the Road Back Home08:47 Providence & Progression: How Callings Reveal Themselves Over Time13:19 Lessons from the Field: Building Parks, Serving People, Finding Fulfillment17:51 Failure, Planning, and the ‘Marathon’ Pep Talk22:02 Seasons, Purpose, and Hiring for Creativity (Leadership Lessons)27:24 What Makes a Good Leader? Cutting the Path vs. Leading the People28:47 Leadership Is a Choice: Boss vs. True Culture-Building29:40 What Makes a Great Leader? Intangibles, Vision, and Pathways31:40 Culture, Trust, and Why Vision Fails Without It35:43 How to Build Trust in a Divided Community (Warmth + Competence)39:50 Consistency & Authenticity: The Real Enemy of Trust41:31 Called Into Ministry: Taking Over After His Father’s Passing44:24 25 Years Later: Destiny, Purpose, and Walking by Faith46:07 Leading CAC: The Weight of Being #1 and Growing Into Responsibility49:23 Carrying the Burden: Romans 8, Gethsemane, and the Thorn51:53 A Father’s Pride, a Son’s Gratitude, and Final Reflections
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RX Kids with Christina Harrington
A conversation with Saginaw County health leader Christina Harrington about the chaos and controversy of navigating the pandemic and how Saginaw’s approach—humility, grace, and authentic collaboration—strengthened partnerships instead of breaking trust. The discussion explains how that collaboration led to Be Well, a community-wide initiative guided by a three-year community health assessment and funded by a 12-organization advisory board (including local hospital systems, SVSU, the ISD, United Way, the Community Foundation, CMU Medical Education Partners, and others).The episode also details RX Kids coming to the City of Saginaw, Bridgeport, and Buena Vista Township: a no-strings-attached cash assistance program providing a $1,500 prenatal payment and $500 per month for the first six months after birth, with payment via direct deposit or prepaid card. They cover documentation requirements, the role of GiveDirectly in administering and verifying applications, the goal of reducing barriers to access, and reported outcomes from Flint’s two years of RX Kids including earlier prenatal care, fewer preterm births, higher birth weights, and increased engagement like WIC enrollment and voter turnout. Viewers are directed to apply at rxkids.org.00:00 Inside the Health Department During COVID02:48 Why Saginaw Was Different: Trust, Grace, and Real Collaboration04:51 Be Well Is Born: Keeping the Momentum After the Pandemic07:43 Hospital Teammates: Leadership That Made Collaboration Real14:16 One Voice, Real Results: The Safe Sleep Campaign That Saved Babies17:45 Introducing RX Kids: No-Strings Cash Support for Moms & Babies19:29 Trust-Based Aid: Why “No Strings Attached” Matters22:13 Breaking Down Access Barriers & Trusting Families22:42 RX Kids in Flint: Bandwidth, Engagement, and Ripple Effects23:36 How the Cash Works: $1,500 + Direct Deposit or Prepaid Card24:51 The First 6 Months: $500/Month When Parents Need It Most25:24 The Science Case: Income Shock, Brain Development, and Stress29:55 Eligibility & Verification: Proof of Pregnancy/Residency + Prenatal Care Boost32:05 Early Results: Better Prenatal Care, Fewer Preterm Births, Healthier Babies33:57 Where the Money Comes From: TANF, Philanthropy, and State Expansion38:03 Saginaw’s Funding Plan: Partnerships, Goals, and What’s Still Needed39:45 How to Apply at RXKids.org + Final Thanks and Call to Action
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Kristen Squires & the Dow Event Center
Phil talks with Kristen Squires, Director of Marketing at the Dow Event Center, about parenting, frost quakes and trees exploding, identical twin mix-ups, coming events at The Dow and more! Kristen shares how she intentionally returned to event-space marketing and gives a sneak peek at what to expect this year, from hockey and monster trucks to Broadway and Bob Dylan!00:00 Meet Kristen Squires00:20 Snow day chaos & parenting schedule meltdowns01:30 Frost quakes, exploding trees & Minnesota cold-weather stories03:02 Cliff jumping Lake Superior + the “safe risks” parenting debate04:18 When your kid turns 10: time flies and the emotions hit06:20 Letting kids fail & watching them grow08:37 Same kid name (Evelyn/Evie) + Phil’s take on sacrifice and growth12:45 Twins, identity mix-ups & the classic switcheroo stories15:15 What is the Dow Event Center? Arena + theater, and what happens there18:02 Finding the right career chapter: manifesting the move back to events20:57 Mom guilt, work-life balance, and being away from the kids22:28 Parenting a 7-Year-Old’s Emotional Whiplash23:26 What’s Coming Up at the Dow Event Center? 24:59 Why Saginaw’s Venues Matter: Community Energy & Saving the Dow26:45 Bob Dylan Is Actually Coming (April 3)28:00 Comedy Nights Lineup + Learning to Love Live Stand-Up29:46 Family-Friendly Shows: Monster Trucks, Broadway ‘Clue Live’ & Riverdance35:54 Weird Al in July + Where to Get Tickets (Final Wrap)
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Jamie Forbes and Mutual Aid
Join us as we welcome Jamie Forbes once again to talk about an extraordinary mutual aid initiative happening in Saginaw. Jamie shares the inspiring story of how this grassroots effort started with a simple Facebook post and has now raised $17,600 to help Saginaw neighbors in need. Jamie explains the concept of mutual aid, the power of social media in mobilizing support, and the importance of community connection. Follow Jamie Forbes on Facebook to stay updated and get involved in this impactful movement.00:00 Introduction and Guest Reintroduction00:08 Breaking the Rules for a Good Cause00:50 Understanding Mutual Aid01:59 The Origin Story of Mutual Aid Efforts04:08 Impact and Success Stories05:24 The Power of Community Support09:13 Leveraging Social Media for Good11:21 How to Get Involved13:25 Final Thoughts and Gratitude
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Jeff Larsen talks Food and Imposter Syndrome
In this episode of Sidewalk Talks, we chat with the handsome, charming, and always charismatic Jeff Larsen! We talk about Saginaw’s food scene, Jeff's role at Great Lake Bay Health Centers, and the importance of serving the underserved, and his battles with imposter syndrome. We also touch on Jeff's personal life, especially parenting and the unique joys and challenges it brings. Tune in for an enlightening conversation filled with humor, insights, and heartfelt advice!Show Notes: 00:00 Introduction and Jeff Larsen's Background00:28 The Car Salesman Experience02:42 Pizza Preferences: Detroit vs. New York vs. Chicago05:22 Saginaw's Food Scene09:59 Great Lakes Bay Health Centers and Community Impact15:02 Serving the Underserved: Community Food Initiatives16:01 Healthcare Access and Efficiency17:39 Medicaid and Healthcare Costs19:17 Imposter Syndrome: Personal Reflections29:11 Fatherhood and Life Lessons34:20 Final Thoughts and Gratitude
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Arshen Baldwin at Saginaw United
In this episode of Sidewalk Talks, we sit down with Arshen Baldwin, Assistant Principal at Saginaw United High School! Arshen shares her inspiring journey from generational poverty to becoming an educational leader, discusses the transformative power of education, the importance of building relationships with students, and her vision for the future of Saginaw United High School. She also talks about the impact of a new high school building, fostering a positive school culture, and the vital role of community support in shaping the future of our children.Show Notes: 00:00 Introduction and Congratulations00:26 The Power of Education: A Personal Journey01:28 Generational Impact of Education03:37 New Beginnings at Saginaw United High School06:40 Building Relationships and Community08:58 Goals and Vision for the Future11:57 Community Involvement and Support
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Brian Keenan-Lechel
In this episode of Sidewalk Talks, we chat with Brian Keenan-Lechel, Director at Saginaw County Parks and Saginaw Community Foundation's Volunteer of the Year! Why are we sitting on a hill? Why does he have two last names? What's up with the outhouses and kickball? AND HE CAN JUGGLE!?Check out the episode here or wherever you listen to podcasts! Show Notes: 00:00 Introduction and Initial Banter00:19 Exploring Saginaw's Newest County Park02:21 History and Transformation of the Park04:33 Community Involvement and Funding07:44 Wildlife and Recreational Activities10:35 Promoting Local Adventures11:54 Kayaking and Canoeing in Saginaw14:05 Juggling Interlude15:15 Impressive Juggling Skills15:42 High School Dreams and Spinal Fusion17:33 The Story Behind a Hyphenated Last Name20:40 Outhouse Races and ESPN Coverage24:37 Keep Saginaw Kicking: A Charitable Kickball Tournament25:58 Conclusion and Appreciation
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That's What She Said with Christiana Malacara
In this episode of Sidewalk Talks, Christiana Malacara, journalist and creator of the podcast That's What She Said on WSGW! Christiana shares her journey of interviewing over 60 women from the Great Lakes Bay region, the inspiration behind her show, and the powerful lessons learned from amplifying women's voices.Key Topics & HighlightsThe Saginaw community and the power of local connectionsHow "That's What She Said" was born: from newsroom experiences to podcastingThe importance of connectors and building communityInterviewing women from all backgrounds: students, CEOs, founders, and moreChristiana’s “Circle Square Theory” on identity and personal growthThe concept of life chapters vs. seasons, and embracing changeThe “Three Checks Before Saying Yes” decision-making frameworkThe invisible ripple effect: unseen contributions of women in families, workplaces, and communitiesThe value of lifelong learning and creating content that empowers othersUpcoming projects: a book, workshops on financial literacy, affirmation building, and personal brandingShow Notes: "That's What She Said" with Christiana Malata00:00 – Introduction & Saginaw Community01:05 – Meet Christiana02:06 – The Birth of the Podcast03:30 – The Role of Connectors03:55 – Interviewing 60+ Women04:40 – Lessons from 100+ Hours of Stories04:44 – The Circle Square Theory08:58 – Life as Chapters, Not Seasons.10:52 – The Three Checks Before Saying Yes14:00 – The Invisible Ripple Effect17:13 – What Keeps Christiana Going18:34 – Building Community & Upcoming Projects21:35 – How to Connect22:23 – Closing ThoughtsConnect with ChristianaFacebook, Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn: That’s What She Said with Christiana MalacaraListen on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Audible, and WSGW.com
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Sidewalk Party!
It's a Sidewalk Party! Just as Christiana Malacara from That's What She Said! Radio Show on WSGW and I were sitting down for a Sidewalk Talk, Cassi Zimmerman from the City of Saginaw Government walked by. Then Hurley TJ Coleman III from Saginaw County Community Action Committee (CAC). Then Ben Wieland (also from the City), then co-owners of Old Town Wonder Dyann Fulgencio and Isobel Jarema, then Alesha Martin-Lane from SVRC Marketplace, then Scott Rittenberry (formerly of TempleArts, now Director of Studio 23/The Arts Center and Kenzie McLearn Furlo of 106.3 The Core.A spontaneous crew of nine people all serving the Saginaw community in different ways, so I asked them all the same question, “Why do you do what you do for us?”
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13
The Art of Community: Nyesha Clark-Young
Join us in an inspiring conversation with Nyesha Clark-Young as she discusses the impact of the environment on our perceptions, the essential role of art in society, and the intersection of STEM and creativity. Discover how Saginaw's unique gritty history shapes its vibrant artistic community and learn about the upcoming community event, 'The Last Splash,' aimed at transforming the local skate park into a beautiful public art space. This episode is a heartfelt call to embrace creativity, foster new artists, and build a stronger, united community.00:00 Introduction and Initial Thoughts00:30 The Impact of Environment on Perception01:28 Art as a Reflection of Society02:48 The Intersection of Art and STEM05:26 The Role of Art in Saginaw's Community07:18 Creating Opportunities for Young Artists12:25 Upcoming Event: The Last Splash18:53 Conclusion and Final Thoughts
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Ramont Roberts and Saginaw Public Schools
Saginaw is starting a new school, and to help kick it off, Superintendent of Saginaw Public Schools, Dr. Ramont Roberts, joins us for a Sidewalk Talk! We talk discuss everything from the transformative journey initiated by the 2020 bond to future strategic plans to how the entire community of Saginaw can support the educatioan and future of our kids. Watch the episode here or listen to Sidewalk Talks on Apple and Spotify!Show Notes: 00:00 Introduction and Setting the Scene00:35 The Impact of the 2020 Bond on Saginaw04:01 Community Unity and School Transformation07:09 Saginaw Public Schools: A Safe Haven for Students09:40 Supporting and Celebrating Staff12:32 Ongoing Efforts and Future Plans15:39 Adapting Education for the Technological Age16:26 The Importance of Adaptable Skills17:43 Building a Foundation for Future Success18:39 Community Support and Trust in Education20:39 Raising Expectations and Accountability24:34 Looking Forward to the New School Year
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Saginaw Community Food Club and Kitchen
In this episode of Sidewalk Talks, Tina Dowe Swanton, CEO of the Saginaw Community Food Club and Kitchen, gives us the scoop on this incredible project that will increase access to quality food in the City of Saginaw. The Food Club will feel and act like your favorite grocery store, but with a very different approach to pricing. Members will pay $12 to $16 a month—a sliding scale based on income and household size—and shop with points. The Food Club will also accept cash or credit/debit card for payment. Member households can shop daily until all points are used. The membership fee also offers access to nutrition education opportunities.A primary goal of the Food Club is to support those in the ALICE (Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed) population who often fall into the 'benefits cliff' whil also working in tandem with other amazing organizations addressing food insecurity like Hidden Harvest and East Side Soup Kitchen. Join us for a look at a community-driven initiative that's set to make a big impact in 2026! Show Notes: 00:00 Let's Eat Some Baked Goods00:45 Farm-to-Table Delights03:08 The Saginaw Community Food Club and Kitchen04:38 Addressing Food Insecurity05:55 The Benefits Gap and ALICE Population08:33 Community Efforts and Emergency Food Systems13:54 Construction and Future Plans15:20 Conclusion and Final Thoughts
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Jimmy Greene on Marriage, Failure, and the Safety Around Water Program
We dive deep with Jimmy Green, discussing the essence of authenticity in life and marriage, the importance of being genuinely oneself, and the significance of honesty in personal growth and relationships. He also passionately talks about his recent initiative, 'Safety Around Water,' aimed at teaching kids essential swimming skills to ensure their safety, demonstrating how individual actions can spur significant community change. This episode is packed with personal anecdotes, impactful life lessons, and inspiring community efforts. Don't miss it!00:00 Setting Up the Microphone01:00 Wedding Day02:10 Finding Peace in Marriage03:28 Authenticity in Relationships06:16 Midlife Unraveling and Truth09:32 Failures and Lessons Learned10:35 Safety Around Water: A New Initiative11:04 A Heartbreaking Tragedy11:34 Taking Action: The Swim Lesson Initiative12:11 Community Support and Growth13:54 Personal Reflections on Swimming15:04 The Lifesaving Importance of Swimming16:26 Program Implementation and Future Plans17:48 Overcoming Challenges and Pushback19:46 The Power of Individual Action21:17 Final Thoughts and Future Conversations
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Jamie Forbes on Community
Jamie Forbes joins the discussion about the significance of community organizing and its impact on making lasting positive changes. The conversation explores personal experiences, the art of communication, and practical tips for those looking to drive change in their communities. Jamie shares stories about the transformative power of phrases like 'tell me more,' the importance of building relationships, and maintaining a resilient spirit despite challenges. Tune in for an inspiring chat that delves into the essence of community, the value of connection, and the power of collaborative efforts!00:00 Introduction and Clapper00:55 Discussing Hats and Personal Stories01:40 The Power of 'Tell Me More'04:52 Community Organizing 10108:13 Building Relationships and Making Progress09:34 No Permanent Friends, No Permanent Enemies13:52 Changing Conversations for Community Transformation16:58 Reframing Conflict and Embracing Principles17:41 The Importance of Addressing Misunderstandings18:38 Maintaining Relationships Despite Disagreements20:15 The Power of Individual Action21:59 Balancing Personal Well-being and Community Involvement26:52 Practical Tips for Community Organizing30:39 The Privilege of Community Engagement
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Terry Reed: Community & Compassion
TERRY. REED. IS. THE. MAN. In this heartfelt conversation, Terry Reed, the owner of Community Auto, discusses the profound impact of community and personal connections in his life and business. Terry emphasizes the importance of giving back to the Saginaw community that has supported him, shares personal anecdotes about struggles with addiction, the significant role his supportive wife plays, and the essential nature of genuine human connections. Show Notes: 00:00 Microphone Tips and Tricks00:37 Community and Business02:36 Sharing Personal Stories05:03 Impact of Storytelling06:01 The Importance of Peace in Relationships08:05 Sunday Drives with Your Wife11:05 Power of Affirmation and Community Support13:44 Overcoming Challenges and Building Community15:23 The Essence of Community and Giving16:38 Personal Reflections and Community Impact18:58 The Power of Purpose and Belief21:10 Challenges and Perceptions of Saginaw25:36 Acts of Kindness and Daily Intentions29:46 Final Thoughts and Takeaways
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Random people, random topics, talking on random sidewalks in the City of Saginaw, Michigan.
HOSTED BY
Riverfront Saginaw / Storyville
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