Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Join us for a live show August 9th


Join the We Stay Woke crew tonite at 6pm CST/ 7pmEST 3pmPST on the 3rd anniversary of Mike Brown Jr. to discuss the last 3 years of activism. 

Listen at https://www.zenolive.com/hot1037jamz or call 701-719-7698to listen & or press 5 to talk. #mikebrownanniversary #WeStayWoke #TruthTellingFerguson



featuring Aurora Harris - Co-Founder of We the People of Detroit


Rev. Anthony Grimes - Director of Campaigns, Fellowship of Reconciliation 

Chrissi Jackson - Assistant Director of The Truth Telling Project Ferguson


Aaron Googins, Black Lives Matter, D.C.


Kayla Reed, Ferguson Action Council




Featuring Music by Bates and Sauce records

Friday, July 28, 2017

All Manner of Speaking Episode 4.1




We are back after a short hiatus.   Episode four features the Aziza Binti- a St.Louis Film-maker and activist with Kristine Hendrix on the hot-seat and the same We Stay Woke crew from left to right - Dave, Adam Stone, Gabby Burks and Wavey Wayne.
Kristine is a Ferguson protestor, and recently elected member of the University City School Board.








Continuing with our format, we asked Kristine what she was reading and watching. Extraordinarily, Kristine came across the autobiography of Angela Davis when cleaning out her grandmothers belongings; it was a gift she continues to treasure.

In a time of social movements that address the deep injustices and often the our very survival, the stories of our elders have to speak to us.

When we asked Kristine what was she listening to and watching she pointed out the film "Spook Who Sat by the Door".  Click here to watch the film in its entirety.

To listen to this episode click here 


This film came out of the blaxploitation era, but speaks to what what some suggest is playing the master's game toward liberation.  Audre Lourde suggests the masters tools cannot be used, less we become just like the master.  Click here to read more about Audre's argument.

We hope you enjoy this episode.  Follow us on twitter & instagram @westaywoke2k and join the convo on fb at https://www.facebook.com/WeStayWoke/
Email us at WeStayWoke2k@gmail.com
Help us keep this going by supporting us on venmo @WeStayWoke

Special Thanks go out to Sauce records for production.  You can hear Lydia as the podcast opens. Lydia Caesar's album is in stores now.


Thursday, January 5, 2017

Episode 3.1 The Political Climate, Happy New Year & Goodbye 2016

Blog by Mori Hitchcock

The phrase "Ferguson is Everywhere" was always more than a catchy slogan or design for a t-shirt. 

  It was a reminder that the frustration which boiled to the surface during the summer of 2014 was the culmination of years of anger and was endemic to the Black experience. It meant that any city could be Ferguson because throughout this country, black people live in fear that at any moment a run-in with the cops could turn fatal. It was an expression that called to mind the fact that our oppression does not exist in isolation from one another and that the reverberations of our feet marching and voices chanting could wake up a sleeping nation and put white folks on notice.


    Similar to this phrase, was the chant "Whose Street? Our Streets;" a call-and-response chant that called to mind our ancestors and fostered a sense of unity and ownership amongst protestors. I remember the first time I participated in that chant, we had organized a bus trip from my college in the middle of Pennsylvania to the streets of New York for the Millions March (which was coincidentally planned by one of our guests today, Sabaah) and it electrified me. It's one of those chants that makes you really look at the country as yours, perhaps for the first time. 

  Sabaah Folayan, an activist from New York who came to Ferguson in the wake of Michael Brown Jr's murder, directs the about to be released film entitled "Whose Streets?" Using the "call" portion of the chant as the title, this film attempts to tell the story of the protests and to assist the activists in sharing their own stories. In our podcast, Sabaah talks about how misrepresented the protests were by the media and how they were covered as violent clashes, while paying little attention the police violence that spurred them. Sabaah describes how she hopes to show the "courage, beauty, and love that she encountered on the front lines"; qualities that she believed to be inherent and shared between the black folks in every corner of the struggle. 

    

When the white, mainstream media continues to fail our people by ignoring our stories or misrepresenting our demands, it is our responsibility to put out the work that challenges these narratives. Sabaah is doing just that, through a film set to premiere at Sundance this year with a story that goes beyond the tanks and tear gas, and beyond the looting and rioting, to the heart of the struggle. Sabaah and Taylor Payne, our second guest, are perfect examples of stepping outside of the realm of racist, hetero - patriarchal capitalism and mainstream materialism to use their art for black liberation.


    Taylor, who I had the pleasure of meeting last Spring, just complete a series of knitting meet-ups on the east coast teaching, beginning knitters, friends and activists how to knit for black liberation. Her entire trip was funded by her work for The Yarn Mission, which provides anyone with interest in knitting and the values of Yarn Mission to do the same. She taught me how to knit and has not only opened up a new hobby/skill for me but has also taught me (and others) how to divest from the chains of capitalism.

    Both of these black women have devoted their time to uplifting our experiences and marginalized voices to show us how we offer a narrative of hope, outside of the structures that oppress us.


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As well, get a We Stay Woke T-Shirt with any donation $25 and over on venmo  @westaywoke