The Great American Average
Aengus Anderson
Like any landscape, Phoenix becomes more interesting relative to the amount of time you spend looking at it. Stare long enough and the veneer of normality will melt entirely away.
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Filtering by Category: podcast
Like any landscape, Phoenix becomes more interesting relative to the amount of time you spend looking at it. Stare long enough and the veneer of normality will melt entirely away.
Read MoreA short montage of Tucson experiences, drawn from oral histories I have recently recorded for Special Collections at the University of Arizona Libraries.
Read MorePatricia Preciado Martin is an author, oral historian, and speaker whose work has been invaluable in documenting and sharing stories of Mexican-Americans in Tucson.
Read MoreA visit to Tucson's Gadsden-Pacific Division Toy Train Operating Museum, a 6,000 square foot world of tiny trains and the men who run them.
Read MoreIsaac Kirkman is a writer and poet. In addition to writing and border activism, Isaac spends a lot of his time walking around Tucson—he doesn't drive and never has.
Read MoreWe live on top of the Hohokam—their buildings, ball courts, canals, fields, and bodies—yet most of us know nothing about them.
Read MoreWhat is a place? This question seems simple, but the more you think about it, the more headache-inducing it becomes.
Read MoreYou can't launch a podcast called Tucsonense without tipping your hat to El Tucsonense, a Spanish-language newspaper that ran in Tucson from 1915 to 1962.
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