The Sheletta Show

Don’t take your story to the grave

9 min · 23. maj 2026
episode Don’t take your story to the grave cover

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Hedy Tripp is a close friend of Sheletta’s and the show. She returns today to share news of a free writing workshop for memoirs. The event is called Listening to Our Ancestors: A Story Workshop for Community Elders. Sheletta and Hedy chat about the importance of sharing our elders’ stories to not only preserve for future generations but to connect us to each other. Date: Wednesday, June 3, 2026 Time: 1:30 PM – 4:00 PM Location: St. Cloud Public Library Refreshments will be served It is a partnership with the Multicultural Center of St. Cloud Technical & Community College and organized by Dr. Njeri ‘Jeri’ Clement, Ph.D. https://www.eventbrite.com/e/listening-to-our-ancestors-a-story-workshop-for-community-elders-tickets-1981790175764

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episode Justin Ellis on his book, “The Cruelty of Nice Folks” and grappling with Minneapolis’ discriminatory history cover

Justin Ellis on his book, “The Cruelty of Nice Folks” and grappling with Minneapolis’ discriminatory history

Justin Ellis is a writer and son of Minneapolis. He joins Sheletta to chat about the release of his first nonfiction book, “The Cruelty of Nice Folks”. Justin talks growing up on the South side of Minneapolis and how he has been called back to focus and write about what has been and continues to happen in the community that raised him. Justin and Sheletta embark on a poignant conversation about institutional and interpersonal racism, industrialization, red lining and the generational impact on our marginalized community members. In a powerful new epilogue, Ellis turns his gaze back to Minneapolis as the sweeping federal immigration operation once again thrusts the city into national headlines. If George Floyd’s murder forced Minneapolis to confront questions of policing, power, and responsibility, the events of 2026 ask what those years of reckoning ultimately changed. Where fear once threatened to overwhelm the city’s response to state violence, Ellis finds a community newly practiced in dissent and collective action. The crisis reveals a Minneapolis still wrestling with its identity, but also one transformed by experience—no longer shocked into awakening, but shaped by it. The Cruelty of Nice Folks stands to be a record of a moment in time as well as a definitive portrait of America, documenting: The Myth of Post-Racial America: Reveals how the promises of the George Floyd reckoning faded, exposing a nation still shaped by deep inequality The Hidden Cost of “Nice” Liberalism: Shows how progressive spaces can avoid real change, allowing injustice to persist beneath a veneer of goodwill Minneapolis as America in Microcosm: Uses one “model” city to uncover the deeper roots of segregation, policing failures, and systemic racism A Personal Story with National Stakes: Blends memoir and reporting to explore what it means to be Black in a place that sees itself as fair and just https://www.harpercollins.com/products/the-cruelty-of-nice-folks-justin-ellis?variant=44065276493858

I går25 min