Think Out Loud

Owners of new Trap Kitchen restaurant in Portland say it’s about both food and community

16 min · 27. maj 2026
episode Owners of new Trap Kitchen restaurant in Portland say it’s about both food and community cover

Description

Eddie Bynum Jr., who raps professionally as Mikey Vegaz, is a very busy man. He just released a new track called Rose City Goats with Damion Lillard and Cool Nutz. And he’s just opened a new restaurant called “The EAST by Trap Kitchen [https://trapkitchenpdx.com/] in the central eastside. He’s also active in nonprofit work and community efforts, including Rose City Jam, a monthly basketball night for youth in partnership with the Blazers Boys and Girls Club.  The original Trap Kitchen was started in LA by Bynum’s brother, Malachi Jenkins. He and a former gang rival, Roberto Smith went into business together [https://www.mashed.com/2096840/snoop-dogg-favorite-underground-food-trap-kitchen/] in 2013 and later launched Trap Kitchen food carts in LA and then in Portland [https://www.wweek.com/restaurants/news-restaurants/2018/01/05/comptons-world-famous-trap-kitchen-is-cooking-in-portland-right-now/]. That food cart turned into The EAST by Trap Kitchen. We sit down with Bynum to talk about his restaurant, his music, and his contributions to the larger community, including Rose City Jam.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Think Out Loud community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

300 episodes

episode Despite high wool prices, it’s difficult to sustain fiber production in the Pacific Northwest artwork

Despite high wool prices, it’s difficult to sustain fiber production in the Pacific Northwest

If you're not well-versed in the natural fiber economy, Kristen Buchanan wants to help with that. Buchanan manages a small family farm in Southwest Washington, and she’s the co-founder of PNW Fiber Connect, an organization that wants to create a support network of different players in the regional fiber industry.   The organization aims to educate consumers and share resources from shepherds to mill owners to yarn stores. Buchanan wants consumers to make intentional choices about where their wool and textiles come from and hopes that the Pacific Northwest can one day sustain a more robust fiber economy.   Kirsten Holbo is a shepherd at Iron Water Ranch in Albany, Oregon. She’s been in the fiber industry since 1984 when her family took over Iron Water Ranch. She and Buchanan join us to share more about the current state of the wool industry in Oregon

Yesterday17 min
episode New president of Metro says Portland’s regional government must plan for the future, prioritize housing and jobs artwork

New president of Metro says Portland’s regional government must plan for the future, prioritize housing and jobs

Juan Carlos González [https://www.oregonmetro.gov/councilor/president] was elected president of Metro in May, and then appointed [https://www.opb.org/article/2026/06/02/juan-carlos-gonzalez-appointed-metro-president/] to serve out the remainder of the previous president’s term. He made history in 2018 becoming the youngest member and first Latino to serve on the Metro council. His priorities for the council are creating more affordable housing and jobs in the region. Metro has begun what it calls Future 50 [https://www.oregonmetro.gov/stories/metro-launches-future-50-project-create-50-year-vision-greater-portland-region], a planning process designed to shape the metro area through 2077. We sit down with González to hear more about his priorities and vision for the next 50 years.

Yesterday20 min
episode Illnesses from extreme heat events could double by 2040, Portland State University study predicts artwork

Illnesses from extreme heat events could double by 2040, Portland State University study predicts

IT’S BEEN NEARLY FIVE YEARS SINCE A DEADLY HEAT DOME [https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-023-36289-3]GRIPPED THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST. MANY HUNDREDS OF PEOPLE DIED — INCLUDING 69 IN MULTNOMAH COUNTY ALONE — FROM THE EXTREME HEAT EVENT THAT SENT THE TEMPERATURE SOARING TO 116 DEGREES IN PORTLAND AND BROKE OTHER TEMPERATURE RECORDS IN THE REGION.    AS CLIMATE CHANGE MAKES EXTREME HEAT EVENTS MORE FREQUENT AND LONGER-LASTING, A NEW PORTLAND STATE UNIVERSITY STUDY [https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2025GH001655] PREDICTS THAT HEAT-RELATED ILLNESSES COULD DOUBLE BY 2040 ACROSS MORE THAN 50 OF THE LARGEST METRO AREAS IN THE U.S., INCLUDING SEATTLE AND PORTLAND. THE COST OF TREATING HEAT-RELATED ILLNESSES IS ALSO EXPECTED TO DOUBLE, ACCORDING TO THE STUDY, LIKELY FURTHER STRAINING HEALTHCARE SYSTEMS AND VULNERABLE POPULATIONS.    THE STUDY’S AUTHORS DEVELOPED A MODEL INTEGRATING MULTIPLE VARIABLES, INCLUDING DEMOGRAPHIC INFORMATION ABOUT AGE, RACE AND HEALTH; CLIMATE DATA; VISITS TO HOSPITALS AND EMERGENCY ROOMS FOR HEAT-RELATED ILLNESSES; AND ACCESS TO AIR-CONDITIONING OR OTHER COOLING INFRASTRUCTURE. THE STUDY REVEALS THAT CITIES IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST COULD BEAR AN ESPECIALLY HIGH PUBLIC HEALTH BURDEN WITH THEIR AGING POPULATIONS AND LACK OF COOLING INFRASTRUCTURE.   VIVEK SHANDAS IS A PROFESSOR OF EARTH, ENVIRONMENT AND SOCIETY AT PSU AND CO-AUTHOR OF THE STUDY. HE JOINS US TO SHARE MORE DETAILS.

9. juni 202616 min