The OddPod
This one is different. OddPod takes it outside. Marc and Rashid pull up to the West End Farmers Market at California Park for a live, off-the-cuff episode that captures exactly what the show is about at its core — community, conversation, and the people making Louisville move. No studio, no script, just whoever walks up to the tent. And a lot of people walked up. First to pull up is Danny from No Data Center 502 — a grassroots community organization organizing against a proposed hyperscale data center set to be built near Lake Dreamland in the Southwest End. Danny breaks it all down: 24/7 noise pollution loud as a jet engine, light pollution so intense neighbors need blackout curtains, water pressure and quality issues, and a pattern of these facilities being placed exclusively in poor Black and brown neighborhoods. She makes it plain — it's not a coincidence, it's a choice. The group isn't petitioning politicians. They're boots on the ground, holding community meetings and building real strategy. Next meeting: check their socials for updates. Next up is Nyah Stewart, a 13-year-old entrepreneur selling handmade crystal bracelets who came up through the ACE Project — a Louisville youth program that combines gun violence prevention with real entrepreneurship training. She made $100 at her first graduation showcase and never looked back. Then her little sister, 10-year-old "Crochet and Knots", stops by to rep her own crocheted earrings and purses business — two years in and already a certified craftswoman. Generational entrepreneurship in real time. Throughout the episode Marc and Rashid chop it up with vendors, artists, and community members — including conversations around the dark side of football culture, CTE, toxic masculinity, identity, and what it means to sacrifice your body for a sport that discards you by 30. They also get into manifestation, the power of speaking things into existence, staying intentional about what energy you put out, and why they consciously avoid amplifying what they don't want to see in the world. All while the music plays, the food vendors sell out, and California Park does exactly what Dom Haley and the community envisioned — bringing back that OG Black culture energy on a beautiful Sunday afternoon. This is the OddPod in its purest form. Pull up next time.
75 episodios
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