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    GumboLife

    GumboLife helps you on your journey to explore your roux and understand what your foundation is. It also focuses on Creole culture, preservation and people doing significant things around the promotion and preservation of Creole culture.
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    Episodes (13)

    Ep. 11 An interview with Jodi Massengale

    Ep. 11 An interview with Jodi Massengale

    This interview with Jodi Massengale is full of storytelling, intention and family history.  Jodi is a native of Los Angeles with ties to Louisiana and has a large, close knit, extended family. She talks about her experiences, her famous tea parties, meeting Oprah and how Creole in Vegas brought us together. Her message to connect with family and friends especially right now really resonated with me. Preserve your story and tell your story, it will help you find the roux of who you are. 

    Follow her on Instagram and Twitter @jodisjoy and on Facebook at Jodi Massengale.

    For more go to: http://www.gumbolife.com/an-interview-with-jodi-massengale/

    To Shop GumboLife: https://bit.ly/gumbolifestore

    Interview with Dustin Fuqua

    Interview with Dustin Fuqua

    Coonie, Cajun, Creole: Ethnicity, Context, and Identity on the American Landscape.

    Dustin Fuqua, native Louisianian and anthropologist, discusses growing up "cookie" and the dynamics of inclusive Creole identity.

    Dusty Fuqua hails from Avoyelles Parish and resides in Cenla. Fuqua works as Chief of Resource Management at Cane River Creole National Historical Park in Natchitoches Parish. Dusty has apprenticed under John Oswald Colson aka The File' Man for over a decade and works with the Sassafras Society to perpetuate the gumbo file' tradition. Dusty is active in Louisiana french language matters and enjoys participating in French tables and meetups.

    Dusty can be found on Instagram @DustyCreole or Facebook at Dustin Fuqua. Also search on Instagram for #sassafrassociety for all things file'.

    Dr. Moriah Istre-Hargrave

    Dr. Moriah Istre-Hargrave
    Dr. Moriah Istre-Hargrave serves her community in the Acadiana region of South Louisiana as a health coach, multinlingual folklorist, independent filmmaker, and professional dancer, choreographer and instructor. We discuss all of her projects and her new dance video soon to be released. We talk culture, music and the years of work put into her film First Cousins: Cajun and Creole Music in South Louisiana. You can find out more about Dr. Istre-Hargrave at www.fleurishforever.com. You can also access her zydeco workout video Zydefit at www.zydefit.com or instructional dance lessons at www.ladanser.com

    The Adventures of Pamela Wood

    The Adventures of Pamela Wood

    This week my guest is the incomparable Pamela Wood. We discuss her journey to Cane River and her adventurous introduction to New Orleans. Pamela is a philanthropy and fundraising professional and has been successful as a business consultant and stylist. She currently serves as the Major Gifts Officer for the Center for Third World Organizing, a Black Lives Matter ecosystem satellite. 

    You can find Pamela on Facebook at Pamela Wood or contact her at skinnybillionairess@gmail.com.

    Dr. Rain Prudhomme-Cranford

    Dr. Rain Prudhomme-Cranford

    A conversation with my friend, one of my wedding officiants and academic Dr. Rain Prudhomme-Cranford. Rain is the Executive Editor and Publisher of That Painted Horse Press, a borderless Indigenous/BIPOC non-profit publishing house. We talk about her upcoming projects, the intersection of Creole and Native culture and her two definitions of Creole. And there's lots of laughter! If you're a writer then this is an episode you need to listen too.

    You can find the That Painted Horse Press on Facebook or their website at thatpaintedhorsepress.blogspot.com or thatpaintedhorsepress@gmail.com

    Allison LaCour

    Allison LaCour

    A conversation with Allison LaCour, Makeup Artist, about ancestry, the movie Cane River and on being within culture. Allison is a New Orleans, Louisiana based, and nationally recognized makeup artist. She has expressed her talent in a variety of industries such as fashion editorials, local and national publications, a makeup artist for TV and film, politics, and celebrity glamour. Constantly evolving, Allison strives to stay on the cutting edge delivering the latest trends and techniques in her artistry. Her mission of using beauty as an empowerment tool has spread across the country and even across waters internationally.

    Allison and I talk about our summers on Cane River at our grandmothers houses, her grandmothers legacy, family connections and the recent resurgence of the movie Cane River. This was such an authentic and honest conversation. Allison also talks about her most recent tv and film projects and some of her work that has just been released. You can follow her on Facebook and Instagram @allisonlacour and @ritualnbeauty on Instagram for her online store.

    If you want to check out the early 80s movie, Cane River, that we discussed you can rent or buy it here.

    Thanks for listening and don't forget to check out the GumboLife store for your Christmas shopping!

    Kelly Clayton

    Kelly Clayton

    Kelly Clayton talks about her new book Mother of Chaos: Queen of the Nines, family and Louisiana. Kelly Clayton is a writer, poet, playwright, and workshop facilitator. She is a Louisiana Creole with roots 15 generations deep. She returned home after twenty years in New York City spent teaching herself to write. Though she dropped out of high school for creative reasons (four sons), she kept both pantry and bookshelves full by working as a waitress, line cook, publisher's assistant, exotic dancer, and event producer. She is a VONA/Voices, as well as a Hedgebrook Alumnae. She was a recipient of the Hedgebrook Women Authoring Change Award.

    Kelly’s poetry has been published by, among others: Future Cycle Press, Delacorte Press, China Grove Press, The Dead Mule Society of Southern Literature, and Random House.

    She was awarded an Artist's Residency with the Acadiana Center for the Arts for the production of her original play, "Dancing With Aurora Borealis.”

    Kelly develops and teaches bespoke writing workshops in Louisiana schools, both public and private, for the Lafayette Juvenile Detention Center, and to groups of formerly incarcerated adults. She currently lives in Lafayette with her husband, youngest of four sons and their Great Pyrenees, Mabelline.

    To connect with Kelly:
     www.kellykclayton.com

    Information about ordering signed copies: kellykclayton@gmail.com
    Official Contact: kellykclayton@gmail.com

    Kelly is available for readings via Zoom, as well as in person. Send inquiries to:
    kellykclayton@gmail.com

    For more information visit: That Painted Horse Press

    Andrew Jolivette on GumboLife

    Andrew Jolivette on GumboLife

    This week I have as my guest Dr. Andrew Jolivette, creator of beautiful things, my best friend and wedding officiant.  Andrew, former professor and department chair of American Indian Studies at San Francisco State University (2003-2019) is an accomplished internationally recognized researcher, educator, writer/poet, speaker, socio-cultural critic, and an aspiring chef. He has authored eight books and is currently the Professor, Chair of the Department of Ethnic Studies at University of California San Diego.

    Andrew and I have known each other for over twenty years and discussed how at the time we met we were always the youngest in the room. There was not a lot of representation of our generation at Creole events and how social media impacted that so much. We went from being a small group of young people that were dedicated to preserving Creole culture to a much larger group of people that were finding their familial roots and cultural ties. 

     We talked ancestry and cultural pride and how the “What are you” question still pervades and why that matters. Andrew also talks about his definition of Creole and how definitions are different for different people. 

     I am honored to have had my best friend and my brother as my first guest. Andrew is much more than a friend, he’s family and has been there for us through our toughest times. He is giving to his community and to his culture and has done a tremendous amount of work in preserving and promoting the Creole culture.

    To find out more about Andrew:

     Email: ajolivette@ucsd.edu

    Facebook: @Andrew Jolivette

    Instagram: @creoleandres

    Speakoutnow.org – Andrew Jolivette

     You can also find his literary work on Amazon by searching his name. The most relevant title to this conversation would be Louisiana Creoles: Cultural Recovery and Mixed-Race Native American Identity.

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