“Black in the Blue Grass”: A new podcast from Stacey Brooks

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History buffs, Kentucky buffs, and especially Kentucky Black history buffs will have a new podcast to dive into starting later this month when Stacey Brooks presents “Black in the Bluegrass,” a podcast that dives into the discussion of Kentucky’s heritage through a black perspective.

“I’m framing it as a public history podcast. Indeed, modeling conversations are important to Kentucky. And my goal is to talk to people who have a connection to Kentucky, especially people who have either lived or studied and become passionate about or written or done something related to black people in Kentucky, urban or Appalachian .”

Building on his own love of history, Brooks interviewed various people in Kentucky, such as Philip Bailey and Frank X Walker, as well as the founding members of the Black Historic District Assembly, among others. He begins each conversation with the same question: “What’s your connection to Kentucky?” and he describes his reason for creating Black in the Blue Grass as a way to provide a historical legacy of his interviewees’ lives and the conversation that followed. “The idea is to have the conversation for today, but also to have a recognition that these conversations and the content we create will have longevity. So, people looking at these conversations 50 years later, sort of like the Freedom Writers Project or the Freedmen’s Bureau Project in the early 1900s, where they recorded stories of people who were formerly enslaved. Likewise, I try to capture stories from people who are living that history today so that people coming later, future generations, can hear those conversations and know what things people found important.

Although he started the podcast interviewing people he had personal connections with or knew from his days as a history Ph.D. He says he’s already generated a decent list of interesting Kentuckians to interview for future podcasts, but he’s always open to suggestions of other black Kentuckians whose stories people feel should be shared.

Brooks has currently recorded seven interviews and is working on editing and polishing them for release. His plan is to release 12 episodes, take a two-month break, release 12 new episodes, and continue working on that cycle as long as he has people to interview. You’ll be able to find the episodes at www.blackintheblugrass.com (no e in bluegrass) and you can email Brooks to recommend future interview subjects at [email protected]

(Coming soon: an in-depth interview with Brooks.)


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