Crude Conversations
”Crude Conversations” features guests who represent a different aspect of Alaska. Follow along as host Cody Liska takes a contemporary look at what it means to be an Alaskan. Support and subscribe at www.patreon.com/crudemagazine and www.buymeacoffee.com/crudemagazine
Episodes
Tuesday Oct 20, 2020
Chatter Marks EP 003 with Acacia Johnson Part 2
Tuesday Oct 20, 2020
Tuesday Oct 20, 2020
Acacia Johnson is a photographer focused on human relationships to the environment. She spent most of her twenties traveling around Scandinavia and the polar regions, working on ships. Today, she has over 50 expeditions to the Arctic and Antarctica.
In Part 2 of this conversation, Acacia talks about creating a record of stories, of people and place. About how, through photography, she has the opportunity to start important conversations about polar regions—about the people who live there, climate change and, ultimately, the lessons we can learn from it.
Chatter Marks is now on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music and Google Podcasts. Just search "Chatter Marks."
Friday Oct 16, 2020
Special Conversation: Kathleen Parker on Sobriety During the Pandemic
Friday Oct 16, 2020
Friday Oct 16, 2020
In this Special Conversation, Cody talks with Kathleen Parker about managing addiction during the pandemic. Many in-person meetings have transitioned to virtual meetings, and that has resulted in new challenges and opportunities. Kathleen has been sober for nine years.
Wednesday Oct 07, 2020
Special Conversation: Dan Cannon on the Roadless Rule and the Tongass National Forest
Wednesday Oct 07, 2020
Wednesday Oct 07, 2020
In this special conversation, Cody talks with Dan Cannon, the Tongass Forest Program Manager at the Southeast Alaska Conservation Council. Dan explains how exempting the Tongass National Forest from the Roadless Rule will affect the forest, its inhabitants and the economy in Southeast Alaska. The Roadless Rule is a federal safeguard that restricts logging and road building on roughly 58 million acres of national Forest Service lands. The Tongass accounts for about 17 million acres of that land.
Wednesday Sep 30, 2020
Chatter Marks EP 002 with Acacia Johnson Part 1
Wednesday Sep 30, 2020
Wednesday Sep 30, 2020
In this episode of Chatter Marks, Cody talks with Acacia Johnson, a photographer focused on human relationships to the environment. She spent most of her twenties traveling around Scandinavia and the polar regions, working on ships. Today, she has over 50 expeditions to the Arctic and Antarctica.
In part one of this conversation, she talks about subverting the stereotype of what it means to be an explorer. And that means reframing the image of a man conquering landscapes to an image of a symbiotic relationship between people and the landscapes they live on.
Follow and subscribe to Chatter Marks on Spotify, Amazon Music and Google Podcasts. Coming to Stitcher and Apple Podcasts soon!
Saturday Sep 26, 2020
Special Conversation: Micah Booze on Fighting Wildland Fires in Alaska
Saturday Sep 26, 2020
Saturday Sep 26, 2020
In this Special Conversation, Cody talks with wildland firefighter Micah Booze, better known as Booze. Booze has been a firefighter for over 15 years, five of which have been spent in Alaska. Fighting wildland fires in Alaska, he says, involves more than just putting water on the hot stuff. It involves strategic thinking.
Sunday Sep 20, 2020
Chatter Marks EP 001 with Sebastian Garber
Sunday Sep 20, 2020
Sunday Sep 20, 2020
Introducing Chatter Marks, a podcast of the Anchorage Museum, hosted by Cody Liska. Chatter Marks is dedicated to exploring Alaska’s identity through the creative and critical thinking of ideas—past, present and future.
In this episode, Cody talks with Sebastian Garber, the Senior Designer at the Anchorage Museum. Sebastian has been a graphic designer for about 12 years now, and in that time he’s worked for large companies, small firms and a magazine. He says that the most important things he’s learned in those 12 years is being able to adapt to changing trends in design and communication, and the importance of a strong team.
Sebastian is currently working on designing a typeface that includes Alaska Native languages. It will be a typeface stripped of geographic references and that will encompass all the necessary diacritics. Diacritics are accent marks that indicate pronunciation. And when finished it will become the official font of the Anchorage Museum.
Thursday Sep 17, 2020
Special Conversation: Josh Branstetter on Racism at Anchorage Christian Schools
Thursday Sep 17, 2020
Thursday Sep 17, 2020
In this Special Conversation, Cody talks with Joshua Albeza Branstetter about the controversy currently surrounding Anchorage Christian Schools (ACS). At the time of this recording, 180 alumni had shared their experiences of racism at ACS. Joshua is one of those alumni.
Follow Anchorage Christian Schools alumni speaking out against the historical racism at ACS on Instagram @a.christian.school.
Thursday Sep 10, 2020
EP 079 with Sharon Liska
Thursday Sep 10, 2020
Thursday Sep 10, 2020
In this episode, Cody has a conversation with his mom, Sharon Liska. For the past 13 years, she has worked as a nurse at a neonatal intensive care unit at an Anchorage hospital. While she worked as a nurse, she continued her education and eventually moved to a Clinical Nurse Specialist position. To her, it’s more than a job. It’s a calling and a privilege to be welcomed into those sacred places of tragedy and happiness.
From owning a gym in the 80s to being a stockbroker in the 90s, her working life has been a series of careers, many of which have been in male-dominated professions. To be successful in that atmosphere, she had to navigate the sexism and male egos of the time. Which, a lot of the time, meant having to temper her intelligence.
From 1989 to 2007, she was an integral part of Boarderline Alaska Snow and Skate. Boarderline was founded by Cody's dad, Scott Liska, and his uncle, Jay Liska, in 1989. Sharon's job was damage control. Whenever there was trouble with the business or Scott had personal issues, she came to the rescue. She was routinely responsible for keeping track of and contributing to the financials of the business, even when it took precedence over her family. She says that to create a successful business, everything takes a backseat. And that “a business owns you, you don’t own that business.”
Sunday Aug 30, 2020
EP 078 with Mike Ward
Sunday Aug 30, 2020
Sunday Aug 30, 2020
In this episode, Cody has a conversation with Mike Ward, the co-owner of The Pioneer Bar. The Pioneer Bar, better known as Pio, is a classic Alaskan bar located in downtown Anchorage. It’s been around since the 1950s, before Alaska became a state. Back then, it was a working class bar with a regular crowd of blue collar workers and barflies. It eventually began to attract a younger crowd in the late 1990s. That trend has continued to this day, where crusty sourdoughs and weekend warriors drink side-by-side.
Mike’s relationship with The Pio goes all the way back to his childhood, when his dad was a regular there and he would bring Mike with him. That was around 1980. Mike and his business partner Dave Croffut bought the bar in 2013, and they quickly learned that the idea of owning a bar is much different than the reality of it. In reality, you have to deal with controlling crowds, local politics, and all the repairs that come with owning a 100-year-old building.
Thursday Aug 20, 2020
2019 Throwback: EP 043 with Julie Decker
Thursday Aug 20, 2020
Thursday Aug 20, 2020
In this episode, Cody has a conversation with Julie Decker, the Director and CEO of The Anchorage Museum. When she took the job, Julie made a radical shift in the way museums typically function. Rather than just collecting and displaying artifacts, she decided to transform the Anchorage Museum into a living museum, focused on local issues by examining present themes in order to look at Alaska's cultures and traditions in a contemporary way. Ultimately, this shift was meant to answer one fundamental question: how does the museum and its network make Alaska a better place?
Julie is uniquely qualified for the position she's in, having grown up around her dad Don Decker, a prominent Alaskan artist whose work goes back to the 70s. When she was a kid, she watched as he did the artist thing—struggle and appreciate the creative process and then learn to let his art exist outside of himself. She understands this dance between the indefinable creative process and its payoff because she's an artist as well. Today, she talks about how she finds things like the sound of pencil on paper soothing because of what it represents: a quiet and contemplative meditation.