

City Cast Denver
City Cast
Join Host Bree Davies and the City Cast Denver crew every weekday morning as we celebrate, explore, and challenge an ever-changing Denver. It’s the daily news podcast for all Denverites — whether you’ve been here for six months or six generations. We’ll break down the news you need (and want) to know with journalists and culture makers; activists and artists; neighbors and ne’er-do-wells — and John Elway, if he ever returns our calls. Learn more and subscribe to our morning newsletter at citycast.fm/denver.*Named Westword's Best Podcast of 2021, 2023
Episodes
Mentioned books

May 10, 2021 • 11min
Landmark, Eyesore or Both: Should the Denver7 Building Be Saved?
Denver City Council is deciding the fate of the Denver7 building on Speer tonight. Will they side with the owners, paving the way for a sale and demolition? Or will they decide it’s a landmark worth preserving? Host Bree Davies speaks with art and architecture critic Mary Voelz Chandler, who wrote for the Rocky Mountain News for many years, about the architectural merits of the building, the origins of Brutalism, and Denver’s contentious relationship with its own history. Plus, Amazon responds to our report on an alleged lack of Spanish-language COVID safety communications at their warehouse in Thornton. Read Mary’s writing on Denver architecture and more at her blog: http://chandlerindenver.com/Follow us on Twitter: @citycastDenverSubscribe to our newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/citycast/denver

May 7, 2021 • 17min
She Says Amazon Fired Her For Speaking Out. Now She's Fighting Back
What happens when a worker at an Amazon warehouse sees something concerning and speaks up? Today on the show, we bring you the story of Linda Rodriguez, a local grandmother who got a job at the Amazon fulfillment center in Thornton right before the pandemic started. Host Bree Davies speaks with Linda’s attorney David Seligman, who portrays her as a woman caught in an impossible situation, compelled to stand up for what she thought was right. We also hear from Linda herself about the conditions inside DEN3, the Amazon fulfillment center in Thornton where she says Amazon neglected to communicate important COVID safety information with its Spanish-speaking workforce.David Seligman is also executive director of the local legal nonprofit Towards Justice, which you can learn more about here: https://towardsjustice.org/If you want to read more about Linda’s case, here’s a link to the formal complaint David and his colleagues at Swain Law LLC filed with the Department of Labor and Employment on Thursday: https://towardsjustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/5.6.21-amazon-final.pdfGet the tweets: @citycastdenver Get the newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/citycast/denver

May 6, 2021 • 13min
Punch Bowl Social’s Wild Pandemic Ride
Punch Bowl Social was a Denver success story — emphasis on the “was.” Starting with that one location on South Broadway in 2012, the arcade/bowling alley/bar quickly expanded across the country, operating 20 locations and raking in tens of millions of dollars per year at its peak. But then the pandemic hit, setting CEO and founder Robert Thompson off on a year of twists, turns, and tough decisions. With the original Punch Bowl Social re-opening next week, host Bree Davies speaks with Denver Business Journal reporter Ed Sealover, who’s been in touch with Robert through it all. Bree and Ed talk through Punch Bowl’s rise, fall, and the unclear future of "eatertainment."Get Ed’s tweets: @ESealoverDenBizGet ours: @citycastdenverSubscribe to our newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/citycast/denver

May 5, 2021 • 14min
The Mystery of the Missing Low Riders
It’s Cinco de Mayo and that means cruising — especially on Federal. But over the last year, Chicano car clubs have stopped meeting up along the strip, while at the same time, police have had an increased presence. It looks like a law enforcement crackdown, but is it? Councilperson Jamie Torres joins the show today to help get to the bottom of this issue of vanishing car clubs. We also hear from an OG low rider about the deep roots of the car club tradition.And hey! We’re still hoping to hear more of your Elitch’s memories. Are you an Old Elitch’s person? Or a New Elitch’s person? Use Voice Memos, Voice Recorder, or another app to record your memory and send it to us at denver@citycast.fm, and we might play it on the show. Just remember to say your name and whether you’re an Old Elitch’s person or a New Elitch’s person.Get the newsletter: https://denver.citycast.fm/newsletter/Get the tweets: @CityCastDenver

May 4, 2021 • 15min
When a Foster Child Turns 18
More than a third of foster children in Colorado will end up homeless by the time they are 21. A new bill making its way through the Colorado General Assembly would allow them to re-enter the system after they’re 18 and get help with things that many of us take for granted — like opening bank accounts and getting a driver’s license. Foster parent Natasha Pepperl has seen first-hand how much this support is needed. She joins host Bree Davies on the show today to talk parenting and the messy cracks that make navigating the foster care system so challenging. Check out Natasha’s podcast, Just As Special, right here.And check out our newsletter for even more…you guessed it — news.

May 3, 2021 • 15min
Can ‘Safe Outdoor Spaces’ Be A Permanent Part Of Our City?
On our show last Friday, we featured a deeply human story from one man, David Gordon, about his experience living inside one of the most important new efforts to address Denver’s homelessness crisis. After a three-month stay at a Safe Outdoor Space, he said Denver should absolutely invest in this housing option. But the leases at the first two locations are up at the end of the month, and it’s unclear whether there’s much appetite for making this temporary pandemic relief measure permanent. On the show today are Cole Chandler, executive director of the Colorado Village Collaborative, the organization administering the SOS program, and Pastor Nathan Adams of Park Hill United Methodist Church. Host Bree Davies asks them how South Park Hill is reacting to their decision to invite unhoused neighbors into the community, why they believe in this new type of shelter, and how you can help make it permanent.The best way to reach Nathan is through Park Hill United Methodist Church, which you can learn more about here. You can donate to Colorado Village Collaborative here. Hey, don’t forget to listen to our first part of this conversation about Safe Outdoor Spaces with Denver VOICE vendor David Gordon who lived in the one on Pearl St. for three months.Are you an Old Elitch’s person? Or a New Elitch’s person? Use Voice Memos, Voice Recorder, or another app to record your Elitch’s memory and send it to us at denver@citycast.fm, and we might play it on the show. Just remember to say your name and whether you’re an Old Elitch’s person or a New Elitch’s person.Get the newsletter: https://denver.citycast.fm/newsletter/Get the tweets: @CityCastDenver

Apr 30, 2021 • 13min
What A ‘Safe Outdoor Space’ Means to One of Our Unhoused Neighbors
There are more than 4,000 people experiencing homelessness in Denver, according to the latest Point in Time Survey from Metro Denver Homeless Initiative. And that was back in January 2020, two months before the global pandemic caused a massive economic downturn. Last summer, the city sponsored a new effort to help house some of those people, but it’s been controversial to say the least. So this time on the show, we’re going inside one of the new “Safe Outdoor Spaces” to hear how it has benefitted one man, David Gordon, a longtime vendor with the Denver VOICE. We initially recorded this episode as an installment of VOICE on the Street, our partnership with Denver’s street paper, the Denver VOICE, which provides opportunities to Denverites experiencing homelessness and other forms of economic inequity. If you’d like to support VOICE vendors like David Gordon, head over to denvervoice.org/donate. They even have Venmo, so if you want to get a little help directly to David, follow this link and add his name to the note attached to your transfer.Subscribe to the City Cast Denver newsletter: denver.citycast.fmGet the tweets: @citycastdenver

Apr 29, 2021 • 20min
Which Elitch’s is Your Elitch’s?
Elitch Gardens is so much more than a theme park. It’s more like a nostalgia factory with roller coasters, and it’s been in business for over 100 years. The New Elitch’s, as the current incarnation is commonly known, is opening this weekend, so Bree invited three-time Emmy winning comedy writer Hallie Haglund and zero-time Emmy winning City Cast producer Paul Karolyi on the show to talk about everything Elitch’s — from the oldest of the old to the unclear future. Are you an Old Elitch’s person? Or a New Elitch’s person? Use Voice Memos, Voice Recorder, or another app to record your Elitch’s memory and send it to us at denver@citycast.fm, and we might play it on the show. Just remember to say your name and whether you’re an Old Elitch’s person or a New Elitch’s person.The excerpt of the oral history with Mrs. Harold Robinson (née Laura Besser) heard in this episode comes courtesy of the oral history collection at History Colorado. You can listen to the whole conversation, including a few more juicy Elitch’s tidbits right here. Subscribe to the City Cast Denver newsletter: denver.citycast.fmGet the tweets: @citycastdenver

Apr 28, 2021 • 16min
Denver’s Coolest Pastor Wants to Hear Your Shame and Secrets
Nadia Bolz-Weber is on the show today to talk about the new season of her podcast, The Confessional, which she describes as “a carwash for our shame and secrets.” Nadia tells Bree about how she helps people process the worst moments in their lives and offers some tips for broaching difficult conversations.Bree interviewed Nadia for the first time in 2012, one year before Nadia published her first best-selling book, Pastrix: The Cranky, Beautiful Faith of a Sinner & Saint. Read that story here, and hey, since you’re already clicking on links we give you, why not click one more and subscribe to our newsletter?

Apr 27, 2021 • 15min
A Cartoonist Takes On Old vs. New Denver in 'Queen City’
Even if we don’t always like it, a city’s got to change. And your Denver might look very different from someone else’s Denver. Award-winning cartoonist Karl Christian Krumpholz explores this theme in his new illustrated history of Denver, “Queen City.” He joins host Bree Davies to talk about the book and how he brought places that have closed or been demolished back to life, while paying homage to living legends. The Breakfast King, Gabor’s and Satire Lounge all make appearances in this conversation, and can be seen throughout this book’s beautiful images and colorful Denver backstory. Subscribe to the City Cast Denver newsletter and learn more about us at denver.citycast.fm. Get the tweets @citycastdenver.