

Making Contact
Frequencies of Change Media
“Making Contact” digs into the story beneath the story—contextualizing the narratives that shape our culture. Produced by Frequencies of Change Media (FoC Media), the award-winning radio show and podcast examines the most urgent issues of our time and the people on the ground, building a more just world through narrative storytelling and thought-provoking interviews. We cover the environment, labor, economics, health, governance, and arts and culture.
Episodes
Mentioned books

May 27, 2015 • 30min
Walking in Two Worlds
We bring you to Alaska s Tongass Forest, where the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act turned tribes into corporations and sparked a lengthy logging frenzy.
In this radio adaptation of the documentary film, Walking in Two Worlds, we meet a Tlingit brother and sister, who are trying to heal both the forest and their native community.
Special thanks to Specialty Studios.
Featuring:
Wanda Culp & Bob Loescher, Tlinget brother & Sister
Peter Coyote, narrator
Mike Jackson, Tlingit tribal historian
Ernestine Hanlon-Abel, Weaver & Activist
Byron Mallott, Former Seaalaska CEO
Israel Shotridge, Tlingit carver
Tom Thorton, anthropologist
Lydia George, Tlingit Clan Mother
Joe Sebastian, Alaska Fisherman & guide
Deny Bschor, former US Forest Service Regional Forester
John Rowan, Tlingit carver
Richard Nixon, President of the United States
Rick Harris, Former Seaalaska Executive VP
Rosita Worl, Seaalaska Board member

May 20, 2015 • 29min
Returning Home: From War Fighter to Student
What is it like to be a student who has fought in a war? Producers at The Stanford Storytelling Project’s podcast, State of the Human asked six Stanford students and recent alumni, all veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, to tell their stories about “Returning Home.”
Featuring:
Dustin Barfield, Chris Clark, Josh Francis, Annie Hsieh, Russ Toll, and William Treseder, military veterans
Heidi Toll, wife of veterana
More Information
Returning Home from the Stanford Storytelling Project (full episode)
Veterans for Peace
Student Veterans of America
Complexity of Student Vets
Ten Things You Should Know About Today's Student Veteran

May 13, 2015 • 29min
Not Throw Away Women: Black and Indigenous Women Disrupt Violence
On this week's show we’re exploring how some women have been dehumanized to the point of indifference.
We’ll learn how one community is undoing the silence around the violence women of color face. We’ll also hear about how serial killers were able to hunt down mostly Black women for three decades in South Los Angeles. Then we’ll take you to the Yucatan where pregnant indigenous women struggle under a health care system failing to provide proper medical care.

May 5, 2015 • 29min
#BlackLivesMatter: Alicia Garza on the Origins of a Movement
Black Lives Matter.
This simple phrase has become the motto of a growing movement calling for true justice and equality for black people. Alicia Garza, co-founder of Black Lives Matter, first typed out those three words back in 2013.
In March of 2015, Alicia Garza visited the University of Southern Maine to tell the story of how Black Lives Matter came to be, and express her hopes for where it’s headed. We hear her speech.
Special thanks to E.B.Leonard with Maine X Change.
Featuring:
Alicia Garza, Black Lives Matter co-founder
Cephus Johnson, uncle of Oscar Grant
Grace Anderson, protestor

Apr 29, 2015 • 29min
States of Censorship: Journalism Under Attack
Imprisonment, oppressive laws, and harassment of journalists - these are just a few means of censorship around the world. The use of these repressive tactics threaten freedom of expression and the public’s right to information.
On this edition, we hear from journalists in Ecuador and Mexico, and learn about the most censored countries from the Committee to Protect Journalists.
Featuring:
William Morocho, Page Designer with Diario HOY
Jaime Mantilla, Director of Diario HOY newspaper
Carlos Ochoa Hernandez, head of Supercom
Rosental Alves, Director of the Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas at the University of Texas in Austin
Romel Jurado, Consultant for Supercom
Gustavo Ruiz, Independent Photographer
Edwin Canché Pech, Journalist
Adrián López Ortiz, director of Northwestern newspaper
Marcela Zendejas, Associate Officer on Alternative Media and Gender Issues at Article 19 MEXICO
Courtney Radsch, Advocacy Director with the Committee to Protect Journalists

Apr 22, 2015 • 29min
The Power of Poetry
Making Contact partnered with the 2014 National Poetry Slam in Oakland, CA to produce this special open mic highlighting the power of thoughtful, truth telling, community focused poetry.
Featuring Poets:
Chris Cuadrado
Lindsay Stone
Jared Paul
Caitlin Clark
Queen T

Apr 15, 2015 • 30min
BP Five Years Later: Deepwater Horizon and the Cost of Oil
Five years after the deepwater horizon oil spill in the gulf of mexico, not everyone is “back to normal”.
On this edition, we follow BP’s trail from the Bayous of Louisiana to the fine art galleries of London.
Featuring:
Antonia Juhasz, investigative Journalist
Monique Verdin & Beau Verdin, Houma tribe members
David Gauthe, community organizer
Thomas DarDar, United Houma Nation Chief
Mark Miller, Southern Utah University History professor
Mel Evans, author of Artwash: Big Oil and the Arts

Apr 8, 2015 • 29min
Heat of the Moment: Sea Level Rise
Climate change is here affecting weather conditions and sea levels. In India it's also having a more surprising influence on the country's tigers. On this edition of Making Contact, reporter Daniel Grossman takes us to India in Heat of the Moment: Sea Level Rise.
Heat of the Moment was originally produced for the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting and WBUR.
Featuring:
Pranabes Sanyal, former park director for the Sunderbans Tiger Reserve
Amit Mallick, Sundarbans resident and man attacked by tiger
Tushar Kanjilal, secretary of the Tagore Society for Rural Development
Mohammed Sheikh Gafur, Sundarbans resident and tea shop owner
Sugata Hazra, an oceanographer at Calcutta’s Jadavapur University
Ainun Nishat representative to the International Union for Conservation of Nature
Shafiqul Islam, director of a small college and founder of the Pani Committee
Sheikh Nural Ala, chief engineer for this region of the Water Development Board
Atiq Rahman, director of the Bangladesh Center for Advanced Studies
Daniel Grossman, journalist

Apr 1, 2015 • 29min
The Controversial Nicaragua Canal
Officially opening in 1914, the Panama Canal connected the Atlantic and Pacific creating a short-cut for ships. It was the biggest infrastructure project of its time. But originally the United States wanted to build the canal in Nicaragua. The plans shifted largely after French engineer Philippe-Jean Bunau-Varilla convinced U.S. lawmakers otherwise.
Well now the Nicaragua canal plans are back on the table. Nicaragua plans to build a $50 billion canal to connect the Caribbean and Pacific. Supporters argue it will create more than 250,000 jobs. But small farmers and environmentalists say the project will destroy Lake Nicaragua.
On this edition, we’ll take a look at the economic, political and environmental controversies surrounding the Nicaragua canal. Reporter Reese Erlich has the story.
Featuring:
Maria Mercelin, fisherman’s wife
Michael Healey, head of an agribusiness association
Monica Lopez, anti-canal activist and lawyer
Lionel Teller, former Nicaraguan ambassador to the EU
Rosibel Lope, owner of snack bar on OmetepeIsland
Jairo Carrilon, anti-canal coalition leader
David Quintana, spokesperson for Foundation for Nicaraguan Sustainable Development
Benjamin Lanzas, member of the canal’s governing body
Juana Juarez, resident of Ometepe Island
Osvaldo Navas, Ometepe Island leader
Antonio Granados, land owner whose property lies directly along the canal route.

Mar 25, 2015 • 29min
Coffee: Trouble Brewing?
It’s the second most-traded commodity in the world after oil but how much do you think about your cup of coffee?
From coffee farmers in Colombia to the trash produced by your single-cup coffee machine, Making Contact andGreen Grid Radio team up to count the costs of your morning cup o’joe.
Featuring:
Jairo Martinez, Mariana Cruz, Suzana Angarita, coffee farmers
Jeff Goldman, former executive director FairtradeResource Network
Jeff Chean, Principal and Chief Coffee GuyGroundworks Roasters
John Hazen, single-cup coffee machine owner
Rebecca Jewell, recycling program manager for Davis Street Transfer Station