Broken Ground Episodes
Cornell Watson on Justice Through Photography
Photographer Cornell Watson’s images recognize the camera can be a tool for connection, and action. Whether its pollution from hog farms, efforts to gut Black neighborhoods, or racism at the state’s flagship university, Watson’s lens points...
Victoria Bouloubasis and Paola Jaramillo on Bridging Language Barriers
Whether its natural disasters or shifting political winds, Victoria Bouloubasis and Paola Jaramillo believe North Carolina’s Spanish-speaking population has a right to know about it. That belief fuels their work as a reporter and editor, respectively,...
Cameron Oglesby on Collecting Community Stories
Listen to environmental journalist Cameron Oglesby discuss how highlighting Black joy and centering community narratives in her writing drives action. Environmental Justice Oral History Project students, including Cameron Ogelsby, center right in a white shirt and...
Lyndsey Gilpin and Tajah McQueen on Empowering Community Reporters
Hear what spurred the founding of Southerly, an online publication focused on environmental justice, and how it evolved from more traditional reporting to an outlet focused on putting reporters’ tools in community hands. ...
Lesson 7: Do It Again
An announcement late on the Friday of a holiday weekend is a classic move. And in the case of the Byhalia Pipeline it is an end so abrupt many don’t believe it. But it’s true. What...
Lesson 6: Hold On
With a federal permit approved and state officials supporting the project, in the spring of 2021 the Byhalia Pipeline has momentum on its side. But opponents aren’t giving up as they bring national attention to the...
Lesson 5: Embrace Your Allies
As aquifer advocates and the residents of southwest Memphis in the path of the pipeline began looking for help pushing back against Byhalia’s plans, they quickly learned not to assume who would join their cause. From...
Lesson 4: Call ‘Em Out
While pipeline developers deploy common tactics to secure support, like spreading donations around the community, organizers look for allies among their elected officials. Reporter Carrington Tatum also starts covering the story and amplifying voices going unheard.
Lesson 3: Dig In
All of Memphis drinks from a world-class underground source, known as the Memphis Sand Aquifer. The realization that the Byhalia Connection crude oil pipeline, planned for southwest Memphis, could endanger they city’s water draws new allies...
Lesson 2: Raise a Ruckus
It was a throw away line by an out of town pipeline representative but it struck a nerve and came to define much of the resistance to the Byhalia Pipeline. In this episode hear the origin...