• The Art of Film Appreciation: Lisa Elliott
    Aug 29 2025

    Lisa Elliott’s super power is helping you take take the power back from films you love, but that don’t love you back. “By teaching…the art of…appreciating film…people [learn] how film has shaped them and how culture has shaped them, and then that gives the power back to them. It helps them heal from the traumas of loving something that doesn’t represent you or doesn’t show what you feel your lived experience is as a woman or as a lesbian or someone who’s gay or somebody who lives on the border or somebody who is Hispanic. Like all of these things that could be part of your identity that film doesn’t represent [well] and you can take that back.

    Show More Show Less
    34 mins
  • The Art of Guiding: Mercedes Medici
    Aug 21 2025

    Professional tour guide Mercedes Medici calls herself “a giver of words...I’m always impressed about the power or words – the tremendous, magical creative, healing power of words.” Sit back, picture the Coliseum in Rome in the distance, and listen to Mercedes Medici’s silky voice, beautiful accent and poetic phrasing explain how she uses the art of guiding to heal herself and others.

    Show More Show Less
    33 mins
  • The Art of Acting, Part 2: Teddy Sanchez
    Aug 13 2025

    “First off…I am not comfortable at all being interviewed. Working in radio, I definitely feel more comfortable and confident as the interviewer than the interviewee. Revealing myself and putting myself out there in the world is very scary to me.” Kudos to Teddy for going “there” with me in talking about trauma and change and growth. And also hamming it up. As usual.

    Show More Show Less
    34 mins
  • The Art of Bad A#@ Boot Making: Nevena Christi
    Aug 7 2025

    Nevena Christi’s career path goes from from the Met Gala to Hollywood and beyond. But basically she’s “the same kid from when I was little. I just want to make stuff and draw and get messy and basically anything – furniture, art, boots, anything – that’s me...at home we restore vintage travel trailers – we love everything old. On weekends I’m restoring the [Rocketbuster] building which was built in 1900. Before the movie people came downtown to film, I spent 8 weekends varnishing the floors. That is my play time.”

    Show More Show Less
    31 mins
  • The Art of Exotic Retirement: Sherri Kendall
    Jul 23 2025

    After a career of helping others, Sherri lives the dream retirement in Costa Rica. “I live on top of a mountain. I have a very chill lifestyle. I get up when I want to get up and I go to bed when I want to go to bed. No alarms, other than my dogs and monkeys when I’m in the jungle.” Listen in to hear more about her Pura Vide life.

    Show More Show Less
    27 mins
  • The Art of Dance and Politicking: Christina Sanchez
    Jul 16 2025

    At different stages, Christina Sanchez has lived creative and professional lives. Hear how her experience with dance in many ways perfectly prepared her for public life. But replacing her love for dance with her current role as the El Paso County Attorney gives her pause: “I’ve been thinking a lot lately about how my journey has – how I got to where I’m at…I know a lot of it is luck and a lot of it has been just the good people that I think have had faith in my abilities...So I don’t know necessarily if that’s like that trauma, but maybe there is something there I haven’t thought through.” Intrigued? Take a listen!

    Show More Show Less
    27 mins
  • Healing Arts from the Borderland – the Art of Drag: DeDe Camacho
    Jun 12 2025

    Living in Juarez by way of Chicago, DeDe entertains for a living at Drag Story Hour, at your next Joteria party or anywhere. “If I had to put it into a character that you might recognize, [it’s] kind of like ChiChi from Tu Wong Fu.” If you know you know. “Drag is powerful,…because it can take someone out of reality into something beautiful.”

    Show More Show Less
    32 mins
  • The Art of Dance: Joshua Peugh
    Jun 4 2025

    In this weeks episode, Joshua Peugh describes his experience in using dance to heal from trauma and at the same time explains dance as a metaphor for life. “Because your body is your instrument and because for me as a choreographer I am sharing my internal landscape with a group of people, it’s a very vulnerable life and sometimers that comes with thorns and pain and sometimes its beautiful and lovely and smooth and easy and peaceful and other times its challenging and rough and that’s where the exciting parts of it are.”

    Show More Show Less
    32 mins