Episodes

  • HCP #064 - Daniel Ellis: Growing Live Local Oak Cliff and Connecting the Neighborhood
    Feb 18 2026

    Daniel Ellis has quietly become one of Oak Cliff’s most consistent connectors through Live Local Oak Cliff, a platform that amplifies neighborhood businesses and keeps thousands of residents in the loop.In this episode, Daniel shares how a desire to support local businesses turned into Live Local and how that same entrepreneurial drive led him and his wife to launch Diaper Buddy, a thoughtfully designed parenting product. We talk about designing and manufacturing a physical product from scratch, building momentum through grassroots support, and why Oak Cliff continues to attract builders and small business owners. We also get into what could be next for Live Local as it grows alongside the neighborhood.

    Show More Show Less
    35 mins
  • 063 - Bonnie and Clyde: Oak Cliff and the Making of a Legend
    Feb 11 2026

    Bonnie and Clyde didn’t come from nowhere, and they didn’t become who they were somewhere else. This episode looks at how poverty, proximity, and momentum shaped Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow, and why Oak Cliff mattered at every stage of their lives.
    Before the headlines, the manhunts, and the legend, they were young people growing up in West Dallas and Oak Cliff during the Great Depression - tethered to family, limited by circumstance, and searching for motion in a world with very few exits. As crime replaced choice and survival replaced ambition, Oak Cliff remained the gravitational center of their story. This episode traces the real geography beneath the legend and asks what it means when some of America’s most infamous history is rooted not in distant frontiers, but in our very own neighborhood.

    Show More Show Less
    25 mins
  • HCP #062 - Andrew Snow: Building a Generous Community in Oak Cliff
    Feb 4 2026

    Andrew Snow has been part of Oak Cliff long enough to see how much of this neighborhood has been shaped by relationships. In this episode, the Track 15 cofounder reflects on how he landed here, the people who welcomed him in, and how that web of connections eventually led to building a nonprofit fundraising firm rooted in trust and generosity.

    We talk about Track 15’s origins, why community and giving can’t be automated or hacked, and what Oak Cliff has taught Andrew about building things that last. Along the way, he traces the friendships, neighbors, and small moments that quietly shaped his family’s life—and asks what it means to keep that spirit of generosity alive as the neighborhood continues to change.

    Show More Show Less
    39 mins
  • HCP #061 - DJ EZ Eddie D: Knowledge Dropped, Longevity, and the Sound of Oak Cliff
    Jan 28 2026

    For more than three decades, DJ EZ Eddie D has been a steady presence on Dallas airwaves and a quiet force in the city’s hip-hop culture. In this episode, Eddie traces his path from Cincinnati to Oak Cliff, from early club nights to KNON and Knowledge Dropped, a show that became a home for true school hip-hop and social commentary.

    We talk about the Oak Cliff music scene of the ’80s and ’90s, the loss of local infrastructure, and what it meant to break records before algorithms took over. Eddie reflects on community, craft, and the importance of local radio, sharing stories of Biggie, KRS-One, early SXSW days, and more from his nearly 40 years in the Dallas music scene.

    Show More Show Less
    52 mins
  • HCP #060 - A History of the Hidden City of Oak Cliff
    Jan 21 2026

    This episode is a little different. Instead of sitting down with a guest, we step back and tell the story of Oak Cliff itself.
    We trace how this part of the city came to be, from early settlement on the bluffs above the Trinity, to utopian experiments, speculative development, independence, annexation, and the long arc that followed. Along the way, we look at how geography, distance, and deliberate choices shaped Oak Cliff into a place that has always felt connected to Dallas, yet separate from it.
    This isn’t a comprehensive history, and it’s not nostalgia. It’s an overview of how Oak Cliff became Oak Cliff and why that beginning still echoes in the neighborhoods, tensions, and sense of identity that exist today.

    Show More Show Less
    36 mins
  • HCP #059 - Michael & Lauren Boss: Building a Neighborhood Music School at the Kessler Theater
    Jan 14 2026

    Michael and Lauren Boss are the founders of BOCO, a neighborhood music school in Oak Cliff. In this episode, they share how they started with a single student next to the Kessler Theater and grew into a school serving kids, adults, and families across the community.We hear about their approach to teaching music, curating what students learn, and giving them the chance to perform on real stages. From youth bands to adult programs, the conversation explores how BOCO combines education, performance, and neighborhood culture into a single, thriving space.

    Show More Show Less
    47 mins
  • HCP #058 - Year in Review: The Top 10 Hidden City Episodes of 2025
    Jan 7 2026

    We’re looking back on the conversations that resonated most with our listeners. In this special episode, our team counts down the Top 10 most-watched episodes of 2025 - each one representing a story that left a mark on Oak Cliff and on us.

    From neighborhood organizers and artists to historians, filmmakers, and community builders, this episode revisits the moments that sparked curiosity, emotion, and connection. Along the way, you’ll hear short clips from each episode introduced by our team, reflecting on why these stories mattered.

    This isn’t just a highlight reel. It’s a snapshot of a year spent listening closely, asking better questions, and sharing the voices that make Oak Cliff what it is. Thank you for being part of it. We can’t wait to keep going in 2026.

    Show More Show Less
    46 mins
  • HCP #057 - Jordan Jeanty: Filmmaking with Purpose, Faith, and Care for People
    Dec 17 2025

    Jordan Jeanty is a filmmaker and founder of Jeanty Studios whose wedding films are rooted in intention, faith, and care for the people he serves. In this episode, Jordan joins Doug and Grant to share his path from shooting on an iPhone to building a recognized wedding film studio, and why purpose and service guide every project he takes on.

    They talk about the responsibility of documenting life’s most meaningful moments, the emotional weight of wedding filmmaking, and how community, mentorship, and hospitality have shaped Jordan’s approach to both work and relationships. Along the way, Jordan reflects on storytelling that lasts, destination weddings, and the small, intentional practices that keep people at the center.

    Show More Show Less
    48 mins