
1 Year Anniversary: Who's Behind CJ?
01/29/22 • 48 min
In this special 1 year anniversary episode, Cooperative Journal's host - Ebony Joy finally opens up to share their personal story.
I explain what inspired me to start this form of storytelling, why I've shifted from the language of "alternative economics", expanding into a multimedia/multi-sensory platform, and why this is an opportune times for collectivized economic solutions.
My friend/collaborator Robin also joins me in the later half of the episode to share a bit about themself. They've been central in the recent reinvisioining process and is the visual strategist/artist at Cooperative Journal Media.
Cooperative Journal Media: Media platform that the podcast is now under the umbrella of
Anticapitalism for Artists: A platform for artists interested in anti-capitalism
Creative Wildfire: Group of artists Robin and I joined to make art about "not going back to normal"
Want to support Cooperative Journal?
Share your gifts with us on Open Collective Foundation
In this special 1 year anniversary episode, Cooperative Journal's host - Ebony Joy finally opens up to share their personal story.
I explain what inspired me to start this form of storytelling, why I've shifted from the language of "alternative economics", expanding into a multimedia/multi-sensory platform, and why this is an opportune times for collectivized economic solutions.
My friend/collaborator Robin also joins me in the later half of the episode to share a bit about themself. They've been central in the recent reinvisioining process and is the visual strategist/artist at Cooperative Journal Media.
Cooperative Journal Media: Media platform that the podcast is now under the umbrella of
Anticapitalism for Artists: A platform for artists interested in anti-capitalism
Creative Wildfire: Group of artists Robin and I joined to make art about "not going back to normal"
Want to support Cooperative Journal?
Share your gifts with us on Open Collective Foundation
Previous Episode
![undefined - [24] Understory: Worker-led Restaurant](https://storage.googleapis.com/goodpods-images-bucket/episode_images/beb997af6722c3621fdc7ea31db2715f5e3bbf6ddf80c9497f65acba509f1107.avif)
[24] Understory: Worker-led Restaurant
Understory is a worker-led restaurant, bar, and incubation kitchen in Oakland, CA. In collaboration with Oakland Bloom, they center immigrant, working class, and people of color chefs through pathways to worker-leadership, project support and training, and economic opportunities. It is more than just a restaurant, they offer a platter of ways to physically and socially nourish the community in a co-creative way. You can experience the roots of the workers through their rotating menu of Filipino, Moroccan, and Mexican cuisine, check out local art, attend a dance party, or support an immigrant or refugee chef at their weekly pop-up.
In this episode I speak with one of the chefs Florencio Esquivel about how Understory is shifting the narrative of who receives support and amplification in the restaurant industry. They share how the pandemic influenced the restaurant’s formation, process of assuming responsibilities and navigating decision making, impact and intention of their worker emergency fund, importance of preserving indegenous recipes, and their vision for a changed restaurant world that is horizontally structured while honoring the diversity of workers and their lineage.
Resources
Wahpepah’s Kitchen (Kickapoo Tribe Restaurant in Oakland)
Next Episode
![undefined - [26] Tariq El Nahl: Herbal Collective](https://storage.googleapis.com/goodpods-images-bucket/episode_images/ce4e1f1ccdbacb298ed0f9d2af55c8e31311dafea2dfe1f33ffed73909b21cfa.avif)
[26] Tariq El Nahl: Herbal Collective
Tariq El Nahl translates from Arabic to Way of the Bees. They are an herbal collective based in Lebanon that formed after the explosion in the capital of Beirut in 2020. Lebanon has been compounded with crises in the past 50 years - from a civil war, to a financial crisis, and most recently the explosion left 300,000 people homeless and a government collapsed. When faced with trauma, broken infrastructure, and governmental systems that fail to meet our needs, how do we heal and progress? Tariq El Nahl is answering this question through fully embodying and bringing people back to their essence - Mother Earth.
In this episode, I speak with Paul Saad, one of the members of the collective.. He poetically shares how they are utilizing land–based practices for reclaiming, highlighting, and accessing ancestral knowledge including creating native botanical gardens, delivering handmade baskets filled with herbal medicine from the land, herbal medicine toolkits as well as how they are raising money to fulfill these needs, and suggestions for finding light and grounding amidst darkness.
Want to support Cooperative Journal?
Share your gifts with us on Open Collective Foundation
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