Here we go! It’s time for The Raising a Ruckus Podcast; the show all about rule-breakers, change-makers, and risk-takers — and the leaps of faith, sleepless nights, disasters, and big decisions they made along the way. Welcome to the show!
In his book Steal Like an Artist: 10 Things Nobody Told You About Being Creative, Austin Kleon wrote, “You have to dress for the job you want, not the job you have, and you have to start doing the work you want to be doing.”
Well… we’re stealing that line as the perfect setup for our guest, Shefalee Patel.
Shefalee is an artist, dancer, creative, and a community connector. Even more so, she recognizes her role as an ambassador to her Indian culture. Her art, her dance, and yes – even the way she dresses – are starting points for folks to learn more.
Y’all, she is wide open, and we love that about her.
Once we stop cutting-up in the booth; we get into her Charlotte story and how she went from a job in government to creative entrepreneurship. DC has a helluva time getting a word in on this episode of The Raising a Ruckus Podcast…
Cheers!
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Here we go! It’s time for The Raising a Ruckus Podcast; the show all about rule-breakers, change-makers, and risk-takers — and the leaps of faith, sleepless nights, disasters, and big decisions they made along the way. Welcome to the show!
One of the things we love most about this format is that conversations really get a chance to breathe and develop over the time in the studio. And, of course, that means some stuff’s gonna be said that no one ever saw coming.
Case in point: this episode with our man, Ted Rosenau. We actually met Ted long before he cracked the seal on Petty Thieves Brewing. And that long, winding road to opening day was not the surprise in this conversation. At least not until he dropped a casual mention of some supernatural goings-on during the process. Full stop and rewind for us, y’all. Spoiler alert: not Ted’s first go-round with the spectral.
We get into all that, plus the otherworldly inspiration behind the brewery’s curious beer names and eclectic, comfortable tap room. Get the Mystery Machine fired-up for this episode of The Raising a Ruckus Podcast…
Cheers!
PS: Congrats to Ted and the gang at Petty Thieves and their Charlotte Magazine “Best Of” award for “Best Brewery Interior.” Who knew there was a category for that!
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We’re always impressed with folks who make it work from a right brain AND left brain perspective. Frank Expression is one of those cats on our list.
We know him first and foremost for his performance chops. He’s a brass man and a spoken word poet, and he puts them both together in a way that literally goes deep. Like deep enough to really get ya in the feels.
Everyone’s life experience is different, but Frank manages to pull from his, and quite literally express it in a way that’s very special. If you’re open to it, you’ll feel it.
And that’s just the Frank we knew when we started this recording…
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The Raising a Ruckus Podcast is the show all about rule-breakers, change-makers, and risk-takers — and the leaps of faith, sleepless nights, disasters, and big decisions they made along the way. Welcome to the show!
We’re pretty sure everyone, at some point, did some painting when they were younger. Watercolors, fingerpaints… whatever. We sure did. Craft paper decorated with big, fat brush strokes in the shape of stick figures and stuff that looked like animals (or trees?) practically covered the refrigerator at our house. We couldn’t have been more proud if our work was hanging in the Smithsonian.
But at some point, we get self-conscious of our creations. It’s not “real” enough, or artsy enough, or cool enough? Maybe that “C” in art class wasn’t a reflection of our real potential. Who knows. Then we just stop creating altogether.
Tim Edwards believes we’re all still harboring that inner artist. He’s created a judgement-free zone in Splatter Charlotte where anyone – and we mean anyone – can create something all their own.
Cheers!
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The Raising a Ruckus Podcast is the show all about rule-breakers, change-makers, and risk-takers — and the leaps of faith, sleepless nights, disasters, and big decisions they made along the way. Welcome to the show!
Not gonna lie here; Brian Lafontaine is a really good-looking fella. Approachably handsome, with the manner and personality to match. He’s the kinda guy you’d be happy to introduce to your mom. But then every time you’d call home she’d ask, “how’s that friend of yours, Brian? He was so nice!” (He’s fine, Mom… )
Over the years, Brian has managed to parlay those looks – and a natural talent plus a whole lot of hard work – into a successful career as an actor. Like a legit, making a living, as-seen-on-TV and in the movies actor.
You might have seen him in Ozark, The Hate U Give, Stranger Things, and a ton of other films and shows. Or maybe you even saw him at the Harris Teeter. Yep; he’s managed to be a movie star without giving up the freedom that’s lost to big time fame. Pretty cool.
On this episode of the Raising a Ruckus podcast, Brian Lafontaine talks about making it in the movies, keeping it real in the 704, and his next role as an entrepreneur. Cheers!
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The Raising a Ruckus Podcast is the podcast all about rule-breakers, change-makers, and risk-takers — and the leaps of faith, sleepless nights, and big decisions along their journey. Welcome to the show!
The creative path – like that of the entrepreneur – is a big leap of faith. Hell, it’s actually a bunch of them. It’s like playing drunken hopscotch in the dark on a carpet covered in Lego bricks. You learn a ton about yourself and your partners and friends in the process.
Torrie Savage and Paula Bartlett learned plenty about each other, and what they really wanted to do (and not do) in the formative years of The Savage Way. These ladies are so baller they took a completely successful marketing biz and totally blew it up! Of their own volition, of course. Then, they totally reinvented their brand, banking solely on clean graffiti and moss art to make their mark on the ad and marketing scene.
Like LL said, don’t call it a comeback. They’ve been here for years.
On this episode of the Raising a Ruckus podcast, Torrie and Paula talk about taking big chances, doing cool shit, and what it was like when the Rolling Stones called. Cheers!
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We met Priya Sircar IRL at a OneBand gig earlier this year, and knew we’d need to get her on the show. She’s a singer, dancer, choreographer, independent filmmaker, actor, mom, and probably a secret agent, and some other cool $#i+ you can’t put on LinkedIn.
She’s also the City of Charlotte’s first-ever Arts and Culture Officer. In just two years on the job, she’s helped put millions of dollars in grants directly into local creatives’ hands. It’s no Austin or Santa Fe, but you gotta start somewhere, right?
On this episode of the Raising a Ruckus podcast, Priya Sircar talks about what it’ll take to get Charlotte to reach its creative potential, what she learned from her own unfunded film project, and if all those liquids were necessary to record this podcast. Cheers!
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The Raising a Ruckus Podcast is the podcast all about rule-breakers, change-makers, and risk-takers — and the leaps of faith, sleepless nights, and big decisions along their journey. Welcome to the show!
Quick question: did you like school? Traditional “school” ain’t for everyone, that’s for sure. And, the straight jacket most teachers are fit with gets more constrictive every year. Thank your state lawmakers, standardized tests, etc., for all that…
Natalie Parmenter said, “F all this classroom mess,” but still couldn’t kick her habit. She’s a born teacher – and there clearly IS such a thing – but the system can’t handle a red-headed rebel like this.
On this episode of the Raising a Ruckus podcast, she spills the tea or whatever on WTF is wrong with the classroom setup, why and how she’s STILL teaching, and how parents and teachers turned her into a YouTube superstar. (With no feet pictures involved.)
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Natalie Parmenter // Primary Focus
• YouTube
• Website
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The first episode - also episode 78 ;) - featurers the co-founders of Charlotte is Creative, Matt Olin & Tim Miner. We definetly talked to them about all the fun stuff they are up to at the Charlotte based non-profit, but we also asked about their friendship, history, why they love Charlotte so much, and much more.
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