Category: podcast

  • Fields of Loyalty: Why Does Appalachia Keeps Voting for the Rich?

    The road into my town winds through acres of farmland that stretch to the horizon, dotted with tractors, barns, and fields that breathe with the rhythm of the seasons. Every spring brings a cautious hope, and every autumn delivers a verdict. A good harvest can carry a family through the winter, while a bad one…

  • Why Billionaires Are Quietly Buying Land in Appalachia

    The road into one Appalachian County winds through dense forest and past old mining sites now covered in second-growth poplar. Land that once belonged to small farmers and coal families is changing hands, and the buyers aren’t from nearby. Signs are going up along familiar paths: private property, no trespassing, access by permit only. People…

  • The True Story of the Appalachian City That Breathed Life

    Long before antibiotics were discovered, people placed their hopes in nature. And in the late 1800s, there were few places more sought after than Asheville, North Carolina—a mountain town that quietly became a place where the sick came to heal, or at least to hold on a little longer. In 1870, Dr. H. P. Gatchell…

  • The Battle for the Soul of Appalachia

    The Mountain South Confronts Hard Truths in a World That Often Ignores It Appalachia is not a postcard. It’s not all wildflowers and misty ridgelines, though there’s plenty of that. It’s a place where contradictions sit heavy. Where people love their neighbors but may not trust the government. Where the past is always just below…

  • Appalachia’s Changing Landscape: Who Can Still Afford to Call It Home?

    Appalachia has long been a refuge for those seeking a quieter, more affordable life. But in recent years, a surge of newcomers—retirees, remote workers, and families fleeing high-cost cities—has transformed the region’s economic and cultural fabric. While the influx brings growth, it also raises pressing questions about affordability and the displacement of lifelong residents.​ A…

  • FEMA Scales Back Aid as Appalachian People in North Carolina Struggle to Rebuild

    Six months after Hurricane Helene, federal support is drying up while the need remains high FEMA has denied North Carolina’s request to continue covering 100% of the costs tied to Hurricane Helene recovery—leaving Appalachian communities to carry a heavier load just as a new hurricane season approaches. In a letter sent Friday to Governor Josh…

  • The Trump Administration’s Push to Log National Forests: A Threat to Appalachia’s Mountains and Environment

    The Trump administration is pushing hard to open up national forests to more logging, and Appalachia’s mountains are squarely in the crosshairs. They claim it’s about jobs and fire prevention, but anyone who knows these woods understands the real cost. These forests aren’t just a resource to be exploited—they’re the backbone of the region, holding…

  • The True Story of Appalachia’s Deadly Ginseng Wars”

    How a humble mountain root turned neighbor against neighbor—and sometimes, killer against killer Roy Combs never locked his doors. Not his truck, not his toolshed, certainly not the old cedar chest where he kept his dried ginseng roots wrapped in newspaper. In the holler where he’d lived all his 58 years, everyone knew Roy. And…

  • Pretty Polly: Ralph Stanley’s Haunting Ballad of Betrayal and Ghostly Justice

    Bluegrass icon Ralph Stanley’s bluegrass standard “Pretty Polly” is an eerie murder ballad of love, betrayal, and supernatural revenge. Based on an older English folk song called The Gosport Tragedy, the ballad tells the tale of a young woman who meets the worst end at the hands of her lover, only to have revenge visit her in supernatural and ghostly proportions. The Ballad: A Promise Fatal The ballad recounts the sinister tale of John Billson, a ship carpenter, who makes Pretty Polly pregnant after seducing her and then takes her into the woods to murder her so that he will not have to take responsibility for his sin. Billson sets sail on the ship MMS Bedford after committing the…

  • Appalachian Slang: A Language All Its Own

    The Appalachian dialect is a fascinating and colorful form of speech that has been shaped by centuries of tradition, isolation, and cultural blending. This unique way of speaking reflects the history, resourcefulness, and humor of the people who call the mountains home. Below is a collection of common Appalachian slang words and phrases, along with…