
Cut & Paste
Hosted by Jeremy D. Goodwin, Cut & Paste arts and culture podcast brings you in-depth conversations with artists and cultural drivers. Listeners will hear from artists about their work and why it matters, and also about who they are and how their own personal experiences shape their art-making.
Latest Episodes
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We’ve all had that dream. You know, the one where you’re naked on stage and the audience is laughing.For an improv performer, that’s no nightmare; that’s…
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The art of activism weaved its way more deeply into the St. Louis arts scene in 2016.In this year’s Cut & Paste arts and culture podcasts, we brought you…
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Two official St. Louis poets don’t always agree on what’s appropriate but they do concur on at least one thing: If you want change, you've got to work for…
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Millions have marveled at the beatboxing contests between father-daughter duo Ed Cage and Nicole Paris. They’ve battled it out in numerous YouTube videos…
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You can almost hear the silverware clatter, the glasses clink and the generations clash as Thanksgiving approaches.St. Louis artist Edo Rosenblith aims to…
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We’ve all been touched by cancer, through someone we love or admire, or even our own. Nearly 40 percent of us will be diagnosed with the disease in our…
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The title of an upcoming play by St. Louis’ Tesseract Theatre is a loaded question: “Am I Black Enough Yet?”It's a challenge that could cause discomfort…
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From a modern-day operatic tribute to “The Goose That Laid the Golden Egg” to a woman interacting with a toy chicken, St. Lou Fringe offers entertainment…
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Before Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat, before Freedom Riders headed to segregated bus stations, before Martin Luther King Jr. led his first march,…
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As a child in Meridian, Miss., Treasure Shields Redmond donned special shoes nearly every Sunday — a black patent leather pair that skipped after her…
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Do you ever wonder why St. Louis Public Radio covers a particular concert but not an art show opening on the same night? Or a certain play but not a…
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“What fools these mortals be!” Puck famously utters in Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.”St. Louis audiences may be fooled in Shakespeare Festival…