• The hype behind the world’s largest gas station
    Jan 8 2026

    Buc-ee’s, the mega-sized gas station known for its pristine bathrooms, numerous snack options and cartoon beaver mascot, is expanding across the South. And it’s bringing with it a legion of cultish fans. But what’s with all the hype? And does the world really need a gas station the size of a Walmart with 20 different flavors of beef jerky?

    Featuring:

    • Emily Cataneo, freelance journalist and contributor for The Assembly
    • Dale Edwards, managing editor for The News of Orange County

    Links:

    • Check out Emily's reporting on Buc-ee's for The Assembly here.

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    23 Min.
  • Tony Hawk and the skateboard rabbit hole
    Jan 1 2026

    This New Year's Day we're revisiting one of our all-time favorite episodes of The Broadside. We'll be back with a new original show next week.

    On a rainy day in 1979, a photograph was taken of a young girl skateboarding down a street in Fayetteville, North Carolina. 45 years later, that photo went viral with a little help from the most famous skater who ever lived: Tony Hawk. This week, we find out who the mystery girl in the picture was and why the snapshot was so ahead of its time.

    This episode originally published on December 12, 2024.

    Featuring:

    • Jeremy Markovich, writer of the North Carolina Rabbit Hole
    • Tony Hawk, skateboarder
    • Shaunda Shane, skateboarder

    Links:

    • Check out Jeremy's article about tracking down Shaunda Shane.
    • View photographs of Shaunda skateboarding from the Fayetteville Observer.
    • You can find a transcript of this episode here.

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    20 Min.
  • Our Common Nature: Mountains and Forgotten Family with Yo-Yo Ma
    Dec 25 2025

    During this holiday break, we're sharing an episode from the podcast series Our Common Nature, produced by our friends at WYNC.

    When the world stopped in 2020, cellist Yo-Yo Ma started thinking about how music can reconnect people to the natural world, and how story and song can help us grapple with America's complicated history. Our Common Nature is a 7-episode series where Yo-Yo Ma travels around the country to make music and meet people who have deep connections to the earth. In this episode, host Ana González joins Yo-Yo in the Smoky Mountains of North Carolina, to tell two stories of people who are reclaiming their connections to the land.

    Episode description: In the Smoky Mountains, traditions layer and intersect. Yo-Yo Ma believes that story and song can help us grapple with America’s complicated history. This episode highlights two stories of people who are reclaiming their connections to the land. The first brings us to Cherokee, North Carolina, where Lavita Hill and Mary Crowe are working to change the name of the tallest mountain in the range back to its original Cherokee name.

    Then, we go to the other side of the mountains, where musician Eric Mingus meets up with some long-lost family, and grapples with the weight of his family’s history. His performance reconnects him to a lineage he never thought he’d find.

    Featuring music by Eric Mingus, Rhiannon Giddens and Yo-Yo Ma.

    “Grinds My Bones/The Mill” was composed and performed by Eric Mingus.

    Flute and vocal performance in this episode by Jarrett Wildcatt. Additional audio recording provided by Taylor MacKay.

    Credits: Our Common Nature is a production of WNYC and Sound Postings

    • Hosted by Ana González
    • Produced by Alan Goffinski
    • With editing from Pearl Marvell
    • Sound design and episode music from Alan Goffinski
    • Mixed by Joe Plourde
    • Fact-checking by Ena Alvarado
    • Executive Producers are Emily Botein, Ben Mandelkern, Sophie Shackleton, and Jonathan Bays
    • Our advisors are Mira Burt-Wintonick, Kamaka Dias, Kelley Libbey, and Chris Newell
    • Episode photo by Austin Mann
    • Episode and show art by Tiffany Pai


    And if you want to listen to more music from this series, you can check out the Our Common Nature EP, featuring Yo-Yo playing with Eric Mingus, Jen Kreisberg and an Icelandic choir, now available on all streaming platforms.

    This podcast was inspired by a project of the same name, conceived by Yo-Yo Ma and Sound Postings, with creative direction by Sophie Shackleton, in collaboration with partners all over the world.

    Our Common Nature is made possible with support from Emerson Collective and Tambourine Philanthropies.

    Visit the website at ourcommonnaturepodcast.org

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    43 Min.
  • 100th Episode Special: There are no small stories
    Dec 18 2025

    On our 100th episode there are no small stories… just short ones. In the past two years, we've crisscrossed the state of North Carolina. From Manteo to Murphy and many points in between. And we’ve done our best to connect you – wherever you live – to the people and places that make our region so fascinating. Along the way, we’ve collected a few stories that, for whatever reason, didn’t fit into a full-length episode. But we thought our 100th episode special was the perfect excuse to break out some of these shorties but goodies.

    This week, we explore the effort to raise up a beloved hip-hop anthem, learn that much of our fate was randomly drawn on a map and dig into a tale about one of the most infamous crime scenes in American history.

    Featuring:

    • Adrienne Berney, outreach coordinator for the State Archives of North Carolina
    • Katie Hatton, editor of the North Carolina Colonial Records Project
    • Allison Hussey, writer

    See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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    28 Min.
  • How mini golf spread from one man’s lawn to the world
    Dec 11 2025

    It’s easy to overlook the importance of mini golf. But this tiny game has played a pivotal role in breaking down class barriers to golf. And the story of how a bite sized version of golf made it from one man’s lawn in North Carolina to the rest of the world is utterly fascinating.

    Featuring:

    • Audrey Moriarty, Executive Director at Given Memorial Library and Tufts Archives
    • Carolyn Cole, owner of Thistle Dhu
    • Katie Boyce, PhD, Adjunct Lecturer in History at William & Mary

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    22 Min.
  • Exploring our supermarket in the woods
    Dec 4 2025

    The Blue Ridge Mountains of western North Carolina are one of the most biodiverse places on the planet. The region is home to a whopping 4,000 species of plants and thousands of species of fungi. And many of them are edible. In the wake of Hurricane Helene, some folks (including children) are embracing this supermarket in the woods by learning how to forage for wild food… and how not to get poisoned in the process.

    Featuring:

    • Emily Cataneo, freelance journalist

    Links:

    • Check out Emily’s article on foraging for The Guardian.

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    21 Min.
  • Due South: Teaching the teachers about Native American history
    Nov 27 2025

    This Thanksgiving we're sharing an interview from our friends and colleagues at Due South, WUNC’s daily talk show. Hosted by Leoneda Inge and Jeff Tiberii, the program is a source for news, information and perspectives from across North Carolina and the South.

    In this conversation, Leoneda chats with Dr. Brittany Hunt. Hunt is a professor at the Virginia Tech School of Education, where she teaches the teachers about how schooling practices have been rooted in anti-Indigeneity and how to upend that system to center Indigenous stories.

    Hunt is also co-host of the Red Justice Project podcast, which tells stories of missing and murdered Indigenous people, and is the author of a children’s book Whoz Ya People.

    See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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    22 Min.
  • The curious case of George Masa
    Nov 20 2025

    The Great Smoky Mountains National Park and the Appalachian Trail form the backbone of the eastern portion of the US National Park system. Together, they welcome 15 million visitors every year. But they likely wouldn't exist as we know them today, if it weren't for the work of a pioneering photographer in North Carolina named George Masa. This week, we find out how an immigrant from Japan became the eyes of the American conservation movement and unearth the dark secrets that motivated his life’s work.

    Featuring:

    • Paul Bonesteel, documentary filmmaker and co-author of the book George Masa: A Life Reimagined
    • Mami Kikuchi, researcher and translator

    Links:

    • To learn more about Paul's new George Masa documentary film click here.




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    22 Min.