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We Got The Funk

We Got The Funk

Von: DonTheBarber
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"We Got The Funk" is a podcast based in Fort Worth, Texas. I discuss a wide variety of subjects that directly affect our city. Everything from the history of Funkytown to its future. Welcome to The Funk......

© 2025 We Got The Funk
Management & Leadership Persönliche Entwicklung Persönlicher Erfolg Welt Ökonomie
  • Before the Fort: The First Footprints
    Jan 2 2026

    🪒 Episode Overview

    Before cowboys.

    Before cattle drives.

    Before the Stockyards.

    Fort Worth had a heartbeat.

    In the very first episode of We Got The Funk, DonTheBarber takes listeners back to a time long before Fort Worth had a name, when families lived, worked, raised children, and built community along the Trinity River.

    This episode sets the foundation for the entire series—challenging the myths, correcting the record, and honoring the people whose stories are too often skipped.

    Pulled straight from the barbershop chair, this is history told the way it was meant to be told: honest, grounded, and alive.

    📍 What We Cover in Episode 1

    🟫 The Trinity River Before Fort Worth

    Why the Trinity River was prime real estate long before modern development

    How water, soil, and wildlife supported permanent communities

    What city and archaeological records reveal about thousands of years of habitation

    🟫 The First People of the Region

    The Caddo world and Wichita-related peoples

    Organized villages, farming systems, and trade routes

    A cultural crossroads where Native communities lived, traded, and raised families

    🟫 Daily Life in Early Villages

    Farming corn, beans, and squash

    Hunting, fishing, family life, and spirituality

    Why this wasn’t “survival”—it was intentional living

    🟫 Why This History Still Matters Today

    The danger of starting Fort Worth’s story in 1849

    How erasing early peoples distorts the city’s identity

    Why honoring the first residents is essential to loving the city today

    🧠 Key Takeaways

    Fort Worth did not begin with the Army or the Stockyards

    Native communities were settled, organized, and thriving

    The Trinity River was the original neighborhood

    You can’t build a future without telling the whole truth about the past

    📢 Call to Action

    If this episode made you think differently about Fort Worth:

    ✅ Subscribe — Episodes 1, 2, and 3 drop together

    ✅ Share — Especially with someone who only knows Stockyards Fort Worth

    ✅ Review or Comment — Tell us what surprised you most

    ✅ Reflect — Take a walk along the Trinity River and imagine the families who lived there first



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    5 Min.
  • Before the Fort: The Rising Tensions
    Jan 2 2026

    Episodes one and two showed peace along the Trinity River and Village Creek — families thriving, land providing, life moving in rhythm.

    But in Episode 3, the energy changes.

    In “Rising Tension, Before the Smoke Hit the Air,” DonTheBarber breaks down how North Texas went from calm to conflict in the early 1800s. As settlers began moving into the region, misunderstandings grew, fear spread, rumors ran wild, and government power stepped in.

    This episode isn’t about one moment — it’s about how pressure builds, how neighbors become suspects, and how a place called home slowly turns into a battlefield.

    Before the smoke hit the air… the tension was already thick.

    🧠 What This Episode Covers

    Why early Native communities at Village Creek were already rooted and organized

    How increased settler migration in the 1830s–1840s changed everything

    The role fear, rumors, and exaggerated reports played on the frontier

    How Native families were blamed for violence they didn’t commit

    The Republic of Texas government’s response to settler anxiety

    Who Edward H. Tarrant was — and why his name still matters today

    How tension shifted from social pressure to planned military action

    Why violence didn’t come out of nowhere — it was built step by step

    📍 Why This Story Matters

    Fort Worth history doesn’t start with cowboys or forts.

    This episode shows how real families, real homes, and real communities were pushed into danger long before a single fort was built. Understanding how tension formed helps explain why the violence that followed was so devastating — and why the land still carries that history today.

    You can’t understand the explosion without studying the pressure.

    ▶️ What’s Coming Next

    Episode 4: The Village Creek Throwdown

    Dropping January 9, 2026

    This is the moment it all erupts.

    Militia rides in.

    Families run.

    And the land is changed forever.

    You don’t want to miss it.

    📢 Call to Action

    •Subscribe so you don’t miss Episode 4

    •Share this episode with someone who thinks Fort Worth started with cowboys

    •Leave a review or comment and tell us what moment made you think, “Yeah… trouble was coming”

    •If you’re near Village Creek, take a drive and look at that land with new eyes

    Hosted by: DonTheBarber

    Be smooth. Be safe. And by all means — keep it Funky.

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    5 Min.
  • Episode 2 Before the Fort: Life Along Village Creek
    Jan 2 2026

    🪒 Episode Overview

    Before Texas had a name…

    Before Fort Worth…

    Before 1849…

    There was Village Creek.

    In Episode 2 of We Got The Funk, DonTheBarber takes listeners inside one of the most important—yet overlooked—places in North Texas history. If the Trinity River was the main highway, Village Creek was the neighborhood where people stopped, stayed, and built real lives.

    This episode pulls you out of the textbook and drops you right inside the village, showing what daily life actually looked like for the Native communities who lived, farmed, fished, raised families, and called this land home long before settlers arrived.

    This isn’t theory.

    This isn’t myth.

    This is lived history.

    📍 What We Cover in Episode 2

    🟫 Why Village Creek Was Prime Real Estate

    Fresh running water, fertile soil, timber, and protection

    Why Native communities chose this land intentionally

    Archaeological evidence of long-term settlement

    🟫 Who Lived Along Village Creek

    Caddo-related peoples, Wichita, Tonkawa, and other bands

    How multi-tribal communities shared space, traded, and intermarried

    Why simplifying Native history erases real complexity

    🟫 A Day in the Life of the Village

    Morning routines along the creek

    Farming corn, beans, and squash

    Hunting, fishing, tool-making, family life, and community rhythm

    Why these villages were organized—not temporary camps

    🟫 Why This Story Still Matters

    The danger of starting Fort Worth’s story in 1849

    How erasing Village Creek erases real families and real homes

    Why later conflict hit so hard—because this land was already loved

    🧠 Key Takeaways

    Village Creek was not empty land—it was home

    Native communities were skilled, knowledgeable, and rooted

    Fort Worth’s history didn’t begin with the Army

    Understanding Village Creek changes how we understand conflict, loss, and legacy

    📢 Call to Action

    If this episode opened your eyes:

    ✅ Subscribe — Episode 3 is ready and the story only gets deeper

    ✅ Share — Especially with someone from North Texas who never heard this history

    ✅ Review or Comment — Tell us what you pictured during those Village Creek mornings

    ✅ Reflect — Visit the Village Creek area and look at the land differently



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    4 Min.
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