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Could Be Pretty Cool News

Could Be Pretty Cool News

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Could Be Pretty Cool News is your go-to podcast for the latest scoop on the indie art and creative entrepreneurship scene. Each episode blends insights from the trailblazers who study and build the creative economy with intimate conversations with up-and-coming artists and entrepreneurs. Tune in for insightful discussions, artist spotlights, and a deep dive into the mechanics of running an independent creative business. In each episode, we embark on an intellectual exploration where research meets creativity and data intersects with entrepreneurship. The show is hosted by Spotify Sound Up Alum and "You Heard Me Write" host Kacie Willis.

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Episodios
  • Can Sustainable Creativity Create Circular Systems?
    Jun 25 2025

    Explore how creative entrepreneurs are building sustainable futures through circular systems that honor both ancestral wisdom and innovative solutions. Featuring Tamara Stands and Looks Back-Spotted Tail on bridging Lakota values with renewable energy technology, and Jonelle Dawkins on creating financial independence through creative reuse.

    • Traditional ecological knowledge meeting modern sustainability solutions
    • Creative reuse as economic empowerment for artists
    • Building circular economies that serve communities
    • Indigenous entrepreneurship and cultural preservation
    • Removing barriers to creative independence
    • Sustainability as environmental, social, and financial interconnectedness
    • Community-driven renewable energy projects
    • Creative problem-solving for systemic challenges
    • Cultural authenticity and certification processes
    • Multi-disciplinary creative entrepreneurship


    Tamara Stands and Looks Back-Spotted Tail - Founder of Lakota Women Business (LLC) and Lakota Women Initiative (nonprofit); Member of the Sicangu Lakota tribe; Renewable energy advocate and Indigenous women's empowerment leader

    Jonelle Dawkins - Executive Director at Scraplanta; Multi-disciplinary creative entrepreneur; Creative reuse movement leader

    "As Lakota people, we utilize the buffalo for our robes, for our tepees. So a tepee is our home and reaching out to the earth to build a sustainable home is where we're at in the future, especially as climate changes and the earth changes and how do we meet that change as it's coming into the future." - Tamara Stands and Looks Back-Spotted Tail

    "At Scrap Atlanta, we are taking art supplies from people who no longer need it... instead of us putting it to the landfill and it no longer having a useful life, they can bring it to a creative for reuse center and somebody else who maybe they want to get started in sewing... can use that they make that piece that helps them get that job that helps them build independence." - Jonelle Dawkins

    • Tamara: https://www.lakotawomenbusinessllc.com/ and Lakota Women Initiative
    • Jonelle: @scrapATL on Instagram, @scrapatlanta on Facebook, and @scrapatl on TikTok
    • Tucker Creative Reuse Center
    • Adair Park Creative Reuse Center
    • Duluth popup location


    @couldbeprettycool | couldbeprettycool.com | couldbeprettycoolnews.substack.com

    Sustainable creativity, circular economy, Indigenous entrepreneurship, creative reuse, renewable energy, Lakota culture, community empowerment, creative independence, traditional ecological knowledge, upcycling, social sustainability, financial sustainability, cultural preservation, creative problem-solving


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    43 m
  • Can AI and Human Artistry Coexist?
    Jun 5 2025

    In this inaugural episode of The Young Creator Electorate, host Sabbath Canady explores one of the most pressing questions facing young creators today: what does the rise of artificial intelligence mean for the future of human creativity?

    Theatre artist and recent college graduate Nicholas Gilomen takes center stage with a powerful monologue that captures the complex relationship between AI technology and working artists. Speaking directly to an AI voice, Nicholas wrestles with questions that keep many creators up at night: Will AI replace human performers? How do we protect artistic authenticity in an age of deepfakes? And what happens when corporations prioritize cost-cutting over the humanity behind the art?

    Through his personal lens as an aspiring voice actor navigating ongoing industry strikes, Nicholas examines how AI impacts everything from background performers to major productions, and why the loss of entry-level opportunities could reshape entire creative industries. The conversation that follows digs deeper into issues of digital privacy, stolen likenesses, and the urgent need for regulation in our rapidly evolving technological landscape.

    This episode doesn't offer easy answers, but it amplifies the thoughtful, nuanced perspectives of Gen Z creators who refuse to be passive observers in conversations that will shape their artistic futures. From the ethics of AI training data to the importance of maintaining human connection in art, these young voices are asking the hard questions that matter most.

    Featuring: Nicholas Gilomen (Theatre Artist) and Sabbath Canady (Host, Spelman College)

    Produced by: Could Be Pretty Cool News in partnership with Georgia Public Broadcasting Student Voices Collective

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    29 m
  • Navigating Change: From Fractional Production to Georgia's Arts Divide
    May 21 2025

    Description

    Explore how creative entrepreneurs are navigating industry transitions and building sustainable futures through two distinct perspectives. Featuring Dani Dufresne on reshaping creative production with a fractional model beyond traditional agency structures, followed by Kacie Luaders' thoughtful examination of Georgia's creative ecosystem highlighting the stark contrast between struggling nonprofit arts organizations and expanding commercial entertainment ventures in Atlanta.

    Key Topics

    • Evolving from traditional agency models to flexible, fractional production
    • Building sustainable creative businesses during industry shifts
    • Navigating business formation and contracts as creative entrepreneurs
    • Creating supportive networks for creative professionals
    • Balancing creative work with personal responsibilities
    • The divide between nonprofit and for-profit creative sectors in Georgia
    • Georgia's ranking in state arts funding and its impact on cultural organizations
    • The expansion of commercial entertainment ventures in Atlanta
    • Creating symbiotic relationships between different parts of the creative economy

    Featured Segments

    • Interview: Dani Dufresne - CEO and Executive Producer of The Auxiliary Co. ; Pioneer of the "fractional executive producer" model in creative production
    • Commentary: "Atlanta Arts: A Tale of Two Sectors" - Kacie Luaders explores the contrasting realities of Georgia's nonprofit arts organizations facing funding cuts while commercial entertainment ventures in Atlanta expand with substantial backing


    Notable Quotes

    "I don't ever wanna get in the way of making my agency feeling uncomfortable because like we're putting our work out as ours. So then we actually crafted that as our new, like p or really as our biggest communication. This is not our work. So that opens up our reel and you see all the different kinds of things that we've done, but it's not. We do your work, we get your vision made." - Dani Dufresne

    "No one will give a shit about your business as much as you do. No employee you ever hire will care as much as you do." - Dani Dufresne

    "If it feels too produced, people are gonna know... they're gonna see it." - Dani Dufresne

    "Georgia ranks 50th in the nation for state arts funding, investing only 14 cents per capita on the arts. That puts us at the very bottom nationwide when it comes to public support for arts and culture, highlighting a systemic underinvestment in the nonprofit creative sector." - Kacie Luaders

    "The question isn't just 'How can nonprofits become more sustainable?' but rather 'How can we create a cultural landscape where both commercial and mission-driven arts thrive together?' This requires seeing beyond the false dichotomy of business versus art and recognizing the inherent interdependence of Atlanta's creative sectors." - Kacie Luaders

    Connect with our guest

    • The Auxiliary Co
    • LinkedIn: Dani Dufresne


    Recent News Mentioned

    • National Endowment for the Arts grant withdrawals affecting Georgia arts organizations (over $500,000 in funding)
    • Live Nation's new 5,300-capacity music venue at Centennial Yards ($5 billion downtown development)


    Follow Could Be Pretty Cool News

    • @couldbeprettycool
    • couldbeprettycool.com


    Keywords

    Creative entrepreneurship, fractional production model, advertising production, creative agency adaptation, industry transitions, sustainable creative careers, Georgia nonprofit arts funding, Atlanta commercial entertainment ventures, arts advocacy, cultural ecosystem, Atlanta arts landscape, creative business models

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    43 m
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