Crude Mag

Crude Mag Helping to Preserve and Define Alaskan Cultures Crude Conversations is a podcast about Alaskans. For questions, comments or story inquiries: [email protected]

Through long-form conversations, host Cody Liska helps discover larger truths about the culture of our great state. Each week features a guest who represents a different aspect of Alaska.

02/01/2025

New Year’s Eve in Fairbanks

VIDEO by u/merrehdiff via Reddit

In this episode of Crude Conversations, Cody talks to Jonathan Kreiss-Tomkins. Ever since he was a kid he’s been interes...
31/12/2024

In this episode of Crude Conversations, Cody talks to Jonathan Kreiss-Tomkins. Ever since he was a kid he’s been interested in politics and sports. Electoral politics and baseball, to be specific. But when it came to politics, he was a prodigy. He could recite groups of politicians — the 50 state attorneys general and all 100 U.S. senators, for example. He was interviewed on NPR at 14, and at 23 he dropped out of Yale, moved back home to Sitka and ran as a Democratic candidate for the state House of Representatives. He would go on to represent Sitka and 21 other rural Southeast Alaska communities in the Alaska House of Representatives, until leaving politics in 2022. His self-proclaimed fanaticism toward sports is what drew him to politics. Like sports, politics is statistical, numeric, and there are winners and there are losers. But with politics, unlike sports, the stakes are higher. They shape the world we live in.

Jonthan credits the Sitka High School Debate Team for giving him the intellectual and ideological versatility that he still relies on today. He says that in debate, it’s common to flip a coin and on the basis of the coin flip you have to argue diametrically opposite sides of the same issue. So, you not only have to understand both sides of an argument, you have to be able to clearly communicate it. In 2014, House Bill 216 was signed into law. It made the twenty Native languages in Alaska official languages of the state. Jonathan sponsored that bill and his efforts were, in part, aided by what he had learned in debate. He says that, like all things in politics, it was accomplished through compromise and teamwork.

27/12/2024

Heather Kallevig spotted these orcas in Homer, off Land’s End, today.

Boarderline summer camp at Alyeska. 2 weeks of shredding, partying and taking over Girdwood.
25/12/2024

Boarderline summer camp at Alyeska. 2 weeks of shredding, partying and taking over Girdwood.

An evening with Jason Borgstede, Jesse Burtner, Micah Hollinger and Andre Spinelli. With DJ Spencer Lee. Friday, January...
20/12/2024

An evening with Jason Borgstede, Jesse Burtner, Micah Hollinger and Andre Spinelli. With DJ Spencer Lee. Friday, January 17, at 6:30 pm in the Anchorage Museum Auditorium. We’ll get into stories, challenges and inspirations that have shaped Alaska’s snow and skate culture, past and present.

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In Alaska, starting in his late teens, Jesse Burtner released seven films under JB Deuce Productions with co-founder Jason Borgstede. At the age of 25, Jesse co-founded Think Thank with his wife, Christina, and collaborator Sean Genovese.

Micah Hollinger is arguably the most prolific and influential Alaska skateboarder to date. He filmed seven video parts for JB Deuce Productions and went on to bring a unique, creative, and artistic vision of progression to the entire skateboard industry.

Andre Spinelli is an Alaska snowboarder who has starred in numerous seminal snowboard films and competed at the professional level.

Jason Borgstede is the Owner of Blue & Gold Boardshop in Anchorage. He’s an X-Games Gold Medalist, skateboard and snowboard lifer, and father of three.

Poster by Sebastian Garber

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Dang
15/12/2024

Dang

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02/12/2024

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18/11/2024

“A beached whale was found today in Anchorage near Westchester Lagoon. A mix of fascination at the opportunity to be face to face with a massive wild animal, coupled with the sadness of its unfortunate and untimely death. Alaska is like no other place on earth.”

VIDEO & WORDS / Kellen Brent

Listen now wherever you get your podcasts. Just search "Chatter Marks."
04/11/2024

Listen now wherever you get your podcasts. Just search "Chatter Marks."

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03/11/2024

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In this episode of Crude Conversations, Cody talks to Mr. Whitekeys. He’s a showman, a performer and a musician, and for...
28/10/2024

In this episode of Crude Conversations, Cody talks to Mr. Whitekeys. He’s a showman, a performer and a musician, and for over 50 years he’s been entertaining Alaska with his music, his shows and his books. He started playing music in Anchorage in the 1970s at Chilkoot Charlie’s. In those days, the bars didn’t close until 5 am. So, a band could play for as long as 7 ½ hours — from 9 pm to 4:30 am. Keys says that for a musician it wasn’t about the entertainment, it was an endurance contest. From those years spent playing at Koots, he learned how to read an audience, to understand what entertains them. Then in 1980, he opened The Fly By Night Club. It featured long-running shows that parodied Alaska like “The Whale Fat Follies” and “Christmas In Spenard.” They had original songs, costumes, props, sets and slideshows. You could even get a meal of Spam there. The goal was to provide Anchorage with a cheap laugh, some infectious music and a good time.

Alaska, as it existed in the ‘70s, continues to influence Keys’ idea of Alaska. There was a renegade spirit to it back then, he says, and there wasn’t much influence from the Outside. There were no food chains, no big box stores and people lived how they wanted to live. That’s why he came to Alaska and he never left. It was unpretentious, just like Keys. In fact, at one point, he had a rule that he would never go to any entertainment-related event if they didn’t serve nachos. So, he laughs when asked what he thinks his legacy will be because he’s just a normal guy looking for a good time. Not someone to be put on a pedestal. But he says that if he did have one — if he did have a legacy — it would be that he spent his life telling Alaska’s story.

In this episode of Chatter Marks, Cody talks to Lael Wilcox. She’s an ultra-endurance cyclist and racer, and she recentl...
22/10/2024

In this episode of Chatter Marks, Cody talks to Lael Wilcox. She’s an ultra-endurance cyclist and racer, and she recently set a women’s Guinness World Record for fastest time cycling around the world. The trip was 18,000 miles long and it took her 108 days, 12 hours and 12 minutes to complete. She averaged 166 miles a day. And with the help of some friends, she planned her own route. She wanted it to include the kind of riding she likes to do, which is a lot of climbing in the mountains. It’s slower and it’s harder, but it’s the riding that inspires her. Her route was intense, rewarding and challenging. She was especially grateful for finishing without any injuries. Considering how much road Lael covered, staying safe around vehicles was among her top priorities because regardless of what happens, her main goals are to always stay safe and to finish regardless of her standing.

She says that each race is an opportunity to prove something to herself. Sometimes that’s overcoming her fear of the route — like with cycling around the world and the Iditarod Trail. Other times it’s about being capable of doing these increasingly long and difficult rides. Her desire to chase these rides, these proving grounds, is all-consuming. To the point that when she finds herself thinking about them, she stops eating or she stops talking to focus on the idea and her intent. She imagines it all fitting together like a puzzle — every piece is important and it all fits together to form a bigger picture. Sometimes that involves spontaneity — she loves that. Adjusting to weather, keeping an eye out for places to sleep, seeing wildlife, meeting new people, experiencing other cultures and visiting new places.

In this episode of Chatter Marks, Cody talks to Mike Livingston. He specializes in the cultural heritage of the Aleutian...
24/09/2024

In this episode of Chatter Marks, Cody talks to Mike Livingston. He specializes in the cultural heritage of the Aleutian and Pribilof Islands. His background makes him uniquely qualified for this position. He grew up in Cold Bay, Alaska, located on the Aleutians, and his family homesteaded where Trout Creek flows into Cold Bay. He says they didn’t have much money, so they lived a subsistence lifestyle and built their home using remnants left on the island from World War II.

At 21, he moved to Unalaska and worked as a police officer for three years, then he moved to Anchorage and was an officer for the Anchorage Police Department for 20 years. In that time, he worked in a number of different departments: burglary, theft, felony assaults, the crimes against children unit, and the major crimes unit. His work in law enforcement and his research into the Unangax̂ region — in addition to a local murder he remembers from when he was 16 — eventually led him to his work with Murdered and Missing Indigenous Persons.

More recently, Mike’s been focused on ways to integrate ancient sod housing design into the construction of modern houses. Traditional sod houses were used in the Aleutian Islands and the Alaska Peninsula for at least 10,000 years. They were so energy efficient that their carbon footprint was virtually non-existent.

He’s also been working on correcting historical inaccuracies of Benny Benson, the boy who designed the Alaska flag in 1927. The research he’s involved in found that Benny was not of Alutiiq heritage, like it’s been believed for decades, but of Unangax̂ heritage.

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13/09/2024

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11/09/2024

In this episode of Chatter Marks, Cody talks to Kristen Faulkner. She’s a professional cyclist and she recently won gold in two events at the 2024 Paris Olympics, women’s individual road race and women’s track cycling team pursuit. It was a dream come true. Ever since she was a kid — growing up in Homer, Alaska — she wanted to compete in the Olympics. As a young girl, she’d watch it on TV and it was the only time she saw women competing in professional sports. But it takes more than just a dream and a positive attitude to make it to the level that Kristen’s at now. She says there’s a process: You have to be humble and analytical and constantly learning. You also have to be willing to take risks.

In 2016, Kristen graduated from Harvard and then took a job in New York and then in San Francisco as an investment associate. She was in her mid-twenties when she quit that job and started pursuing a career in cycling. It was a decision that she agonized over — to leave a lucrative job for an uncertain one. But she eventually determined that the pros outweigh the cons, that she would rather live with no regrets.

Her approach to cycling, like everything in her life, is about assessing what you’re good at and what you’re bad at. And then when you’ve identified what you’re bad at, you focus on it until it’s a strength. This is one of the reasons she excelled in cycling so quickly: She made her weaknesses her strengths. She approached it with the mentality of, “It’s not that I’m bad at it, it’s that I’m just not good at it yet.”

Photo by Anouk Flesch

Listen now wherever you get your podcasts. Just search “Chatter Marks.”

Helping to Preserve and Define Alaskan Cultures

23/08/2024

In this episode of Chatter Marks, Cody talks to Paddy Sullivan. He’s an ecologist, and every year he travels to the Brooks Range in northern Alaska to collect snowpack samples. The area he visits is remote and often inaccessible. The Salmon River, for example, is a place where bush planes rarely land. They’ll land outside of the watershed and then people walk in. Paddy’s been going here for 20 years now, and in that time he and Roman Dial — an adventurer and fellow scientist — have formed a hypothesis about why the area is changing so much: The retreat of sea ice fuels increasing snowfall and nearby landmasses, protects seedlings and improves soil nutrient availability. And all of this allows for shrubs to proliferate and trees to advance into the tundra. It’s called the Greening of the Arctic and it’s changing the land; It’s also changing how people and wildlife use the land.

In 2019, while Paddy and Roman were collecting their datasets they stumbled upon something concerning and out of place: The once gin-clear Salmon River had turned orange. They noticed other rivers and streams had turned orange as well. In all the years they’d been coming to the Brooks Range, they’d never seen anything like it. So, they decided that they needed to sound the alarm, to let other scientists know what was going on up there. And hopefully, with their help, they could figure out what the implications were for humans and the surrounding ecosystems. Because something like this — an occurrence that trickles down into other ecosystems — has the potential to trigger ecosystem collapse. This happens when the rules of an environment are altered in a way that forces wildlife and vegetation to change how they interact with their environment.

Helping to Preserve and Define Alaskan Cultures

Listen wherever you get your podcasts.
08/08/2024

Listen wherever you get your podcasts.

06/08/2024

In this episode of Crude, Cody talks to Laine Welch. She’s been reporting on the Alaska fishing industry for 36 years, and during those years her goal was always to show where Alaska fits into the global commodities market because seafood is one of the largest commodity items sold throughout the world. Given Alaska’s commercial fishing market, there’s always been a real opportunity to be a major player in the global seafood market. But Laine says we tend to squander our potential profits. For example, there are plenty of revenue streams that could be taken advantage of in areas like cosmetics and pharmaceuticals. Or how almost 75 percent of all of the value from groundfish — Alaska’s number one species in terms of volume — goes out of state. Primarily to Seattle.

Laine says that when she first started reporting on the Alaska fishing industry she tamped down her criticism of it, and instead chose to be its cheerleader. But when she retired two years ago, she felt a new sense of responsibility and freedom to point out areas of the industry that could use improvement. She was no longer beholden to only reporting on the good or acceptable news. So, in retirement, she’s been focusing on issues like the lawful waste of seafood caused by bycatch — the catching and discarding of unwanted sealife. She says that every other protein industry has a philosophy of using the whole animal, what they call ‘from the rooter to the tooter.’ But in Alaska, they take the filet and the rest goes. This has always been important — avoiding waste and maximizing profit — but it’s especially important now, when the economy of Alaska needs new revenue streams.

Helping to Preserve and Define Alaskan Cultures

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Our Story

Crude’s mission is to preserve and define Alaska’s cultures through both podcasts, "Crude Conversations" and "lost anchorage." Both podcasts are hosted by me, Cody Liska.

Crude Conversations uses long-form conversations as a springboard to discovering larger truths about what it means to be Alaskan. Each week will feature a guest who represents a different aspect of The Last Frontier. Follow along as I take a contemporary look at what it means to be an Alaskan. lost anchorage investigates the mechanisms of crime and violence in Anchorage, Alaska. Through research and interviews with professionals, law enforcement and those affected by crime, I hope to build a better understanding of whether or not Anchorage is, in fact, becoming more dangerous. In order to continue producing meaningful content that matters to Alaska, I need your help! For information about how to support Crude, visit patreon.com/crudemagazine