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Rising Forward: Stories of Change
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Rising Forward: Stories of Change

Author: WUWM 89.7 FM - Milwaukee's NPR

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Hosted by Shannon Sims, this podcast goes behind the headlines to explore the social entrepreneurs transforming Milwaukee and beyond. Shannon leverages her networks, resources and journalistic curiosity to uncover the stories of innovative changemakers who are building businesses that solve pressing community challenges. 

Each episode features authentic conversations with entrepreneurs who are rising from their communities, leaning into social concerns, and creating sustainable solutions that move Wisconsin forward — embodying our state's motto. From Milwaukee neighborhoods to communities across the region and eventually statewide, these are the stories of people who refuse to accept the status quo. 

Join Shannon as she discovers how business and social impact intersect to create lasting change. 


4 Episodes
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Derrick Cainion spent 20 years helping people understand each other as a sign language interpreter. Then COVID-19 hit, his son turned three, and a vacant lot on Milwaukee's north side sat waiting. This week on Rising Forward, Derrick walks us through what he built at 35th and Vliet — ART Intersection MKE — a living outdoor gallery where art, sustainability and community healing don't just coexist. They're the same thing. We talk about the night a street shut down for art instead of sirens. The mural of his mother watching over the neighborhood. A bio-swale that literally holds water for a community that's been drained. Solar panels that keep the lights on when the city goes dark. And international artists from Tunisia, Dubai and the UK — all landing on one lot in Washington Park. Derrick also gets into what it took to raise nearly a million dollars without being independently wealthy — and what funders actually responded to. If you've ever driven past a vacant lot and wondered what it could be — this episode is the answer. Credits: Shannon Sims, hostBryce Richards, graphic designer/ grip  Brianna Sitkowski, producerJunction Box Production, Dwight Cannon, audio editor/videographerLionArts Media, Laura Dyan Kezma, audio/video editor William Howell, photographer/ assistant editor   Mic’d & Ready Media  
There's money in Wisconsin right now looking for the right people to fund. Most social entrepreneurs don't know how to find it — or how to be ready when it finds them. In this episode, Shannon Sims sits down with Tony Shields, CEO of Wisconsin Philanthropy Network, and Nina Johnson, senior vice president at U.S. Bank, to break down exactly how mission-driven businesses get funded. They cover the full capital stack — from CRA investment and community development financial institutions to grant funding and impact investing. They talk about what separates the entrepreneurs who get funded from the ones who get delayed. And they share what the funder relationship actually looks like once you're in. This is the episode for the social entrepreneur who has the idea, believes in the mission, and is ready to stop waiting. What you'll hear:  Why passion and preparation are not the same thing.  How to stack CRA investment, foundation grants and CDFIs on a single project.  What trust-based philanthropy looks like in practice and why it matters.  Why Milwaukee is a destination city right now, and what that means for you.  The one thing most entrepreneurs get wrong when they walk into a funder meeting.  Credits: Shannon Sims, hostBryce Richards, graphic designer/ grip  Brianna Sitkowski, producerJunction Box Production, Dwight Cannon, audio editor/videographerLionArts Media, Laura Dyan Kezma, audio/video editor William Howell, photographer/ assistant editor   Mic’d & Ready Media  
Women are breaking barriers and rewriting the rules of entrepreneurship often in systems that weren’t built for them.   Stephanie Melnick has been practicing law in Milwaukee for over 30 years. But in 2017, she realized her clients needed more than legal advice. They needed each other. So she founded She Stands Tall — a community for women entrepreneurs. Stephanie has highlighted dozens of women entrepreneurs and created events that teach marketing, brand protection, financial literacy and inspire the next generation of women leaders. In this episode of Rising Forward stories of change she shares what she’s learned about women building together instead of going it alone—and how that collective momentum is moving Wisconsin forward. Credits: Shannon Sims, hostBryce Richards, graphic designer/ grip  Brianna Sitkowski, producerJunction Box Production, Dwight Cannon, audio editor/videographerLionArts Media, Laura Dyan Kezma, audio/video editor William Howell, photographer/ assistant editor   Mic’d & Ready Media  
Kevin Newell moved fourteen times before he went to college. Today, he's transforming that instability into solutions — as founder and CEO of Royal Capital Group, Newell has built a billion-dollar portfolio proving that the people who lived the problem are the ones who can solve it. From redeveloping Phillis Wheatley School — the grade school he once attended — to creating the Good Hope Library, to building ThriveOn King, a $105 million "lifestyle campus" in the heart of Bronzeville, Newell is rewriting what's possible. He's the first African American to build and own multi-family commercial properties in downtown Milwaukee and Madison, and the first to partner with an NBA team on a commercial entertainment district. Now he's taking the Wisconsin model to Fort Worth, Texas. In this inaugural episode of Rising Forward, Shannon Sims sits down with Newell to explore how his mother's sacrifice, his aunt and uncle's sanctuary, and even his biggest setbacks became the foundation for a new model of community-centered development. Credits: Shannon Sims, hostLionArts Media, Laura Dyan Kezma, audio/video editor Dwight Cannon, Junction Box Production, assistant editor/videographer
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