DiscoverOzarks Watch Video Magazine: Podcast Edition
Ozarks Watch Video Magazine: Podcast Edition
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Ozarks Watch Video Magazine: Podcast Edition

Author: KSMU

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This podcast includes audio features from the popular Ozarks Public Television show, which highlights the culture and traditions of the rich Ozarks region.
7 Episodes
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A classic Ozarks radio station, KWTO, was all about its charismatic, on-air personalities. The station offered rural-flavored old-time songs, Western swing, and pioneer music, and it launched in 1933. In this podcast, host Jim Baker talks with Ozarks historian Ed McKinney and radio broadcast historian Wayne Glenn on what the call letters KWTO stand for and the impact the station has had on the region over the generations.
Mitch Jayne, who had attended a teacher's college in Kirksville, was stunned to discover, within a few days as a one-room schoolteacher in rural, Dent County, that his school children were speaking an offshoot of Middle English. "But that was the time of William Shakespeare," he said. "I immediately wrote down 'sanction' and 'dilitory,'" he said, and then he asked his brother on the East Coast to send him the biggest dictionary he could find. Hosts Jim Baker and Mike Smith talk with Jayne in
Where did the word "Ozarks" come from, and what geographical boundaries define The Ozarks? How are the "Hill Folks" of northern Arkansas different from those living in the Ozarks plains? In this podcast episode, host Jim Baker talks with Ozarks historian and scholar Brooks Blevins on the land and the individuals defining The Ozarks.
Ozarks songwriter Johnny Mullins was the brainchild behind many classic tunes; in this episode, we hear some of his music, and also the memories his family members have of his songwriting habits. Instead of packing up and moving to Nashville, the successful songwriter chose to stay in the Ozarks, working as a school janitor for decades.
Lifelong Ozarks resident Gordon McCann shares some of his experiences developing Ozarks music and archiving local music history. He began with a simple tape recorder, he tells host Jim Baker. "The more I taped, the more I started realizing the repertoire these people had," he said. McCann curated a musical and oral history of the region.
A traditional fiddler from Ava, Missouri talks about his early childhood memories listening to his grandmother's fiddle records.Host Jim Baker asks about traditional Ozarks music, and what makes a good square dance tune.
When did Ozarkers begin using the term "antsy," or comparing strong coffee to battery acid? In this podcast episode, host Jim Baker interviews a local author on the history of these sayings.
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