LISTEN: Southern Avenue Has The Mountain Stage Song Of The Week

On this week’s premiere broadcast of Mountain Stage, host Kathy Mattea welcomes Southern Avenue, Driftwood, Elvie Shane, Melissa Ferrick and Jeff Plankenhorn.

On this week’s premiere broadcast of Mountain Stage, host Kathy Mattea welcomes Southern Avenue, Driftwood, Elvie Shane, Melissa Ferrick and Jeff Plankenhorn.

Our Song of the Week comes from the energetic blues and soul band Southern Avenue. Joining us for their second Mountain Stage appearance, the Memphis-based, GRAMMY-nominated group performed “So Much Love.” This song is set to appear on the band’s highly anticipated follow-up to their 2021 release Be the Love You Want.

Tune in to an affiliate station near you starting Friday, June 14 for the entire set from Southern Avenue, plus live performances from New York folk rock group Driftwood, Kentucky country singer Elvie Shane, singer-songwriter Melissa Ferrick and multi-instrumentalist and songwriter Jeff Plankenhorn.

Check out the playlist here, and take a look at our list of affiliates to find out when you can tune in.

W.Va. Basketball Great Jerry West Dies

Jerry West – whose struggling childhood in Chelyan, West Virginia earned him the nickname “Zeke from Cabin Creek” shortly after he began a storied career with the Los Angeles Lakers – died Wednesday morning at the age of 86.

This is a developing story and will be updated. 

Updated on Wednesday, June 12, 2024 at 2 p.m.

Jerry West – whose struggling childhood in Chelyan, West Virginia earned him the nickname “Zeke from Cabin Creek” shortly after he began a storied career with the Los Angeles Lakers – died Wednesday morning at the age of 86.

Announcing his passing on X, the Los Angeles Clippers where West worked as a team consultant, said he was “the personification of basketball excellence and a friend to all who knew him.” 

In a press briefing Wednesday afternoon, Gov. Jim Justice remembered good times turkey hunting with West and called him a “superstar” saying, “We celebrate the great life of a gentleman that we lost and a hero in every way in West Virginia, basically in many ways what we stand for, Jerry West.” 

“From his time as a record-breaking basketball player in the WVU Field House to his success in the front offices of some of the most respected sports franchises in America, Jerry brought his unique abilities, innovative spirit and quiet strength — the very best of what it means to be a Mountaineer,” Gee said in a statement.

WVU Athletic Director Wren Baker called it “one of the saddest days ever for West Virginia University and the state of West Virginia,” and said West was “a true gentlemen, one of the greatest players and executives the NBA has ever seen and certainly the most famous West Virginia Mountaineer of all time.” 

After his time at WVU West played for the Lakers for 14 years, was co-captain of the 1960 U.S. Olympic gold medal team and was an All-Star every year of his NBA Career. Later, he became an executive, credited with drafting Magic Johnson and James Worthy, then bringing in Kobe Bryant and eventually Shaquille O’Neal to play alongside Bryant.

Twice enshrined in the basketball Hall of Fame – in 1980 as a player and in 2010 as a member of the 1960 U.S. Olympic Team – he will be enshrined for a third time later this year as a contributor.

He also received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2019. 

**Editor’s Note: This story was updated to include statements from Gov. Jim Justice, WVU President Gordon Gee and WVU vice president and director of Athletics Wren Baker. 

Us & Them Encore: SNAP — Do The Hungry Get More Policy Than Nutrition?

Hunger and poverty are universal challenges, but in the U.S. for more than 50 years, support programs like SNAP, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, have provided help to those in need. On this Us & Them, host Trey Kay talks with three people — a retiree, a mom and a lawmaker — who all say that nutritional support has made a difference in their lives.

Forty-two million Americans, or about 12 percent of the the population, need help feeding their families. 

That help often comes from a federal program called SNAP — which stands for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly called food stamps. The Mountain State is one of the top recipients of SNAP benefits. Nearly 45 percent of recipients are older adults or families with someone who’s disabled, while nearly 60 percent are families with children. 

The nation’s food support program began six decades ago, as a pilot program in McDowell County. Since then, it has reduced poverty and hunger across the nation. 

In an award-winning encore episode of Us & Them, host Trey Kay talks with three people — a retiree, a mom and a lawmaker who all say that nutritional support has made a difference in their lives. 

This episode of Us & Them is presented with support from the West Virginia Humanities Council and the CRC Foundation.

Subscribe to Us & Them on Apple Podcasts, NPR One, RadioPublic, Spotify, Stitcher and beyond.


Reenie Kittle, 75, from Harding, W.Va., is a widow and retired with a physical disability. She does what she can to get by on a meager fixed income.

“How do I live on a fixed income? Very scarcely,” Kittle told Us & Them host Trey Kay as they sat in the living room of her converted double-wide home. “So I have to buy pellets for my wood stoves in the winter months. I have to pay the water bill … all my bills. I don’t go out very much ‘cause I can’t afford the gas. With my income and my bills of $1,300 a month, I am lucky if I have $200, maybe $250 left over to try to find food. My neighbor sometimes will bring me supper, and that’s been a blessing to me. They try to help me food-wise as much as they can. For SNAP, I qualify for $23 a month. It is nothing. They just tell me that they’ve reviewed my case and that’s as much as they can do. They have no extra money to give and that’s it.

Photo Credit: Trey Kay/West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Each month, Reenie Kittle heads to the grocery store in Elkins, W.Va. with $23 from the federal government’s SNAP program. SNAP stands for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program — it used to be called “Food Stamps.” 

Reenie beelines past the produce section … beyond the tower of packaged strawberries, the cold case full of carrots and greens. She’s not here to buy what she wants to eat. She’s here to stretch the money she is allotted to the very last penny.

Photo Credit: Trey Kay/West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Roughly 18 percent of West Virginia residents use SNAP benefits. Nationally, that number is more like 12 percent, which means that 42 million people across America need help getting enough to eat. 

Seth DiStefano, with the West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy, lobbies to support programs like SNAP — which became a centerpiece of the social reform programs in President Lyndon Johnson’s “Great Society” initiative. DiStefano says SNAP has its roots in West Virginia. This goes back to when President John F. Kennedy started the original “Food Stamp” program in McDowell County.

“It truly is one of the most effective anti-poverty programs in the history of the United States,” DiStefano says.

Photo Credit: West Virginia Center on Budget & Policy
Mary Kathryn Molitor, 34, lives in St. Albans, W.Va. with her three daughters and an old dog named Brenda. Mary Kathryn works full-time at a local credit union, making about $13 an hour. When the Us & Them team first spoke with her, she wasn’t sure she wanted to talk on the record about her relationship with SNAP saying it was her “dirty little secret.”

“I don’t tell people that I use SNAP benefits because I know what that person looks like and that person doesn’t look like me,” Molitor explains while pulling one of her wriggling twin daughters up onto her hip. “That person doesn’t have a college education. That person doesn’t have a full-time job. That person isn’t who I am. I find it embarrassing. I don’t want to admit that I need help.”

Photo Credit: Trey Kay/West Virginia Public Broadcasting
To supplement her family’s food supply, Mary Kathryn Molitor often goes to the Capital Market in Charleston and checks to see if they have wilted vegetable plants that are about to be discarded. She takes them home to plant in her garden.

“Those are pumpkins right there. Volunteers. All those tomatoes? Volunteers. Sunflowers? Volunteers,” Molitor says while showing Us & Them host Trey Kay the plants around her home. “After Halloween — I threw my pumpkins into a couple of different areas and they rotted, seeded and they are giants now!  They grow on their own. They volunteer! If anybody needs a free pumpkin this year, just come to my house!”

Photo Credit: Trey Kay/West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Del. Jonathan Pinson represents the 17th District of West Virginia’s House of Delegates, on the western border of the state including parts of Mason and Jackson counties. Pinson, a Republican and a Baptist pastor was first elected in 2020. 

“I cannot say that I have issues with [SNAP] in general,” Pinson told Us & Them host Trey Kay when they met in Point Pleasant, W.Va. “One of the reasons that I can’t say that I’m opposed to that is because I think back prior to my adoption … at 15 years old … I go back to Saturday mornings sitting in a line at the armory in Florida, picking up corn flakes and powdered milk and five pound jugs of peanut butter. And I can tell you that there were many, many meals that I wouldn’t have had, had my parents not been on food stamps — and at the time, ‘commodities,’ that’s what it was called. So I can’t say that I’m opposed to the government helping when help is warranted.”

Photo Credit: West Virginia Legislature

W.Va. Chef Wins Elite National Culinary Award

West Virginia Chef Paul Smith was named the James Beard Foundation’s Best Chef: Southeast Monday night at the awards ceremony in Chicago.

Updated on Tuesday, June 11, 2024 at 5 p.m.

West Virginia Chef Paul Smith was named the James Beard Foundation’s Best Chef: Southeast Monday night at the awards ceremony in Chicago.

Smith, who last year became the foundation’s first ever finalist from West Virginia, took top honors in this year’s star-studded ceremony at the Lyric Opera.

“Two words that have never been mentioned here before: West Virginia,” Smith said in his acceptance speech.

Chef Paul Smith accepts the 2024 James Beard Award for the southeast. He is the first person from West Virginia to do so.

Photo Credit: Maria Young/West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

A crowd of hundreds watching a live stream of the event at Charleston’s Capitol Market erupted in prolonged cheers as a presenter told the audience, “He grew up in West Virginia literally standing on a milk crate stirring his grandfather’s Sunday sauce. Today at his restaurant, he tells the Appalachian food story. Paul Smith is … he’s a hometown hero, he really is.”

Tourism Secretary Chelsea Ruby, in the Capitol Market crowd, said the win puts West Virginia on the map as a culinary destination. 

“It puts us on the map. When you think about culinary destinations, this absolutely puts us on the map,” Ruby said. “It’s one more thing that gives people at a national level the idea that West Virginia is a destination.”

Gov. Jim Justice said in a Facebook post that the award “attracts visitors from around the world to experience the taste of Almost Heaven.” 

The Southeast category in which Smith won includes Georgia, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and West Virginia.

**Editor’s Note: This story was updated to include comments from Tourism Secretary Chelsea Ruby and Gov. Jim Justice.

The Role Rural Libraries Play Today, This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, we talk with Emily Dubinsky, president of the American Library Association, about the role rural libraries play in the digital age.

On this West Virginia Morning, President of the American Library Association, Emily Dubinsky, is on a three-week road trip from New York to the annual Conference in San Diego. Along the way, she will stop at different rural libraries to talk to them about the work they are doing and what they need to continue that work.

Dubinsky took a pit stop in Charleston, to sit down and talk with Briana Heaney about what she has been hearing from rural libraries during this road trip.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Shepherd University.

Eric Douglas produced this episode.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

W.Va. Black Pride Foundation Forges Space For Black LGBTQ Community

Reporter Jack Walker spoke with West Virginia Black Pride Foundation founder Kasha Snyder-McDonald to discuss her organization’s vision for a better West Virginia for Black LGBTQ residents.

Black LGBTQ West Virginians often experience exclusion on the basis of their race and LGBTQ identity alike, according to Kasha Snyder-McDonald, founder and executive director of the West Virginia Black Pride Foundation.

But Snyder-McDonald said the organization — founded in December 2022 — is looking to turn shared experiences like these into an opportunity for community-building.

Jack Walker spoke with Snyder-McDonald about her foundation’s vision for a better West Virginia for Black LGBTQ residents.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Walker: Could you tell me about how West Virginia Black Pride got started?

Snyder-McDonald: Well here in Charleston, West Virginia, they didn’t have any kind of Black Pride. It took them a couple of years before they got some Black entertainment for Pride. There [were] a lot of African American people and trans people — LGBTQ+ — that had nowhere to go. And they also felt like they weren’t included in other organizations. I’m not saying that these organizations did not include them; it’s just that they just didn’t feel welcomed. So we came together, a couple of my friends, and we decided to say, “Well, we need to have a Black Pride.” Because everywhere in America was having a Black Pride, and we’re Black and we wanted to tell our stories and let people see what we do and what we bring to the table and what we have to offer. Because the Black experience is a wonderful experience, something to be talked about. We’re trailblazers and leaders.

Walker: You touched on this a little bit, but for those who might be unfamiliar, could you explain what Black Pride is, and what makes Black Pride groups distinct from other LGBTQ organizations?

Snyder-McDonald: Black LGBTQ+ people or persons are not — they are accepted in other spaces, but they’re not comfortable in those said spaces. We’re always told that we’re loud, we’re always told that we’re overbearing, and they just don’t want us to be around. The trans community has been one of the most left out communities of all, because people don’t want to deal with us. People don’t want to date trans women. People don’t want to associate with trans women. And trans women are the ones that led the march for the LGBTQ+ community, especially Black trans women. But, of course, we’ve been overlooked by white LGBTQ+ men.

The Black Pride organizations, we make sure we have this safe haven. We have a whole host of Black trans and nonbinary people here in West Virginia. But you would never know it because they don’t feel comfortable. But when we opened West Virginia Black Pride Foundation they all decided to come. We have a whole host of people that come. They sit, they relax, we have cookouts, we have sister circles. Like I said, we talk about Black history. We inform them that they’re not a stigmata on the universe. We try to show them and give them knowledge. And knowledge is power.

Walker: What are some of the resources and programming your organization offers?

Snyder-McDonald: We are a drop-in center. So you can come in and you can utilize our zen rooms, and we have a space just to breathe and relax and to collect your thoughts. We are fully staffed with bathroom facilities and things like that, so if you need to come in and get hygiene [products] or stuff like that, we have that for you. If you need to take a shower or bath, we have that as well. We are currently working towards building — in addition to our center — somewhere we can have an emergency shelter for those people who get kicked out and have no place to go.

So, you know, we do what we say we’re going to. We’re here to help the community. We’re here to help the LGBTQ+ community. The LGBTQ+ community [has] been kicked out for such a long time. They’ve had no places to go, and we give them a place to go.

Walker: You’ve been around now for about a year and a half. What has the community response been like so far?

Snyder-McDonald: You know, even when we started a Black Pride, everybody was so excited and so happy and so on board. And oh, “We’re willing to help you and we’re willing to do this and do this and do this.” As soon as we opened, there was crickets. There was nobody. We have had some support, do not get me wrong. Monetary support, we’ve had very little. But that’s because we are Black Pride. The word “Black” had been weaponized, especially in this day and age. So we’ve been called prejudiced, we’ve been called dividing the community. We’ve been called everything but the Son of God.

Walker: So it sounds like many potential donors are giving funds to more established LGBTQ organizations as opposed to Black Pride, which has made it difficult for you all to get off the ground. Is that accurate?

Snyder-McDonald: We have a Pride here already. And because they already have Pride, we’ve been met with — when we reach out to ask for donations — “We’ve already donated. We’ve already donated. We’ve already donated.” At times, it begins to feel racist and bigoted.

Walker: Pivoting now, what’s been your favorite part about creating space for the Black LGBTQ community here in West Virginia?

Snyder-McDonald: Oh gosh. Just to see the community. We are located right in the heart of the Black community here in Charleston, and the stigmata between Black people and the LGBTQ+ community is very big. But we are changing that each and every day. And that is the big thing. We had neighbors who have never even spoke to us, that made fun of the organization being there that come and drop off donations, come and sit in our space. They ask us if they can come and just relax because it’s so serene and so beautiful, how we’ve beautified the neighborhood by sprucing it up.

To see Black trans women and men who are scared to come outside literally walk outside of their own home and be themselves when they walk into West Virginia Black Pride Foundation. They sing, they dance, they read poetry. They, [as] we say, “gay out.” They get to be themselves.

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