Appalachian Power customers may be seeing another price hike, caregivers are under stress, particularly during the holidays, and a new mountain roller coaster is a destination for fun seekers in Mercer County.
Don’t Get Dead: Pandemic Folk Songs By The Cornelius Eady Trio
Don’t Get Dead: Pandemic Folk Songs by the Cornelius Eady Trio
Courtesy Photo
Five years ago, the COVID-19 lockdowns kept a lot of people out of public spaces — and a lot of artists used that time to create. Like the Cornelius Eady Trio.
The group is organized around Cornelius Eady, a poet and professor at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, whose writing has been nominated for the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award.
The album now has been re-released on vinyl by Whitesburg, Kentucky’s June Appal Recordings.
Traditional Music And Tattoos At The Parlor Room
Fellow tattooer Russ Griswold thumps on his upright bass and John Haywood plays the banjo as frequent client Brad Centers listens.
Photo Credit: Zack Harold/West Virginia Public Broadcasting
John Haywood of Whitesburg, Kentucky says he got his first guitar and his first tattoo when he was about 13 years old.
These days, Haywood is the proprietor of Parlor Room Art and Tattoo in downtown Whitesburg. It’s a place where some people get inked up, and some play traditional music.
It’s a place unlike any other, as Zack Harold reports.
Traditions: The Ghost of Ruth Ann and Other Local West Virginia Lore
The Veggie Man at the Folklife Center in Fairmont, West Virginia.
Courtesy of the Mothboys
Almost everyone has heard of the Mothman — West Virginia’s best known cryptid. But have you heard of Veggie Man?
That’s another West Virginia cryptid. And it helped inspire a zine project from the Frank and Jane Gabor West Virginia Folklife Center at Fairmont State University.
Producer Bill Lynch spoke with the center’s director, Lydia Warren, about the forthcoming publication, which is taking submissions.
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Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert. Other music this week was provided by The Cornelius Eady Trio, John Haywood, Tim and Dave Bing, Paul Loomis, John Inghram and John Blissard.
Bill Lynch is our producer. Abby Neff is our associate producer. Our executive producer is Eric Douglas. Kelley Libby is our editor. Our audio mixer is Patrick Stephens. We had help this week from Folkways Editor Chris Julin.
You can send us an email: InsideAppalachia@wvpublic.org.
Appalachian Power customers may be seeing another price hike, caregivers are under stress, particularly during the holidays, and a new mountain roller coaster is a destination for fun seekers in Mercer County.
This week, the cost of health insurance is going up in 2026. Millions of people are faced with sticker shock. Also, a mountain farmer kept an encrypted diary for years. It’s unclear whether he would have wanted that code to ever be cracked. And, a beloved West Virginia hot dog restaurant closed in 2018. An annual tribute sale gives people a chance to relive its glory days.
People who buy health care through the federal marketplace are set to see their premiums rise 40 percent or more. It depends on whether Congress extends the 2021 enhanced subsidies that help people pay their premiums. Ruby Rayner is a reporter for the Chattanooga Times Free Press who’s been covering this story in Tennessee. Inside Appalachia’s Mason Adams spoke with Raynor.
We're an aging nation, and the cost of care is lower the longer people stay in their homes. The trend has led to an explosion in home-based support and care services. On the next episode of Us & Them, host Trey Kay focuses on the challenges of care for our growing elderly population.