Politics

One Runner of Color’s Internal Monologue

If We Want to Protect the Places We Love, We Must Vote

Mountain Towns Rely on Immigrants

When Alpinists Go Rogue

A Day in the Life of a Fisherwoman

Why Paradise Valley Shouldn’t Be Mined

The Fight to Save Louisiana’s Coastline

A Rare Trout Is Revitalizing New Mexico

The Lowdown on Voting, with Conrad Anker

How to Register to Vote, with Conrad Anker

Meet Alaska’s Most Interesting Lobbyist

Fishing with Steven Rinella in the South

Elkmont: A Ghost Town in the Smokies

A Short Film About Overpopulation

A Thru-Hike of the U.S.-Mexico Border

The Truth About Wild and Scenic Rivers

‘Koktuli Wild’

How Flood Forecasting Might Save Lives

The Human Cost of Closed Borders

Highlining Across the Border
One Runner of Color’s Internal Monologue
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“When will I reach that high?”Many runners have asked themselves this question, but as actor and storyteller highlights in his short filmHead on aSwivel,not all runners have equal access to that feeling during a run. The video presents thethoughts and emotions of one runner of color, as told through Rivas’sinternal narrative on an average jog: the anticipation of racial profiling, the anxiety of social interaction, and the fear of unjust retribution. “I created this piece in response to the killing of Ahmaud Arbery,” Rivas says. “I wondered if disappearing into a runner’s high is ever truly possible when the body of color always has to keep their head on a swivel.” Rivas’s monologue in the film questions which spaces are safe and which “normal” acts are actually dangerous, but closes with a message of persistence and defiance: he keeps running.