Before the Movement Exists: Founder Psychology and the Welcoming Bet with David Lubell
On this episode, I sit down with movement builder and social entrepreneur David Lubell to unpack the origins of Welcoming America, the national initiative that helped bring the idea of “welcoming communities” into the mainstream. What began as a local project in Nashville eventually spread across the United States and inspired a global network through Welcoming International. David reflects on how the early movement took shape, why its strategy focused on building local alliances instead of chasing federal political power, and how pivotal moments transformed welcoming work from a loose set of community initiatives into a national movement.We also go deeper into the ideas and mindset behind building something that lasts. David shares how early gatherings of practitioners evolved from passive learning spaces into an active network demanding infrastructure, why listening to communities became central to the model, and how initiatives like Welcoming Week and local dialogue efforts emerged organically from the network itself. Along the way, he reflects on the founder psychology required to pursue a vision before it has proof, the gradual process of building legitimacy as a leader, and how welcoming initiatives have adapted to shifting political climates. For builders, organizers, and anyone interested in how ideas scale from one community to a global network, this episode offers a rare inside look at how durable social infrastructure is built.
After Age of Audio: Podcasting’s Structural Question
At Podfest Multimedia Expo in Orlando, a screening of the documentary Age of Audio stirred a set of questions I couldn’t shake about where podcasting actually is today. Watching the film as someone who has spent years building audio inside nonprofits and movement spaces, I found myself both focused on podcasting’s origin story as well as its current phase. During the Q&A, I asked whether the film’s ending was pointing toward an existential question about podcasting’s identity—or a more practical one about economic instability—because the medium today feels pulled in multiple directions at once.
No Grant, No Permission: Why the Institute Starts with Voice, with Maria Javier
On this first guest-featured episode of Podcasting An Institute, I welcome Maria Javier—a longtime friend and builder whose career spans city government, immigration advocacy, national campaigns, and democracy institutions—for a conversation that does something very specific: it publicly declares an institute before it exists. We say the words Audio × Democracy Institute out loud—awkwardly, imperfectly, without a grant, a funder, or a finished plan—and treat voice, not paperwork, as the starting point. This episode flips the usual order of legitimacy, using conversation itself as infrastructure.From there, we get concrete about what’s broken. We talk about why progressive spaces struggle to build long-term media power, how risk aversion and capital shape institutional behavior, and why the right understood audio as infrastructure years ago. Maria challenges the idea that lack of funding is a failure, reframing it instead as a design choice—one that opens the door to audience-first legitimacy, private donors, and grassroots backing. Along the way, the episode quietly names who this institute is actually for: movement folks who want media skills without gatekeeping, audio creators who want political purpose, and the handful of people who keep finding themselves at the edges of both worlds. The conversation doesn’t resolve the tension—it documents it, and that documentation is the point.
Building in Public: 3AM at Target, Dreaming an Institute
In this episode, I reflect on how Podcasting An Institute came into being—and why now is the moment to build it. After fourteen years working across nonprofit and social justice spaces, I trace the threads that led me here: a three-month sabbatical, time spent in Portugal opening up my thinking, receiving the Frank Karel Scholarship at ComNet, and realizing—again and again—that audio does something democracy work desperately needs. It holds memory. It builds trust. It carries nuance. And yet, there’s been no real infrastructure behind the intersection of audio and democracy. No institute. Just fragments.
Trailer
Let’s go far together by showing how podcasting functions as civic infrastructure.