Menu
Sign In Search Podcasts Charts People & Topics Add Podcast API Pricing
Podcast Image

ART IS CHANGE: Strategies & Skills for Activist Artists & Cultural Organizers

151: Should Activist Artists & Cultural Organizers be Running for Office - Tom Tresser Says, "ABSOLUTELY!"

12 Nov 2025

Description

What if the solution to our democracy’s crisis isn’t another white paper or study—but an artist running for office?In this episode, civic organizer and “public defender” Tom Tresser reveals why he feels America’s nonprofit and creative sectors are missing in action when it comes to power, policy, and public trust. As arts funding shrinks and disinformation grows, Tom challenges creatives to stop “staying in their lane” and instead step up as leaders in civic life.In it we’ll: • Learn how a small, unfunded coalition stopped the 2016 Olympics from coming to Chicago—and why that matters for creative change agents everwhere • We’ll also Discover why Tom thinks creative people are uniquely qualified to solve society’s most funky problems—and how artistic skills and political strategies are cut from the same clothAnd inspired by a radical, hopeful model for building civic power from the ground up, rooted in creative intelligence, story making, and community action.Notable MentionsThe 100K Project: Tom Tresser's initiative that seeks to train, and propel 100,000 people from the arts, nonprofit, social services, education, and science sectors (and their supporters) to run for local office or help those with our values run as champions of service, science, justice, equity, peace, creativity, and the public sector.PeopleBill Cleveland: Host of Art Is Change and long-time practitioner in arts-based community development and civic storytelling.Tom Tresser: Chicago civic organizer, public defender of the public sector, and co-founder of No Games Chicago.Richard M. Daley: Former Chicago mayor behind the 2016 Olympic bid effort.Barack Obama: Then–senator and later president who supported Chicago’s Olympic bid.Sam Zell: Billionaire and owner of the Chicago Tribune, a supporter of the Olympic bid.Senator Jesse Helms: Conservative senator known for attacks on the NEA.Pat Robertson: Christian Coalition founder and major force in culture-war politics.Andres Serrano: Artist whose work Piss Christ became central to NEA controversies.The NEA Four: Performance artists whose denied NEA grants fueled national censorship debate.Frederick Douglass: Abolitionist and civic educator cited as a model for grassroots truth-telling.Paul Wellstone: U.S. senator whose “organize–advocate–run” triangle influences...

Audio
Featured in this Episode

No persons identified in this episode.

Transcription

This episode hasn't been transcribed yet

Help us prioritize this episode for transcription by upvoting it.

0 upvotes
🗳️ Sign in to Upvote

Popular episodes get transcribed faster

Comments

There are no comments yet.

Please log in to write the first comment.