Race In The Northwest: Hood River Man Learns His Family’s Surprising Truth

Posted in Articles, Audio, Autobiography, Health/Medicine/Genetics, Media Archive, Native Americans/First Nation, United States on 2016-12-08 02:58Z by Steven

Race In The Northwest: Hood River Man Learns His Family’s Surprising Truth

Oregon Public Broadcasting
2016-12-07

Anna Griffin, News Director


Hood River writer and cidermaker John Metta.
Anna Griffin/OPB

Hood River, OregonJohn Metta grew up thinking of himself as mixed race: His mother was white. His father’s side of the family proudly proclaimed themselves a blend of African-American and Native American.

“Actually, I grew up always being the Indian kid at school,” he said. “I have pictures of myself in like fourth and fifth grade, and my hair was dead straight parted in the middle. I looked like the typical Native American.”

The family wasn’t entirely clear on where that Native American element entered the mix — someone at some point had spent time on the Seneca reservation in Western New York. Still, they embraced their native side…

…A few years ago, Metta’s sisters got curious about precisely which tribes and parts of the country their relatives came from. They asked an uncle to swab his cheek and had the sample tested. How much Native American blood did they find?…

Read the entire article here.

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MOsley WOtta

Posted in Arts, Interviews, United States, Videos on 2014-01-09 22:32Z by Steven

MOsley WOtta

Oregon Art Beat
Oregon Public Broadcasting
Aired: 2013-05-30
Length: 00:08:24

MOsley WOtta is a sly play-on-words meant to remind us that we are all “mostly water.” This inclusive, hip-hop reminder helps Bend-based man-behind-the-artist Jason Graham find family wherever he goes and to share his danceable message of peace and mutual support.

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MOsley WOtta

Posted in Arts, Media Archive, United States, Videos on 2012-02-14 01:56Z by Steven

MOsley WOtta

Arts Beat Oregon
Oregon Public Broadcasting TV
2011

Meet hip-hop artist Jason Graham and find out why “I am MOsley WOtta and so are you!”

MOsley WOtta is a sly play-on-words meant to remind us that we are all “mostly water.” This inclusive, hip-hop reminder helps Bend-based man-behind-the-artist Jason Graham find family wherever he goes and to share his danceable message of peace and mutual support.
 
First Broadcast: 2011
Producer: Jule Gilfillan
Videographer/Editor: Tom Shrider
Audio: Randy Layton

View the video here (00:08:21)

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‘MOsley WOtta’ Transcends Boundaries Of Music, Poetry And Art

Posted in Articles, Arts, Audio, Media Archive, United States on 2012-01-25 17:03Z by Steven

‘MOsley WOtta’ Transcends Boundaries Of Music, Poetry And Art

OPB News
Oregon Public Broadcasting
2011-12-30

David Nogueras, Central Oregon Correspondent
Bend, Oregon

Note from Steven F. Riley: I will be the co-host on the February 22, 2012 podcast of Mixed Chicks Chat with featured guest Jason Graham.

It’s been a good year for Bend’s MOsley WOtta.  The hip-hop group played shows around the state, opening for acts such as Ice Cube and Tricky.  The band plans to close out this year with a New Year’s Eve show in Bend. That’s where the band will unveil its third official release, titled Amalgum X. Bend isn’t typically thought of for it’s hip hop scene. But MOsley WOtta isn’t your typical hip hop group.

“No matter where you come from, what era you come from, there is some kind of music inside of hip hop that will grab you,” says Bend artist MOsley WOtta.

“Light skin, blue blood, gentlemen and ladies, girls and boys, this is that love, pain, grow, if you are living and breathing right now.  You know exactly what I’m talking about.” MOsley WOtta is the alter ego of 28 year old Jason Graham.  It’s also the band that Graham fronts…

…“I think he’s a classic artist, a classic creative brain.  You might meet artists and creative people who are introverted or socially awkward.  This is not that case,” says Salmon. Up on stage, Jason Graham is in his comfort zone.   But growing up biracial in the 1980 he says he’s always kind of felt as if he lived between worlds.  He was born in what he describes as a somewhat rough neighborhood in Chicago and moved to Bend at age 9.  These days he’s tough to miss.  He’s tall, lanky and exudes energy.   Graham says sometimes people don’t quite know what to make of him.

“Maybe people come up and they’re like so are you Mexican?  Are you Filipino?  Indian right?  That is just like with the music, I do see a total correlation there.  Between it’s like well it’s not exactly one thing.  And it never will be one thing, cause I’m not one thing,” says Graham…

Read the entire article here.  Listen to the audio here (00:04:54).

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