Sidewalk Ballet
Tamika Butler
Tamika L. Butler reflects on what it takes to build transportation systems that serve people—not just efficiently, but equitably. Paired with immersive field report from the Philippines about Jeepneys and for-hire vehicles, the episode explores how movement systems evolve: through need, policy, technology, and the people who shape them every day.
Retail Round up
Retail is constantly being redefined—but it still plays a central role in how cities function.
In this episode, guest host Josh Yeager joins Michael Berne and Jaime Izurieta to explore how retail is evolving on the ground—from dwell time and hospitality to what actually makes a storefront succeed—and why it still matters for the health of our streets and downtown districts.
Evan Weissman
Democracy doesn’t disappear all at once — it weakens when people stop getting the chance to practice it. In this season finale, The Sidewalk Ballet closes with a conversation with Evan Weissman of Warm Cookies of the Revolution about joy, participation, and what it means to show up locally. It’s a reflection on why civic life needs more than expertise — it needs invitations, practice, and people willing to step in together.
Lezlie Lowe
Public bathrooms are small spaces with big consequences. In this episode of The Sidewalk Ballet, journalist and author Lezlie Lowe joins Chip to unpack how access to restrooms reveals deeper truths about gender equity, public health, dignity, and who cities are really designed for—offering a fresh way to see the everyday infrastructure we rarely stop to think about.