Prison POD Productions
For all of my links in one spot: https://allmylinks.com/valerie-cartonio769
This includes where you can make donations and purchase merchandise.
Contact information:
Prison POD, P.O. Box 294, Orono, ME 04473
email: prisongram@prisonpod.org
07/05/24 - Website: https://prisonpod.org
Those who may be hearing impaired can view on YouTube (link below) and use the Closed Captioning.
Season 1 is not available on YouTube.
All links pertaining to Prison POD Productions can be found here:
https://allmylinks.com/valerie-cartonio769
This podcast is for people who are in jail or prison, and/or affected by incarceration. Using Sociology and Peace Studies to: Save Lives, Restore Hope, Reduce Suffering and Recidivism.
The host has 20+ years experience working inside several jails and prisons, providing education in substance abuse prevention, doing HIV testing and counseling, reentry planning, inmate advocacy, and mentoring. This work brought them into various areas of peoples lives including coming home, marriages, births, courts, jail visits...death. Their passion for change has led them to produce this podcast.
The people they worked with made a permanent imprint. Recently they published their first book "Notes from the Peaceful Sociologist" reflecting writings about prison work from a unique perspective. You can find it on: thebookpatch.com
Save Lives, Restore Hope, Reduce Suffering.
Host: Valerie L. Cartonio
Facebook page for friends and families - https://www.facebook.com/PeacefulSociologist
If you are on the Buzzsprout site - At the top right of this page, little blue f in the white circle.
Prison POD Productions
"Humanizing Common Stereotypes Changes Everything" - Jason Marque Sole
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
"Have you ever felt invisible just because of how you look? Here's why 'humanizing' common stereotypes changes everything."
Drop a ✊ if you've ever experienced this feeling.
When I started wearing hoodies in class, people told me I’d be judged—until I realized clothing is just a tool for identity, not a barrier to respect.
By wearing my hoodie, I challenged biases and opened up space for real conversations about justice—whether in prisons, schools, or communities.
It’s powerful to see humanity behind the hoodie — the stories, struggles, and resilience. (JMS)
What do your clothes say about you?
#HumanizeMyHoodie #AbolitionInAction #CommunityOverCorrection #BlackVoices
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