Douglas

Doug Has Questions

Society EN ↓ 33 episodes

Doug Has Questions is a podcast dedicated to thoughtful conversation that leads to better understanding, connection, and inspiration. Host Douglas Olerud draws on his life experience to explore the stories of the people he’s met along the way.

Author

Douglas

Category

Society

Podcast website

www.buzzsprout.com

Latest episode

Jul 9, 2026

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Episodes

Episode 33: Shannon McPhetres; How Volunteer Hospice Helps Families Through The Hardest Days 09.07.2026

Send us Fan Mail  Hospice can sound like a single frightening word, but what we’ve learned is that it’s really a promise: you don’t have to do the hardest part alone. I sit down with Shannon McPhetres, director and volunteer coordinator for Hospice of Haines, to talk honestly about death, grief, and the kind of neighbor-to-neighbor support that can change a family’s final months. Along the way, Sh...

Episode 32: Charlie DeWitt; A Life Built In Alaska 02.07.2026

Send us Fan Mail You can hear a whole era of Southeast Alaska in Charlie DeWitt’s voice: Salvation Army roots, moving from post to post, then landing in Haines and deciding it is home for good. Charlie walks us through the early days, from small boats and cannery rhythms to the way a town shapes you when everyone knows your family and your work ethic actually matters. From there, the conversation...

Episode 31: Lee Robinson; What If Your Detours Are The Point 25.06.2026

Send us Fan Mail Dropping a signed contract into a FedEx box and immediately searching “how to recall a package” is a special kind of panic, and it’s exactly where Lee Robinson found himself after agreeing to buy The Rusty Compass in Haines, Alaska. Lee’s journey to small-town business ownership is anything but linear: film photography in school darkrooms, newspaper assignments in the pre-digital...

Episode 30: Mike Machowiak; What Survival Teaches About Love And Faith 18.06.2026

Send us Fan Mail  A home birth in a ham radio room on a Fairbanks-area homestead is only the opening scene of Mike Machowiak’s life, and it explains more than you’d think. Mike grew up around improvisation, cold mornings, and the kind of grit you don’t learn from a manual. From there, his family history stretches back to WWII Europe: the Polish underground, a POW camp and escape, Switzerland’s mou...

Episode 29: Harriet Brouillette; From Boarding Schools To Tribal Leadership In Southeast Alaska 11.06.2026

Send us Fan Mail  A family story can be entertaining, but it can also explain why a community looks the way it does. Sitting down with Harriet Brouillette, lifelong Haines resident and Alaska Tribal Administrator of the Year, I hear how one family line stretches from France to Louisiana to Southeast Alaska and then collides with some of the hardest chapters in Alaska Native history. The details ar...

Episode 28: Tod Sebens; What If You Treated Your Life Like A List 04.06.2026

Send us Fan Mail Something is off about a guy who can casually mention getting lifted by a humpback whale and then move right along to the next story. Tod Stevens has spent decades stacking real adventures the hard way, through mechanical skill, odd jobs, and a stubborn willingness to try things most of us only talk about. We sit down and follow the thread from growing up between Virginia and Cali...

Episode 27: John Svenson; A Mountaineer Artist Explains How Adventure Becomes A Life In Art 28.05.2026

Send us Fan Mail Denali is the easy part compared to the people. That’s one of the clearest lessons we pull from our conversation with John Svenson, a Haines, Alaska mountaineer and working artist whose life somehow spans Yosemite dirtbag years, Alaska state surveying by rope, high-altitude guiding, and a studio full of watercolor, fused glass, and beadwork. We talk in John’s Extreme Dreams Galler...

Episode 26: Lee Heinmiller; A Lifelong Haines Local Explains How A Community Gets Built 21.05.2026

Send us Fan Mail A town can start with a big dream, but it survives on unglamorous details: heat that actually works, water that keeps running, and neighbors who show up when the plan falls apart. We talk with lifelong Haines resident Lee Heimiller, president of the Port Chilkoot Corporation, about the unlikely chain of events that helped turn Fort Stewart from a postwar military site into the hea...

Episode 25: Sean Brownell; From Ski Bum To Heli Ski Pioneer In Southeast Alaska 14.05.2026

Send us Fan Mail A fishing boat flips in the dark in a 60-mph blow, and a 23-year-old stays calm enough to get everyone into a life raft. That same steady nerve shows up again and again in our conversation with Sean “Sean Dog” Brownell, a longtime Haines resident and one of the old-guard voices in Alaska heli skiing. We go back to where his winter obsession starts, how the Juneau ski-bum years tur...

Episode 24: Stuart DeWitt; From Trapping Lines To Fishing Grounds In Southeast Alaska 07.05.2026

Send us Fan Mail He grew up in Haines, Alaska with a bike, a beach, and more wilderness than rules and it shaped everything that came after. My guest, longtime local Stuart DeWitt, walks me through the moments that built his edge: early hunting trips, learning to trap from old-school mentors, and the kind of outdoor freedom that turns into real capability when things go sideways. Then we get into...

Episode 23: Kim Larson; Eight Kids, Nine Hours, Zero Quiet 30.04.2026

Send us Fan Mail A licensed daycare in a small town sounds simple until you hear what it actually demands: nine-hour days, strict ratios, constant trust from parents, and almost no margin for error. We sit down with Kim Larson, a longtime in-home child care provider in Haines, Alaska, to trace how she got here and why her work has quietly held up families for decades. From Kansas roots to growing...

Episode 22: Thom Andriesen; What Does A Small Town Owe Its Volunteers? 23.04.2026

Send us Fan Mail A Disney crew, a Gold Rush story, and a tiny Alaska town that had to pull off big-league logistics in the dead of winter. We’re joined by longtime Haines resident Tom Andriesen, a familiar face to anyone who’s spent time around town, and he walks us through how White Fang ended up filming entirely in the Chilkat Valley and what it took to make it happen day to day. Tom shares the...

Episode 21: Michael Marks; From Woodstock To Haines 16.04.2026

Send us Fan Mail A kid in Queens watches planes at LaGuardia, runs a small-time “slug” hustle on coin machines, and then gets stopped cold by a store owner and a furious mom. Years later, that same kid hitchhikes across America at 16, goes to Woodstock, and somehow ends up getting paid to draw Bert and Ernie for Sesame Street. Michael Marks’ story is one of those rare life arcs that connects real...

Episode 20: Charlotte Olerud; What We Owe The People Who Stay 09.04.2026

Send us Fan Mail One decision, one returned phone call, one job opening in a tiny Southeast Alaska town and a whole family history gets rerouted. I’m sitting down with my mom, Charlotte Olerud, to capture the stories people have been asking for for years: growing up between Fort St. John and rural Minnesota, learning to work early, and watching my grandpa keep going after losing an arm in a brutal...

Episode 19: Aaron Davidman; A Director Explains Why American Solitaire Is About Community Over Fear 02.04.2026

Send us Fan Mail A gun store in Alaska. A filmmaker from Berkeley. A quiet movie about a noisy country. We talk with director writer producer Aaron Davidman about American Solitaire and the long road from early theater mentors to a feature film built for real conversations, not talking points. We get into what shaped Aaron’s craft from intense conservatory training to learning how to direct, fund...

Episode 18: Jimmy Yoakum; What If Policing Started With Grace Instead Of Force 26.03.2026

Send us Fan Mail A police chief doesn’t just arrive in a town like Haines, Alaska with a clean slate. Every choice gets remembered, every interaction becomes part of the story, and trust is earned one conversation at a time. That’s why I wanted to sit down with Haines Police Chief Jimmy Yoakum and let you hear the full arc, from where he comes from to how he plans to lead. Jimmy opens up about gro...

Episode 17: Rashah McChesney; From Texas To Alaska: Building Trust Through Local Journalism 19.03.2026

Send us Fan Mail A local newspaper can feel quaint until you see the bill: thousands per month just to print, plus a supply chain that depends on flights, couriers, and weather. We sit down with Rashah McChesney, owner and publisher of the Chilkat Valley News, to talk about what it really takes to keep community journalism alive in Haines, Alaska when the old ad-driven model is collapsing and ever...

Episode 16: Tom Wayes; Chasing Lines, Building Gear, Racing Rocks: The Relentless Pursuit Of Flow 12.03.2026

Send us Fan Mail A 400-foot ski hill in Pennsylvania shouldn’t produce a heli-ski guide who opens Alaskan lines, designs technical gear, and races a 900-horse rock car at 140 on dirt—but here we are. We sit down with guide and multi-sport athlete Tom Wayes to trace the decisions, near-misses, and outrageous stories that shaped a life built on edge. Tom takes us from late-blooming collegiate gates...

Episode 15: Al Badgley; From Baytown To Haines: A Life Of Service 05.03.2026

Send us Fan Mail A cabin burns to the ground on a winter night without phones. A young volunteer watches a ragtag crew of neighbors save what they can and decides to spend the next three decades running toward the worst moments in people’s lives. That’s the hinge of Al Badgley’s story, and it opens into a rich, surprising life that stretches from Texas bayous to the Chilkat Valley. We start in Bay...

Episode 14: Travis Kukull; What If A Restaurant Could Feed A Town’s Soul? 26.02.2026

Send us Fan Mail A slice of fresh bread on a Sunday night can shape a life. Travis joins us to share how those early kitchen memories, a scientist father’s quiet example, and a teenage “pop-up” at home set him on a winding path from Shoreline to Maui, New York, and finally Haines, Alaska—where Deer Heart now serves as both restaurant and community anchor. We dig into the reality of restaurants aft...

Episode 13: Reba Hylton; How A Tourism Director Balances Growth, Wildlife, And Community Needs 19.02.2026

Send us Fan Mail A love story to place doesn’t always start pretty. For Reba Hylton, it began with a mother who worked fields and fought racism, a softball swing that opened college doors, and a gut feeling that life had to be wilder. Alaska answered. Reba learned to read rivers, run tours, and solve problems the way guides do: watch, decide, commit. From guiding and managing Skagway operations to...

Episode 12: Dr. Marnie Hartman; What If Your Hardest Struggles Become Your Superpower? 12.02.2026

Send us Fan Mail What if the hardest things you’ve lived through could become your superpower? We sit down with Dr. Marnie Hartman—physical therapist, yoga teacher, author, and death doula—whose life moved from the precision of competitive gymnastics to the intimate, human work of helping a rural Alaska town heal. From Orange County’s boutique sports clubs to a basement room next to a utility clos...

Episode 11: Bill Thomas; A Veteran’s Journey Through Alaska, War, And Public Service 05.02.2026

Send us Fan Mail A life can hold multitudes, and Bill Thomas’ story proves it. Born and raised in Haines with deep Tlingit roots, Bill carries us from Main Street memories and Chilkat dancers to the hot ramp at Bien Hoa, where a young crew chief learned to keep planes—and people—alive. He talks about flying VIP missions in U-21s, the daily reality of fear, the rare medal signed by General Creighto...

Episode 10 Lilly Boron; From Off-Grid Alaska To The Superintendent’s Office 29.01.2026

Send us Fan Mail A World War II tent. A Yamaha piano hauled off a swaying dock. Five bears on the playground. A cancer diagnosis delivered in a plastic-lined hallway. And a small town that kept showing up. This conversation with superintendent Lilly Boron is a sweeping, human story about grit, grace, and what schools must become to truly serve kids today. We start with Lilly’s off-grid childhood i...

Episode 9: Joe Hamilton; Hard Work, Human Connection, And A Warranty That Built A Brand 22.01.2026

Send us Fan Mail What turns a humble birding shop into a global optics leader? A leap of faith, a relentless work ethic, and a belief that service beats slogans. Sitting down at Vortex HQ with CEO Joe Hamilton, we trace the arc from a dentist-turned-retailer to a family business that learned retail on the floor, listened to customers asking for binoculars, and built Eagle Optics before consolidati...

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