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Last weekend, the place to be seen for the top tier of Indigenous artists was the 64th Annual Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair and Market in Phoenix.

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On the February morning of the New York Fashion Week runway show exhibiting a collection of Iñupiaq parkas, designer Bobby Brower (Alaska Native Iñupiaq) awoke in Manhattan to snow.

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The all Indigneous cast and creators of the Hulu smash hit Reservation Dogs stood and embraced one another last night at the 2022 Film Independent Spirit Award Ceremony for their latest wins: Best Scripted Series and Best Ensemble Cast in a New Scripted Series.

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When Román Zaragoza auditioned for the show “Ghosts” in December 2020, he was like many of us in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, lost and unsure about the future. He recently moved to Eugene, Oregon to resume his undergraduate work in film studies at Cal State in Los Angeles remotely, when he submitted his audition via Zoom to CBS. A week after his submission, he was on set filming in Hollywood, California. 

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When a beaming Gordon Ramsay enthusiastically asks to fill your champagne glass, and you find yourself clinking flutes of bubbly with him and celebrity chefs Richard Blais and Nyesha Arrington in a toast to your talent and success, you know you’ve made it big in the food biz.

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Prairie Band Potawatomi and Mexican-American Chef Stephanie “Pyet” Despain is one of three contestants moving on to the final round of Fox’s cooking reality competition Next Level Chef. 

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Indian Country is filled with cultural adventures through the beginning of March.

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Hinckley, Minn.—On Friday, February 18, the Grand Casino Hinckley hosted “Grand Friday Night Fights,” a popular casino professional boxing series that has been showcasing amateur and professional fighters since 2007. It’s considered one of the top casino boxing series in the country.

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This week, the Mother Tongue Film Festival celebrates its seventh annual virtual festival with on-demand film screenings and virtual events scheduled through March 4, 2022. The film festival is curated by the Smithsonian and features films and filmmakers from around the world that highlight the role languages play in culture and identity. 

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Daniel Vandever, Diné, believes the future is female, Indigenous, and drawn from the generations before her. Vandever, along with Diné artist Corey Begay, have won the American Indian Youth Literature Award for their book Herizon, which follows a Diné girl’s journey through the Navajo Nation to herd her grandmother’s sheep. The award honors Native writers and illustrators for the best work that portrays Indigenous people “in the fullness of their humanity.”