Zahn McClarnon (Reservation Dogs), who plays Ghost Face about native representation in Westerns, helping with dialogue for this movie and his preferito aspect of his character.
While there are 430,000 Cherokee citizens in the three federally recognized tribes, fewer than an estimated 2,000 fluent speakers remain—the majority of whom are elderly. Language activists, artists, and the youth must now lead
@Cinemon Entertainment -The four souls of the Coyote offer the viewer an escape while presenting a magical world inspired da Native American folklore that brings us back to the wonders of life.
Zahn McClarnon: "We grow up with these stereotypes and these tropes about native Americans and the public is learning we're not all on horseback and yipping and yelling in buckskin. We're human beings."
Searching for some ancient wisdom? Check out some of the best moments when the spirit world appeared in Reservation Dogs. Watch all episodes now. Only on Hulu.
Directors Razelle Benally and Matthew Galkin and activists Luella Brien and Lucy Simpson talk to IndieWire’s Christian Blauvelt at the Sundance Film Festival about Showtime’s “Murder in Big Horn,”...
Brutal, heart-breaking, real. Find out how Teonna’s story in the series 1923 reveals a collective history of trauma with 1923 cast and crew members including Aminah Nieves (Teonna) and Mo Brings Plenty (American Indian Affairs Coordinator).
Why are so many Indigenous women going missing? Murder in Big Horn explores that and more. The new three-part docuseries streams February 3 on SHOWTIME.
Murder in Big Horn crafts a powerful portrait of tribal members and their communities within Big Horn County, Montana battling an epidemic of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women (MMIW) that has been prevalent since colonization.