Upcoming Pow Wows, Indigenous Alaska and more on PowWows.com!
Published 9 months ago • 4 min read
We’re spending this week down in sunny(it's actually pretty cloudy right now) Florida visiting our daughter ☀️
Did you catch our live stream last weekend? If you missed it (or just want to relive the energy), you can always watch the replay on our YouTube channel: 👉 Watch it now on YouTube
And speaking of YouTube... We just launched a brand new channel — Pow Wow Rewind! 🎉
Over the years, we’ve captured so many Pow Wow videos that never made it online. So now, we’re going back in time and posting videos from Pow Wows that happened at least 5 years ago. There are already several up—and more on the way! 📺 Subscribe and start watching here: Pow Wow Rewind on YouTube
🎁 And don’t forget—our Pow Wow Season Giveaway is still going strong! Enter here: www.powwows.com/win
🎬 We’ll be live again this weekend—streaming from Prairie Knights Casino in North Dakota. Be sure to tune in and join us!
Alaska is a bucket list destination for so many people. When you plan your trip to Alaska, make sure you take time to explore the Indigenous cultures.
You can’t learn about Alaska’s Native American tribes solely from a textbook. When you visit a heritage site or destination with a Native guide, you get to see a completely different side to indigenous cultures.
Alaska is home to dozens of indigenous tribes, from the Tlingit people along the Pacific Northwest coast to the Inupiat of the North Slope Borough. Each culture is brimming with beautiful languages, unique art forms, and hundreds of years of carefully preserved historical traditions.
Here’s what you can do when your bank starts apologizing
You may have gotten a ‘sorry’ email from your bank, saying that if you had a 5% APY cash account, that privilege is being snatched away. And with interest rates set to keep sinking… where to pivot? But now, for a slice of their portfolio, Masterworks’ art investing platform is offering shares to 66,000+ investors, with each of their 23 sales individually returning a profit to said investors. With 3 illustrative sales, Masterworks investors have realized net annualized returns of +17.6%, +17.8%, and +21.5%!
The content is not intended to provide legal, tax, or investment advice.
No money is being solicited or will be accepted until the offering statement for a particular offering has been qualified by the SEC. Offers may be revoked at any time. Contacting Masterworks involves no commitment or obligation.
“Net Annualized Return” refers to annualized internal rate of return net of all fees and expenses, calculated from the offering closing date to the date the sale is consummated. For additional information regarding the calculation of IRR for a particular investment in an artwork that has been sold, a reconciliation will be filed as an exhibit to Form 1-U and will be available on the SEC’s website.
This communication is sent exclusively from Masterworks and is not endorsed by or affiliated with Bank of America. Masterworks did not contribute to the creation of the linked content. The report is not intended to be regarded as investment advice, an offer, or solicitation of an offer to enter into any Masterworks offering.
My name is Maddie Sanders and I am the creator of Wotko Moon. I am a Mvskoke & Mojave artist skilled in various mediums such as graphic design, painting, mural work, and beadwork. As a full time artist I have pursued my love of creation through my small business. I am currently living on Ute & Pueblo land in Durango, CO. I was born and raised in Tahlequah, OK and moved out west to complete my bachelor’s degree. I am now an alumni and graduate of Fort Lewis College with a Bachelors of Art in Communication Design.
LIL MIKE & FUNNYBONE are two of the best Native American rappers the world has ever seen. Also known as MIKE BONE, they made their World debut with an Unforgettable performance on America’s Got Talent. These OKC brothers, though they may look-a-like they are not twins. Also what they lack in height they make-up for in talent.
Here is real food—our indigenous American fruits and vegetables, the wild and foraged ingredients, game and fish. Locally sourced, seasonal, “clean” ingredients and nose-to-tail cooking are nothing new to Sean Sherman, the Oglala Lakota chef and founder of The Sioux Chef. In his breakout book, The Sioux Chef’s Indigenous Kitchen, Sherman shares his approach to creating boldly seasoned foods that are vibrant, healthful, at once elegant and easy.