Aaron J. Brown

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Minnesota Brown: Modern Life on the Iron Range

  • Northern Minnesota has what you need

    Northern Minnesota has what you need

    What do you need to live? You need air, of course. Food and water. Shelter.  Once you have these you may think about the other things you need. You need friendship, family and love. You need a sense of purpose, to believe that your efforts matter. And finally, once you have these things, you might…

    January 24, 2021
  • Live broadcast ‘Celebrity Chef’ challenge to raise funds for Second Harvest

    Live broadcast ‘Celebrity Chef’ challenge to raise funds for Second Harvest

    Well, folks. I might be rusty a year after the Great Northern Radio Show went on hiatus, but I’m getting back in the saddle for one night only. It’s time for some fancy live broadcast witty banter … for a good cause. This past year presented an enormous challenge for many of us, but none…

    January 18, 2021
  • Legislature, mining & police

    Legislature, mining & police

    This year I’ll be offering occasional news analysis on WDSE’s Almanac North as part of the station’s “Voices of the Region” segment. My first segment was Jan. 8. If you missed it, here it is: I reviewed three topics. First, the legislature is in session now. Northeastern Minnesota lawmakers of both parties find themselves in…

    January 17, 2021
  • Cure for waning political power is more people

    Cure for waning political power is more people

    It is again time to tabulate the U.S. Census, an incredibly boring task that affects every aspect of our state and federal government.  As with most complicated topics — taxes, First Century scrolls, technology — it’s easy for people to hold outrageous, illogical views without any real consequences. After all, who really knows? That’s why…

    January 17, 2021
  • To think or not to think

    To think or not to think

    For all its horrors, the pandemic allowed many Americans to finally experience what teachers do for a living. It’s certainly useful for parents to know that teachers aren’t just babysitters. Rather, the work teachers do at all levels remains complex and important.  However, the pandemic has also taught us where modern society falls short when…

    January 10, 2021
  • What’s done is never done in 2021

    What’s done is never done in 2021

    The otter’s hot breath stirs me from my slumber. I do not know how long he’s been standing there. My eyes open to see him on his hind legs, his front paws dangling expectantly in front of his tiny burlap overalls. “Is time,” he whispers.  Behind the otter stands a black bear holding an empty…

    January 3, 2021
  • MinnesotaBrown’s Top Posts of 2020

    MinnesotaBrown’s Top Posts of 2020

    It’s time once again to share my most read posts from MinnesotaBrown for the previous year. 2020 may not have been a great year for many, but it was a memorable year, one that will become part the stories we tell for a long time. This year I’ve been working on my book “Power in…

    December 31, 2020
  • 2020 defied words, but created plenty of new ones

    2020 defied words, but created plenty of new ones

    Major events alter the way we communicate. New words enter the language when the old ones fail us. You can’t find a better example than what we’ve experienced in 2020. Language marks changes in lifestyle. For instance, when I leave the house now my wife asks, “Did you remember your face mask?” If you told…

    December 27, 2020
  • Every year is a Brown Christmas

    Every year is a Brown Christmas

    I often tell people from outside Minnesota that the snow and cold don’t really become unpleasant until after Christmas. Everything before then is a crisp, cool puff of snowy magic.  But here along the Mesabi Iron Range we’ve received very little snow this month. As we approach Christmas Day we might have a brown Christmas.…

    December 20, 2020
  • On economic class, urbanization, and chickens

    On economic class, urbanization, and chickens

    My latest column for the Minnesota Reformer is up today. “Just Like a Century ago, there’s a class war in rural America, and the wrong side is winning.” This was quite the creative exercise for me. I had a few things on my mind when I wrote it. First, we seem mired in a hopeless…

    December 16, 2020
  • The cat came back … again

    The cat came back … again

    Nineteen years ago I was the 21-year-old boy editor of the erstwhile Hibbing Daily Tribune. That year I wrote the most consequential article of my entire career. It wasn’t my best work. The story could have used another edit. Its journalistic veracity was thin, to say the least. But more people read this story than…

    December 13, 2020
  • From iron to steel without emissions

    From iron to steel without emissions

    Let’s start with the bad news. Climate change is actively reshaping the whole world; adding billions in property damage, rising insurance premiums, and increased human migration. Among the side effects: economic inequality, declining air quality, natural disasters, and yes, even pandemics. We may come to regard our current struggles with COVID-19 as a normal part…

    December 6, 2020
  • FARGO, Season 4: “Storia Americana”

    FARGO, Season 4: “Storia Americana”

    Northern Minnesota author Aaron J. Brown reviews each episode of “Fargo” with an eye for unique details from the place where the show is set. The ratings range from INTERESTING  (bad), to COULD BE WORSE (not so good) to PRETTY GOOD (not so bad), and OH, YA! (real good then). Beware the spoilers. Episode 11,…

    November 30, 2020
  • Trauma in the American story

    Trauma in the American story

    When the Joel and Ethan Coen movie “Fargo” came out in 1996, Minnesotans complained that we don’t really talk that way. But the fact that the (only slightly) exaggerated regional dialect is what most of us remember from “Fargo” displays the wit of the Coen Brothers, both Minnesota natives themselves. Because “Fargo” isn’t about the…

    November 29, 2020
  • FARGO, Season 4: “Happy”

    FARGO, Season 4: “Happy”

    Northern Minnesota author Aaron J. Brown reviews each episode of “Fargo” with an eye for unique details from the place where the show is set. The ratings range from INTERESTING  (bad), to COULD BE WORSE (not so good) to PRETTY GOOD (not so bad), and OH, YA! (real good then). Beware the spoilers. Episode 10:…

    November 26, 2020
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