Funding Bravely – Détails, épisodes et analyse
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Funding Bravely
Marvin L. Smith
Fréquence : 1 épisode/12j. Total Éps: 2

A podcast about courage in philanthropy - what it looks like, why it matters, and how we grow it. This series shines a light on leaders who are working at the edge of change, disrupting entrenched power dynamics, and seeding new collaborations in service of justice-rooted, values-driven philanthropy. It also challenges philanthropy’s outdated models of risk and pace, pushing the field to move from slow strategy to bold action.
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Apple Podcasts
🇺🇸 États-Unis - nonProfit
04/01/2026#76🇺🇸 États-Unis - nonProfit
25/12/2025#71🇨🇦 Canada - nonProfit
23/12/2025#97🇨🇦 Canada - nonProfit
22/12/2025#87🇨🇦 Canada - nonProfit
21/12/2025#75🇨🇦 Canada - nonProfit
20/12/2025#43🇨🇦 Canada - nonProfit
19/12/2025#46🇨🇦 Canada - nonProfit
18/12/2025#38🇨🇦 Canada - nonProfit
17/12/2025#26🇨🇦 Canada - nonProfit
16/12/2025#11
Spotify
Aucun classement récent disponible
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See allScore global : 73%
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Silencing Truth Is a Red Flag. Dimple Abichandani on the Courage Philanthropy Needs
Saison 1 · Épisode 1
mercredi 10 décembre 2025 • Durée 44:39
What if everything you've been told about philanthropy is actually designed to preserve inequality?
Dimple Abichandani spent 20 years inside the sector and she's here to tell you how it really works. This conversation will change how you see wealth, power, and who gets to decide what justice looks like.
In this episode of Funding Bravely, host Marvin Smith sits down with Dimple Abichandani, philanthropic leader, lawyer, and author of A New Era of Philanthropy to unpack a question that's been haunting the sector: Can philanthropy actually meet this moment?
Dimple takes us back to her college days at UT Austin, where she learned what courage really costs. Then she pulls back the curtain on 140 years of "gilded philanthropy," a system designed not to solve problems, but to cover them up.
From Andrew Carnegie's legacy to today's $1.9 trillion sitting in endowments, this conversation exposes:
- Why spending only 5% annually preserves the status quo
- How tech billionaires use foundations to whitewash harm
- What "transformative alchemy" looks like when you mix capital with trust, imagination, and community voice
- Practices that actually redistribute power (not just resources)
This isn't about tweaking the system. It's about transforming wealth into justice.
Torchbearers Shine When It's Dark Out featuring Darren Isom
Saison 1 · Épisode 2
mardi 23 décembre 2025 • Durée 35:50
"I don't know if we're going to win, but we got our best people working on it."
Darren Isom grew up as part of "Generation Integration" in New Orleans, the only generation between legal segregation and white flight. Now, he's helping philanthropy understand that it's not the strategist. It's the servant.
This conversation will change how you think about courage, joy, and who gets to build the future.
In this episode of Funding Bravely, host Marvin Smith sits down with Darren Isom, partner at Bridgespan Group and host of Dreaming in Color, to explore what courage looks like when you realize the world you normalized was actually radical.
Darren takes us back to 1980s New Orleans, where his parents met integrating a white high school (his mom is the same age as Ruby Bridges). He grew up singing the Beatles with Ms. Ziegler, a Black teacher with an afro "too late to be wearing one," in a school that was one-third Black, one-third white, one-third other, a world built on the belief that integration, not assimilation, was possible.
That upbringing shaped everything about how he works today.
This conversation unpacks:
- Why joy and optimism are acts of resistance, especially for Black Americans
- The moment funders realize: "You thought you were Gryffindor, but you might be a Death Eater"
- Why private sector rules don't transfer to nonprofit work (and never did)
- How younger generations are asking: How do we repair the harm our wealth created?
- Why this moment mirrors post-Reconstruction—and what the Harlem Renaissance teaches us about planting seeds
- The shift from funders as strategists to funders as servants with proximity to impact
- Why Black genius, when given space to create (not just navigate broken things), creates beautiful things
Darren reminds us: "Our torchbearers are most important when it's dark out."
This isn't about protecting systems. It's about building new ones.
TIMESTAMPS
- 0:00 - Joy and optimism as acts of resistance
- 4:00 - Growing up as "Generation Integration" in New Orleans
- 8:00 - His parents met integrating a white high school (mom is Ruby Bridges' age)
- 12:00 - The Willow School: Singing Beatles, normalizing Black excellence
- 16:00 - How naming shapes power in philanthropy
- 20:00 - The shift: Funders as servants, not strategists
- 24:00 - "You might be a Death Eater": When funders realize their wealth caused harm
- 28:00 - A billion dollars is 1,000 millions—so why are we fighting over $100K grants?
- 32:00 - "This is what winning looks like" (Irvishie Vait's wisdom)
- 36:00 - Bright spots: High-network donors spending down, not hoarding
- 40:00 - Post-Reconstruction parallels: Planting seeds we won't see grow
- 44:00 - Where Darren finds community and why Black Americans seek beauty
- 48:00 - "Torchbearers shine when it's dark out"
RESOURCES MENTIONED
• Dreaming in Color podcast (5 seasons available)





