Experience an unforgettable evening on Friday, July 18th of reflection, conversation, and community as we launch Grounded Conversations, a new series in collaboration with Edwina von Gal and Perfect Earth Project. This inaugural program features Krista Tippett, Peabody Award–winning host of On Being, in conversation with Biddle Duke, journalist and climate advocate.
Evening Schedule
5:30 PM – Doors open
6:00–7:00 PM – Talk and reception
7:30 PM – Seated buffet dinner for a limited group of 40 guests. Each table will explore one of Krista’s signature questions, with a Host to guide the conversation and a Scribe to capture insights
Ticket Options
Talk & Reception: $125 for LongHouse Members, $150 for non-members
Talk, Reception & Dinner: $400 - Includes full access to the evening: the talk, reception, and an intimate seated dinner with Krista and fellow guests. (Limited to 40 tickets.)
Krista Tippett speaks of hope not as wishful thinking but as a lifeline—a spiritual muscle we build by facing reality with courage and compassion. She often draws wisdom from the natural world, noting how cycles of decay and renewal in nature mirror our own capacity for growth and healing. For Tippett, hope is grounded in presence: a quiet, resilient force that listens, like the earth itself, and holds space for what might yet emerge.
For the past quarter century Krista Tippett has been pursuing the great questions of meaning that are newly urgent in this century: What does it mean to be human, how do we want to live, and who will we be to each other? On public radio and on the new frontier of podcasting, she has conducted a conversation with wise and graceful lives, some of whom have shifted the world on its axis. Join us at the Longhouse for an evening of conversation with Krista about wisdom for navigating this tender, tumultuous moment and seeing the generative possibilities of this time to be alive.
About Krista Tippett
Krista Tippett is a Peabody-award winning broadcaster, National Humanities Medalist, and New York Times bestselling author. She created the groundbreaking public radio show and podcast On Being, which pursues deep thinking, moral imagination, social creativity, and joy towards the renewal of inner life, outer life, and life together. It has won the highest honors in broadcast, Internet and podcasting, and been downloaded over 450 million times. The On Being Project, which Krista founded in 2013, also engages “quiet conversations” to accompany the generative people and possibilities within this tender, tumultuous time to be alive. She received the National Humanities Medal at the White House in 2014 for "thoughtfully delving into the mysteries of human existence. On air and in print, Ms. Tippett avoids easy answers, embracing complexity and inviting people of every background to join her conversation about faith, ethics, and moral wisdom."Krista grew up in a small town in Oklahoma, attended Brown University, worked as a young journalist and diplomat in Cold War Berlin, and later received a Master of Divinity from Yale. She is the author of three books, most recently Becoming Wise: An Inquiry into the Mystery and Art of Living.
Instagram: @onbeing Facebook: @onbeing LinkedIn: On Being Project
About Biddle Duke
Biddle Duke is a writer, editor, and storyteller whose work centers on people and places, ideas, food, nature, art, family, and friendship. Every now and then, he sounds an alarm about the trouble we’re in — because, in case you haven’t noticed, the world is in peril. A lifelong believer that journalism is a public service, Duke has spent decades reporting and editing for newspapers across New York, New Mexico, South Carolina, Vermont, and Argentina, where he was editor of The Buenos Aires Herald in the mid-1990s. In 1998, he became publisher of The Stowe Reporter in Vermont and later expanded the company to include six weeklies and two magazines. In 2016, he co-founded EAST magazine with the owners of a newspaper company in East Hampton, New York. The quarterly publication celebrates the soul of the East End — its history, environment, food, politics, culture, and art. His writing has appeared in The New Yorker online, The New York Times, Ski Racing, The Surfers Journal, Backcountry Magazine, The East Hampton Star, and numerous regional publications. Also a speaker and event organizer, Duke is driven by a deep commitment to storytelling and advocacy. Though a lifelong nomad, he now lives in Springs, New York, with his wife, artist Idoline Duke, and their dog, Ralphie — when he’s not chasing waves or ski lines in remote corners of the world.