In the sixth and final episode of her six-part Tending series, host Shirlette Ammons seeks insight on the future of Black farming and asks if there is a world in which farmers are not dependent on the USDA.

See all episodes here.

About Tending

Hosted by award-winning musician and documentary producer Shirlette Ammons, Tending is a six-part narrative series that explores the ongoing struggles of Black farmers through the lens of Pigford v. Glickman—once the largest civil rights class-action lawsuit in U.S. history. Ammons—an eastern North Carolina native with deep farming roots—travels across seven Southern states to meet Pigford claimants and their descendants. Their stories paint a vivid picture of injustice and an ongoing fight for restitution.

Visit the Tending website here to learn more.

About Shirlette Ammons

Accomplished musician, documentary producer, and most importantly the granddaughter of a Black farmer from Eastern North Carolina, Shirlette Ammons has worked on the Emmy and Peabody Award-winning A Chef’s LifeSomewhere South, and May The Lord Watch: The Little Brother Story. Her 2024 self-released album SPECTACLES was named one of the year’s best by NPR’s Sound Opinions. More about Shirlette’s work is available at www.shirletteammons.com.

Tending features additional production from Andrea Weigl (A Chef’s Life) and Mosi Secret (Radical), with support from the Walmart and Kellogg Foundations, the Heller School for Social Policy and Management at Brandeis University, and the Federation of Southern Cooperatives.