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Cultural Fingerprints

Cultural Fingerprints

By: Rhea Kapur
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Cultural Fingerprints explores the interactions between language, culture, technology, and place. Hosted by Rhea Kapur, the show features conversations with designers of urban signage in NYC; readings and analysis of folklore from around the world; interviews with language and culture experts; musings on how AI can aid in multilingual and interdisciplinary inquiry; and more.

For additional details: culturalfingerprints.com

Copyright 2026 All rights reserved.
Social Sciences
Episodes
  • Story Behind the Choking Sign: Merging Skateboarding, Graffiti, and Cartoons with Van Eggers
    Jun 9 2026

    Van Eggers has been a skateboarder since he was five and a graffiti artist since he was eleven, and the core of his artwork traces back to those two identities. In this episode of the Cultural Fingerprints podcast, Van walks us through his Long Beach years: living in the legendary Winnipeg Street skate house, full of pros sleeping on army cots and exchanging music, art, and skate lore; relentlessly pitching his work to anyone connected to the skate brands he’d grown up admiring; and painting murals at the parks by day before skating under their lights after dark. Those experiences eventually led to Van’s Common Meadows Creamery choking sign, drawn in the spirit of the mid-century advertisement illustrations he loves. Van reflects on how the incredibly diverse mix of communities in skateboarding surfaces in the boards, graphics, and clothing the sport produces, and on why skating, painful as it’s become with his ankle injury, remains his way of staying alive.

    Van Eggers: vaneggersart.com

    Common Meadows Creamery: commonmeadows.com

    For more information: rheakapur.info and culturalfingerprints.com

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    41 mins
  • Story Behind the Choking Sign: Sketching in the Restaurant World with Sara Rabin
    May 25 2026

    Many custom NYC choking safety signs were drawn by those on staff. Graphic designer, illustrator, and artist Sara Rabin has two on the walls of New York City establishments: one made for Dimes in Chinatown, where she waitressed for a decade, and one from Rodeo in Crown Heights, opened by a friend from that same downtown restaurant orbit. In this episode of the Cultural Fingerprints podcast, Sara walks us through both: the hand-drawn Dimes sign she created not long after spotting a wall of bananas in its Chinatown window and deciding to work there, and the Rodeo sign, for which she dressed her boyfriend and her sister’s boyfriend in thrifted cowboy hats and posed them through every step of the Heimlich maneuver. We explore the summer she spent as a teenager at an all-women’s boardinghouse on the Upper West Side, which first sold her on New York City as the place to be. Additionally, we discuss the lasting influence of her training in fashion illustration at FIT, her lifelong loyalty to messy, sketch-style pen-and-ink work in the lineage of Shel Silverstein, and the tight-knit social scene of the service industry, where creative restaurant staff kept getting tapped to design the bars and restaurants in which they worked or which were opening up around them.

    Sara Rabin: sararabin.net

    For more information: rheakapur.info and culturalfingerprints.com

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    49 mins
  • Story Behind the Choking Sign: City Aesthetics and Escaping from New York with Phil Ashworth
    May 19 2026

    How did a dystopian John Carpenter movie end up saving lives in New York cafes? In this new episode of the Cultural Fingerprints podcast, illustrator Phil Ashworth tells the story behind one of city’s most beloved pieces of restaurant safety signage: his Heimlich poster starring Snake Plissken, the reluctant antihero of Escape from New York (1981), begrudgingly saving a choking victim in a bombed-out cityscape (and checking their mouth for hidden razor blades along the way). We trace Phil’s path from drawing at his dad’s drafting table and studying illustration at RISD to pursuing the craft in the city, and we discuss how a basement brainstorm with Trey Kirchoff at Gimme! Coffee helped kick off a citywide wave of personalized choking posters in the cafes and bars of late-2000s New York.

    Phil Ashworth: philashworth.com

    For more information: rheakapur.info and culturalfingerprints.com

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    51 mins
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