About Alan O’Hashi, Whole Brain Thinker

I’ve been involved with community journalism since 1968 when I wrote for my junior school paper, the "Tumbleweed," through high school and college and then wrote for the "Wyoming State Journal." I put aside my newspaper pen and began Boulder Community Media in 2005. There wasn’t much community journalism opportunity, so I resurrected my writing career as a screenwriter. My first short screenplay, “Stardust”, won an award in the 2005 Denver Screenwriting Center contest. I've made a number of movies over the years. Filmmaking is time-consuming, labor and equipment intensive. I recently changed my workflow to first write a book and make a movie based on that content. - Electric Vehicle Anxiety and Advice - This is a memoir travelogue of three trips covering 2,600 EV miles around Wyoming (2022) - Beyond Heart Mountain - Winter Goose Publishers released my memoir in February (2022) - The Zen of Writing with Confidence and Imperfection - This is a book recounting how luck planed into my signing a book deal after a 15-minute pitch meeting. (2020) - True Stories of an Aging Baby Boomer - War stories about living in a cohousing and lessons others can learn when starting their communities (2021) - Beyond Sand Creek - About Arapaho tribal efforts to repatriate land in Colorado (PBS - TBA) - Beyond Heart Mountain - Based on my memoir about my childhood in Cheyenne facing overt and subtle racism toward the Japanese following World War II (PBS - 2021) - New Deal Artist Public Art Legacy - About artists who created work in Wyoming during the Great Depression (PBS - 2018) - Mahjong and the West - SAG indie feature which premiered at the semi-important Woodstock Film Festival (2014) Over the years, I’ve produced directed, filmed and/or edited several short movies, “Running Horses” (Runner Up – Wyoming Short Film Contest), “On the Trail: Jack Kerouac in Cheyenne” (Lowell Celebrates Kerouac Festival, Top 10 Wyoming Short Film Contest), “Gold Digger” (Boulder Asian Film Festival), “Adobo” (Boulder International Film Festival), “A Little Bit of Discipline” (Rosebud Film Series), and two feature length documentaries “Your Neighbor’s Child” (Wyoming PBS and Rocky Mountain PBS), and “Serotonin Rising” (American Film Market, Vail Film Festival). He also directed and produced the award winning stage play “Webster Street Blues” by my childhood friend Warren Kubota. Boulder Community Media is a non-profit production company dedicated to democratzing media in all their forms - large and small screens, printed page and stage by providing sustainable and community-based content. I mostly work with community-based media producers, organizations, and socially-responsible businesses to develop their content via – the written word, electronic and new media, the visual and performing arts in a culturally competent manner – I’m what’s commonly called a niche TV and movie producer. Along with all this is plying my forte’ – fund development through grant writing, sponsorship nurturing and event planning.

Silicon Prairie Episode 2: Chasing the Tax Base

https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-z9hhd-1ae7c23

A billion-dollar Digital Foundry wants to build outside your town.

City leaders see tax revenue. Developers see opportunity. Residents have questions.

Who pays for new roads, water lines, and public services? Can local governments keep up? And should Wyoming’s Industrial Siting Council, created during the coal boom of the 1970s, play a larger role in reviewing the next generation of industrial development?

In Episode 2 of Silicon Prairie: Chasing the Tax Base, we follow the money behind the digital land rush and examine how communities can avoid repeating the mistakes of past booms.

When the promises start flying, it’s worth asking who benefits and who pays.

Listen now.

Silicon Prairie Episode 1: How Communities Can Prepare for the Digital Boom

https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-cmb43-1ad7cc0

The Rocky Mountain West has seen its share of booms from gold and railroads to oil, gas, and coal. Now a new boom is arriving: data centers, artificial intelligence, cryptocurrency, and industrial-scale computing.

In this inaugural episode of Silicon Prairie, host Alan O’Hashi explores how communities can prepare for the opportunities and challenges that accompany the digital economy. What questions should local leaders ask before approving a new data center? Who benefits from the jobs and tax revenue? What happens to power supplies, water resources, land use, and quality of life?

Drawing on lessons he learned from past energy booms, this episode offers practical insights for communities seeking to balance economic development with long-term sustainability.

The digital land rush is underway. The question is whether communities will shape it or react to it.

Silicon Prairie is a production of American Outlands, featuring stories from the edges of America.

This synopsis positions you as a thoughtful observer rather than an anti-data-center critic, which will help attract listeners from multiple perspectives.

Artlink Commons

Boulder is brimming with creativity, yet too often that energy remains confined to silos — scattered studios, one-off events, and bursts of activity that fade without continuity.

ArtLink Commons is a collaboration between Boulder Community Media and Distributive Creative, two 501(c)3 organizations. ArtLink is designed to complement, not compete with, existing resources.

It strengthens what already exists in the North Boulder Arts District by weaving together ongoing efforts, spreading the work among many hands, and creating year-round consistency without adding more to any single organizer’s plate.

The vision is simple: link what’s already happening. The Commons builds on the strengths of NoBo’s vibrant arts community, from First Friday walks and the North Boulder Library, by adding a connective backbone. This means increased visibility, more steady engagement, and a structure that ensures the energy of the arts isn’t limited to a single event or season.

North Boulder is the perfect place to launch this model. The momentum is already here: the planned Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art campus, existing creative businesses, and a community hungry for more cultural anchors. ArtLink Commons doesn’t replace or overshadow.  It complements and amplifies, like the Farmers Market made Boulder’s food culture more accessible without replacing local grocers or restaurants.

I’m not a carpetbagger. I live in the Holiday Neighborhood, where Boulder Community Media also has its office. The energy is here. The timing is right. Download the concept paper to learn more.

← Back

Thank you for your response. ✨