Duo creates app-based audio tour exploring KC’s history of segregation
April 26, 2018 | Bobby Burch
Most Kansas Citians are uninformed on the area’s segregated past, Nathaniel Bozarth said.
“To be quite honest, I’m convinced that this ignorance is by design,” said Bozarth, a Kansas City ethnographer and host of the Wide Ruled podcast. “White America does not want to deal with the sins of our fathers and our own sins with regards to racism. We want it to be a bad dream and to just go away.”

Bozarth and Cook
Responding to that ignorance helped drive Bozarth and Christopher Cook on a storytelling mission to creatively document historical racial divisions in the Kansas City metro that were shaped in large part by real estate development.
Commissioned by the Johnson County Library for its Race Project KC initiative, the duo tapped Bozarth’s experience working with audio tour technology for the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art to create an immersive experience to educate people as they drive through the metro. The audio tour — dubbed Dividing Lines — is a 90-minute story set along 24 miles in Johnson County and Kansas City, Missouri.
During the tour, Bozarth interviews students and various city figures who add historical context to what listeners see along the drive. The interviews and story combine to create what Bozarth hopes is a moving experience that opens the listener up to the foundational issues of racial division in Kansas City, he said.
The tour can be visceral, shocking and heart-wrenching, Bozarth added.
“I hope that listeners will be deeply affected by Dividing Lines on both an emotional and cognitive level,” he said. “I hope that listeners go away with a deeper understanding of what it means for a problem to be systemic or structural as we call it in anthropology. Racism, as it is lived out today, is as much tactical — a white person calling a black person the n-word or telling a Latinx person to go home — as it is built into our spaces. I want people to really marinate in that uncomfortable thought.
“And I hope that it will cause them to think about their own actions and how they participate and perpetuate inequitable systems. Eliminating racism isn’t about finding the bad guy out there — it’s about finding the bad guy in here, in me,” Bozarth said.
To take the free tour, download the VoiceMap app on your mobile device and then search in the app to find and download Dividing Lines. Once you’ve downloaded it, use the app to navigate to the tour’s starting point — Shawnee Mission East High School — and hit start.
Listeners start in Prairie Village, winding their way northeast through Mission Hills and the Plaza before heading north on Highway 71 and into eastern Kansas City, downtown, 18th and Vine and concluding near Hyde Park.
Bozarth and Cook have crafted many video and audio stories, but with Dividing Lines, there were added challenges with content and production, Bozarth said
“The process was highly emotional for both reasons of the heart-crushing content and the deep passion to get it right,” he said. “Christopher Cook, owner of Brainroot Light and Sound and also a producer on Dividing Lines, and I had as much creative tension on this project as any of our projects. He and I both firmly believe, however, that our creative tension and the resolutions that follow are what makes our end product sing.”
To learn more about the tour or to download it, click here.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Startup, investor, corporate worlds collide; Ron LeMay’s message for KC: Sit down and talk
Ron LeMay wasn’t willing to watch entrepreneurs flee Kansas City to build their game-changing companies on the coasts, he recalled. “That’s a prescription for disaster over time,” LeMay, CEO of Main Street Data and managing director of Open Air Equity Partners, said of the way he viewed entrepreneurial progress in the City of Fountains as…
Nuts and bolts: Lenexa-forged Enduralock tech catches the eye of NASA, Shell
A Lenexa-based startup is gathering accolades faster than a SpaceX rocket’s methane-fueled full flow staged combustion cycle. “Investors definitely see something unique that is brewing here in Kansas City, so we are excited to represent the area,” said Diana Greenberg, COO and co-founder of Enduralock. Founded in 2014, Enduralock is one of 10 finalist tech…
LEANLAB earns another top-tier funder with $76K+ grant from Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
A hefty new grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation will allow LEANLAB Education to expand its incoming 2019 K12 Fellowship from six to 10 innovation teams, Katie Boody said. The $76,500 in funding also allows the education accelerator to grow beyond pilot sites to form the Visionary School Network and award honorariums to…
Competitive scoring for medical marijuana licenses pit startups against time as window narrows
Missouri entrepreneurs hoping to roll into the multi-million dollar medical marijuana industry first must jump a number of hurdles. Step one: Obtaining a license. “Missouri is very competitive,” said Dre Taylor, founder of Nile Valley Aquaponics. “So you know, if you’re trying to win the application, you need to have your ducks in a row.”…
