Episodios

  • 52 | Kathrine Switzer
    May 15 2025

    Say the name Kathrine Switzer and many people aren’t sure who she is. Say, “the woman who
    was accosted during the 1967 Boston Marathon because she was running in an event for men
    only,” and it’s an image people recognize and remember. Kathrine had no idea what a historic run Boston would be; it became the spark for her life path. She went on to work at Avon and develop Avon Global Women’s Running, then advocated to have the women’s marathon included in the Olympics. She has also written books, commentated for major races, spoken to groups all over the world, and was the honorary starter for the women’s marathon at the Paris Olympics in 2024. Her number in the 1967 Boston Marathon, 261, became an inspiration for women and then the namesake of 261 Fearless, a non-profit Kathrine co-founded in 2015. She continues to open doors for women, encouraging them through running and helping them feel empowered, no matter their circumstances.

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    53 m
  • 51 | Marge Hickman
    Apr 17 2025

    Marge Hickman can’t sit still. If she’s not running, she’s hiking, driving around the country in her RV, or engaging in another form of movement. Since she was a kid, the ultra running phenom has always felt an insatiable drive to prove herself. And that drive has taken her places few in the running community have dared to go. In 1989, Hickman completed the grand slam of ultra running, meaning she finished four of the oldest 100-mile races in a span of 10 weeks. She is one of only 59 women who have accomplished the feat since it was established in 1986. She also completed the Leadville Trail 100 a total of 14 times (within the time limit), the most by any woman at the event. Now, at almost 75 years old, Hickman still competes regularly as an enduring pioneer in the sport.

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    1 h y 11 m
  • 50 | Women's Running Stories: Jen Kanyugi
    Mar 13 2025

    This month, we’re bringing you something a little bit different in this feed: an episode of Women’s Running Stories, a podcast hosted by Cherie Louise Turner. This episode features Jen Kanyugi, who last year ran her 20th consecutive Boston Marathon. And yes, after this was recorded, she did indeed finish the race! Jen's journey to get to this point is about this one event, and so much more. In this time, Jen went from not running more than 20 minutes on the treadmill to being a steady presence at this, one of the most recognized and celebrated running events in the world. She’s also learned the power of support, finding groups to train with and create community with, like Girls on the Run and Black Girls Run.

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    31 m
  • 49 | Henley Gabeau
    Feb 13 2025

    In the mid-1970s, Henley Gabeau didn’t set out to become an accomplished distance runner. Instead, her athletic journey started as a simple desire to keep up with her 12-year-old daughter while training on the track. Henley quickly noticed there weren’t many spaces dedicated to women, so she and a group of like-minded athletes formed RunHERS, one of the first women’s running clubs in the United States. She went on to become the first female president of the Road Runners Club of America and then the organization's first-ever executive director; she also played a role in advocating for adding the women's marathon to the Olympics. Henley's contributions to the world of distance running go beyond her athletic achievements; her work as an advocate, race director, mother and leader helped shape women’s running into what it is today. Henley passed away in 2018—this interview was conducted by Olympian Amy Begley in 2013.

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    1 h y 9 m
  • 48 | Dr. Joan Ullyot
    Jan 16 2025

    Dr. Joan Ullyot, the “fastest physician marathon runner," paved the way for women runners across the world, proving by example that women should not be counted out when it comes to long distances. Ullyot raced in 80 marathons, winning ten of those along with the masters division in the Boston Marathon in 1984. Her book “Women’s Running,” published in 1976, and her in-depth studies as an exercise physiologist made the case that women deserve the equal opportunity to run competitively; her efforts were instrumental in lobbying the International Olympic Commission to add the women's marathon to the Olympics in 1984. Dr. Ullyot passed away in 2021, at age 80; this interview was conducted in 2013 by Amy Begley.

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    1 h y 6 m
  • 47 | Sara Mae Berman
    Dec 12 2024

    In 1969, 32-year-old Sara Mae Berman was the first woman to cross the finish line in the Boston Marathon. She did it again in 1970 and 1971. But women weren’t allowed to enter officially, so her times—3:22:46, 3:05:08, and 3:08:30, respectively—were unofficial. "All we ever wanted, us early women, was to be allowed to run the distance, and we weren't in any bloodthirsty competition with each other. We just wanted to be able to run the distance and improve our times," she says.

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    1 h y 16 m
  • 46 | Jessica Louis, Amber Henderson, Angel Tadytin, and Birdie Wermy
    Nov 14 2024

    Native people, including women, have been running over these lands since long before anyone organized a major marathon. Yet all too often, with notable exceptions like past guest Patti Catalano Dillon, they aren’t represented at modern races. Changing that is the key goal of Native Women Run, an organization that Verna Volker launched in 2018. At first, it was an Instagram page; now, it’s a non-profit that creates space for and elevates the stories of Native women who run. This year, NWR brought four runners to the Bank of America Chicago Marathon: Jessica Louis, Amber Henderson, Angel Tadytin, and Birdie Wermy. All of them joined Verna, Starting Line 1928’s Cindy Kuzma, and Cherie Louise Turner of Women’s Running Stories for a special live podcast recording at the expo the day before the race.

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    47 m
  • 45 | Junko Kazukawa
    Oct 10 2024

    Junko Kazukawa is a Japanese-born women's ultra running pioneer best
    known for having finished the Leadville 100-mile race 10 times. Junko is a two-time
    breast cancer survivor with more than three decades of experience in health, fitness,
    and training. She currently works as an ultra endurance coach with Boundless.
    Junko lives and trains in Denver, Colorado, and has completed 24 100-mile trail races
    so far, including Leadville, UTMB, Mt. Fuji, Ultra Fiord in Patagonia. She's the first
    female to finish the Grand Slam of ultra running in 2015. She was Lead Woman three
    times, in 2014, 2015 and 2024. This means she completed all six events in the Leadville
    Race Series in the span of two months in the nation’s highest city, including a trail
    marathon, a mountain-bike race, the Leadville Trail 100 Run, and more.
    She was the 2015 Sports Woman of Colorado and voted as the Colorado resident
    badass in 2017.

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    49 m
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