A Documentary Podcast Series

The People’s
Republic of Astoria

How a quiet neighborhood in Queens became a laboratory for a new kind of politics — and how it took one journalist seven years to get off the sideline and join in. A narrative documentary told from the ground floor.

The People's Republic of Astoria — Podcast Cover Art
About the Series
“When there’s a real ideology, you get a level of commitment money can’t buy.” — Michael Thomas Carter, AOC campaign staff

In 2018, ten strangers met in Astoria Park to knock on doors for a longshot congressional candidate. By 2025, the movement they helped build had fifty thousand volunteers — and won the mayor’s race.

Tim Donovan watched it all happen from the sideline: tending bar, cheering from afar, telling himself they didn’t really need him. This is the story of how he was wrong — and what he found when he finally showed up.

Now what?
The Story

Starting with Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s stunning 2018 upset of a ten-term congressman, “The People’s Republic of Astoria” traces seven years of grassroots organizing through the voices of the people who made it happen: the canvassers who knocked tens of thousands of doors, the mutual aid workers who picked up four hundred pounds of bread each week, the campaign managers who stayed up past midnight counting ballots.

From the fight against Amazon HQ2 to a district attorney race lost by fifty-five votes, from pandemic food pantries to a mayoral campaign run in 106-degree heat — each chapter follows a different thread of a single, remarkable story: how a neighborhood in Queens became the proving ground for a new American politics.

Music by Pyrosion.

Season One

The Chapters

Six chapters. Seven years. One neighborhood. New episodes available now on all major platforms.

Chapter 01
Ten Perfect Strangers
In 2018, a 29-year-old bartender takes down a ten-term congressman — powered by a handful of volunteers in a Queens park. Shawna knocks doors three nights a week with a four-year-old at home. Michael bets his career on a 10% chance. And Tim watches from the sideline.
“We’re not going to win this campaign. Joe Crowley is just too powerful. We’re really just trying to build out infrastructure.” — Shawna Morlock
Available
Chapter 02
Twenty Years Apart
Two campaigns, two neighborhoods, separated by twelve miles and two months. In Bay Ridge, a 26-year-old named Zohran Mamdani learns hard lessons from a losing campaign. In Astoria, Jimmy Van Bramer takes on Amazon — and the richest man in the world.
“Billionaires don’t lose, right? Trillion dollar corporations don’t lose. And when they lost, they were f***ing pissed.” — Jimmy Van Bramer
Available
Chapter 03
Fifty-Five Votes
A queer Latina public defender runs to become Queens District Attorney. On election night, they declare victory. Then the absentee ballots arrive. A month-long recount, fought ballot by ballot — and a loss so narrow it haunts everyone who lived it.
“If someone had put a pen mark on the side, or if there was a penny in the envelope… this person’s choice got thrown away.” — Shawna Morlock
Available
Chapter 04
Four Hundred Pounds
A pandemic shuts down the world — and Zohran’s field-first campaign. But as the crisis deepens, campaign offices become food pantries, and activists become mutual aid workers. Benham and a crew of volunteers pick up four hundred pounds of bread every Tuesday.
“People ask me, what’s the secret to the work? And I’m usually like, I think it’s just showing up on time and being reliable.” — Benham Jones, Astoria Food Pantry
Available
Chapter 05
Twenty-Six Hours
It’s 106 degrees on primary day and Zohran Mamdani is trying to become mayor. Magdalena runs field operations from a decorated tent. Tim drives a mobile cooling station up the west side of Manhattan until his body shuts down. Then, at 9 PM, something happens that nobody — nobody — saw coming.
“I screamed ‘we’re the mayor’ a thousand times that night. Because we were the campaign.” — Magdalena Moranda
Available
Chapter 06
Three Million Doors
Season finale. Coming soon.
Coming Soon
The Voices

Meet the People

The organizers, activists, and neighbors who tell the story of Astoria’s political transformation — in their own words.

Shawna Morlock
Canvasser and organizer. Knocked tens of thousands of doors starting with AOC’s first campaign. Self-described “geriatric millennial.”
“Once you win that first one, it’s like blood in the water. You chase that feeling forever.”
Magdalena Moranda
Field lead for the Zohran campaign in Astoria. Showed up at her first canvas in early 2025 and never stopped.
“You’re the vibes creator first and foremost.”
Jimmy Van Bramer
First openly queer City Councilor from Queens. Led the fight against Amazon HQ2 in Long Island City.
“I turned to my mother and was like, I have to go right now. Amazon just pulled out of the deal.”
Luke Hayes
Campaign manager for Tiffany Cabán’s DA race. Stayed backstage calling lawyers while the crowd celebrated.
“With 55 votes, every decision gets magnified. You can look in a thousand different directions.”
Eric Thor
DSA co-chair. Volunteer from the beginning — built Zohran’s first website, helped run field across Queens.
“We’re building something bigger than ourselves.”
Benham Jones
President and co-founder of the Astoria Food Pantry. Started with bread pickups in a friend’s kitchen.
“It turns out that everyone in Astoria is like a bisexual do-gooder.”
Ross Barkan
Journalist, novelist, and former State Senate candidate. Zohran’s first boss in politics — Bay Ridge, 2018.
“It was about someone who was organizing the district against someone who wasn’t.”
Michael Thomas Carter
Second paid staffer on AOC’s primary campaign. First day of work was in her apartment in Parkchester.
“I’m always looking for that line, that play where maybe you win with it, maybe you lose.”
Tim Donovan
Written, Narrated & Produced by

Tim Donovan

Tim Donovan is a 15-year resident of Astoria, Queens, and a former freelance journalist whose work has appeared in Salon, VICE, AlterNet, and Al Jazeera America. He has covered the student loan debt crisis, climate change, wealth inequality, and labor issues.

For years, Tim watched the political transformation of his neighborhood from the sideline — bartending at a bougie cocktail bar on 34th Ave, cheering from afar, telling himself they didn’t really need him. Then in 2025, he signed up for a canvassing shift — and it took over his life. He used his deep personal connections throughout the neighborhood to tell this story from the ground floor.

Salon VICE AlterNet Al Jazeera America
Get Involved

Join the Movement

The organizations and communities featured in the podcast — and how you can support them.

Astoria Food Pantry

Astoria Food Pantry

400 pounds of bread, every Tuesday. Volunteer with the pantry Benham and his crew built from scratch during the pandemic.

31st Ave Open Streets

31st Ave Open Streets

One of NYC’s most vibrant community open street programs — right in the heart of the People’s Republic.