In 1960, the Kainai and their
Sun Dance were featured in the
National Film Board of Canada (NFB) documentary
Circle of the Sun. Tribal leaders had been concerned that the Sun Dance might be dying out, and had permitted filming as a visual record. This documentary was later referenced by electronic music duo
Boards of Canada on their debut album
Music Has The Right to Children, with song titles such as "Kaini Industries" and "Pete Standing Alone" paying homage to the tribe and its leader. In 1973, the NFB released the documentary
Kainai, which discusses the construction and consequences of a factory on their property. In 2006, community leader Rick Tailfeathers contributed a small
ammolite carving of a buffalo skull to the
Six String Nation project. The object was permanently mounted on the interior of
Voyageur, the guitar at the heart of the project. Following a presentation about the project in September 2014 at Tatsikiisaapo'p Middle School, project creator
Jowi Taylor was presented with a braid of
sweet grass by school principal Ramona Big Head. The braid resides in the headstock area in the bed of the guitar case. On
National Aboriginal Day in 2011, the NFB released the
Pete Standing Alone trilogy, which includes
Circle of the Sun,
Standing Alone and a 2010 film,
Round Up, documenting 50 years of the Kainai Nation as well as the life of elder Pete Standing Alone. == Historical newspapers ==