Do you ever wonder what's on your token black friend's mind but you're too embarrassed to ask? Are you a black person with too many white friends and you wish you could talk more about the s**t you care about? Then "Black People With Too Many White Friends" is the podcast for you! Listen along as…
Black People With Too Many White Friends
Tess and Ed welcome two guests on the podcasts this month, comedians Carla and Jaleesa, as they talk about PewDiePie's latest fuck up, the ins and outs of comedy, and the most evil things they'd do if they could get away with it. Disclaimer 1: This episode contains gratuitous and unedited use of the N-word. You've been warned. Disclaimer 2: Ed incorrectly claims that there are 80 to 100 chapters to R. Kelly's "Trapped in the Closet". There are, in fact, only 33 chapters of "Trapped in the Closet".
We have our first ever white friend on the podcast this month, comedian Russel Brock. We don't know why it took us so long. But we do know we're gonna argue about Kendrick Lamar.
Tess and Adam take on Get Out, the Oscars, and their favorite films of 2016.
Tess and Ed tackle the subject of discourse and arguing in good faith, the FBI report on the infiltration of law enforcement by white supremacist, the conversation between Jessica Williams and Selma Hayek at the Sundance Film Festival, Doris Payne, and the Death of Pablo.
Tess and Adam are joined by their friend Brandon for a wrap-up of the music they loved in 2016.
Tess and Ed wrap up 2016 by discussing the favorite film and television from the year.
Tess and Ed argue over the relative value of protesting on highways and discuss Black Santa, "White" Jesus, the Dakota Access Pipeline, and Childish Gambino's latest album.
Tess and Adam tackle the Dakota Access Pipeline protests at Standing Rock.
Alphonso guests on the podcast to talk about being a minority ambassador and marijuana decriminalization.
Tess and Adam give their 2016 Presidential Election post-mortem this week.
Recorded before the election results, Tess and Ed tackle the difference between how black cop killers and this week's multiple white cop killers have been handled by the media, the impending election, Hip Hop for Trump, sexy accents, and a surprisingly reasonable Glenn Beck.
Tess and Ed are joined this week by Ed's sister. They discuss hair, inappropriate Halloween costumes, Festival Supreme, and racial biases in academia.
Tess and Ed cover the shootings of Deborah Danner and Renee Davis, the fake Joey Salads videos, and the SNL Black Jeopardy sketch.
This week, Tess and Adam discuss the Talsa race riot of 1921, terrorism, and microaggressions.
This week, we tackle ACL, Colin Kaepernick, and Ava DuVernay's new netflix documentary, 13th.
Tess and Ed review Luke Cage, A Seat at the Table, and throw shade at Tim Burton.
Tess and Adam tackle the recent string of police shootings, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals ruling on dreadlock bans, stop and spit, and the presidential debate. They also review the new Netflix show Easy.
Tess and Adam drunkenly recall the lives of Josephine Baker and DJ Kool Herc.
Tess and Ed review Atlanta and Donald Glover's PHAROS concert, and discuss the finer points about how to behave in certain public spaces.
This week, Tess and Ed tackle the new Spider-Man casting, debate the relative coolness of Idris Elba, Will Smith, and Andre 3000, and review Frank Ocean's new albums.
Tess and Adam tackle voter registration, the Milwaukee riots, Hollywood whitewashing, and Netflix's new series, The Get Down.
Adam and Tess discuss Butler Traditional High School's racist hairstyle standards, the deaths of Javier Garcia Gaona and Paul O'Neal, double standards when it comes to objectifying the human body (we're looking at you, Cosmo!), and the continuing wait for Frank Ocean's Boys Don't Cry.
This week, Tess and Ed tackle more cop related news, the Democratic National Convention, the Taylor Swift / Kanye feud, Comic Con, racist dress codes, and the MTV Music Video Awards.
In this episode, Tess and Adam discuss Jesse Williams' BET Awards speech and BuzzFeed's "27 Questions Black People Have For Black People" video.
Tess and Adam discuss the deaths of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile, the attack on the Dallas police, the Black Lives Matter, and what's wrong with the All Lives Matter movement.
In honor of Obama declaring this past June being declared African American Music Appreciation Month, Tess and Adam spotlight three songs each by black artists that they like.
In episode 12 of Black People With Too Many White Friends, Tess and Adam talk about Harambe, the Cincinnatti Zoo gorilla who was killed in May and pay tribute to Muhammad Ali. Along the way, they go on digress about aliens, environmentalism, and parallel worlds.
In "Drunker Black History", Tess and Adam recount the lives of Katherine Johnson, who helped put a man on the moon, and Daryl Davis, who defanged the Maryland KKK.
In part I of this week's special "drunk history" episode, Tess and Adam cover the lives of Lewis Howard Latimer and Yasuke.
Shit gets real this episode, in which we cover the Zoe Saldana starring Nina Simone biopic, the word niggardly, and the Laquan McDonald investigation. Despite the heaviness, there's some humor towards the end as we try to figure out who is the Black Bill Murray.
Tess and Adam invite their first ever guest to the podcast this week, cosplayer Cindyrella, to talk about cosplay, World of Warcraft, and finding love in the butter aisle of a grocery store.
Adam and Tess try to breakdown Beyonce's Lemonade but get distracted by hair straightening, skin bleaching, the White House Correspondents Dinner, The Kylie Jenner Challenge, and Harriet Tubman.
This week Adam and Tess cover the favorite Coachella sets, camp destroying winds, sketchy drug dealers, and the White House Correspondents Dinner
Tess and Adam cover cultural appropriation, cosplay, nerdy rappers, and MTV's "White People" documentary.
This week, Adam and Tess run through their top five bands/musicians and talk about black geekdom, Hollywood whitewashing, #BernieMadeMeWhite, Donald Trump, and how to solve America's racial divide.
This episode, Adam and Tess talk about colorism, Beyonce's "Formation" video, The Life of Pablo album art, Chelsea Does Racism, and historical revisionism.
In this episode, Tess and Adam talk about tokenism, online activism, interracial dating, parallel thought, black history, Daryl Davis, Stacey Dash, B.o.B., and token white guys.
We introduce the podcast and run through a list of things that we've noticed white people like.