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On this week's The New Abnormal, guest Spencer Ackerman asks for the political equivalent of a pony. Then, jack-of-all-trades film producer, political commentator, former White House aide and author of the book Why Does Everything Have to be About Race?, Keith Boykin, joins the program to discuss Democrats' renewed sense of energy since Vice President Kamala Harris' rapid ascent to presumptive 2024 nominee. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This month we are speaking with Trisha MacLeod, the Commanding Officer at 2 Field Ambulance in Petawawa and Champion for the Petawawa Defence Visible Minority Awareness Group. Trisha is a lifelong learner whose current pursuits are centred around understanding, acknowledging and deconstructing systemic racism within healthcare settings and CAF overall. Driven to serve, she has over 20 years of military service. She has experience building partner capacities among domestic and international partners, She is enjoying her current military assignment - which she sees as an opportunity to expand her perspectives and worldview. This is a timely discussion as February is Black History Month, but learning and discussion need to happen year round With that in mind, Trish has provided us with a list of recommended readings and resources for anyone who wants increase their understanding of these issues. Read:· So you want to talk about race - Ijeoma Oluo · Inclusion on Purpose, Ruchika Tulshyan · White Fragility, Robin DiAngelo Support:A Different Booklist is a Canadian, independent, multicultural bookstore specializing in the African Caribbean Diaspora from the Global South - https://www.adifferentbooklist.com Watch / Listen:How the US medical community fails Black mothers – TED Talk https://www.ted.com/talks/honourable_ahmed_hussen_a_tale_of_two_canadas_my_story_of_generosity_and_systemic_racism A list of podcasts compiled by Harvard University on the topic of anti-racism for allies: https://projects.iq.harvard.edu/antiracismresources/allies/podcasts About Race w/ Reni Eddo-Lodge https://www.aboutracepodcast.com/ We want to hear from you!Is there a guest that you would like us interview – or a topic that you would like us to talk about? If so, please let us know. We would love to hear your suggestions and feedback. You can reach us at Podcast.Feedback@PetawawaMFRC.com or by contacting the Petawawa Military Family Resource Centre.
As 2022 comes to an end, we're taking a look back at The View's best (and worst) moments of the year, from Whoopi Goldberg's ill-informed comments about the Holocaust to the co-hosts' fabulous week in the Bahamas. Plus, Joe and Claire make an announcement about the future of The View in Review podcast. Show Topics What went wrong for The View in 2022, and where does the show stand going into next year (and beyond)? Breaking down The View's highlights and lowlights of 2022 Whoopi Goldberg put her foot in her mouth about the Holocaust to kick off an uneven year Joy Behar's “Don't Touch Me” moment offered a whiff of behind-the-scenes drama Alyssa Farah Griffin's fight with Kellyanne Conway brought out a different side of the newly-minted fifth co-host The ladies finally had some fun during Bahamas Week with Sherri Shepherd, Bowen Yang, and Matt Rogers Ted Cruz's interview and Little Amal made for a weird fall Saying goodbye to The View in Review podcast Elsewhere on TV: The White Lotus; Survivor 43 References Whoopi Insists ‘The Holocaust Isn't About Race' (January 31) Joy Behar Not-So-Jokingly Tells Sara Haines to Stop Touching Her (February 15) Kellyanne Conway and Alyssa Farah Griffin Throw Down (May 24) Sherri Shepherd Talks ‘Flopping' in the Ocean and Kandi Burruss' Sex Toys in Off the Rails Interview (June 28) Little Amal Makes Guest Appearance on The View (September 28) Whoopi Goldberg Shuts Down Climate Protest During Ted Cruz Interview (October 24) The White Lotus Season 3 Should Ditch the Murder Mystery (Primetimer) Survivor 43's Baffling Finale: Was This Season Truly Unsalvageable? (Primetimer) Discussion Tweet us @theviewinreview Talk about The View in our forums
In part 2 of the Progressive Gospel, Ethan Hoover & Matthew Maher discuss Critical Race Theory, the Social Justice Movement, and Climate Change, and how the progressive Church has joined hands with these ideologies.What's Covered in This Episode:Progressive Gospel (Part 1) RecappedDefining TermsCritical Race TheorySocial Gospel"It's just a Tool"Critical TheoryMarxismOne Race: The Human RaceRacism: A Sin of the HeartThe Color of Skin vs. The Darkness of SinThe Social Justice MovementSocial Justice vs. Biblical Justice"Social Justice for the Christian is acting justly, but not at the expense of the truth of Scripture."Jesus Breaks Down the Wall of PartitionJews & Gentiles Become One: The Race of Grace (Christian)Critical Race Theory (CRT) Further ExploredThe Pure Gospel: Jesus Christ Unites - He Draws All People (Ethnos) to Himself"Social Justice will choose Barabbas over Jesus every time."Why is this the Problem of the Church?What Does the Bible Say?About: Race, Oppression, Justice, Etc.The Good SamaritanWhat the True Christian Should Be Doing...Standing Up for TruthAiding/Assisting Their Neighbor (Everyone)Pointing People to Jesus (the True Solution)Climate Change, Environmentalism, & The Love of Mother Earth Rather Than the Love of Father GodGeneral RevelationThe True Gospel's Main Focus is the Soul of ManWhat Does this All Mean and Why Does it Matter?Progressive Gospel (Part 3) Teased OutResources:What is "Progressive Christianity?"-- https://www.gotquestions.org/progressive-Christianity.htmlWhat is the "Social Gospel?"-- https://www.gotquestions.org/social-gospel.htmlBiblical Truth Matters: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p85tVOw_DbEMatthew Maher says, "Wokeism is a hateful religion." Watch a documentary that affirms this quote-- Paint The Wall Black: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4OJIucA3zsc&feature=youtu.beVoddie Baucham: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i60eQZPG5XMAre Christians Being Duped Into the New Social Justice Ideology? With Voddie Baucham -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZicxJ8nYCwGot questions?Submit your question relating to our Season 1 content for our Question & Response episode here. Learn More: To learn more about the podcast and your hosts, visit our website.Looking to sponsor Rechurched? Apply to be a sponsor!
The View made headlines this week after Whoopi Goldberg was suspended for making ill-informed comments about the Holocaust. In this episode of The View in Review podcast, we discuss Whoopi's remarks, her subsequent apology and suspension, the larger issues playing into the controversy, and more. Show Topics Whoopi says “the Holocaust isn't about race” on Monday's broadcast, prompting an on-air apology and a two-week suspension Former co-host Meghan McCain sounds off on the controversy Should Whoopi have been suspended? How seriously should we take reports that Whoopi is threatening to quit The View? Tara Setmayer and Star Jones return to the table Other fun moments: Katie Couric shade, Sunny's pronunciation of “voyage,” Sara Haines' gaffe about “The Beast” on The Chase Elsewhere on TV: And Just Like That Cringe; Greatest Reality Show Hosts References Whoopi Insists ‘The Holocaust Isn't About Race' in Uncomfortable Moment on The View (Claire's recap of Monday's episode) Whoopi Issues On-Air Apology for Holocaust Remarks (Claire's recap of Tuesday's episode) Whoopi Goldberg Suspended From The View for Two Weeks for “Hurtful” Holocaust Comments (Primetimer) Meghan McCain Wades Into the Whoopi Controversy (DailyMail.com) Whoopi Goldberg Threatening to Quit The View Over Her Suspension (New York Post) The View Hosts Get Randy with 30 Straight Minutes of Sex Talk (Claire's recap of Friday's episode) Claire's And Just Like That Cringe Roundup (Primetimer) Joe's Greatest Reality Hosts Ranking (Primetimer) Discussion Tweet us @theviewinreview Talk about The View in our forums
Which are the best drones for flying over people? What are the drone laws for flying over people? Today's show is about flying drones over people. Specifically, our caller for today, Bryan would like to know if there are any drones available in the market that comply with all the regulatory requirements for flying over people. Great question, Bryan. And certainly, not a straightforward one. We start this show by referencing the RaceDay Quad lawsuit challenging drone remote-id. Next up, you will learn how drones are currently classified into 3 distinct categories – 1, 2, and 3. Which category does your drone fall into? Towards the end of the show, Paul shares why DJI's Phantom series is best suited for those flying over people. And we also have an interesting discussion on whether or not drone parachutes result in enhanced airspace safety. Don't miss out on this one. Get Your Biggest and Most Common Drone Certificate Questions Answered by Downloading this FREE Part 107 PDF Make sure to get yourself the all-new Drone U landing pad! Get your questions answered: https://thedroneu.com/. If you enjoy the show, the #1 thing you can do to help us out is to subscribe to it on iTunes. Can we ask you to do that for us real quick? While you're there, leave us a 5-star review, if you're inclined to do so. Thanks! https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/ask-drone-u/id967352832. Become a Drone U Member. Access to over 30 courses, great resources, and our incredible community. Follow Us Site – https://thedroneu.com/ Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/droneu Instagram – https://instagram.com/thedroneu/ Twitter – https://twitter.com/thedroneu YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/c/droneu Timestamps [04:16] Today's question is about flying drones over people [05:19] Will remote-id make it easier to fly over people? [09:16] About Race day Quad's lawsuit challenging the FAA and remote ID [13:05] Flying over people under category 1 regulations [14:06] Will drone propellers on DJI drones lacerate skin and violate category 1 regulations? [18:36] Which drones fall under category 2? Can you fly category 2 drones over people? [20:46] What is the threshold to determine that your drone is safe to be flown over people? Learn about injury severity limit and other important parameters [22:48] Why DJI Phantom's series is so well suited for flying over people [23:14] Do drone parachutes make it easier to fly over people?
Which are the best drones for flying over people? What are the drone laws for flying over people? Today's show is about flying drones over people. Specifically, our caller for today, Bryan would like to know if there are any drones available in the market that comply with all the regulatory requirements for flying over people. Great question, Bryan. And certainly, not a straightforward one. We start this show by referencing the RaceDay Quad lawsuit challenging drone remote-id. Next up, you will learn how drones are currently classified into 3 distinct categories – 1, 2, and 3. Which category does your drone fall into? Towards the end of the show, Paul shares why DJI's Phantom series is best suited for those flying over people. And we also have an interesting discussion on whether or not drone parachutes result in enhanced airspace safety. Don't miss out on this one. Get Your Biggest and Most Common Drone Certificate Questions Answered by Downloading this FREE Part 107 PDF Make sure to get yourself the all-new Drone U landing pad! Get your questions answered: https://thedroneu.com/. If you enjoy the show, the #1 thing you can do to help us out is to subscribe to it on iTunes. Can we ask you to do that for us real quick? While you're there, leave us a 5-star review, if you're inclined to do so. Thanks! https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/ask-drone-u/id967352832. Become a Drone U Member. Access to over 30 courses, great resources, and our incredible community. Follow Us Site – https://thedroneu.com/ Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/droneu Instagram – https://instagram.com/thedroneu/ Twitter – https://twitter.com/thedroneu YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/c/droneu Timestamps [04:16] Today's question is about flying drones over people [05:19] Will remote-id make it easier to fly over people? [09:16] About Race day Quad's lawsuit challenging the FAA and remote ID [13:05] Flying over people under category 1 regulations [14:06] Will drone propellers on DJI drones lacerate skin and violate category 1 regulations? [18:36] Which drones fall under category 2? Can you fly category 2 drones over people? [20:46] What is the threshold to determine that your drone is safe to be flown over people? Learn about injury severity limit and other important parameters [22:48] Why DJI Phantom's series is so well suited for flying over people [23:14] Do drone parachutes make it easier to fly over people?
In our first themed episode, Cara and Michael attempt to unpack microaggressions: what they are and why they're so frustrating to experience, and how to have better interactions.
The first part of our conversation with Vinh Do, longtime cathedral member and former vestry member, about his story at Saint Mark's, and his reaction to the anti-Asian violence that preceded and followed the 2021 Atlanta shootings.
The second (concluding) part of our conversation with Vinh Do, longtime cathedral member and former vestry member, about his story at Saint Mark's, and his reaction to the anti-Asian violence.
In this second interview with Vinnu, we check in with her after the Atlanta shootings and the anti-Asian hate seen across the country.
Vinnu tells us about how she came to Saint Mark's, and what it's like being one of the few South Asian people at the cathedral. …
In the first part of this episode, Cara and Michael talk about each other; their respective journeys to Saint Mark's, and how they find ourselves being people of color in a mostly white church.…
In the first episode of the “About Race” podcast, Cara Peterson and Michael Perera explain how and why this conversation about race at Saint Mark's came about.
In the second part of the first episode of the “About Race” podcast, Cara Peterson and Michael Perera explain how and why this conversation about race at Saint Mark's came about.
„About Race with Reni Eddo-Lodge“ ist ein britischer Podcast. Moderation: Jonit Schmid Redaktion: Jonit... The post Komet – Podcast: About Race with Reni Eddo-Lodge appeared first on Kanal K.
A Conversation Between African-American Author, Mark Winkler, and Dr. John Schinnerer This episode is an attempt to provide a way forward through the increasingly divisive topics of racism, white privilege, conscious and unconscious biases, how to identify them and how to address them. This episode is an effort to invite white people to come alongside black people; to increase their knowledge around racism; and to seek ways to take positive actions to support racial equality. It also an attempt to extend an open hand in support of people of color. The Evolved Caveman is committed to anti-racism. This is an attempt to join with Black people and other people of color. Now is the time when we anti-racist white people need to commit to having intentional conversations with the people in our lives and on social media who might be conflicted about the protests because of the narratives of violence and looting outlined by those with other agendas. We need to start these uncomfortable, yet critical, conversations. Below are resources to begin your education… Articles to read: Ella Baker and the Black Freedom Movement (Mentoring a New Generation of Activists My Life as an Undocumented Immigrant' by Jose Antonio Vargas | NYT Mag (June 22, 2011) The 1619 Project (all the articles) | The New York Times Magazine The Combahee River Collective Statement The Intersectionality Wars' by Jane Coaston | Vox (May 28, 2019) White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack' by Knapsack Peggy McIntosh Who Gets to Be Afraid in America?' by Dr. Ibram X. Kendi | Atlantic (May 12, 2020) Podcasts to check out: 1619 (New York Times) About Race Momentum: A Race Forward Podcast Pod For The Cause (from The Leadership Conference on Civil & Human Rights) Seeing White Books to read: How To Be An Antiracist by Dr. Ibram X. Kendi I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou Just Mercy by Bryan Stevenson Me and White Supremacy by Layla F. Saad Raising Our Hands by Jenna Arnold Redefining Realness by Janet Mock Sister Outsider by Audre Lorde So You Want to Talk About Race by Ijeoma Oluo The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness by Michelle Alexander The Next American Revolution: Sustainable Activism for the Twenty-First Century by Grace Lee Boggs The Warmth of Other Suns by Isabel Wilkerson When Affirmative Action Was White: An Untold History of Racial Inequality in Twentieth-Century America by Ira Katznelson White Fragility: Why It's So Hard for White People to Talk About Racism by Robin DiAngelo, PhD Films and TV series to watch: 13th (Ava DuVernay) Netflix American Son (Kenny Leon) Netflix Clemency (Chinonye Chukwu) Available to rent Dear White People (Justin Simien) Netflix Fruitvale Station (Ryan Coogler) Available to rent If Beale Street Could Talk (Barry Jenkins) Hulu Just Mercy (Destin Daniel Cretton) Available to rent King In The Wilderness HBO See You Yesterday (Stefon Bristol) Netflix Selma (Ava DuVernay) Available to rent The Hate U Give (George Tillman Jr.) Hulu with Cinemax When They See Us (Ava DuVernay) Netflix Organizations to follow on social media: Antiracism Center: Twitter Audre Lorde Project: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook Black Women's Blueprint: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook Color Of Change: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook Colorlines: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook The Conscious Kid: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook Equal Justice Initiative (EJI): Twitter | Instagram | Facebook Families Belong Together: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook The Leadership Conference on Civil & Human Rights: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook NAACP: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook National Domestic Workers Alliance: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook RAICES: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook Showing Up for Racial Justice (SURJ): Twitter | Instagram | Facebook Check us out on Google Play and give us a Like and Subscribe! https://play.google.com/music/listen#/ps/Imo4l6pgrbmeklxvec6pgwzxnz4 If you like what you've heard, support us by subscribing, leaving reviews on Apple podcasts. Every review helps to get the message out! Please share the podcast with friends and colleagues. Follow Dr. John Schinnerer on | Instagram | Instagram.com/@TheEvolvedCaveman | Facebook | Facebook.com/Anger.Management.Expert | Twitter | Twitter.com/@JohnSchin | LinkedIn | Linkedin.com/in/DrJohnSchinnerer Or join the email list by visiting: GuideToSelf.com Please visit our YouTube channel and remember to Like & Subscribe! https://www.youtube.com/user/jschinnerer Editing/Mixing/Mastering by: Brian Donat of B/Line Studios www.BLineStudios.com Music by: Zak Gay http://otonamimusic.com/
It's been far too long since you last heard from DAS! Charlie & Rubina get together in autumn 2020 to discuss the 'new normal', Rubina's award winning BBC podcast Brown Girls Do It Too and how the BLM movement is changing Britain. Listen to Brown Girls Do it to here: https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/brand/p08k5cp0 Listen to Rene Eddo Lodge's podcast About Race here: https://www.aboutracepodcast.com You can find all things DAS at: Twitter: @DAS_podcast Instagram: thisisdas Facebook: www.facebook.com/DASPODCAST/ website: www.daspodcast.com
In this week’s episode, Laura is joined by podcaster and entrepreneur, Irene Agbontaen. Host of TTYA Talks (aka Taller Than Your Average) Irene started the podcast back in 2015 as “an inclusive space for the excluded girl”. Together Laura and Irene talk about 2020 being a transformational year in light of the Black Lives Matter movement, as well as some of Irene's favourite black hosted podcasts. Irene's choices includes the hilarious Receipts Podcast, the prolific ancillary podcast to Reni Eddo Lodge’s book About Race podcast and the New York based culture podcast The Read with Kid Fury and Crissle West. Podcasts referenced in the conversation includes: TTYA Talks Receipts Podcast About Race with Rene Eddo Lodge The Read
In this episode, we sit down dancer of 32 years and former San Diego Charger girl, Nikki Lewis. Nikki brings her positive light to the podcast. We talk about her experience as a dancer, auditioning to be a San Diego Charger girl and living out a lifelong dream. Nikki shares her experience performing at the Super Bowl halftime show in 1999 and talks to us about being a teacher of 12 years. As an advocate for the Black Lives Matter movement, Nikki educates and inspires us to make progress and shares her book recommendations. We wrap with our Rapid Fire and Nikki shares her take on what’s good in the dance community. In this episode, we explore: 00:28 Introduction02:29 A dance journey of 32 years and counting 04:24 An awakening experience05:47 Parents that share in your passion07:12 Questioning a dream to become a Charger girl08:01 A dream come true 09:00 The Charger girl experience10:13 Mastering mental preparation 12:23 Battling self-doubt13:01 The audition process16:30 The journey has really just begun16:44 Biggest takeaway as a Charger girl17:22 Performing at the Super Bowl halftime show19:58 Dancers as athletes25:54 Being a middle school teacher and a Charger girl30:19 Advocating for Black Lives Matter34:08 Making progress as a community38:20 Nikki’s book recommendations40:56 Rapid fire questions42:04 N’Sync vs. Backstreet Boys44:02 What’s good in the dance community?44:42 Closing remarksThis episode’s guest(s):-Follow Nikki Lewis on InstagramNikki’s Book Recommendations:How to be Black by Baratunde ThurstonI'm Still Here by Austin Channing BrownStamped from the Beginning from Ibram X. KendiHow to be Antiracist by Ibram X. KendiSo You Want to talk About Race by Ijeoma OluoSpecial thanks to: -Jane Banares for creating our Co-Lab Podcast artwork Music by Sam Stan - Das Boo - https://thmatc.co/?l=997FC418Music by SkeetOnTheBeat - Late Night - https://thmatc.co/?l=E76B5749 The conversation continues over on Instagram and TikTokHave a guest suggestion or just want to say hello? Drop us a line at hello@co-labpodcast.com Sign up for exclusive updates and subscribe to our Newsletter
'We may all be weathering the same storm, but we are not in the same boat...''The real tragedy would be if I allowed myself to become a disbeliever of what I know and hold to be the inherent beauty and greatness of all mankind.'The story we feature today talks about racial discrimination, racial injustice and the power of discriminatory discourses in the time of the pandemic.STORYToday we hear Maddy's own voice, from Abohemian, as she narrates her story.DISCUSSIONThis episode was not easy to record. We both felt incredulous, outraged and utterly powerless to hear Magdalene's account of direct experience of racial discrimination.We discuss what we can do about stopping racial discrimination and in fact discrimination of any sort from taking place in the future.We take our lead from Reni Eddo-Lodge's recent advice in her amazing podcast - About Race. She asks us to delve deeply into the question and ask ourselves what is within our capacity to do to stop racial discrimination and injustice from happening.Here's a thought: we can influence discourse. We can make sure that certain ways of referring to people, places, actions are simply inaccessible, not to be used.We discuss this, and more, in today's episode on racial discrimination.We are so grateful to Maddy for sharing her experience with us.RECOMMENDATIONFollow Magdalene on Instagram, read her words and stay a while. Subscribe to her newsletter, talking about those things we seldom talk about, here.We love About Race for education against racism.We enjoyed watching this film, which talks about the difficulties in forgiving unfair acts done to us.N. B. There will be more recommendations coming up in the next edition of the newsletter, subscribe and you can receive them all. THANK YOU, MADDY, FOR TELLING YOUR STORY OF 2020 ON THE PODCAST.See more show notes on storisse.comSupport the show (https://ko-fi.com/alexcuncev)
In this episode, we discuss racism in its individual and institutional forms. We explain terms such as “microaggressions” and “systemic racism” through rigorous definitions and everyday life examples. Finally, we provide suggestions to make a change. Recommendations for further information: READ the book “Why I am no longer talking to white people about race” by Reni Eddo-Lodge LISTEN to the podcast “About Race with Reni Eddo-Lodge” WATCH the TedTalk “How to deconstruct racism, one headline at a time” by Baratunde Thurston
David provides us with an extensive analysis on Britain's relationship with the Gulf states from his latest book - AngloArabia: Why Gulf Wealth Matters to Britain. Useful links https://politybooks.com/angloarabia-why-gulf-wealth-matters-to-britain/ https://www.ippr.org/juncture-item/uk-ties-with-saudi-arabia-costs-and-alternatives https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xkp06Jvh0GU&t= Reading: G. Wekker, White Innocence https://buff.ly/2Br6Efu D. Wearing (article) https://buff.ly/3f9WXjz Anna Stavrianakis, https://buff.ly/3aEECK0 B. Bennet The Vanishing Half https://buff.ly/3jGs2OZ Listening PhDivas https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/phdivas/id991330312 About Race with Reni https://www.aboutracepodcast.com *Please note season 9 is recorded entirely via video call during the COVID-19 Global Pandemic. Hosts Chantelle and Tissot and executive producer George pride themselves on ensuring a comfortable and encouraging recording atmosphere but this is clearly difficult to suffice remotely. Bear with us on this*
David provides us with an extensive analysis on Britain’s relationship with the Gulf states from his latest book - AngloArabia: Why Gulf Wealth Matters to Britain. Useful links https://politybooks.com/angloarabia-why-gulf-wealth-matters-to-britain/ https://www.ippr.org/juncture-item/uk-ties-with-saudi-arabia-costs-and-alternatives https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xkp06Jvh0GU&t= Reading: G. Wekker, White Innocence https://buff.ly/2Br6Efu D. Wearing (article) https://buff.ly/3f9WXjz Anna Stavrianakis, https://buff.ly/3aEECK0 B. Bennet The Vanishing Half https://buff.ly/3jGs2OZ Listening PhDivas https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/phdivas/id991330312 About Race with Reni https://www.aboutracepodcast.com *Please note season 9 is recorded entirely via video call during the COVID-19 Global Pandemic. Hosts Chantelle and Tissot and executive producer George pride themselves on ensuring a comfortable and encouraging recording atmosphere but this is clearly difficult to suffice remotely. Bear with us on this*
Today, Andrea and Noleca discuss Ramy on Hulu, Normal People, also on Hulu, the #entanglement episode of Red Table Talk, Sonya Renee Taylor, and the podcast About Race with Reni Eddo-Lodge, from Broccoli Content See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Renay Richardson is an award-winning audio producer and founder of Broccoli Content. Richardson made her mark on the UK podcasting industry with her highly-acclaimed series About Race with Reni Eddo-Lodge. Originally from Dagenham, Essex, as a young black woman living in Britain, she grew increasingly frustrated by the lack of diverse stories and characters featured on screen. Determined to make a difference and carve out a place for stories like hers, Richardson spent a decade in the entertainment industry, learning the business and climbing her way up. Richardson fell in love with podcasts and the way they engaged with an audience to speak directly to their passions and interests while working for Acast and a number of other leading podcast platforms. She founded Broccoli Content in 2018 after the runaway success of About Race. TBB Talks spoke to this phenomenal powerhouse about how she got into the business of podcasting, what it was like working with Reni Eddo-Lodge and what it takes to produce your own podcast. Check out Broccoli Content: https://www.broccolicontent.com/ (https://www.broccolicontent.com/)
This week I am joined by Sarah Tattersall. Sarah is an actor, comedian and one half of Funny Bird Productions, with multiple sell out theatre and comedy shows, including: stand-up show ‘Girls With Jones' (2019), theatre show ‘Me and My' (2019) and solo shows ‘Sally's Alright' (2016) and ‘Angry Young Thing' (2017). Next to be seen in Afia Nkrumah's ‘A Place of Safety' and Comedy Crowd's ‘Box of Charms'. We talk about adapting projects for lockdown, women in comedy, the future of theatre and remaining positive! Support #BLM SEARCH in your podcast app: About Race with Reni Eddo-Lodge Black Beauty & Racism with Ateh Jewel Open Till Late with Vanessa Lyall ______ To get a 12 months free subscription to Backstage, visit www.backstage.com/irrelevantactor and enter the code IAUK. Please vote for The Irrelevant Actor as Listeners Choice in the British Podcast Awards. You can vote here: https://www.britishpodcastawards.com/vote Find The Irrelevant Actor on Twitter @TIActorPod and on Instagram @theirrelevantactor For submissions and enquiries please contact theirrelevantactor@gmail.com or visit our website www.theirrelevantactor.co.uk
Pod Trawlers - we trawl through podcasts so you don't have to
Hello!So, well, it’s been ANOTHER month. In our last episode we talked about the background to BLM via the 1619 podcast, then the background to BLM in the UK background via the About Race podcast. This week we have returned to the BLM theme with just a couple more podcasts, and a few more perspectives. Beginning with:Making Sense with Sam Harris – Episode 207 Can We Pull Back from the BrinkSam Harris is one of our favourite podcasters. In this episode he “flies solo” and talks his way around many of the topics raised as a result of the death of George Floyd. The episode is available on all good podcasts players, but it is also available on You Tube as a voice file:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vmgxtcbc4iUNext we turn to: Stories of Our Times – Bristol A Tale of Two StatuesThis podcast tells the story of Bristol as one of the most significant slave trading ports, and it also tells the story of slave trader and philanthropist (not an all round good guy) Edward Colston. https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/bristol-a-tale-of-two-statues/id1501716010?i=1000477653207Then we turn to a related topic, which is all the things we were never taught about the British Empire, via this brilliant podcast: We Need to Talk About the British Empirehttps://www.audible.co.uk/pd/We-Need-to-Talk-About-the-British-Empire-Audiobook/B081581253This is an Audible podcast, but even if you are not a subscriber you should be able to listen via the 30 days free trial. We think it is totally worth it. The podcast delves into why it is crucial to talk about The British Empire via six conversations with writers and historians. And last but not least, with the past out of the way, we turn to a podcast that aims to offer solutions for a new way of being in the future:Accidental Gods – particularly Episodes 24 and 26This is a podcast created and presented by Manda Scott and her partner. The aim of the podcast is that “in a world where ideas grow faster than anything, we curate the cutting edge of neuroscience and psycho-technologies, connected spirituality and resilience, politics, philosophy and human creativity so that – together – we can choose a different future.”Episode 24 is a discussion with academics and entrepreneurs, Jim Garrison and Matt Robertson of Ubiquity University about Humanity Rising, a movement for people from all over the world to make the critical difference necessary to ensure human survival.” https://accidentalgods.life/humanity-rising/Episode 25 is a discussion with Professor Rupert Read of Extinction Rebellion about how urgent change really is, and how we genuinely do not have time to lose. https://accidentalgods.life/no-more-business-as-usual/We hope you find something there worth listening to. And if that's still not enough, more of our recommendations are available on our Twitter feed at:@podtrawlersThanks as always to Anna Meredith for (not) giving us permission to use bits of her fantastical tunes, and this week thanks also to Paul Pod for providing the last track - Run to the Sun. We thought it was very fitting. More of his tunes can be found here:https://youtu.be/LtxtwUjY_V8Thanks for listening!
In episode 28 Ellie discusses the murder of black woman Breonna Taylor, JK Rowling’s stand against trans ideology and the appropriation of “Two Spirit” by white trans people. Sister Outrider - Black Radical Feminism https://sisteroutrider.wordpress.com/ About Race with Reni Eddo-Lodge https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/about-race-with-reni-eddo-lodge/id1353151856 On Being with Krista Tippett - discussion with Resmaa Menakem https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/on-being-with-krista-tippett/id150892556?i=1000476829447 Black Lives Matter London https://www.facebook.com/BLMLondon/ On Two Spirit appropriation http://culturallybound.wordpress.comhttps://culturallyboundgender.wordpress.com/2013/03/09/toward-an-end-to-appropriation-of-indigenous-two-spirit-people-in-trans-politics-the-relationship-between-third-gender-roles-and-patriarchy/ Maya’s survey https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSftqafPToSWb7w5c99wxdubJgHfqA2wkZbAkFsZIiH8_Px5zg/viewform Transgender Trend on Stonewall Schools Guidance https://www.transgendertrend.com/stonewall-autism-stonewall-schools-guidance/ JK’s address info@jkrowling.com JK Rowling c/o Bloomsbury Publishing PLC, 50 Bedford Square, London, WC1B 3DP http://patreon.com/ahfpod https://teespring.com/stores/adult-human-female
Hey everyone. I have a brief update to share about the show and some thoughts in light of the recent events. But before I do, I want to say loudly and clearly that Black Lives Matter. As an Asian-American, I think about the way anti-Blackness is embedded throughout Asian culture and society. I think about how this anti-Black sentiment showed itself when Asian-American communities rallied around NYPD officer Peter Liang for murdering Akai Gurley. I think about the affirmative action lawsuit against Harvard that Asians supported as being driven by the same anti-Black sentiment. And of course, there was the Hmong-American police officer standing by as George Floyd was murdered. If there is one thing that has driven me to create this podcast, it is the belief that true freedom cannot come at the expense of Black lives. I think silence in anti-Black violence will not give Asian any true place in a racist white supremacist world. The lacking of self-awareness and propagating anti-Black and anti-Brown rhetoric just so certain Asian can get ahead will not lead to a better place. My heart goes out to everyone protesting on the streets and doing the hard work to elevate Black voices and not black squares.Regarding this show, I did not release an episode last week. When I sat down to write the intro, no words came out. My podcast and voice seemed trite. I took it as a sign to not release my episode if I had to force words out when they were not ready. I also felt the voices that needed to be heard were Black voices. I then thought about this in relation to remaining silent and don’t have a clear answer. When I set out to make this podcast, I wanted to be able to confront my privilege as a Chinese-American cis male who went to college to study art and is able to travel to residencies while moving through the art world. I wanted to keep talking about race because I don’t believe one simply becomes “woke.” Talking about race is a lifelong commitment that never ends. I am forever learning and figuring out where these conversations fit within the larger picture.In lieu of a real episode, I posted on my website a list of resources for anyone interested. There is a lot out there and many of these materials are waiting to be used. Feel free to share and continue the discussion about how white supremacy and racism continues to pervade every aspect of our lives.So that’s the update. Again, thank you to everyone who has been supportive of this show as I couldn’t have gotten here without all the guests and listeners. I’ll resume my episodes starting next week. Until then, stay safe, stay healthy, and good bye for now.Image credit: @jerrygogosianhttps://www.instagram.com/jerrygogosian/Donations to Organizations:Black-Owned Bookstores (Publishers Weekly)Black Lives MatterBlack Lives Matter Los Angelesblacklivesmatters.carrd.coI Run With MaudJustice for Breonna TaylorJustice for George FloydMinnesota Freedom FundNational Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)Bukit Bail FundReclaim the Block: fund our broader movementReadings and other resources:ANTI-RACISM RESOURCESWhat Is an Anti-Racist Reading List For?Critical Reading Google Drive FolderModernity + ColonialityThe Case for Reparations by Ta-Nehisi Coates20+ Allyship Actions for Asians to Show Up for the Black Community Right NowExtended Learning:Justice in June Google DocOver the course of the month, you will have spent 5 hours intentionally learning how to be an active ally of the black community. (That’s less than the amount of time it takes to watch all of Tiger King ~ 5.5 hours.) Remember, the black community lives the reality of the information you will learn- they have a lifetime of fearing for their well being versus 5 hours of you being uncomfortable. All the action items listed in the calendar have linked information below the weekly schedule (see sections Watch, Read, Listen, and Act).The Consious KidZinn Education ProjectThe Zinn Education Project promotes and supports the teaching of people’s history in middle and high school classrooms across the country. Based on the lens of history highlighted in Howard Zinn’s best-selling book A People’s History of the United States, the website offers free, downloadable lessons and articles organized by theme, time period, and reading level.UCLA African American Studies Summer CoursesOpen Yale Courses for African American Studies (FREE)Podcasts:The NodBrittany Luse and Eric Eddings gleefully explore all the beautiful, complicated dimensions of Black life.1619 from The New York TimesFour hundred years ago, in August 1619, a ship carrying more than 20 enslaved Africans arrived in the English colony of Virginia. No aspect of the country that would be formed here has been untouched by the 250 years of slavery that followed. “1619,” a New York Times audio series hosted by Nikole Hannah-Jones, examines the long shadow of that fateful moment.Podcasts in ColorA directory of podcastsTea with Queen and JQueen and J. are two funny womanist race nerds from the Bronx talking liberation, politcs and pop culture over tea.MEDIA INDIGENA: Indigenous current affairsA weekly roundtable about Indigenous issues and events in Canada and Beyond.Yo, Is This Racist?Andrew Ti, Tawny Newsome, and their guests answer questions from fan-submitted voicemails and emails about whether something is, in fact, racist.About Race with Remi Eddo-LodgeFrom the author behind the bestselling "Why I'm No Longer Talking To White People About Race" comes a podcast that takes conversations a step further.Cultura ConsiousJoin Paula Santos, a podcast addict and lover of everything arts and culture, in conversation with other museum and cultural workers, educators, artists, activists, and leaders about how we work with our communities and the public at large. She is particularly interested in how the work we do in museums, non-profits or other cultural organizations intersects and is informed by larger questions of race and inequity in society.There Goes the NeighborhoodA podcast about how and why gentrification happens.Follow Seeing Color:Seeing Color WebsiteSubscribe on Apple PodcastsFacebookTwitterInstagram
Join me and my close friend, Brent Corbett, in this expansive discussion on the heavy topic of racism and black lives matter. Brent shares a little bit of his history and his journey into the world of motivational speaking. He walks us through his perspective as a black man in regards to racism and gently walks us through ways we can begin to become more positively involved in this narrative. This discussion is far from black and white (no pun intended) and makes a point of highlighting all sides of the narrative. I so appreciate Brent's patient and gentle manner as he sheds some light on this powerful movement. Interview Links: Book: https://amzn.to/3hJCjZM (The Autobiography of Malcolm X) Book: https://amzn.to/2AVsiIm (The Pedagogy of the Oppressed) Book: https://amzn.to/311ZDfs (Lies My Teacher Told Me) Book: https://amzn.to/3hIHfhC (The Topology of Violence) Where to Find Brent: https://www.instagram.com/b_corbett23/ (Instagram) Where to Find Me: https://www.instagram.com/leighannlindsey/ (Instagram) https://www.leighannlindsey.com/ (Website) Other Anti-Racism Resources FILMS On Netflix: https://www.netflix.com/title/80091741 (13th) https://www.netflix.com/title/81024100 (American Son) https://www.netflix.com/title/80095698 (Dear White People) https://www.netflix.com/title/80216758 (See You Yesterday) https://www.netflix.com/title/80200549 (When They See Us) Amazon Prime: https://amzn.to/2ARS7Ju (Just Mercy) https://amzn.to/3hMVr9c (The Hate You Give) https://amzn.to/3fJPKr5 (I Am Not Your Negro) https://amzn.to/2Nfixri (The Last Black Man in San Francisco) https://amzn.to/30X6vuu (Freedom Summer) https://amzn.to/2V10rNW (Two Black Men A Week) Podcasts https://www.aboutracepodcast.com/ (About Race) https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/pod-save-the-people/id1230148653 (Pod Save the People) https://www.thediversitygap.com/ (The Diversity Gap) https://www.raceforward.org/media/podcast/momentum-race-forward-podcast (Momentum: A Race Forward Podcast) https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/pod-for-the-cause/id1463460979 (Pod for the Cause) https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/08/14/magazine/1619-america-slavery.html (1619 by the New York Times) Books https://amzn.to/2V3jyXL (The Bluest Eye) https://amzn.to/2UYZzt4 (Black Feminist Thought) https://amzn.to/37KwBCo (Eloquent Rage: A Black Feminist Discovers Her Superpower ) https://amzn.to/3fEKRPL (I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings) https://amzn.to/3dlLvjz (So You Want to Talk About Race) https://amzn.to/2BlbN8s (The Next American Revolution: Sustainable Activism for the Twenty-First Century) https://amzn.to/3hKNfGI (The Warmth of Other Suns) Organizations https://www.blackwomensblueprint.org/ (Black Women's Blueprint) https://colorofchange.org/ (Color of Change) https://unitedwedream.org/ (United We Dream) https://www.theconsciouskid.org/ (The Conscious Kid) https://civilrights.org/ (The Leadership Conference on Civil & Human Rights) https://www.sistersong.net/ (SisterSong) https://www.colorlines.com/ (Colorlines) https://eji.org/ (Equal Justice Initiative) Magnetic Moment Challenge This week I am challenging each of you to buy a book, watch a documentary, listen to an interview, read an article, etc related to racism. I would LOVE to hear what you decide to do and what you are discovering along the way. If you do any of these tag me on an Instagram story or send a DM of the book you purchased or the documentary you are watching! I know that together we can begin to inspire ourselves and others to continue to educate themselves on the topic of racism, empower themselves to join the narrative and truly become enabled to create tangible change.
In this first session of After Hours, Celtic and FTHRS discuss the racial dynamics of our country and of the dance world. In the interest of providing our listeners with more tools to deepen their education and further their understanding, we present the following list of podcasts that we hope you will check out and learn from: 1619 (New York Times); The Nod by Gimlet; About Race by author Reni Eddo-Lodge; Higher Learning with Van Lathan and Rachel Lindsay; Code Switch (NPR); Intersectionality Matters! hosted by a leading scholar of critical race theory Kimberlé Crenshaw; The Goodfoot Podcast (by Cue Arnold, episodes on race relations, white fragility, and a two parter on Blackface, one with Michele Byrd); Momentum: A Race Forward Podcast; Pod For The Cause (from The Leadership Conference on Civil & Human Rights); Pod Save the People (Crooked Media); Seeing White ( a miniseries by Scene on Radio)
Renay Richardson is the founder and CEO of Broccoli Content, a company she founded in 2018.Broccoli is a new multi-genre podcasting joint venture between Renay and Sony Music and is focused on the development and distribution of original programming. Renay is a producer who has previously worked for podcast platforms including Acast & Audible and a successful independent podcast creator in her own right - her credits including About Race with Reni Eddo-Lodge and The Receipts on 1xtra from BBC Radio 1Xtra. In this episode we talk about Broccoli's recent brilliant initiative called The Equality in Audio Pact - which the Guardian and BBC have just signed among many others - there are the 5 points:1 . Pay interns / No longer use unpaid interns.2. Hire LGBTQIA+, black people, people of colour and other minorities on projects not only related to their identity.3. If you are a company that releases gender pay gap reports, release your race pay gap data at the same time.4. No longer participate in panels that are not representative of the cities, towns, and industries they take place in.5. Be transparent about who works for your company, as well as their role, position and permanency.You sign the pledge here: https://www.broccolicontent.com/equality-in-audio-pactHope you enjoy this episode! I loved talking to Renay about her career, the future of podcasting and making the audio space more equal. Plus, getting into podcasting; first jobs; being a CEO; sharing the mic, what 'Broccoli' means; working on Reni Eddo-Lodge's podcast, racism in audio, working in podcasting in the UK and the US. On making About Race: "we were right, we were ahead, you get punished for having vision and for seeing the future and what is actually needed. We were held back and restricted in what we did."Please go and follow Broccoli Content and check out their amazing podcast series ANTHEMS: http://hyperurl.co/anthemspodcast See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this episode we are joined by the wonderful Carrie all the way from New York as we discuss openly the things we have learned from the Black Lives Matter movement and the changes we want to make. We talk about the constitutional racism that exists both in the US and the UK and consider the reasons that have led to those issues. This Podcast is a candid conversation and takes a different turn to the usual light hearted fun we like to have on the show however as James Corden said ‘White people cannot say I’m not racist and think that’s enough… this is our problem to solve…how can the black community dismantle a problem that they didn’t create’. This is not an episode you should listen to educate yourself on BLM and racism. Here are some Podcasts you should listen to in order to educate yourself: About Race with Reni Eddo-Lodge Pod Save the People Speaking of Racism - Tina Strawn and Jen Kinney Our dear guest Cari is from New York and works as a social worker, she has also had some improv and stand up classes and getting married in December. If you would like to be a guest on the show give us a shot on email or our Social media platforms. We would love to hear from you! How To Survive Your Twenties is a podcast where two brothers Jonah and Joe (or Joe and Jonah). Discuss, tell dorky stories and Jokes about all the relatable aspects of life in your twenties. We love to hear your thoughts and stories . You can follow us on send them to us @ Instagram @Htsy20s Twitter @HYour20s Or email htsy20s@gmail.com Thank you for all the love but we could do with some more don’t forget to review and share. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/htsy20s/message
In these less than normal times, when the world is crying out for change, it can be difficult to tell which way is up, let alone make decisions on how to move forward. But liminality offers us the opportunity to slow down and look within. What if we could find a way to flow with the chaos? What if, inside, we actually know what we need to do next? Here are some steps to create a ritual for flow: 1. Create a quiet space. 2. Slow down and center. 3. Notice the words, phrases and images in our head . 4. Find ourselves in the center of the chaos. 5. Follow our intuition and go with the flow of the moment. 6. Jot any ideas or plans down to consider later. 7. Rest the body for a few moments if possible. 8. Eat! And review the list of ideas we made earlier. Links: Community Rituals: https://ever-changing.net/offerings Color Me Conscious: https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/e-maire-fowler/color-me-conscious The Stoop: http://www.thestoop.org/ Code Switch: https://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/ About Race with Reni Eddo-Lodge: https://www.aboutracepodcast.com/ Full Transcript: We are in a liminal space. We are between the worlds. We have left the pre-COVID world behind us and moved onto the path toward a new reality. What will it bring? In these less than normal times, when the world is crying out for change, it can be difficult to tell which way is up, let alone make decisions on how to move forward. But liminality offers us the opportunity to slow down and look within. What if we could find a way to flow with the chaos? What if, inside, we actually know what we need to do next? This is Shame Piñata. I’m Colleen Thomas. Welcome to Shame Piñata, where we talk about creating rites of passage for real-life transitions. If you've been listening to Shame Piñata for a while, you know that we began season 1 with a focus on weddings & commitment ceremonies. However, since COVID-19 came on the scene, we have been dividing our time between talking about the commitment ceremony we might one day plan and building ceremonies we can do right now to help with day to day life in the middle of a pandemic. We started with a simple ceremony to release fear and center in our strength as the pandemic began in March, then moved on to a ritual to release overwhelm. That one has been very popular, by the way, as it continues to be a useful practice. I'll put a link in the show notes if you'd like to know more. Today we are going to spend some time talking about flow. And chaos. And flow. Because we are now not only surfing a pandemic, but also birthing a new world. The protests that are happening in response to the police killings of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and many other Black people have pitted protesters against the police and changed the focus of everything. It's been a whirlwind and continues to be. Today we will create space to find out what this chaos and flow is offering us, and how we can learn, grow, and move with it. But right now, before we go any further, I want to point out that I am a white person with a white voice. And it's wonderful that you're listening because I love to talk ritual with you, but I want to make sure that you are also surrounding yourself with Black voices right now and always. So check the show notes for links to four of my favorite podcasts: Color Me Conscious, Code Switch, The Stoop, and About Race with Reni Eddo-Lodge. Go ahead and check the show notes now, while we listen to some music. In creating ceremony, the first thing we want to do is to find a time where we won't be disturbed, in this case maybe an hour. If this is unrealistic for you, given your whole family is under one roof 24/7, maybe try for 20-30 minutes. It will also be helpful to have a little bit of space to move around and you might also find it useful to have access to music, a journal, and some water. Once we're in a quiet space, we want to just slow down. Just sit. And breathe. Notice. What sounds do we hear? How does the floor feel against our bare feet or our stocking feet? What does it feel like to have a closed door in between us and the rest of the household? Or what does it feel like to be sitting still and listen to the sounds of an empty house? Notice. How are we breathing? Can we count from 1-10 on our breaths? After we begin to quiet down a little bit, we can expand our noticing to what is going on inside of us. What words and phrases are swirling through our head? What images are still there from something we saw this morning or last night? The words of a friend, a voice from the protests, an image from the news, an image from our worries and fears. We're just noticing, still. We are making little piles of the things that are in our heads, like making piles of coins on the table as we empty our pockets. The things we have collected over time, the images we have been carrying around with us. We can write them down or speak them out loud to witness them. So, we take time for that. These things, words, phrases, images are part of the mandala of this moment, this expanded, crappy, wonderful, awful, beautiful moment. Each moment is always so many things at the same time. We're just noticing. Noticing and setting a few of these things down as we gently look through them all. It's important here to be organic. Let it be messy. Yes, we're setting down each thing, but we're not trying to organize them. We're in process, everything is moving. We allow everything. We allow all of me and we allow all of you. Now that we've slowed down and taken a simple inventory of some of what we've been holding, it's time to center. It's time to find ourself in the midst of chaos, find ourself at the center of the wheel. What can be helpful here is to bring our attention to a single thing. The tip of our nose. A pinkie finger. One thing about ourself that feels true. A memory from earlier in the year, a simple, clear moment, maybe a boring moment. And now that we're centered, we become conscious again of the chaos and change swirling around us. We feel into it and notice what wants to move. What's already moving and inviting us along? Where are we being led? What's the pull? What do we want to do with this energy? Now, this is a moment when the mind will most likely jump and start thinking of Things. To. Do. That's fine, that's what the mind is for. And that's what the journal is for - to jot those ideas down, ideas like take a class, attend a protest, read a book, call a friend. So we willwrite those down to save them for later, and return to the intuition. For now, we will be intuitive, let our body lead, follow our impulses, let whatever wants to move be birthed through us. We can cry, move, dance, scream, connect to the Ancestors, make art, pray or just sit and notice the energy of the moment. Once we get into the intuitive flow, we want to really give ourselves a chunk of time to stay in it. This is the healing part of the ceremony, this is where the change is happening. This is where we are making sense of the chaos, where we are letting go of the river bank and giving in to the pull of the water. We want to do lots of deep breathing because energy moves on the breath. So we follow the flow as long as it asks us to, and when we're ready, we allow the activity to come to a natural close and give ourselves time to fully feel any emotions that have come up. To transition out of the ceremony, we will take time for lie down and rest if possible, to allow the shifts to integrate. Maybe give thanks or think of things we are grateful for. And then when we feel ready, we will be sure to drink lots of water and eat something! While we're eating, we can review the list we made of all the things our mind suggested we might want to do next and scratch somethings off or add some new ideas. It might not be a bad thing to add some ideas for self-care, things like remembering to keep breathing, get good sleep, keep our blood sugar even, stay hydrated, and make room for laughter and tears. While we're are at it, we can pick one or two of the podcasts from our show notes to check out this week. As humans, we are not comfortable living in liminality. We like things to be straightforward, known, and predictable. Right now we are all in between the world we used to inhabit and the next one. I hope this simple ceremony provides you with a template to build one for yourself or for your community so that you can recharge and center and return to the important work of building the new world. Our music is by Terry Hughes. If you like our show, please take a minute to share it with a friend. That is one of the very best ways you can support this new baby show. Learn more at shamepinata.com. I’m Colleen Thomas. Thanks for listening.
We’re BACK! This week Mike is joined by Kevin Lyons to discuss the films that fit the bill for this brand new series: Everything from psychological thrillers to classic body horror, to extreme cinema. Support #BlackLivesMatter, donate to one of the following causes: Black Lives Matter UK The Bail Project Stop Hate UK Listen to some of these Black History podcasts: Witness Black History (BBC World) 1619 (The New York Times) About Race with Reni Eddo-Lodge Black History Buff Podcast Music by Jack Whitney. Visit our website www.evolutionofhorror.com You can now buy Evolution of Horror T-SHIRTS! www.evolutionofhorror.com/shop Subscribe and donate on PATREON for bonus monthly content and extra treats... www.patreon.com/evolutionofhorror Email us! Follow us on TWITTER Follow us on INSTAGRAM Like us on FACEBOOK Join the DISCUSSION GROUP Follow us on LETTERBOXD Mike Muncer is a producer, podcaster and film journalist and can be found on TWITTER
The TITT Talks Podcast - Modern Women Living in a Mama World
In July 2014, Eric Garner, a 43 year-old unarmed black man, was killed when a New York City police officer placed him in a chokehold after Garner questioned the officer as to why he was being harassed. In March 2018, Stephon Clark, a 22 year-old unarmed black man, was shot and killed by two officers of the Sacramento Police Department in the backyard of his grandmother's house while he had a phone in his hand. The officers stated that they shot Clark, firing 20 rounds, believing that he had pointed a gun at them. Police found only a cell phone on him. In September 2018, an off-duty Dallas Police Department patrol officer entered the apartment of Botham Jean, a 26 year-old unarmed black man, and fatally shot him. The officer said that she had entered the apartment believing it was her own and that she shot Jean, believing he was a burglar. In February 2020, Ahmaud Arbery, an unarmed 25-year-old black man, was fatally shot in Glynn County, Georgia, while jogging. Arbery had been pursued and confronted by two white men, a father and son, who were armed and driving a pickup truck. The father was a former police officer, and his son shot Arbery at point-blank range with a shotgun. The event was recorded on video by a third white man, who was following Arbery in a second vehicle. No arrests were made until May 7, two days after the video of Arbery’s shooting went viral. In March 2020, Breonna Taylor, an unarmed 26-year-old black woman, was fatally shot by Louisville Metro Police Department (LMPD) officers. The officers forced entry into her apartment in Louisville, Kentucky under the authority of a no-knock search warrant. Gunfire was exchanged between the LMPD officers and Taylor's boyfriend, who believed that the officers were intruders. The LMPD officers fired over twenty shots, and Taylor was killed after being shot eight times. In May 2020, George Floyd, a 46-year-old unarmed black man, was killed in Minneapolis, Minnesota during an arrest for allegedly using a counterfeit bill. A white police officer knelt on Floyd's neck for almost nine minutes while Floyd was handcuffed and lying face down in the street, begging for his life and repeatedly saying "I can't breathe." These are only a fraction of the stories of which we know. These stories are only a minuscule fraction of the abuses that have actually occurred against the Black community as the result of senseless police brutality.We are Asian American Pacific Islander women. While we face our own societal obstacles based on our race alone, we absolutely recognize that those disadvantages will never compare to the fear that the Black community faces on a daily basis. We do not live in fear that we, or our loved ones, will be killed for asking why a police officer has pulled us over, while going on a jog, for using a cell phone, or while simply existing in our own homes.As women of color, as mothers, and as humans, we cannot remain silent when confronted with the reality that any person has to live with this fear. We have an obligation to proactively contribute to positive change, whether by marching, donating, signing petitions, educating ourselves on Black history and experiences, and speaking out against racism in any form. We unequivocally believe that Black lives matter and that there cannot peace until there is justice for all. In this episode, we discuss our thoughts on the current climate of race relations in America and our call to action in light of the most recent atrocities committed against the Black community. We hope you will share yours with us as well. ____________________________________________WAYS TO GET INVOLVED Participate in #BLACKOUTDAY2020 on July 7, 2020. This is a call to action where ALL people of color are encouraged to come together in one day of solidarity to not spend a dollar. Collectively, this group of minorities has $3.9 trillion dollars in economic spending power. Use your own platform, big or small, to educate your family and friends on the injustice black people face daily. It’s not enough to be quietly non-racist, now is the time to be vocally anti-racist. Donate to organizations serving Black communities, like TGI Justice Project, Black Girls Code, and the NAACP to name a few. This is just one of the many suggestions from Michelle Kim’s article, “20+ Allyship Actions for Asians to Show Up for the Black Community Right Now”. We encourage you to read the full article. Subscribe and listen to the following podcasts which dive into important conversations around racial equality and justice: 1619 by The New York Times, About Race, Code Switch by NPR, The Diversity Gap, Intersectionality Matters! Hosted by Kimberlé Crenshaw, Momentum: A Race Forward Podcast, Pod For The Cause from the leadership conference on civil & human rights, and Pod Save the People by Crooked Media. This listed was published by Sarah Sophie Flicker & Alyssa Klein. Sarah Sophie Flicker & Alyssa Klein published a full list of Anti-racism resources that range from articles, videos, bookies, movies, organizations to support, and more. Please go here to read it. Donate to the funds for George Floyd and Amaud Arbery. Sign the petition for justice for Breonna Taylor.____________________________________________ CONNECT WITH US Sign up for our NEWSLETTER – TITT Talks Tea IG: titt_talks FACEBOOK: TITT Talks E-MAIL: TITTtalks@gmail.com YOUTUBE: TITT Talks Podcast____________________________________________ WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU What topics would you like to hear discussed on the show? Click HERE to let us know!
Due to the recent protests against racial violence and police brutality in the United States, we (alongside other podcasts) will be participating in the Podcast Blackout and will not be releasing our regularly scheduled episode for today. We have chosen to use this platform to help spread awareness about the issues our country is facing, and encourage you to do the same! Whatever platform you have to make your voice heard, we ask that you take the time to speak out. Instead of listening to us ramble for the next 60-90 minutes, check out some of the podcasts and radio shows we've listed below to help educate yourself and others on race in America. We encourage you to do what you can to fight against racial injustice. Support, protest, donate, and educate yourselves — we will be doing the same. To our black listeners, although we can never truly understand what you're going through (and have gone through in the past), we will stand with you and fight to end racism. Your lives matter....they always have and they always will. Anti-Racist Podcasts & Radio Shows: Momentum: A Race Forward Podcast, features movement voices, stories, and strategies for racial justice. Seeing White Series from Scene On Radio, a 14-part documentary series exploring whiteness in America. Uncivil, a podcast from Gimlet Media that presents a history of the Civil War not often found in school textbooks. Code Switch, a podcast that presents contemporary news viewed through the lens of race and identity. 1619 (New York Times), audio series on how slavery has transformed America, connecting past and present through the oldest form of storytelling. About Race, National conversation about Race and politics Code Switch (NPR), a podcast that presents contemporary news viewed through the lens of race and identity. Intersectionality Matters!, a podcast hosted by Kimberlé Crenshaw, an American civil rights advocate and a leading scholar of critical race theory. Pod For The Cause (from The Leadership Conference on Civil & Human Rights), a podcast created for those of you wanting to effect change, who understand the importance of restoring our democracy. Identity Politics, a podcast on race, gender, and Muslims in America. For a list of even more anti-racist resources, including books, movies, coursework, & social media accounts, check out this great article from Medium & the Female Founders Fund. Looking for a 1-stop link for petitions, donations, and other resources? We gotchu! https://blacklivesmatters.carrd.co/ #BlackLivesMatter #BLM
This episode is an attempt to provide a way forward through conversations across race about the difficult topics of racism, white privilege, conscious and unconscious biases, how to identify them and how to address them. This episode is our effort to call in white people to increase their knowledge around racism in its historical and present contexts and engage in positive action to support Black Lives Matter. It also an attempt to extend an open hand in support of people of color. The Evolved Caveman is committed to anti-racism. This is an attempt to join with Black people and other people of color. Now is the time when we anti-racist white people need to commit to having intentional conversations with the people in our lives and on social media who might be conflicted about the protests because of the narratives of violence and looting outlined by those with other agendas. We need to start these uncomfortable, yet supremely important, conversations. Below are resources to begin your education… Articles to read: • Ella Baker and the Black Freedom Movement (Mentoring a New Generation of Activists • My Life as an Undocumented Immigrant' by Jose Antonio Vargas | NYT Mag (June 22, 2011) • The 1619 Project (all the articles) | The New York Times Magazine • The Combahee River Collective Statement • The Intersectionality Wars' by Jane Coaston | Vox (May 28, 2019) • White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack' by Knapsack Peggy McIntosh • Who Gets to Be Afraid in America?' by Dr. Ibram X. Kendi | Atlantic (May 12, 2020) Podcasts to check out: • 1619 (New York Times) • About Race • Code Switch (NPR) • Momentum: A Race Forward Podcast • Pod For The Cause (from The Leadership Conference on Civil & Human Rights) • Pod Save the People (Crooked Media) • Seeing White Books to read: • Eloquent Rage: A Black Feminist Discovers Her Superpower by Dr. Brittney Cooper • Heavy: An American Memoir by Kiese Laymon • How To Be An Antiracist by Dr. Ibram X. Kendi • I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou • Just Mercy by Bryan Stevenson • Me and White Supremacy by Layla F. Saad • Raising Our Hands by Jenna Arnold • Redefining Realness by Janet Mock • Sister Outsider by Audre Lorde • So You Want to Talk About Race by Ijeoma Oluo • The Fire Next Time by James Baldwin • The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness by Michelle Alexander • The Next American Revolution: Sustainable Activism for the Twenty-First Century by Grace Lee Boggs • The Warmth of Other Suns by Isabel Wilkerson • Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston • When Affirmative Action Was White: An Untold History of Racial Inequality in Twentieth-Century America by Ira Katznelson • White Fragility: Why It's So Hard for White People to Talk About Racism by Robin DiAngelo, PhD Films and TV series to watch: • 13th (Ava DuVernay) Netflix • American Son (Kenny Leon) Netflix • Black Power Mixtape: 1967-1975 Available to rent • Clemency (Chinonye Chukwu) Available to rent • Dear White People (Justin Simien) Netflix • Fruitvale Station (Ryan Coogler) Available to rent • If Beale Street Could Talk (Barry Jenkins) Hulu • Just Mercy (Destin Daniel Cretton) Available to rent • King In The Wilderness HBO • See You Yesterday (Stefon Bristol) Netflix • Selma (Ava DuVernay) Available to rent • The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution Available to rent • The Hate U Give (George Tillman Jr.) Hulu with Cinemax • When They See Us (Ava DuVernay) Netflix Organizations to follow on social media: • Antiracism Center: Twitter • Audre Lorde Project: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook • Black Women's Blueprint: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook • Color Of Change: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook • Colorlines: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook • The Conscious Kid: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook • Equal Justice Initiative (EJI): Twitter | Instagram | Facebook • Families Belong Together: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook • The Leadership Conference on Civil & Human Rights: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook • NAACP: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook • National Domestic Workers Alliance: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook • RAICES: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook • Showing Up for Racial Justice (SURJ): Twitter | Instagram | Facebook More anti-racism resources to check out: • 75 Things White People Can Do for Racial Justice • Anti-Racism Project • Jenna Arnold's resources (books and people to follow) • Rachel Ricketts' anti-racism resources • Resources for White People to Learn and Talk About Race and Racism • Showing Up For Racial Justice's educational toolkits • The [White] Shift on Instagram This is an edited version of document compiled by Sarah Sophie Flicker, Alyssa Klein in May 2020. A big thank you to Sarah and Alyssa. Check us out on Google Play and give us a Like and Subscribe! https://play.google.com/music/listen#/ps/Imo4l6pgrbmeklxvec6pgwzxnz4 If you like what you've heard, support us by subscribing, leaving reviews on Apple podcasts. Every review helps to get the message out! Please share the podcast with friends and colleagues. Follow Dr. John Schinnerer on | Instagram | Instagram.com/@TheEvolvedCaveman | Facebook | Facebook.com/Anger.Management.Expert | Twitter | Twitter.com/@JohnSchin | LinkedIn | Linkedin.com/in/DrJohnSchinnerer Or join the email list by visiting: GuideToSelf.com Please visit our YouTube channel and remember to Like & Subscribe! https://www.youtube.com/user/jschinnerer Editing/Mixing/Mastering by: Brian Donat of B/Line Studios www.BLineStudios.com Music by: Zak Gay http://otonamimusic.com/
In this episode Grace & Abby discuss the murder of George Floyd and the recent uproar and protests standing up against racism across the world. It has been a seriously eye opening couple of weeks, seeing this all unfold and the spotlight being shone on white privilege for the first time on such a large scale. As two privileged white women, your hosts share their thoughts on how we all have had a part to play in the racism in our society today, and encourage you to take action and make a change - urging you to never underestimate your unique power to change the world. Join our community on instagram @findingyourfeetpodcastSome resources we recommend absorbing to educate yourself on the fight of becoming anti-racist:Podcasts: 1619 By the New York Times, About Race, Code SwitchBooks: Me & White Supremacy, Why I'm No Longer Talking To White People About Race, White Fragility: Why It's So Hard For White People To Talk About Racism Netflix: When They See Us, 13th, Underground
Hey Loves!In this weeks episode I discuss how I am feeling on what is happening in the world and how I am doing what I need to for me and my family to get better and move forward into a beautiful new world of change. As most of my solo episodes have been lately its raw and its honest. Much Love Sam xo The podcast I am currently listening to on black history is About Race with Reni Eddo-Lodge. She is super insightful and keeps the episodes engaging. The course I was discussing in this episode for adding diversity into your business is by Lattice Hudson - check her out on Instagram. It should still be available for replay. Another class I signed up for after I recorded this is by Jessica Taylor Regan and she is answering anonymous questions about anti-black racism. This one is free and isn't taking place until June 14th if you are interested also head over to her IGI hope we can move forward in beautiful ways as we learn how to do better as a whole xo
The TITT Talks Podcast - Modern Women Living in a Mama World
Welcome to the very first episode of TITT Talks – Growing Up Asian Pacific American! We recorded this episode nearly three months ago, but given the surge of social unrest surrounding the topic of race, we felt it was important to launch the podcast with this as our first episode. While we directly discuss matters of our own #aapi identities, our hearts are with the black community. We collectively must do our part to rise against the injustice in this world. Together, with action and self-education, we can create a world of equality and justice today and for the next generation. #blacklivesmatter ____________________________________________ WAYS TO GET INVOLVEDParticipate in #BLACKOUTDAY2020 on July 7, 2020. This is a call to action where ALL people of color are encouraged to come together in one day of solidarity to not spend a dollar. Collectively, this group of minorities has $3.9 trillion dollars in economic spending power. Use your own platform, big or small, to educate your family and friends on the injustice black people face daily. It’s not enough to be quietly non-racist, now is the time to be vocally anti-racist. Donate to organizations serving Black communities, like TGI Justice Project, Black Girls Code, and the NAACP to name a few. This is just one of the many suggestions from Michelle Kim’s article, “20+ Allyship Actions for Asians to Show Up for the Black Community Right Now”. We encourage you to read the full article. Subscribe and listen to the following podcasts which dive into important conversations around racial equality and justice: 1619 by The New York Times, About Race, Code Switch by NPR, The Diversity Gap, Intersectionality Matters! Hosted by Kimberlé Crenshaw, Momentum: A Race Forward Podcast, Pod For The Cause from the leadership conference on civil & human rights, and Pod Save the People by Crooked Media. This listed was published by Sarah Sophie Flicker & Alyssa Klein. Sarah Sophie Flicker & Alyssa Klein published a full list of Anti-racism resources that range from articles, videos, bookies, movies, organizations to support, and more. Please go here to read it. Donate to the funds for George Floyd and Amaud Arbery. Sign the petition for justice for Breonna Taylor. ____________________________________________ MONTHLY SPOTLIGHTAs part of TITT Talks' women supporting women initiative, each month TITT Talks will spotlight a member of the community. In this video, you will be introduced to Proud Usacharoenporn. She is a lawyer and business litigation partner. In her spare time, she uses her graphic design skills to raise funds for two wonderful, non-profit organizations: The Little Red Dog and The Center for Disaster Philanthropy, Inc. The Little Red Dog rescues dogs from high-kill shelters across Southern California, rehabs them through behavior training, and finds them forever homes. Proud has fostered several dogs for this rescue and has adopted one! In exchange for a donation to @thelittlereddog, Proud will create for you a personalized portrait of your pet to cherish furever and ever.Proud has also written and illustrated a children’s book called “Panda-Emic” to benefit The Center for Disaster Philanthropy, Inc.’s fund for COVID relief. The story is intended to give parents a way to explain the pandemic to their young children, to spread solidarity, and to inspire positivity. It details the story of five friends who are forced to stay apart because of the “Panda-Emic,” a pandemic started by the pandas that rocks the animal world. The Center for Disaster Philanthropy supports other worthy non-profits that help healthcare workers and especially vulnerable population, such as Americares, CARE, and Feeding America. If you make a donation to The Center, Proud will send you a copy of her book, “Panda-Emic” for you and your family to enjoy. You can donate/purchase here. ____________________________________________ CONNECT WITH US Sign up for our NEWSLETTER – TITT Talks Tea IG: titt_talks FACEBOOK: TITT Talks E-MAIL: TITTtalks@gmail.com YOUTUBE: TITT Talks Podcast____________________________________________ WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU What topics would you like to hear discussed on the show? Click HERE to let us know!
We're in the midst of an international protest movement, sparked by the murder of George Floyd by a member of the Minneapolis police. As a result, it didn’t feel right to put out a new show, so instead we wanted to re-run a show from 2017 during which we talked about race with Reni Eddo-Lodge, the author of Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race and Kishani Widyaratna, an editor at Picador Books in London. In her now best selling book, Reni takes a thorough and passionate look at the UK's long and complicated relationship with structural racism. This show comes with the caveat that we recorded this conversation three years ago. Our thinking has evolved since then as we’ve all continued to read and listen and learn about race. For white people in particular, anti-racist work is an ongoing journey. However, it’s sad and frustrating that most of the issues we were discussing then remain the same. It’s important to point out that we were talking about race generally on this show, whereas the current protests are for Black Lives Matter, focussing on anti-blackness, which is connected but a more specific issue. Recommendations on the theme, race: Octavia: Citizen: An American Lyric by Claudia Rankine https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/288/288167/citizen/9780141981772.html Kish: Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/243/24381/wide-sargasso-sea/9780241951552.html Carrie: The Warmth of Other Suns by Isabel Wilkerson https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/190696/the-warmth-of-other-suns-by-isabel-wilkerson/ General Recommendations: Octavia: Mislaid by Nell Zink https://www.harpercollins.com/9780062364777/mislaid/ Kish: Living a Feminist Life by Sara Ahmed https://www.dukeupress.edu/living-a-feminist-life Reni: Your Silence Will Not Protect You by Audre Lorde https://www.silverpress.org/your-silence-will-not-protect-you Carrie: First Love by Gwendoline Riley https://pagesofhackney.co.uk/lockdown/product/first-love-gwendoline-riley/ Further Reading: Why I'm No Longer Talking to White People About Race by Reni Eddo-Lodge https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/why-im-no-longer-talking-to-white-people-about-race-9781408870587/ Reni's podcast, About Race: https://www.aboutracepodcast.com/ Me and White Supremacy by Layla F. Saad https://www.meandwhitesupremacybook.com/ White Fragility by Robin DiAngelo https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/566247/white-fragility-by-robin-diangelo/ Are Prisons Obsolete? by Angela Davis https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/213837/are-prisons-obsolete-by-angela-y-davis/ So You Want to Talk About Race by Ijeoma Oluo https://www.littlebrown.co.uk/titles/ijeoma-oluo/so-you-want-to-talk-about-race/9781541647435/ Email us: litfriction@gmail.com Tweet us & find us on Instagram: @litfriction
In solidarity with the black and BIPOC communities, and in a spirit of "fox you" to police brutality, the Tarot Foxcast is participating in the Podcast Blackout. The content will continue next week, but it's time to use this platform to speak out against the heinous violence of excessive police force and racism. The first 8 minutes and 46 seconds are intended to be silent in memory of George Floyd, and I encourage for you to sit and listen to the silence. Reflect in it. Here you will find a link on how to protect yourself during a protest. If you are able to donate, you can donate to the following organizations; Black Lives Matter, Campaign Zero, George Floyd Memorial Fund, Black Visions Collective, Reclaim the Block, Know Your Rights Camp, Minnesota Freedom Fund, Communities United Against Police Brutality, I Run with Maud, NAACP Legal Defense Fund, and American Civil Liberties Union. Not all of us are able to march or donate, but that does not allow us to be silent. Here are some podcasts to listen to; 1619, About Race, Code Switch, Intersectionality Matters!, Momentum: A Race Forward Podcast, Pod For The Cause, Pod Save the People, Seeing White, Parenting Forward, Parenting Lessons, Fare of the Free Child.Black Lives Matter, Support the show (https://www.instagram.com/fablingfox/)
Have you been wondering whether to speak out or stay silent when it comes to the Black Lives Matter movement? As a white British woman living from a place of massive privilege, I am no longer willing to stay silent. Saying nothing is the problem. Turning the other way and pretending this isn't happening has been going on for too long. Yes I'll likely make mistakes, say the wrong thing and offend when this was never my intention, but this discomfort is nothing compared to the pain and suffering people of coloured have endured for lifetimes. With love, Kirsty x Educational Resources: Why I'm No Longer Talking To White People About Race (Book) by Reni Eddo-Lodge Me And White Supremacy (Book) by Layla Saad Natives (Book) by Akala How To Be Antiracist (Book) by Ibram X. Kendi Code Switch (podcast) About Race with Reni Eddo-Lodge (podcast) Conversations With Nova Reid (podcast)
Recorded outside in a London park (socially distanced!) Amanda Litherland and Chrystal Genesis recommend some great podcasts and speak to creators. Firstly, following on from the Black Lives Matter protests happening across the world, a selection of podcasts to help you learn about the history of race and racism, and actions you can take now. Including Scene On Radio series 2 Seeing White, About Race with Reni Eddo-Lodge and NPR's Code Switch. Also suggestions of nature podcasts which discuss environmental activism and encourage positive change. Including Costing The Earth, Mothers of Invention, Black Nature Narrative, Outrage and Optimism, and So Hot Right Now. And what is a branded podcast? More and more companies are not just buying advertising, but commissioning entire podcast series to spread the word about their brand. We hear from Radio Wolfgang's Holly Aquilina and Elle Scott, the team behind last year's award winning 'Selfridges Hot Air' to find out why companies are investing in this medium, and what goes into creating a successful series. We also hear the 2020 British Podcast Award nominations for Best Branded podcast; #QueerAF, DeepMind: The Podcast, Meet Me At The Museum, On the Marie Curie Couch, The Penguin Podcast, and The Rough Guide to Everywhere. You can contact the show at podcastradiohour@bbc.co.uk
About Race, Reconciliation and the Gospel’s third option - Ray Bentley, Annie Stone, Miles McPherson
Black Lives Matter! Occupation Wild is not running a full-length episode this week in order to amplify black voices. Some podcasts we have been listening to that are having important conversations on social justice and racial equity are: .1619 by The New York Times .About Race .Code Switch by NPR .The Diversity Gap .Momentum: A Race Forward Podcast .Pod For The Cause .Pod Save the People We have donated to Black Girls Surf: https://www.gofundme.com/f/blackgirlssurf Other Organizations to Donate to: Grassroots Law Project: https://www.grassrootslaw.org/ Minnesota Freedom Fund: https://minnesotafreedomfund.org/ Unicorn Riot: https://unicornriot.ninja/
NONCOMPREHENSIVE LIST OF PODCASTS TO LISTEN TO: 1. Code Switch: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/code-switch/id1112190608 2. The Nod: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-nod/id1250583865 3. United States of Anxiety: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-united-states-of-anxiety/id1155194811 4. The Stakes: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-stakes/id1459124232 5. Scene on Radio : https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/scene-on-radio/id1036276968 6. The Heart: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-heart/id595892633 7. Next Question with Katie Couric ft Bryan Stevenson: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/can-one-person-change-the-criminal-justice-system/id1134154895?i=1000460055126 8. 1619: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1619/id1476928106 9. About Race: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/about-race-with-reni-eddo-lodge/id1353151856 10. The Diversity Gap: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-diversity-gap/id1474097384 11. Intersectionality Matters! : https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/intersectionality-matters/id1441348908 12. Momentum, a Race Forward Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/momentum-a-race-forward-podcast/id1480796503 13. Pod for the Cause: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/pod-for-the-cause/id1463460979 14. Pod Save the People: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/pod-save-the-people/id1230148653 15. Straight Up with Trent Shelton: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/straight-up-with-trent-shelton/id1489061681 And finally: a link to how you can help RIGHT NOW: https://blacklivesmatters.carrd.co/?fbclid=IwAR3q5wP6bO2jsGVOdQtDjIEVtdlTnQ0C5DudwqttndnbF8PQIiPvdJmxyxg
After Alison Roman apologised to Chrissy Teigen and Marie Kondo, we took to Instagram to praise Chrissy for her graceful response. But we showed a blind spot in the process - how quick the world is to downplay the racially charged comments of white women. After an amazing listener called us out, we got her on the phone to talk through this textbook case of white feminism in action - and it came not a moment too soon. As we - and the rest of the world - felt sick to our stomachs about the murder of Ahmaud Arbery, we had already decided to try and wade into the tricky, often uncomfortable topic of race. Why are white people so unwilling to acknowledge their own inherent biases? Why do we think that racism is 'someone else's' problem? And why do we always end up relying on people of colour to explain to us how to dismantle a system that we are responsible for creating? We tackle all these questions, with varying success, in this episode - we'd love to hear your feedback. Thanks to Crystal Andrews for being a guest on this episode. Her first book, 'How To Win Every Argument', is available now. Some things everyone can do: - Change our consumer habits: look at how many books you own which were written by people of colour, who directed and stars in the movies you watch, the magazines you buy, the stories you're engaging in - Look around us and notice when there's no minority groups in the room- Analyse the power you have at work - do you have the power to hire new staff? Is your workplace diverse? If not, why not, and is there anything you have the power to do to change it?- Call out casual racism always - Read about our history and follow (and engage!) with people of colour and minority groups- Look for initiatives that relate to causes you're passionate about and dedicate resources, either money or your time.- Sign petitions and share the news. Shaun King is great to follow and always emails too when there's something important going on with petitions you can sign and marches you can attendReading/recsMe and White Supremacy Workbook by Layla F. SaadWhy I'm No Longer Talking to White People About Race by Reni Eddo-LodgeAbout Race podcast with Reni Eddo-LodgeWhite Fragility by Robin DiAngelohttp://tedxbend.com/presenters/rachel-elizabeth-cargle/How to Be an Antiracist by Ibram X. KendiJelani Cobb's stories for The New YorkerGal-Dem Bobo + Flex podcast Roxanne Gay's books/talks/workPeople to follow:@rachel.cargle @mikaelaloach@laylafsaad @munroebergdorf@ajabarber@israhirsi@theandrehenry@shaunkingOther recs:Pose showParis is Burning documentaryWTF with Marc Maron Remembering Lynn Shelton Richard Jewell movie Get bonus content on Patreon See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Sofie talks to Reni Eddo-Lodge about her book Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race, boundaries, activism, writing, changing tax brackets and class, her podcast About Race, being a teenage girl, creativity, perfectionism and her strong opinions about rabbit care.Trigger warning – stage fright, mental health problems, racism, poverty, therapy, anxiety, CBT, street harassmentArtwork by Linda BrinkhausJingle by Harriet BraineProduced by Dave PickeringMade of Human Podcast online:Twitter: @podmohFacebook: facebook.com/madeofhumanpodcastWeb: madeofhumanpodcast.comPatreon: patreon.com/mohpodSofie Hagen online:Twitter: @SofieHagenFacebook: facebook.com/sofiehagen.komikerWeb: sofiehagen.comInstagram: @sofiehagendk See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
WELCOME TO 1 ON 1 WITH DA 1 AND ONLY...! ON THIS EPISODE, I SIT DOWN FOR AN IN-DEPTH CONVERSATION, ABOUT RACE, HISTORY, PAN-AFRICANISM, AND MORE; AS I GO 1 ON 1 WITH DA 1 AND ONLY... CLIFFVON HOWELL! HISTORIAN, EDUCATOR, AND COMMUNITY ACTIVIST, ARE JUST A FEW OF THE HATS THAT CLIFF WEARS. DURING OUR DISCUSSION, WE'LL GET A PEEK INTO WHAT'S UNDER THOSE HATS. THIS CONVERSATION WILL CHALLENGE MINDS, FACE REALITIES, AND RUFFLE FEATHERS. SO JUST KICK BACK, RELAX, AND ENJOY THE RIDE! AS I PRESENT TO YOU, 1 ON 1 WITH DA 1 AND ONLY... CLIFFVON HOWELL! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/nittyindacity/support
This episode of La Poudre was originally recorded in English. To listen to the undubbed version, click here.Au micro de Lauren Bastide, Reni Eddo-Lodge raconte la polémique autour de la traduction française du titre de son ouvrage (6:00), le fait de vivre sa vie à Londres (17:33), son engagement militant précoce, dès l'âge de 19 ans (26:05), l'affaire Stephen Lawrence (34:25), pourquoi elle ne parle plus de race avec les féministes blanches (38:25), l'intersectionnalité sur la scène médiatique (42:02), le post de blog qui a changé sa vie (56:17), l'importance du self-care (59:53), et son combat contre les fibromes qui habitent son utérus (1:06:30).En 2014, la journaliste et essayiste britannique Reni Eddo-Lodge publie sur son blog un billet qui met le feu aux poudres : « Pourquoi je ne veux plus parler de race avec les personnes blanches ». Fin 2017, elle publie un livre du même titre aux éditions Bloomsbury Publishing. L'ouvrage reste dix mois durant dans les meilleurs ventes Outre-Manche et vient d'être traduit en français sous le titre « Le racisme est un problème de Blancs » (Éditions Autrement). Née à Londres en 1989, Reni Eddo-Lodge grandit dans des quartiers populaires de la capitale, puis poursuit des études de littérature anglaise à l'université du Lancashire Central, où elle devient militante féministe et présidente du syndicat étudiant de son université, poste qu'elle occupe jusqu'en 2012. Devenue pigiste, Eddo-Lodge contribue régulièrement à des médias comme le New York Times, The Guardian, BuzzFeed ou i-D Magazine. Elle a reçu de nombreux prix pour son travail; notamment le prestigieux « Prix Jhalak » du livre britannique écrit par un·e écrivain·e racisé·e. En mars 2018, elle a lancé son podcast : « About Race With Reni Eddo-Lodge », dans lequel elle approfondit les thématiques abordées dans son essai.La voix française de Reni Eddo Lodge est incarnée par Maly Diallo, merci à elle.Cet épisode a été enregistré au studio Monocle à Londres, un grand merci à Bill Leuty pour son accueil.La chanson que vous entendez dans l'introduction de l'épisode est un extrait du générique du podcast « About Race with Reni Eddo-Lodge ».La Poudre est une production Nouvelles Écoutes.Réalisation et générique : Aurore Meyer-MahieuCoordination et traduction : Zisla TortelloPrise de son : studio MonoclePrise de son voix française : Charles de CilliaMixage : Laurie Galligani
Cet épisode de La Poudre est disponible à l'écoute dans une version doublée en français. Cliquez ici pour l'écouter.In this episode, Reni Eddo-Lodge talks about the controversy over the french title of her book (06:00), living her life in London (17:33), her precocious militant commitment while she was only 19 years old (26:05), the Stephen Lawrence case (34:25), why she no longer talks about race with white feminists (38:25), intersectionality through the media stage (42:02), the blog post that changed her life (56:17), the importance of self-care (59:53), and her fight against the fibroids that inhabit her uterus (1:06:30).In 2014, the british journalist and essayist Reni Eddo-Lodge published a blog post that stirred up a hornet's nest : « Why I'm no longer talking to white people about race.”. At the end of year 2017, she published a book of the same title released by Bloomsbury Publishing. The book, which was a best seller for ten month straight in England, has just been translated to French under the title « Le racisme est un problème de Blancs » (ed. Autrement). Reni Eddo-Lodge was born in 1989 and grew up in the working-class districts of London before studying English literature at the University of Central Lancashire, where she became a feminist activist and the president of her university's student union until 2012. As a freelance journalist, Reni Eddo-Lodge has worked for medias like The New York Times, The Guardian, BuzzFeed or i-D Magazine. She received numerous prizes for her work, including the prestigious « Jhalak Prize » for British writers of colour. In March 2018, she launched her own podcast « About Race with Reni Eddo-Lodge », a show that takes the conversation started by her bestseller a step further.This episode of La Poudre was recorded at the Monocle Studio in London. A special thanks to Bill Leuty for his help and kindness.The extract in the intro is the theme song of « About Race with Reni Eddo-Lodge », Reni Eddo-Lodge's podcast, by Matshidiso.Executive producer : Nouvelles ÉcoutesProduction and signature tune : Aurore Meyer-MahieuProduction assistant : Zisla TortelloRecording and Mixing : Monocle Studio
Aujourd’hui les conversations sur les masculinités se répandent progressivement dans l’espace public français, mais celles sur les spécificités des masculinités noires restent plus confidentielles. Dans cette émission, Binetou, Balla, Rhoda et Chris ont décidé de s’attarder longuement sur ces masculinités qui sont à la fois redoutées et célébrées. Dans quelles conditions se construisent-elles ? Pourquoi ces conversations ne sont-elles pas saisies et débattues par les hommes noirs eux-mêmes ? Puis en deuxième partie d’émission, ils tentent de répondre à la question que pose un article récent du journaliste Wesley Morris pour le New York Times : Est-ce que l’Art devrait être un champ de bataille pour la justice sociale ? Et en bonus un DJ Set de @djmissmak Sel & Poivre : 05’52 Jeune. Renoi. Sauvage. 20’23 Wokisme dans l’art : 1’12’23 Cube Maggi : 1’32’15 Dans cette émission on évoque : Interview de Michael B Jordan pour Vanity Fair : https://bit.ly/2Nfk3qZ “Political Blackness” dans le podcast “About Race” de Reni Eddo-Lodge : https://bit.ly/2NDuMvf Les sous-traitants en grève du Park Hyatt Vendôme délogés par la police : https://bit.ly/2QPdCge - “Marianne et le garçon noir” de Léonora Miano : https://bit.ly/2G1I2XQ “Vers La Tendresse” réalisé par Alice Diop : https://bit.ly/2OS2ke0 La série “Masculinités Noires” par le collectif Cases Rebelles : https://bit.ly/2ywWEvK “We Real Cool : Black Men & Masculinity” de bell hooks : https://amzn.to/2CddNhx "La volonté de blesser la masculinité de leur public est fréquente chez les policiers” de Didier Fassin: https://bit.ly/2Emd4x8 - “Should Art Be a Battleground for Social Justice?” de Wesley Morris : https://nyti.ms/2ya3wio Cube Maggi : Chris : City Girls - Period : https://spoti.fi/2yH5K98 Balla : Dinos - Imany : https://spoti.fi/2OsYkkU Rhoda : Choker - Honeybloom : https://spoti.fi/2ycqFR9 Tracklist : Fally Ipupa - École Destiny’s Child - Soldier Little Richard - Tutti Frutti Gregory Porter - Musical Genocide Franco - Mario Fady - Addict Sur Spotify : https://spoti.fi/2ISyj8r Contactez-nous : emissionpiment@gmail.com
In GBA 335 we get better acquainted with Sofie Hagen. She talks about how her politics and language have evolved, fat liberation and feminism, her interest in vulnerability, the relationship between comedy and audiences, and so much more. We also compare notes on turning conversations into podcasts, making art and activism for previous versions of yourself and we swap therapy stories. Content note: we touch on the topics of trauma, #MeToo, rape culture, fatphobia and structural oppression. Sofie plugs: Made of Human: https://www.madeofhumanpodcast.com/ https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/made-of-human-with-sofie-hagen/id1144479729?mt=2 Newsletter: http://www.sofiehagen.com/newsletter Twitter: https://twitter.com/SofieHagen Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sofiehagen.komiker/ Instagram: http://instagram.com/sofiehagendk I plug: Mansplaining Masculinity: The Book https://unbound.com/books/mansplaining-masculinity/ What About the Men? Mansplaining Masculinity: https://soundcloud.com/standuptragedy/sut-presents-what-about-the-men-mansplaining-maculinity http://mansplainingmasculinity.co.uk/ Down to a sunless sea: memories of my dad: https://medium.com/@goosefat101/down-to-a-sunless-sea-memories-of-my-dad-d1d2d3a61360 The Family Tree: http://thefamilytreepodcast.co.uk/ https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-family-tree/id1113714688 We mention: Spark: http://stories.co.uk/ Stand Up Tragedy: http://www.standuptragedy.co.uk/ Mark Watson: http://www.markwatsonthecomedian.com/ Uber: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uber Bubblewrap: https://www.netflix.com/gb/title/80182704 Shimmer Shatter: http://www.sofiehagen.com/shop/ Dead Baby Frog: Look out for her third show as a video soon Harrison Ford kisses: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wWoP8VpbpYI Me Too: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Me_Too_movement Emma Holter: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emma_Holten Pat Burtscher: https://twitter.com/patburtscher Brian O'Gorman: https://twitter.com/bog_416 Intersectional Feminism: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intersectionality Fat acceptance/fat liberation/fat activism: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fat_acceptance_movement Kivan Bay / @kivabay: https://twitter.com/KivaBay Cat Pausé: https://twitter.com/FOMNZ Seeing White: http://podcast.cdsporch.org/seeing-white/ About Race with Reni Eddo Lodge: https://www.aboutracepodcast.com/ Bojack Horseman: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BoJack_Horseman Help more people get better acquainted. If you like what you hear why not write an iTunes review? Follow @GBApodcast on Twitter. Like Getting Better Acquainted on facebook. Tell your friends. Spread the word!
Reni Eddo-Lodge is an award winning journalist, author, and podcaster.Her debut non-fiction book, Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race was published in summer 2017 to critical acclaim.She also has a new podcast out which you can find on iTunes! You can listen to it now, it’s called About Race with Reni Eddo-Lodge and launched in March 2018.Her book instantly became a Sunday Times bestseller and won the 2018 Jhalak Prize. It has also been shortlisted for a British Book Award in the category of narrative non-fiction. The book earned a spot on the longlist for the prestigious Baillie Gifford Prize for non-fiction, and was shortlisted for the Books Are My Bag Readers Awards (non-fiction). It was voted non-fiction book of the year for 2017 by booksellers at both Foyles and Blackwells , and selected by actress Emma Watson as an Our Shared Shelf book pick.We forgot to reference a few names when quoting, so here they are:-Reni quoted Malcolm Gladwell "3 people" in the Tipping Point.-I quoted Lauren Bravo's "quotas analogy are like Invisalyn braces" tweet.Huge thank you to producers Shola Aleje and Marcus Hessenberg and Mark and Elizabeth from Waterstones Gower St for being amazing.Enjoy! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Writer and blogger Reni Eddo-Lodge talks about her acclaimed book Why I Am No Longer Talking to White People About Race. She also hosts the About Race podcast which looks at the recent history that lead to the politics of today and features key voices from the last few decades of anti-racist activism. 5x15 brings together five outstanding individuals to tell of their lives, passions and inspirations. There are only two rules - no scripts and only 15 minutes each. Learn more about 5x15 events: 5x15stories.com Twitter: www.twitter.com/5x15stories Facebook: www.facebook.com/5x15stories Instagram: www.instagram.com/5x15stories
On this episode of Represent, Slate’s culture writer Aisha Harris and chief political correspondent Jamelle Bouie discuss the very controversial awards season contender, Nate Parker’s the Birth of a Nation. Check out what we mentioned: -Aisha’s piece in Slate, “In the Birth of a Nation, Women Don’t Participate in Nat Turner’s Rebellion. History Tells Us Otherwise.” -Former President George W. Bush at the opening of the National Museum of African American History and Culture -Good Morning America: Birth of a Nation Star Nate Parker Speaks Out -The 2003 film Nat Turner: A Troublesome Property For more Nate Parker rape allegation coverage we recommend: -About Race podcast: Cold Empathy for Nate Parker with Roxane Gay -Ebony: “Nate Parker on Campus Incident, Consent and Toxic Male Culture” -Slate: “Nate Parker Seems Like He’s Had It With Talking About Rape” Bonus: The 50 greatest movies by black directors. Slate Plus members: Get your ad-free podcast feed. Email: represent@slate.com Facebook: Slate Represent Twitter: @SlateRepresent, @craftingmystyle Production by Veralyn Williams. We want you to tell us about the podcasts you enjoy, and how often you listen to them. So we created a survey that takes just a couple of minutes to complete. If you fill it out, you'll help Panoply to make great podcasts about the things you love. And things you didn’t even know you loved. To fill out the survey, just go to www.panoply.fm/survey. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Slate’s culture writer Aisha Harris and chief political correspondent Jamelle Bouie discuss the very controversial awards season contender, Nate Parker’s the Birth of a Nation. Check out what we mentioned: -Aisha’s piece in Slate, “In the Birth of a Nation, Women Don’t Participate in Nat Turner’s Rebellion. History Tells Us Otherwise.” -Former President George W. Bush at the opening of the National Museum of African American History and Culture -Good Morning America:Birth of a Nation Star Nate Parker Speaks Out -The 2003 filmNat Turner: A Troublesome Property For more Nate Parker rape allegation coverage we recommend: -About Race podcast: Cold Empathy for Nate Parker with Roxane Gay -Ebony: “Nate Parker on Campus Incident, Consent and Toxic Male Culture” -Slate: “Nate Parker Seems Like He’s Had It With Talking About Rape” Bonus: The 50 greatest movies by black directors. Tell a friend to subscribe! Share this link: megaphone.link/represent Email: represent@slate.com Facebook: Slate Represent Twitter: @SlateRepresent, @craftingmystyle Production by Veralyn Williams. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Anna Holmes and the original About Race crew of Baratunde Thurston, Raquel Cepeda, and Tanner Colby take a listen to your feedback on episode 1638: “The Press, The Election, and Race.”
It’s the first ever all-woman episode of About Race as Raquel Cepeda returns to talk with Anna Holmes and Rebecca Carroll about Marco “That taco truck Trump supporter guy” Gutierrez and whether we can expect a “Blacklash” to the current moment in Black creativity.
Anna Holmes, co-host of the About Race podcast, founder of Jezebel, and content queen at First Look Media, grew up with a Black dad and a white mom in California. She chats with us about her childhood jheri curl, what side she'd choose in a race war, and why we should all be a little more f(*cking humble when it comes to our ideas about, well, about anything. Oh, and cat cafes! Visit mashupamericans.com for more!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Anna Holmes, co-host of the About Race podcast, founder of Jezebel, and content queen at First Look Media, grew up with a Black dad and a white mom in California. She chats with us about her childhood jheri curl, what side she'd choose in a race war, and why we should all be a little more f(*cking humble when it comes to our ideas about, well, about anything. Oh, and cat cafes! Visit mashupamericans.com for more!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Hi everyone! We're coming back on September 2nd, with Baratunde, Tanner, Raquel, and the newest member of About Race, Anna Holmes. We'll also be featuring guests from all kinds of backgrounds, and responding, as always, to listener emails and voice memos (send them to showaboutrace@gmail.com). Save the date, tell your friends to subscribe, and believe us when we say we won't stop until racism is over.
Our guest is Baratunde Thurston, who runs digital for The Daily Show with Trevor Noah. He's also got a podcast called About Race and is the author of How to Be Black. He joins us to talk about the role of comedy in uncomfortable conversations about race and politics, the presidential campaign, and what it's like to work on The Daily Show. Then, a nerd confession FULL of 90's memorabilia.
Hosts Raquel Cepeda and Tanner Colby, and special guest Jamil Smith try their best to decipher Dr. Ben Carson’s pyramid theories and disputed technicolor Horatio Alger claims, and the social media backlash to a recent call for a kinder, gentler handling of white casualties in the decades long "war on drugs." About Race is brought to you by The Rachel Maddow Show on MSNBC. Watch Rachel as she breaks down the big headlines for the local threads that tie them all together, weeknights at 9 Eastern only on MSNBC. This podcast is also sponsored by Spotless, a new series from the Esquire Network, a sexy and bold drama laced with dark humor. Learn more about Spotless by downloading “Coming Clean” a podcast that goes behind the scenes of TV’s best dark dramas, and tune into the Spotless series premiere November 14 at 10/9 Central on Esquire Network.
Hosts Raquel Cepeda and Tanner Colby are joined by New Republic Senior Editor Jamil Smith to dole out some advice and address listener feedback to Episode 16. About Race is brought to you by The Rachel Maddow Show on MSNBC. Watch Rachel as she breaks down the big headlines for the local threads that tie them all together, weeknights at 9 Eastern only on MSNBC. This podcast is also sponsored by Spotless, a new series from the Esquire Network, a sexy and bold drama laced with dark humor. Learn more about Spotless by downloading “Coming Clean” a podcast that goes behind the scenes of TV’s best dark dramas, and tune into the Spotless series premiere November 14 at 10/9 Central on Esquire Network.
On The Gist, Mimi Valdés explains her work as chief creative officer for Pharrell Williams’ collective I Am Other. She’s a co-producer of the film Dope, the new drama-comedy from writer and director Rick Famuyiwa. For the Spiel, it didn’t take long for the joy of the U.S. winning the World Cup in women’s soccer to turn to a serious question. If you’ve seen the movie Dope—or just want its plot spoiled for you—make sure to check out Slate’s Spoiler Special on Dope, featuring Slate film critic Dana Stevens and the three hosts of the Panoply podcast About Race. Join Slate Plus! Members get bonus segments, exclusive member-only podcasts, and more. Sign up for a free trial today at slate.com/gistplus. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this special podcast mash-up, Dana Stevens of Slate's Spoiler Special sits down with the hosts of Panoply's new show About Race: Baratunde Thurston, Raquel Cepeda, and Tanner Colby. They discuss Dope, filmmaker Rick Famuyiwa's sly new comedy about a young black man's coming of age. Read Dana's review of the film on Slate. Check out Baratunde, Raquel, and Tanner on the About Race podcast at ShowAboutRace.com or subscribe on iTunes or your favorite podcast app.
In this special podcast mash-up, Dana Stevens of Slate's Spoiler Special sits down with the hosts of Panoply's new show About Race: Baratunde Thurston, Raquel Cepeda, and Tanner Colby. The discuss Dope, filmmaker Rick Famuyiwa's sly new comedy about a young black man's coming of age. Read Dana's review of the film on Slate. Check out Baratunde, Raquel, and Tanner on the About Race podcast at ShowAboutRace.com or subscribe on iTunes or your favorite podcast app. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Hosts Baratunde Thurston, Tanner Colby and guest host Anand Giridharadas discuss listener questions and feedback about Episode #005: The "I Check All The Boxes" Episode. About Race is sponsored by MailChimp. More than 7 million businesses around the world use MailChimp to send email newsletters. More at MailChimp.com.
Today on The Gist, a brief history of beer with William Glenn and Trish Parry. Their show A Brief History of Beer is at the Under St. Marks Theater in New York the last Sunday of every month. Plus, author Baratunde Thurston joins us from the new Panoply podcast About Race. He’s the author of How to Be Black. Guidelines for talking about race include: 1. Assume good intentions, especially online. 2. Shut up. Listen. 3. Try to make it not just about yourself. “But I’ve never” isn’t a good argument. It’s about a bigger system. For the Spiel, does it matter if our politicians are out of touch? Today’s sponsor: The Netflix original documentary series Chef’s Table. Go inside the lives and kitchens of six of the world’s most renowned international culinary talents. All episodes now streaming on Netflix. Join Slate Plus! Members get bonus segments, exclusive member-only podcasts, and more. Sign up for a free trial today at slate.com/gistplus. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices