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From the train to the castle, Harry is passively drifting through this chapter, and that's for damn sure. Email us at restrictedsectionpod@gmail.com to tell us what you thought of Snape Victorious or even what you think of us! We'd love to read your email on the show. Be sure to subscribe to know right away about new episodes, and rate and review! SUPPORT US ON OUR PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/therestrictedsection THANK YOU LOVE YOU BUY OUR MERCH: https://www.teepublic.com/user/restricted-section-podcast THANK YOU LOVE YOU IG: https://www.instagram.com/restrictedsectionpod/ TW: https://twitter.com/restrictedpod FB: https://www.facebook.com/groups/rspoddetentioncrew/ Check out our other amazing Deus Ex Media podcasts! www.deusexmedia.org This episode featured: Nav and Harmat from A Song of Ice and Fire Symposium! https://popculturesymposium.tumblr.com/ Nav plugged attending a local pottery class. Harmat plugged They Said This Would Be Fun by Eternity Martis https://bookshop.org/a/82745/9780771062209 Christina Kann https://linktr.ee/christinakann Christina plugged Age of Cage by Keith Phipps https://bookshop.org/a/82745/9781250848826 Andrew My Dude Andrew plugged Crying in H Mart by Michelle Zauner https://bookshop.org/a/82745/9781984898951
With Nana aba Duncan (Media Girlfriends) and Eternity Martis. Sometimes, it's the personal stories that can light a fire. Because in the flurry of activity around the viral Signal for Help, a hand gesture we released that means “I need your help”, we can forget we're talking about real people. That's why we're releasing the Signal for Help podcast, a mini-series you don't want to miss. Gender-based violence is a problem, and we want to support survivors. But too many people who face abuse are shamed, silenced, and stigmatized, and too many people don't feel confident in supporting them. The Signal for Help podcast explores how we can play a helping role through validation, active listening, and a survivor-led approach. Today, you're getting a sneak peak of the first episode of the Signal for Help podcast, released this week. It's hosted by award-winning journalist, professor, and former CBC Radio One host Nana aba Duncan. It's produced Media Girlfriends. This episode features Eternity Martis, journalist and editor who has worked with The Huffington Post, Chatelaine, Maclean's, CBC, The Walrus, and more. In 2021, she published “They Said This Would Be Fun: Race, Campus Life, and Growing Up”, her bestselling memoir of her experiences with racism, partner abuse, and so much more at university. If you prefer to listen en Français, check out our French Appel à l'aide podcast produced by Zoé Gagnon-Paquin. Find both English and French podcasts on Apple Podcast, Spotify, Google Podcasts, or anywhere you get your podcast content. A note about content: this episode includes discussion of gender-based violence. Please listen, subscribe, rate, and review this podcast and share it with others. If you appreciate this content, if you want to get in on the efforts to build a gender equal Canada, please donate at canadianwomen.org and consider becoming a monthly donor. Episode Transcripts Facebook: Canadian Women's Foundation Twitter: @cdnwomenfdn LinkedIn: The Canadian Women's Foundation Instagram: @canadianwomensfoundation
Content note: this episode addresses gender-based violence. Anna Maria Tremonti and Eternity Martis are iconic voices in Canadian media. Both of them have shared their stories of facing intimate partner violence and the shame, silencing, and stigma that came with it. They joined the Canadian Women's Foundation, Women's Shelters Canada, and YWCA Canada in a dynamic conversation last week. This episode includes part of their conversation. Anna Maria Tremonti is a long-time journalist for the CBC. She served as senior reporter for The National and hosted The Current until 2019. In February 2022, she published “Welcome to Paradise”, a podcast memoir — and for the first time ever, she disclosed her experience in a marriage to an abusive husband. Eternity Martis is a journalist and editor who has worked with The Huffington Post, Chatelaine, Maclean's, CBC, The Walrus, and more. In 2021, she published “They Said This Would Be Fun: Race, Campus Life, and Growing Up”, her bestselling memoir of her experiences with racism, partner abuse, and so much more at university. Stay tuned for the full conversation, available soon on our YouTube channel. Be a Signal for Help Responder: signalresponder.ca Episode transcript Please listen, subscribe, rate, and review this podcast and share it with others. If you appreciate this content, if you want to get in on the efforts to build a gender equal Canada, please donate at canadianwomen.org and consider becoming a monthly donor. Visit our website and donate today: canadianwomen.org Facebook: Canadian Women's Foundation Twitter: @cdnwomenfdn LinkedIn: The Canadian Women's Foundation Instagram: @canadianwomensfoundation The Canadian Women's Foundation acknowledges the support of Women and Gender Equality Canada.
Eternity Martis was unprepared for the level of racism, gender-based violence and anger she encountered as a mixed-race Black woman on a predominantly white campus. In her memoir, They Said This Would Be Fun, the award-winning Toronto-based journalist and author confronts her experiences, tying them to the systemic issues plaguing students today. She joins Tamara for a frank discussion about race, identity, anger and the worrying growth of white supremacy.
Eternity Martis is a Toronto-based journalist, author and advocate. She's also a best-selling author of her first book, “They Said This Would Be Fun - Race, Campus Life, and Growing Up.” Eternity's work focuses on issues of race and gender, taking deep dives into her own experiences and sharing them with the world. Her stories are real, raw, and relatable.Our conversation covers so much about the journey through writing this book and many of the topics and experiences shared within. We talk about setting boundaries and the challenge that comes with having to reassert yourself and reestablish boundaries time and time again - but how crucial that is for our physical, mental, sexual, emotional and spiritual health. We talk about what love really is - and what it isn't, and the hard lessons that come with navigating love on it's own.We discuss the theme of abandonment that is laced throughout Eternity's story, and how she's had to navigate both gender and race as a mixed woman; her Mom from Pakistan and her Dad from Jamaica.I get excited about all of my conversations with my guests, but there is something about the level of relatability and raw vulnerability in this conversation with Eternity that really got my heart racing.**Episode Trigger Warning - Contains content relating to sexual abuse and assault; some explicit language.**---LINKS:Eternity on Instagram: @eterniteeeThey Said This Would Be Fun: Chapters / IndigoWebsite: thesafehaven.coInstagram: @thesafehavenpodcastFrequency Podcast Network: The Safe HavenFacebook: The Safe HavenAll the good stuff: linktree/thesafehavenpodcastEmail: hello@thesafehaven.co
It’s a staple of small talk, but should it be? People are genuinely curious to learn about each other’s backgrounds or cultures. While this question might start a good conversation, it can often make people feel othered and unwelcome. So where do we go from here? Harv and Elena speak with journalist Eternity Martis about getting this question as a Black woman both in big cities and smaller towns. Eva Jewell offers some insight into how this question can be a great way to make connections when Indigenous peoples ask it to each other. Psychology professor Kevin Nadal shares some helpful tips for anyone who asks or gets asked this question. Connect with our guests below: Eternity Martis: @eternitymartis on Twitter Eva Jewell: @ebaans_ on Twitter Kevin Nadal: @kevinnadal on Twitter and Instagram Follow us! Twitter: @IQ_Podcast Instagram: @IQ_Podcast
It’s a staple of small talk, but should it be? People are genuinely curious to learn about each other’s backgrounds or cultures. While this question might start a good conversation, it can often make people feel othered and unwelcome. So where do we go from here? Harv and Elena speak with journalist Eternity Martis about getting this question as a Black woman both in big cities and smaller towns. Eva Jewell offers some insight into how this question can be a great way to make connections when Indigenous peoples ask it to each other. Psychology professor Kevin Nadal shares some helpful tips for anyone who asks or gets asked this question. Connect with our guests below: Eternity Martis: @eternitymartis on Twitter Eva Jewell: @ebaans_ on Twitter Kevin Nadal: @kevinnadal on Twitter and Instagram Follow us! Twitter: @IQ_Podcast Instagram: @IQ_Podcast
Personal storytelling has historically provided a new lens of experiences that challenge oppressive systems and introduced thousands of readers to the hardships of marginalised communities. Author and journalist Eternity Martis believes that these stories inspire future generations to create real change. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Anne chats with Tiyondah Fante-Coleman from Pathways to Care & Black Health Alliance. We discuss They Said This Would Be Fun by Eternity Martis. We also talk about stereotypes about sexual violence and sexuality that Black men & women face, and through this, we talk about WAP, Dr. Seuss, FKA Twigs, John Mayer, Shania Twain, and more! This episode is a run through about pop-culture, with the overall message that we should question our assumptions about sexuality and sexual violence. If you would like to access a transcription of this episode, visit: www.uwindsor.ca/sexual-assault/PRS_podcast Find Tiyondah on social media: @tfantecoleman on Instagram and Twitter! To learn more about Pathways to Care, check out: www.pathwaystocare.ca Our amazing PRS podcast theme song is by Canadian singer-songwriter Keats Conlon: www.keatsconlon.com For more information on UWindsor's Sexual Misconduct Response & Prevention Office, visit www.uwindsor.ca/sexual-assault Find local support for sexual violence at the Ontario Coalition of Rape Crisis Centres (OCRCC) website: https://sexualassaultsupport.ca/
I hope I held it together, but I was SOO EXCITED about this interview. "They said this would be fun: Race, Campus Life and Growing Up" was one of the books that resonated with me the most in 2020 (and I am sure I will be revisiting it). In this podcast episode I speak with the National Bestselling (debut) and Award-winning Author, Eternity Martis. We chat about race, identify, belonging, community, overcoming obstacles and why everything is about race. I did not add a "skip ahead" list for this episode, because you should just listen to the whole thing! Share with your friends , and let me know your thoughts in the comments.
Toronto journalist Eternity Martis spoke with us about her memoir, They Said This Would Be Fun: Race, Campus Life, and Growing Up. Hear more from Kobo in Conversation.
Toronto journalist Eternity Martis spoke with us about her memoir, They Said This Would Be Fun: Race, Campus Life, and Growing Up. Hear more from Kobo in Conversation.
CBC's Idil Mussa hosts Eternity Martis and Tessa McWatt. This episode of the podcast takes a hard look at racial belonging in contemporary Canada. For too long the conversation on race in Canada has been framed by issues south of the border. Here, we examine our own culture and some of the ongoing barriers to equity and inclusion. They Said This Would Be Fun: Race, Campus Life, and Growing Up by Eternity Martis is a powerful memoir about what it's like to be a student of colour on a predominantly white campus. Using her award-winning reporting skills, Eternity connects her own experience to the systemic issues plaguing students today. It's a memoir of pain, but also resilience. Interrogating our ideas of race through the lens of her own multi-racial identity, critically acclaimed novelist Tessa McWatt turns her eye on herself, her body and this world in a powerful new work of non-fiction. Shame on Me is a personal exploration of history and identity, colour and desire, from a writer who, having been plagued with confusion about her race all her life, has at last found kinship and solidarity in story.
Studies in National and International Development Podcast Series – CFRC Podcast Network
Kingston Frontenac Public Library, The Black Luck Collective, and Queen’s SNID are pleased to present Eternity Martis, author of the enlightening memoir, They Said This Would Be Fun. A booksmart kid from Toronto, Eternity Martis was excited to move away to Western University for her undergraduate degree. But as one of the few Black students […]
Author & screenwriter Catherine Hernandez plus iRise Founder & Executive Director, Rhonelle Bruder Guest host: Award-winning journalist & author, Eternity Martis. #ontheradar: US elections, rappers supporting Trump, Kendall Jenner birthday, Real Housewives and more. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Your story isn't finished. There is always time to write a new chapter. In this podcast episode (the first solocast in a little while) I explore some topics that may be unwritten chapters of your book and how we can put pen to paper (literally and figuratively) to fill in our book of life. SKIP AHEAD: 1:05 : Foreword [quote from They Said This Would Be Fun by Eternity Martis] 3:12 : The first chapter: Increasing capacity [notes from The Potential Principle by Mark Sanborn] 6:09: The second chapter: Building good relationships [notes from Popular by Mitch Prinstein] 13:06 : The third chapter: Be a good friend [notes from The Rules of Life by Richard Templar] 16:51 : The fourth chapter: The uncertainty curve [notes from Maximize Your Potential, a series of essays produce3d by 99u] 25:33 : The fifth chapter: The evil of fulfillment [notes from The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison] 27:20 : Epilogue
*Trigger Warning – Contains content relating to sexual abuse and assault; some explicit language.** Eternity Martis is a Toronto-based journalist, author and senior editor at Xtra. She's now a best-selling author of her first book, “They Said This Would Be Fun – Race, Campus Life, and Growing Up.” Eternity's work focuses on issues of race … Continue reading "Race, Campus Life, and Growing Up"
https://twitter.com/eternitymartis?s=20 (Eternity Martis) is an award-winning Toronto-based journalist and editor whose work has been featured in The Huffington Post, VICE, Chatelaine, Maclean's, Flare, Salon, CBC, Hazlitt, The Walrus, Refinery29, The Fader, Complex and many more. This is a fantastic listen if you're interested in learning more about racialized experiences in a Canadian University and how racism complicates the existing challenges faced by most students, especially women. Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/52701581-they-said-this-would-be-fun (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/52701581-they-said-this-would-be-fun) Audio production by Graham Stephenson Episode music: Caprese by Blue Dot Sessions (http://www.sessions.blue/ (www.sessions.blue)).
Eternity Martis is an award-winning Toronto-based journalist and editor whose work has been featured in The Huffington Post, VICE, Chatelaine, Maclean’s, Flare, Salon, CBC, Hazlitt, The Walrus, Refinery29, The Fader, Complex and many more. This is a fantastic listen if you’re interested in learning more about racialized experiences in a Canadian University and how racism complicates the existing challenges faced by most students, especially women. Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/52701581-they-said-this-would-be-fun Audio production by Graham Stephenson Episode music: Caprese by Blue Dot Sessions (www.sessions.blue).
Author and journalist Eternity Martis talks to Nam Kiwanuka about her book, "They Said This Would Be Fun: Race, Campus Life, and Growing Up." Martis's memoir reflects on her experiences at Western University in London, Ontario, and finds the atmosphere unwelcoming and hostile to a Black woman.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
We chat with Eternity Martis about her book They Said This Would Be Fun. It was the May Femme Wonk book club pick so we discuss observations from the book club, the book writing process, and what happens next.
Eternity Martis found that as a Black student at a mostly-white university, she learned more about “what someone like me brought out in other people than who I was.” From blackface to racial slurs, she chronicled it all in her debut memoir, They Said This Would Be Fun. A blend of personal stories and in-depth reporting, … Continue reading Eternity Martis: “I had to survive” →
Eternity Martis found that as a Black student at a mostly-white university, she learned more about “what someone like me brought out in other people than who I was.” From blackface to racial slurs, she chronicled it all in her debut memoir, They Said This Would Be Fun. A blend of personal stories and in-depth … Continue reading Eternity Martis: “I had to survive” →
Prepare for The L Word: Generation Q reboot with Xtra’s primer on the original series, hosted by Rachel Giese, Erica Lenti, Eternity Martis and Michelle Turingan. Subscribe now!
Welcome to the radio magazine that brings you news, commentary and analysis from a Black Left perspective. I’m Glen Ford, along with my co-host Nellie Bailey. Coming up: Mumia Abu Jamal speaks on the U.S. war against fellow political prisoner Julian Assange; a noted writer and anthropologist ponders why so many people that claim to be leftists can’t help bad-mouthing the Wikeleaks founder; and, a Black doctor in Canada says her profession is in denial about racism. Black women are the fastest-growing part of the U.S. prison population, which gives new meaning to Mothers Day in Black America. In Greenville, South Carolina, the Malcolm X Center for Self-Determination is part of a coalition that is raising bail money for Black women and girls facing incarceration. Malcolm X Center director Efia Nwangaza explains. Wikileaks founder Julian Assange is locked away in a British jail, as he prepares to fight extradition to the United States. Assange was recently evicted from his sanctuary in the Ecuadorean embassy in London, where he had spent seven years. Black American political prisoner Mumia Abu Jamal has spent 37 years incarcerated in Pennsylvania. He files this report for Prison Radio, titled “The Wars Against Assange.” Maximilion Forte is a professor of anthropology at Concordia University in Montreal, Canada. In a recent article, Professor Forte wrote that the U.S. campaign against Julian Assange is really a war against free speech. In addition to the U.S government’s vendetta against Assange, lots of Americans that claim to be part of the Left can’t seem to resist expressing their personal disdain for the whistleblower. Recently on Black Agenda Radio, Black Canadian journalist Eternity Martis said a “health crisis” exists among Black people in Toronto, Canada, and that anti-Black bias in the medical profession is a big part of the problem. One of the doctors quoted in Martis’s article is Onye Nnorom, a community health specialist on the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto. Dr. Nnorom says the problem with Canadian health care is that doctors are in denial about racism.
Welcome to the radio magazine that brings you news, commentary and analysis from a Black Left perspective. I’m Glen Ford, along with my co-host Nellie Bailey. Coming up: Canada is possibly best known to those of us who live south of its border as place where everyone has access to single payer health care. However, racism is killing disproportionate numbers of Black Canadians, just like in the U.S; And, we’ll talk with a talented artist and intellectual from Kenya, whose current project is using comic books to help African girls navigate the terrain of sex, health and patriarchy. Russiagate has consumed the U.S. corporate media for the past two years, but the “no collusion” verdict of the Mueller investigation has caused the once-superheated scandal to finally fizzle. In Philadelphia, Duboisian scholar Anthony Monteiro says the implosion of Russiagate lays bare the deep crisis afflicting U.S. empire. Eternity Martis, is an award-winning Black journalist from Canada, whose work focuses on issues of race and gender. She’s author of a recent article on The Health Effects of Anti-Black Racism in Canada. Martis says Blacks in Toronto face a variety of health challenge, directly related to race. However, when people in the United States think of Canada at all, it’s often with admiration for their single payer health care system. Thousands of young girls in Canada are illuminating their own lives through the lens of comic books. Ann Moraa is a writer, editor, and performer who is dedicated to telling compelling stories through an African feminist lens. For the last five years, she’s been developing comics and magazines targeting girls in her east African country.
Living off of peanut butter and stale crackers (8:14), preserving Black history in Canada (13:47), and how we save our abolitionist museums (30:55)
Our official Pizza Party and Politics episode. We discuss the National Film Board announcement that it will use fully 50% of its dollas to fund films by female directors with filmmaker Chelsea McMullin; We talk to journalist Eternity Martis about her piece for Vice about being a 90s Fat Kid; and #pizzapoliTO co-founder Claire McWatt tells us about her plans to eat the best pizza in each of Toronto's 44 Wards.