Podcasts about not your negro

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Best podcasts about not your negro

Latest podcast episodes about not your negro

Naoness: The Power of Connection
20. Happy Lunar New Year! 20th Episode on Culture and Community

Naoness: The Power of Connection

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2022 87:58


Happy Lunar New Year! We're celebrating our 20th episode with endless conversation about culture and community. This spans from the meaning of Lunar New Year, fast food (In N Out, McDonald's and Japanese burger chain MOS Burger anyone?) , to of course, Diversity, Equity & Inclusion. Naoko introduces Naoko to American writer and activist, James Baldwin, where his complex narrative centered around America's civil rights movement is beautifully directed by Haitian director Raoul Peck's documentary "I am Not Your Negro." Compelling, poignant and poetic, themes of race and class intertwine and should be on the watch list of all. We also revel in the works of powerful women of Viola Davis and Stacey Abrams, each of who is changing history by being present, being uniquely 'them' and impacting their respective roles in film and politics. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/naoness/support

The Michael Berry Show
Machine Self-Dealing Politicians | PM Show

The Michael Berry Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2021 70:11


Michael Berry talks about how major cities are becoming more difficult to live in due to their politicians, he then expands on a story about how a Houston Judge used an $11,000,000 kickback and donated it to a member of the DNC; In New Zealand, Berry talks about how a man was arrested for selling McDonalds on the black market; Dr. Jason D.Hill, philosophy professor at DePaul University, joins the program to talk about his new book “I'm Not Your Negro.”

Inside-America
Haiti on the Brink | Inside America with Ghida Fakhry

Inside-America

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2021 25:55


The commando-style execution of Haitian President Jovenel Moïse three weeks ago has plunged Haiti into even deeper political turmoil, as the United States and other Western powers weigh their optio ns and consider ways to stabilize a country engulfed in yet another acute crisis. Guests: Raoul Peck- Haitian filmmaker who directed the Oscar-nominated documentary “I am Not Your Negro” and the HBO documentary series “Exterminate All the Brutes”. He was Haiti's Minister of Culture from 1996 to 1997 under President Aristide. Jemima Pierre- Assistant Professor in the Department of Anthropology and the Department of African American Studies at The University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) & Haiti/Americas Coordinator with The Black Alliance for Peace Jonathan Myerson Katz- Journalist and author of “The Big Truck That Went By: How the World Came to Save Haiti and Left Behind a Disaster”. His upcoming book, “Gangsters of Capitalism: General Smedley Butler and the Making and Breaking of American Empire” will be released in January. --- Watch other episodes of Inside America ➡ Weekly in-depth interviews with American opinion and policy-makers exploring the issues shaping US politics.

Unconvenient Truth
Episode 38: Broots or Uncle's Union

Unconvenient Truth

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2021 103:09


We start our episode this week by unwittingly stress testing the Mayometer with an employer whose antebellum-esqe management style is going to cost him big bucks, a senator's freudian slip, and a school whose HR Manager will be working overtime with legal working over its new hiring policy. It's not all workplace antics as we discuss the HBO Max series by I'm Not Your Negro director Roaul Peck's Exterminate All the Brutes and how it has affected our outlook on current events. We will see you in 2 weeks till then, WATCH EXTERMINATE ALL THE BRUTES! Links: Quality Handmade Facemasks from a Black Woman owned business free shipping on orders over $35. MoeMasks4u.com Mr Intrigue does thangs...to see what they are go to: CraftingIntrigue.com Contact the Show: Please email us at unconvenientpod@gmail.com use the subject line "Episode ## ..." when referencing episodes. Facebook, Instagram, Twitter @unconvenientpod Copyright: © 2021 Unconvenient Truth URL: www.unconvenientpod.com

Present Company Included
Be a Goldfish

Present Company Included

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2020 66:52


On today's episode, the guys talk about Drug going back to high school during COVID-19, the David Arquette documentary, social media and our freedoms, the High Score and I'm Not Your Negro documentary, their review of season two of The Umbrella Academy, their love of Ted Lasso, and what podcasts they are listening to. Thank you for being friends of Present Company Included.Website:https://presentcoinc.comInstagram:https://www.instagram.com/presentcoincTwitter:https://twitter.com/presentcoincShirts:https://www.facebook.com/SideHustleCraftss/Art:https://www.ashleygrego.com/

The Recommendation Game
Episode 144: I Am Not Your Negro

The Recommendation Game

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2020 60:11


I am Not Your Negro (2016) directed by Raoul Peck. In 1979, James Baldwin wrote a letter to his literary agent describing his next project, "Remember This House." The book was to be a revolutionary, personal account of the lives and assassinations of three of his close friends: Medgar Evers, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, Jr. At the time of Baldwin's death in 1987, he left behind only 30 completed pages of this manuscript. Filmmaker Raoul Peck envisions the book James Baldwin never finished. This is The Recommendation Game, a bi-weekly podcast where two film lovers take turns to recommend a film the other has not seen, they watch and then skype to discuss it. Spoilers are a given. We are Ricardo Deakin and Orla Mc Nelis, two filmy types who love waffling extensively about movies. Catch us on Dublin Digital Radio on every second Monday: https://listen.dublindigitalradio.com/home Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/therecgame Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/therecommendationgame/

Ship Talk
SE01E05 - Opportunity To Learn

Ship Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2020 14:56


We are doing something different this week. As many of you are, our attention has been on the wrongful killings of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery and Breonna Taylor, and the following protests for justice against oppression and systematic racism. As two privileged individuals, we want to learn, progress, and change. Instead of doing a classic episode, we want all of you to take the time you would dedicate listening to this podcast, and focus it on listening/reading/learning to and about black voices. It is the least we could do. The people/resources we have recommended in this episode are the following: Instagram Followers: @iamrachelricketts @ajabarber @ohhappydani @theconsciouskid Podcasts about Race: The Daily - "Why is the Pandemic Killing So Many Black Americans" 1619 - New York Times podcast series about the history of black oppression, starting with the arrival of slave ships in 1619 Movies: "13th" - Documentary about the transition of control from slavery to the African American overrepresentation in the American Prison System. "I am Not Your Negro" "When They See Us" Books: "That Hate U Give" - Angie Thomas "The People's History of the US" - Howard Zinn "Coming of Age in Mississippi" - Anne Moody "Long Walk to Freedom by Nelson" Mandela Thanks for listening. If you have read any of these or you have recommendations yourself, reach out to @shiptalk_ on Instagram.

The Refined Collective Podcast
Why Black Lives Matter

The Refined Collective Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2020 42:01


“For me, I believe that Black lives matter. That’s what I said. Anyone with a functioning brain understands that all lives matter. Anybody. But right now there is a portion of our community that is frustrated, and they are suffering, and they are hurting. So, as an empathetic Christian I’m gonna go and say I agree with the statement Black lives do matter. But I was glad some people disagreed with me, because I kept saying, do Black lives matter yes or no? yes but…I’m like there is no but. We disagree. Those are the same type of people that would have interrupted Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount. Jesus would have been like, blessed are the poor…no Jesus blessed are all people. Since when does highlighting one issue disparage another? Are we not secure enough to be able to sit here and go issue by issue and talk about one without disparaging another? Of course all lives matter, but it’s okay to say Black lives matter. What’s wrong with you? This is not rocket science. All lives matter. No kidding. That’s why Black lives matter, because until all lives matter equally, we need to focus on this.” -Carl Lentz, 2016   This is the most important episode I will ever release. I hope you approach it with an open heart.   Just recently: George Floyd was murdered by a police officer while three other police officers stood by and did nothing. Breonna Taylor was in her home in the middle of the night when police broke in, unannounced, and shot her to death. Ahmaud Arbery was out for a run when two men chased him and shot him to death. Christian Cooper was bird watching in Central Park when a woman threatened to call the police and say that an African American man was threatening her life. He was not.   It doesn’t stop there. The following Black men and women have been murdered by police: Philando Castile Atatiana Jefferson Eric Reason Natasha McKenna Botham Jean Walter Scott Bettie Jones Tamir Rice Michael Brown Dominique Clayton Eric Garner Trayvon Martin  Tanisha Anderson Sandra Bland Freddie Gray   THESE ARE JUST THE NAMES WE KNOW. Do you know how hard it is to find a full list of Black people who have been murdered at the hands of police brutality?    Here’s a brief history of the Black lives lost in our country over the past few years along with the #Blacklivesmatter gaining momentum:   ·      2013: #Blacklivesmatter first appears on twitter ·      7/17/14: Eric Garner dies in NY after being arrested ·      8/9/14: Michael Brown is killed during an encounter with police officer in Ferguson, MO. ·      11/22/14: Tamir Rice is killed by police in Cleveland while playing with a toy gun ·      11/24/14: Announcement that there will be no indictment in Michael Brown case ·      4/19/15: Freddie Gray dies in Baltimore while in police custody ·      6/17/15: Charleston church shooting kills 9 people ·      7/13/15: Sandra Bland is found hung in Texas jail cell   STATS ·      99% of killings by police from 2013-2019 have not resulted in officers being charged with crime. ·      Unarmed Black people were killed by police at 5x the rate of unarmed white people in 2015. ·      Police killed at least 104 unarmed Black people in 2015— nearly 2x a week. ·      1 in 3 young Black men will be incarcerated in their life (compared to 1 in 17 white men). ·      13TH DOC: “The film’s premise is that while the 13th Amendment to the Constitution eliminated slavery and involuntary servitude, it in effect had an unintentional loophole that asserted “except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted.”” ·      Black people make up 6.5% of the American population but make up 40.2% of the prison population. ·      Our prison population went from less than 200k in 1970 to 2.3m today. This is what we refer to when we talk about mass incarceration.   THERE ARE PROVEN STRATEGIES that significantly reduce police killings, but very few Police Departments have adopted them. These are: Requirements that officers use all means other than shooting (decreases death by 25%) Requires all use of force be reported (decreases death by 25%) Bans chokeholds + strangleholds (decreases death by 22%) Has use of force continuum (decreases death by 19%) Requires de-escalation (decreases death by 15%) Duty to intervene if another officer uses excessive force (decreases death by 9%) Restricts shooting at moving vehicles (decreases death by 8%) Requires warning before shooting (decreases death by 5%) *You can call your local representatives and demand these 8 things be instituted with your local law enforcement. Want to learn more? Click here: https://8cantwait.org   WHY DO BLACK LIVES MATTER? My Personal Reckoning: 2016 ·      I didn’t realize my own white privilege for a long time. I felt better than the other white people when it came to bias and racism because I grew up in a broken home filled with drugs, addiction, affairs, and even lived in a town where I was a minority. The reality is I have loved Black culture for most of my life, but I have done very little to be an advocate for justice for my Black brothers and sisters. I’m so sorry for this. ·      I received a DM from a Black woman who encouraged me to diversify who I was interviewing on The Refined Woman. Almost all of my collaborations and interviews for the first few years of The Refined Woman were with white women. I was a white girl blogger. ·      In 2016 I also wrote an All Lives Matter blog post that fortunately never went live. I didn’t understand what it meant that Black Lives Matter. As a Christian I assumed didn’t all lives matter? Thank God I have a team, and thank God I didn’t go live with that painful article. I was very, very wrong.    Black Lives Matter, and here’s why:   Jesus was a 1st Century Palestinian Jewish man. He had brown skin and was hated by the religious, and beaten and killed by law enforcement. If he was alive today in America, he’d be a minority immigrant who probably wouldn’t step foot inside white evangelical churches except to flip over tables. The Western Evangelical Church in America has become a religion for rich, advantaged, and privileged white people—which is the exact opposite of the roots of Christianity and the life of Jesus. Jesus hung out with the oppressed people of society, those ostracized, those who didn’t feel safe in the church—those who were judged and cast off. He fought for justice, restored dignity and humanity from the woman at the well, woman caught in adultery, to touching people with contagious diseases and engaging with people outside of the Jewish law which would have made him unclean in Jewish circles. But he didn’t care, because He was on a mission to do God’s work.   Friend, if you are a follower of Jesus and do not have a heart for justice, racial reconciliation and to see the systemic walls, pillars, and foundations of racism in our country to be dismantled, you are out of alignment with the heart of God.   Who does Jesus care about?   -       Prodigal Son returns: the jealous brother instead of the father rejoicing over the return + safety of his son. But don’t I matter—OF COURSE YOU MATTER, BUT YOUR BROTHER WAS LOST + NOW IS FOUND.    -       Luke 15: Jesus leaves the 99 to go after the one sheep. He cares about the individual.   It’s time to get back in touch with the heart of Jesus. Do all lives matter? YES. But until Black lives matter—we better go after that. Jesus went after the one.   What can you do?    #1: Acknowledge If we don’t heal our past, it will follow us. And ours is HAUNTING US. -Kat Harris   1.     Until we acknowledge the experience of what it means to be a Black person in America there is no chance at healing. 2.     When someone dies, you show up. 3.     “I don’t know the full story.” You don’t have to. 4.     “People are just reposting for attention…not for the right reasons.” You don’t know their hearts. And so what? Does that mean you get to stay silent? 5.     Here’s what’s true: in 1619 was when the first wave of Black people were kidnapped from Africa to become slaves in Jamestown. July 4th isn’t a celebration of independence for Black people. They weren’t free when those freedom bells rang. America was built on the backs of terrorism and genocide and slavery of Black people, people of color and indigenous people. 6.     If we don’t heal our past, it will follow us. And ours is HAUNTING US. 7.     We have to look back before we can move forward. 8.     One of the first things we can do is acknowledge our white privilege. What is white privilege and how do you know if you have it? Go through these statements.   #2: Get Curious I STARTED NOTICING + GETTING CURIOUS: ·      Why did I have so few Black friends? ·      Why were there some Black people and people of color at my church but none on staff or leadership or in the decision-making rooms? ·      I changed churches because I wanted to be a part of a community with women in leadership, then I noticed almost every week at church I could count on one hand the number of Black people at my church…why? ·      Why were influential Black Christian people like Lecrae + Andre Henry leaving the church? ·      How come at my favorite salad place every single person in line buying was white and all the people working in the buffet are Black? ·      How come the expensive gym I had a membership to had mostly white members, and yet almost every single one of the people working there from front desk to maintenance are Black? ·      This started making me very uncomfortable. I didn’t know what to do—so I’d talk with my friends about it…but really I didn’t do much about it. I deeply regret this. #3: PRAY + REPENT: ·      When have you been complicit, silent, and chosen ignorance out of comfort and convenience? Write it down, say it out loud, pray, and repent. ·      Psalm 13 is great to walk through lament. ·      Psalm 51 is great to walk through repentance. #4: ACTIVATE: ·      Sign petitions for racial justice. change.org is a great start for this! ·      Talk with friends and family. ·      When you see racism, call it out. ·      Post on your platforms. ·      Call your local representatives and demand justice. ·      Support Black-owned businesses. ·      Donate to Historically Black Colleges and Universities. ·      Go to https://www.grassrootslaw.org to find out how you can support policing and justice in America. ·      Read this: 75 Things White People Can Do for Racial Justice by Corinne Shutack    #5: ORGANIZATIONS TO SUPPORT: ·      Equal Justice Initiative (Bryan Stevenson) ·      Be the Bridge (Latasha Morrison) and her wonderful resource page, “Where Do I Start?” ·      WhereChangeStarted.com has a great anti-racism starter kit ·      The Innocence Project ·      To help pay bail for protestors in NYC, money can be Venmo’ed to @bailoutnycmay.  ·      City-specific bailouts. ·      ACLU ·      NAACP ·      UNCF   #6: READ: “Stop asking us to give you books. Stop asking us to do research. Listen y’all were able to do mathematic equations through some Black women and then your own stuff and to be able to go to the moon, and put a flag in it and dance around and do the west coast strut. How in the world can you go from the earth to the moon and you can’t do research on the racial history that we need to fight in this country. I don’t want to be traumatized by teaching you history. I want you to grow up in your spiritual maturity, and grow up in your faith, and go on the sanctifying journey of overriding the patriotic way that we’ve learned history in America.” - Pastor Eric Mason   1.     White Fragility by Robin DiAngelo 2.     So You Want to Take About Race by Ijeoma Oluo 3.     The Person You Mean to Be by Dolly Chugh 4.     We Were Eight Years in Power by Ta-Nehisi Coates 5.     How to Be an Antiracist by Ibram X. Kendi 6.     I’m Still Here: Black Dignity in a World Made for Whiteness by Austin Channing Brown 7.     Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates 8.     Woke Church by Eric Mason 9.     The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness by Michelle Alexander 10.  Jesus and the Disinherited by Howard Thurman 11.  Great Speeches by Frederick Douglass 12.  Waking up White and Finding Myself in the Story of Race by Debby Irving 13.  Ghetto by Mitchell Duneier 14.  More than Just Race: Being Black and Poor in the Inner City by William Julius Wilson 15.  Stamped from the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America by Ibram X. Kendi 16.  A Testament of Hope by Martin Luther King Jr. 17.  Prejudice and Racism by James M. Jones 18.  Blindspot: Hidden Biases of Good People by Mahzarin R. Banaji 19.  Tears We Cannot Stop: A Sermon to White America by Dr. Michael Eric Dyson 20.  I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou 21.  All About Love by Bell Hooks 22.  Well-Read Black Girl by Glory Edim 23.  Go Tell it on the Mountain by James Baldwin 24.  Heavy: An American Memoir by Kiese Laymon 25.  There Will Be No Miracles Here by Casey Gerald 26.  Paradise by Toni Morrison 27.  Healing Racial Trauma by Sheila Wise Rowe 28.  Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston 29.  The Lies that Bind: Rethinking Identity by Kwame Anthony Appiah 30.  The Very Good Gospel by Lisa Sharon Harper 31.  The Prophetic Imagination by Walter Brueggemann 32.  Prophetic Lament: A Call for Justice in Troubled Times by Dr. Soong-Chan Rah 33.  Divided by Faith: Evangelical Religion and the Problem of Race in America by Michael O. Emerson and Christian Smith 34.  Just Mercy by Bryan Stevenson 35.  The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America by Richard Rothstein 36.  Human(Kind) by Ashlee Eiland 37.  A Day Late and a Dollar Short by Terry McMillan 38.  Kindred by Octavia E. Butler 39.  Beloved by Toni Morrison 40.  White Teeth by Zadie Smith 41.  Discerning the Voice of God by Priscilla Shirer 42.  Detours: The Unpredictable Path to Your Destiny by Tony Evans 43.  Unashamed by Lecrae 44.  Believe Bigger by Marshawn Evans Daniels   ARTICLE + WEBSITES 1.     Code Switch: Race in Your Face 2.     White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack by Peggy McIntosh 3.     NYTimes An Antiracist Reading List compiled by Ibram X. Kendi 4.     Goodgooodgood.co Anti-racism resources compiled by Sarah Sophie Flicker and Alyssa Klein 5.     Buzzfeed’s An Essential Reading Guide for Fighting Racism by Arianna Rebolini 6.     1619 Project (NY Times) – an article series on the history and legacy of slavery in America (also a podcast below). There is a book project in the works to expand on what they’ve started. 7.     The America We Need (NY Times) – a NYT Opinion series that touches on justice in the midst of the pandemic. 8.     “Walking While Black” by Garnette Cadogan   WATCH: 1.     Pastor Eric Mason: Don’t Lose Heart: Why It’s Worth It to Fight for Racial Harmony Even When We Don’t See Progress 2.     Pastor Carl Lentz: I said, “Black Lives Matter” 3.     Dr. Robin DiAngelo’s talk on White Fragility at the University of Washington 4.     How to Deconstruct Racism One Headline at a Time, TEDtalk, Baratunde Thurston  5.     How Racism Makes Us Sick, TEDtalk, David R. Williams  6.     Racial Reconciliation, Latasha Morrison’s sermon, National Community Church  7.     The Privilege Walk   8.     Jon Tyson and David Bailey, class, race, reconciliation, and the Kingdom of God   9.     Becoming Brave: Reconciliation Rooted in Prayer – “why do we need the church?” by Rev. Dr. Brenda Salter McNeil     Movies to watch on Netflix: 1.     13th 2.     American Son 3.     Dear White People 4.     See You Yesterday 5.     When They See Us   Movies to watch on Hulu: 1.     If Beale Street Could Talk 2.     The Hate U Give   Movies to rent: 1.     Black Power Mixtape: 1967-1975 2.     Clemency 3.     Fruitvale Station 4.     I am Not Your Negro 5.     Just Mercy 6.     Selma 7.     The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution 8.     BlacKkKlansman 9.     Burden 10.  The Color of Fear   Listen to these podcasts: 1.     NPR’s Code Switch 2.     Season 2 of In the Dark 3.     Hope & Hard Pills with Andre Henry 4.     Her with Amena Brown 5.     Truth’s Table Podcast 6.     Fights and Feelings with Joseph Solomon 7.     Anti-Racism with Andre Henry on The Liturgists 8.     Pod Save the People 9.     1619 Project Podcast 10.  Scene on Radio’s “Seeing White” 11.  Why Tho   The Refined Collective episodes on race: 1.     Anxiety, Race, and Healing Community with Nikia Phoenix 2.     I’m Still Here: Black Dignity in a World Made for Whiteness with Austin Channing Brown 3.     Why Being a ‘Good Person’ Prevents You From Being Better with Jeana Marinelli   People to follow: 1.     @austinchanning 2.     @theconsciouskid 3.     @blackcoffeewithwhitefriends 4.     @theandrehenry 5.     @colorofchange 6.     @rachel.cargle 7.     @ibramxk 8.     @mspackyetti 9.     @blklivesmatter 10.  @osopepatrisse 11.  @reformlajails 12.  @akilahh 13.  @showingupforracialjustice 14.  @tyalexander 15.  @tiffanybluhm 16.  @natashaannmiller 17.  @thefaithfeast 18.  @louisa.wells 19.  @abigaileernisse 20.  @jessicamalatyrivera 21.  @thegreatunlearn 22.  @laylafsaad 23.  @luvvie 24.  @pastorgabbycwilkes 25.  @elevateny 26.  @pastoremase 27.  @lecrae 28.  @whatisjoedoing 29.  @sarahjakesroberts 30.  @bishopjakes 31.  @devonfranklin 32.  @iammiketodd 33.  @amenabee 34.  @shaunking   You don’t have to read all 44 books in one day. You don’t have to start a non-profit. BUT YOU DO HAVE TO DO SOMETHING. I have not read every single one of these resources, but am making my way through them one by one. I am with you on the journey.   What are you committed to? How are you going to ensure that you are no longer silent? It’s time for white people to do something.   We are co-creators with God; it’s time to get to work.

god america jesus christ american university fear time netflix texas black world new york city movies power washington prayer voice anxiety new york times truth friend race project africa story christianity radio ny dm black lives matter write racism lies revolution jewish african americans george floyd poor color feelings mountain baltimore dark cleveland kingdom of god rev fight bridge martin luther king jr paradise npr hulu constitution fights duty butler beloved burden stats charleston buzzfeed sermon on the mount ferguson universities amendment requirements breonna taylor prejudice divided requires bans discerning activate venmo testament women in leadership waking central park good people ahmaud arbery announcement maya angelou ghetto antiracism racial justice antiracist race in america james baldwin unashamed frederick douglass humankind michael brown whiteness toni morrison police departments troubled times kindred blackkklansman kendi jamestown racial reconciliation inner city when they see us dear white people ibram x kendi white fragility ta nehisi coates go tell eric garner lecrae just mercy michael o all lives matter worth it historically black colleges zora neale hurston robin diangelo if beale street could talk bryan stevenson bell hooks sandra bland tony evans white america clemency zadie smith christian smith stamped code switch david r colorblindness tamir rice freddie gray james m howard thurman carl lentz project podcast david bailey fruitvale station black christians michelle alexander your destiny michael eric dyson priscilla shirer ijeoma oluo jon tyson all about love world made pod save restricts table podcast your face caged bird sings baratunde thurston richard rothstein dollar short walter brueggemann kiese laymon austin channing brown see you yesterday their eyes were watching god lisa sharon harper law a forgotten history american son liturgists finding myself racist ideas kat harris healing community eric mason latasha morrison white teeth how our government segregated america disinherited still here black dignity national community church andre henry beginning the definitive history seeing white prophetic imagination invisible knapsack well read black girl kwame anthony appiah terry mcmillan new jim crow mass incarceration dolly chugh peggy mcintosh believe bigger glory edim marshawn evans daniels amena brown where do i start debby irving octavia e banaji things white people can do white privilege unpacking casey gerald heavy an american memoir we were eight years sarah sophie flicker joseph solomon walking while black blindspot hidden biases garnette cadogan not your negro there will be no miracles here tears we cannot stop a sermon william julius wilson
Soul Kitchen
Soul Kitchen LIVE - con Mr. Wob & the Canes

Soul Kitchen

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2020 113:08


Puntata Live con il gruppo di Venezia Mr Wob and the Canes che presentano (e suonano) l'ultimo CD uscito nel 2019: NOT YOUR NEGRO.

cd voodoo canes wob soul kitchen puntata live not your negro
RCF Sessions
Uno stufato blues: Mr. Wob & the Canes

RCF Sessions

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2019 34:17


Mr. Wob & the Canes hanno una loro idea ben precisa di musica.Hanno una loro idea ben precisa di blues.Non sono dei puristi, e questo è il loro grande punto di forza.A poche settimane dall'uscita del loro terzo album - Not Your Negro - sono tornati a Radio Ca' Foscari per una live session in acustico. Andrea "Wob" Facchin" e Giovanni "Sugo" Natoli si sono messi comodi dietro i nostri microfoni per raccontarci le loro storie e il loro modo di raccontare storie - che è, in fin dei conti, il loro modo di suonare.L'inizio della puntata è un po' così: fuori dagli schemi come piace a noi.

Stayin' Alive in Technology
Jacqueline Harper: “Shining Star”

Stayin' Alive in Technology

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2019 79:36


Jacqueline Harper has a story that is rarely told and exactly the kind that we’re trying to bring to light with this podcast. As one of the first black female programmers, her career goes back further than most of our guests. At her job in the IBM typing pool in the 1960s, she was asked to go home when she became pregnant with her first child. Eventually, she went back to work and pushed herself to learn programming while also raising her family. Jacqueline talks about the programming languages used decades ago, sifting through hexadecimal code, and what it was like when laptops entered the market.  She also brings her passion to a new project in the Hudson Valley in New York, excavating the artifacts of freed slaves and reconstructing what their lives were like—she just doesn’t slow down! Listen to this remarkable story of perseverance and pursuit from a perspective we don’t hear often enough.   LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: Chronological History of IBM (1970s) More about Jacqueline’s current work to excavate artifacts from freed slaves: Poughkeepsie Journal article: “Slavery's hidden history in the mid-Hudson Valley coming to light”  The Archaeological Conservancy: Locals Dispute Over Guinea Community Artifacts The earliest core dumps were paper printouts of the contents of memory, typically arranged in columns of octal or hexadecimal numbers (a "hex dump"). [Wikipedia]  I am Not Your Negro, by James Baldwin; and Official Trailer for I am Not Your Negro Film   MUSICAL INSPIRATION FOR THIS EPISODE ON SPOTIFY: "Shining Star" by Earth, Wind & Fire   ABOUT THIS PODCAST Stayin' Alive in Tech is an oral history of Silicon Valley and technology. Melinda Byerley, the host, is a 20-year veteran of Silicon Valley and the founder of Timeshare CMO, a digital marketing intelligence firm, based in San Francisco. We really appreciate your reviews, shares on social media, and your recommendations for future guests. And check out our Spotify playlist for all the songs we refer to on our show.

Mercredi !
Discussion sur le racisme // 07.02.2018

Mercredi !

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2018 29:48


Discussion avec trois enfants, Louise, Antoine et Camille, sur le racisme en particulier aux Etats Unis, en compagnie de Lawrence Jackson, professeur de littérature et histoire de l’université John Hopkins de Baltimore (USA). Il intervenait au festival pour une discussion sur la situation des noirs aux Etats Unis avec la projection du film I’m Not Your Negro de Raoul Peck. Toutes les musiques sont en lien avec le contenu et nous encourageons les auditeurs-trices à regarder la signification des paroles qui peuvent apporter d’autres matières à réflexion. Merci à l’équipe de la revue XXI et surtout aux enfants ! Les musiques de l’émission : Nina Simone – Baltimore Mos Def – Rock&Roll Soul Williams – Black Stacey Vianney – Moi aimer toi Beyonce – Formation Lauryn Hill – I Get Out

Mercredi
Mercredi ! Discussion sur le racisme

Mercredi

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2018


Au programme ce Mercredi ! Émission réalisée au festival des Rendez-vous de Juillet à Autun en juillet 2017. Discussion avec trois enfants, Louise, Antoine et Camille, sur le racisme en particulier aux Etats Unis, en compagnie de Lawrence Jackson, professeur de littérature et histoire de l'université John Hopkins de Baltimore (USA). Il intervenait au festival pour une discussion sur la situation des noirs aux Etats Unis avec la projection du film I'm Not Your Negro de Raoul Peck. Toutes les musiques sont en lien avec le contenu et nous encourageons les auditeurs-trices à regarder la signification des paroles qui peuvent apporter d'autres matières à réflexion. Merci à l'équipe de la revue XXI et surtout aux enfants ! Les musiques de l'émission : Nina Simone – Baltimore Mos Def – Rock&Roll Soul Williams – Black Stacey Vianney – Moi aimer toi Beyonce - Formation Lauryn Hill – I Get Out

Mercredi
Mercredi ! Discussion sur le racisme // 07.02.2018

Mercredi

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2018 29:48


Au programme ce Mercredi ! Émission réalisée au festival des Rendez-vous de Juillet à Autun en juillet 2017. Discussion avec trois enfants, Louise, Antoine et Camille, sur le racisme en particulier aux Etats Unis, en compagnie de Lawrence Jackson, professeur de littérature et histoire de l’université John Hopkins de Baltimore (USA). Il intervenait au festival pour une discussion sur la situation des noirs aux Etats Unis avec la projection du film I’m Not Your Negro de Raoul Peck. Toutes les musiques sont en lien avec le contenu et nous encourageons les auditeurs-trices à regarder la signification des paroles qui peuvent apporter d’autres matières à réflexion. Merci à l’équipe de la revue XXI et surtout aux enfants ! Les musiques de l’émission : Nina Simone – Baltimore Mos Def – RocketRoll Soul Williams – Black Stacey Vianney – Moi aimer toi Beyonce - Formation Lauryn Hill – I Get Out

Radio Information
Lille Virgil, nordkoreanske tvangsarbejdere med dansk forbindelse og 99 luftballoner

Radio Information

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2017 54:40


Lille Virgil. Silas og hans hoppe, Ylle, Dylle og Dolle. Så er der børnelitteratur. Fra 1967. Vi fejrer i weekenden 50 året for udgivelsen af nogle af de mest skælsættende bøger til og om børn. Anita Brask Rasmussen er i studiet. Og så skal vi selvfølgelig snakke om, hvordan i hele hule h… et af dansk forsvars skibe er blevet bygget med nordkoreansk arbejdskraft. Rune Lykkeberg har set den biografaktuelle dokumentar I’m Not Your Negro og giver en tur igennem de forskellige grundfortællinger om race i USA. Og hvis du bliver hængende, giver vi dig tysk popmusik! Tilmeld dig podcastens nyhedsbrev og få besked, når der er et nyt afsnit klar. Nyhedsbrevet giver dig også links til de artikler, gæsterne taler om.  Du kan finde flere podcasts fra Information i iTunes/Apple Podcasts og på

Are You Famous, Yet?
Bryn and Nilsa 200th Episode Spectacular!

Are You Famous, Yet?

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2017 71:58


06:54 - Gilbert Godfrey's podcast http://www.gilbertpodcast.com 07:25 - Gilbert's documentary http://www.indiewire.com/2017/04/gilbert-gottfried-documentary-review-tribeca-film-festival-2017-1201807032/ 09:47 - What has Nilsa been up to? 14:50 - Nilsa was asked to join the company New York Madness https://nymadness.com Lonestar Theatre Company http://www.lonestartheatre.com 20:06 - Nilsa is also writing for "The Lost Girls Blog" http://www.lostgirlsworld.com/blog/ I am Not Your Negro, documentary about James Baldwin http://www.imdb.com/title/tt5804038/ 25:01 - Jake remembers bit about when Bryn and Nilsa would imitate each other 31:08 - Cultural events of the last few years have been hard for Bryn to reckon with and he's been writing about it. 41:15 - Jake would like to talk a little more concretely about what Bryn has been doing: played the ghost of Benjamin Spock in the play, "Baby Hubris," by Jacqui Rego http://www.babyhubris.com You can listen to our podcast episode about this here: http://areyoufamousyet.libsyn.com/jacqui-rgo-and-the-cast-of-baby-hubris-episode-182 Festival show, "From A to Double D" https://www.facebook.com/events/1915146762090057/ 47:35 - Now they're doing another run of "From A to Double D." 48:29 - And the marketing is great, with Instagram http://toptagram.com/user/fromatodoubledplay Twitter https://twitter.com/FromAtoDoubleD and Facebook https://www.facebook.com/FromAtoDoubleD/ 50:30 - Bryn gets sucked into reading/watching the news. 55:05 - Softball: a retreat with the twins! 56:15 - The MTA has been falling apart. 1:01:43 - Bryn is trying to get a job now. 1:03:59 - Cats and the next CJ3 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fy28it0ul6E https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iLV44zOUusY Follow us on Twitter or Facebook Intro Music: "Are You Famous, Yet?" - Laura Scruggs. Outro Music: "AYFY 1" - Christopher Kriz

Popgram Podcast
Popgram Podcast – Episode 13

Popgram Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2017 60:22


Episode 13 – In today’s podcast, we discuss Cannes bringing TV, Mo and Deji’s different reasons for watching the new Pirates Of Caribbean, studios bidding for the Bond franchise. And we saw the Fate Of The Furious and I’m Not Your Negro.. chalk and indeed cheese

New York Said
Giuseppe González - Mixology, Tough Choices, Hustle, Patience and Fortitude

New York Said

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2017 107:00


I met up with Giuseppe at his bar Suffolk Arms and we talked about Puerto Rico, graffiti, films, tough choices, hustle, patience, fortitude and much much more.  (You can subscribe to the podcast at iTunes, Subscribe on Android, iHeart Radio, Mixcloud, TuneIn, Stitcher, PodBean, PlayerFM, Google Play or listen via the media player above.) Thumbnail Photography by Liz Clayman   Links to the Stuff they Talked About Running Numbers  Tats Cru  Big Pun Grand Master Flash  DJ Kool Herc  The Writer’s Bench  Mare139 Terrible Tkid Seen UA Cope2 Racking Neuroscience Mei Li Wah Bakery Slick Rick  Mandy Blouin Slick Rick - Sittin' In My Car Slick Rick - Children's Story Bad Brains Misfits  Jadakiss Blondie Ramones Gill Scot Heron - Winter in America  James Baldwin  I’m Not Your Negro  Nostradamus  Bill William F. Buckley Jr. Buckley vs. Vidal: The Real Story James Baldwin Debates William F. Buckley (1965) Duke Ellington Crazy Legs  Peter Dinklage Zelda  Metroid  Habana Outpost  Ed Koch Ralph Bakshi Coonskin  Fritz the Cat  David Attenborough Morgan Freeman  Veniero's Dim sum Flatiron Lounge  Pegu Club  Milk & Honey Cory Booker Robert Moses  Per Se Julie Reiner   Audrey Saunders Employees Only  Pusser's Rum Discovers the Cost of Trademarking Drink Recipes This episode is sponsored by Gorilla Coffee. 

The Guardian's Token
The 'I Am Not Your Negro' episode - Token podcast

The Guardian's Token

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2017 25:34


Leah Green and Freddy McConnell are joined by Raoul Peck, director of the Oscar-nominated documentary I am Not Your Negro. They talk about the legacy of James Baldwin, white fragility and the irrelevance of #OscarsSoWhite I am Not Your Negro will be released in UK cinemas on 7th April

Dollar Reviews
Two Cents 082: Views Askewed

Dollar Reviews

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2017


The episode in which Batfleck leaves the director’s chair, Smodcast turns 10, I forget what week it is, IMDb is abandoning its message boards, directors move around, and The CW’s DC footprint is getting bigger. Steve caught 28 Days Later on 35mm, caught up on Train to Busan, and saw I’m Not Your Negro; while […]