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On this episode of 1050 Bascom, we were excited to sit down with David Olson, a lecturer in the Department of Political Science, to discuss not only his spring course, The Supreme Court as a Political Institution, but also his broader work in civic education. We talked to David about the history and evolution of judicial decision-making and its connection to contemporary political issues. We also asked him about his work at Retro Report – an independent nonprofit news organization - as well as his thoughts on the evolving role of civic education in today's society. We thoroughly enjoyed our conversation with David, and hope you will too.
In 1942, a 26-year-old African-American man was removed from a Sikeston, Missouri jail and was lynched by a white mob. His name was Cleo Wright. A documentary and podcast series was created called Silence in Sikeston in partnership with KFF Health News, World Channel, Retro Report, and Local, USA to tell the story of the crime and recent incidents, what it's like to be Black in the Bootheel, and explore how racism has caused a public health issue in the Black Community. KFF Health News reporter Cara Anthony stopped by to talk with Carol about the history of racial violence in the region and its effects of it and even shared a related personal story. - What were your thoughts on this episode? Let us know at ninepbs.org/listenstlouis. Related links https://kffhealthnews.org/silence-in-sikeston/ https://www.pbs.org/video/local-usa-silence-in-sikeston-trailer/ https://www.physiciansweekly.com/silence-in-sikeston-is-there-a-cure-for-racism/
Francine Hughes, a mother of four, set fire to her Michigan home in 1977, killing her ex-husband after enduring thirteen years of relentless abuse. The case gained national attention and became a pivotal moment in raising awareness about domestic violence and the legal challenges survivors face. Research by Elizabeth Atwood. For more information about domestic violence awareness month including resources for survivors, supporters, and ways to give back, including joining us and Navigating Advocacy Podcast in our Survivor's Bag Drive, check out momsandmysteries.com/dva. Thank you to this week's sponsors! Right now, Hungryroot is offering Moms and Mysteries listeners 40% off your first delivery and free veggies for life. Just go to Hungryroot.com/moms to take advantage of this amazing deal! Help your kids gain financial literacy. Sign up for Greenlight today and get your first month free when you go to Greenlight.com/moms. For 55% off your order, head to NurtureLife.com and use code MOMS. To advertise on the show, contact sales@advertisecast.com or visit https://www.advertisecast.com/MomsandMysteriesATrueCrimePodcast. New merch! Check out Moms and Mysteries Threadless! You can also get new episodes a day early and ad free, plus merch and more at Patreon.com/momsandmysteriespodcast Listen and subscribe to Melissa's other podcast, Criminality!! It's the podcast for those who love reality TV, true crime, and want to hear all the juicy stories where the two genres intersect. Subscribe and listen here: www.pod.link/criminality Check-out Moms and Mysteries to find links to our tiktok, youtube, twitter, instagram and more! Sources: Boots, Anna, “The Burning Bed” Recalls the Case That..., The New Yorker, 2020 Francine Hughes Wilson, whose ‘burning bed'..., The Washington Post Grimes, William, Francine Hughes Wilson, 69, ...,, The New York Times, 2017 White, Otis, Mrs. Hughes accused of affair, Lansing State Journal, 1977 McNulty, Faith Battered wife…(Excerpt from The Burning Bed), Edmonton Journal, 1981 Hughes, Mike, Nichols, Sue, The tale behind 'The Burning Bed' .., The San Bernardino County Sun, 1984 Nixon, Mark, Former wife arrested in arson death, Lansing State Journal, 1977 Woman arraigned for ex-husband's death, Lansing State Journal, 1977 Heron, Kim, Abused Dansville woman helped...,, Lansing State Journal, 1977 Leach, Hugh, Mrs. Hughes bound over to trial, Lansing State Journal, 1977 Killer of ex-husband awaits trial, The Columbus Telegram, 1977 White, Otis, Mrs. Hughes' children tell of beatings, threats, Lansing State Journal, 1977 AP, 2d Man in fire death trial, Detroit Free Press White, Otis, Mrs. Hughes called temporarily insane, Lansing State Journal, 1977 Michigan woman's story of abuse forever changed America's…, Michigan Public, 2017 Jones, Jennifer, Chapter 4. Totaled Women: The Battered Wife…, Project Muse, 2003 State v. Kelly, 33 Wn. App. 541 | Casetext, 1982 State v. Kelly - Washington - Case Law , 1985 Weiand v. State, 732 So. 2d 1044 | Casetext, 1999 State v. Bobbitt, 415 So. 2d 724 | Casetext, 1982 State v. Bobbitt, 389 So. 2d 1094 | Casetext, 1980 Carleton, Sue, Battered spouse case is closed, Tampa Bay Times, 1999 Blakemore, Erin, Francine Hughes Killed Her Abusive Husband…, History, 2019 Transcript: The Domestic Violence Case That Turned…, Retro Report, 2020 Fletcher, Kayla, National Domestic Violence…,Stockbridge Community News, 2020 Dozier, Vickki, Abused Michigan wife who inspired 'The Burn…, Detroit Free Press, 2017 White, Otis, Childhood incident caused Francine..., Lansing State Journal, 1977 Maitland, Leslie, Courts easy on rising family violence, The New York Times, 1976 Franks, Mary Anne, Real Men Advance, Real Women Retreat: Stand Your Ground, Battered Women's Syndrome, and Violence as Male Privilege, Miami Law Review, 2014 Flock, Elizabeth, How Far Can Abused Women Go to Protect…,, The New Yorker, 2020 White, Otis, Francine Hughes' case nears jurors, Lansing State Journal, 1977 White, Otis, Jury frees Mrs. Hughs, Lansing State Journal, 1977 Van Der Hayden, Ute, Francine Hughes is no longer a battered wife, News-Press, 1980 Diliberto, Gioia, A violent death, a haunted life, People, 1984 Simmons, Emma, Police: Woman fatally shot boyfriend during argument…, ABC, 2017
A new four-part documentary series on PBS from Retro Report called Citizen Nation follows high school students from throughout the U.S. – including students from Glen Allen High School – as they compete in the nation's premier civics competition, “We the People.” Virginia State Senator Schuyler VanValkenburg (D-16th District) and some of his students from Glen Allen High School, along with others from Maggie L. Walker High School in Richmond, are set to star in the new series, which premieres Tuesday, Oct. 8 at 9 p.m. ET on PBS. The series shadows high school students in eight states during a...Article LinkSupport the show
FRONTLINE Film Audio Tracks are FRONTLINE documentaries, in audio form. Stream or download full-length recordings of film audio on Apple Podcasts or FRONTLINE's website. A firestorm has been raging on many American college campuses. Ignited by the devastating October 2023 Hamas attack on Israel and the catastrophic war in Gaza, the outrage deeply divided American campuses and in some places devolved into hate-filled rhetoric and arrests. FRONTLINE and Retro Report have been following the escalating turmoil since the war began — talking to people on all sides of the divide, investigating how universities have responded, how powerful interests joined the fray, and how the conflict over the conflict ultimately spiraled out of control.From director James Jacoby (Netanyahu, America & the Road to War in Gaza, Amazon Empire, Age of Easy Money) and Retro Report producers Scott Michels and Joseph Hogan, Crisis on Campus examines how the debate over one of the world's most intractable and complex conflicts has gripped American college campuses.
A firestorm has been raging on many American college campuses. Ignited by the devastating October 2023 Hamas attack on Israel and the catastrophic war in Gaza, the outrage deeply divided American campuses and in some places devolved into hate-filled rhetoric and arrests. FRONTLINE and Retro Report have been following the escalating turmoil since the war began — talking to people on all sides of the divide, investigating how universities have responded, how powerful interests joined the fray, and how the conflict over the conflict ultimately spiraled out of control. From director James Jacoby (Netanyahu, America & the Road to War in Gaza, Amazon Empire, Age of Easy Money) and Retro Report producers Scott Michels and Joseph Hogan, Crisis on Campus examines how the debate over one of the world's most intractable and complex conflicts has gripped American college campuses.
The classroom can be a place of learning, wonder, and exploration of challenging ideas. Yet often the most engaging learning environments provide moments for difficult conversations. How can educators manage these tough topics in a way that promotes learning while navigating the challenges of the current education environment?Sphere Education Initiatives and Retro Report are pleased to invite you to this special, one‐day professional development event on January 20 to tackle free speech issues and leave you empowered and equipped to engage in difficult conversations in your classroom. Held in person at the Cato Institute and streamed live online, this event will feature:Screenings of the latest Retro Report documentaries on free speech and artistic expressionConversation with the film's producer and remarks from a leading free speech scholar Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Parental alienation is a disputed psychiatric diagnosis in which one parent is accused of having brainwashed their child against the other parent. In a new documentary, produced in partnership with Insider and Retro Report, a follow-up to her recent series of investigations on the topic, reporter Olivia Gentile exposes how parental alienation has been cited by family courts in custody cases, resulting in children being placed back with their abusers or in ‘family reunification' programs that separate them from their trusted parent. In this conversation, we talk to Olivia about how she started reporting on parental alienation, how she developed her sources for her series of investigations on the topic, and what the response to her investigations has been like. Documentary: https://bit.ly/40v6I4T Parental Alienation series: https://bit.ly/3u4myre “Her Son Said Her Ex Sexually Abused Him. Then She Lost Custody.”: https://bit.ly/462btUS Transcript: https://bit.ly/3soIpJu
On this episode, we're joined by Isadora Varejão, an engagement producer for Retro Report. Retro Report is a non-profit organization that makes documentaries connecting current events to stories from the past.Isadora is Brazilian and got her journalism degree at Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro and a masters degree from Craig Newmark School of Journalism at City University of New York.In the first part of the interview, Isadora explained her journalism path (which included time working in public relations for the Brazilian government) and described the important work she did at Newmark School, creating a bot and a play to educate Latina immigrants about domestic violence.In the second half of the interview Isadora talked both about what Retro Report does and explained what engagement journalism is. She also described her role, specifically that of working with teachers and educators to meet her audiences where they are.Isadora's salute: Jeff Jarvis,Craig Newmark School Thank you as always for listening. Please send us feedback to journalismsalute@gmail.com, visit our website thejournalismsalute.org and Mark's website (MarkSimonmedia.com) or tweet us at @journalismpod. And find us on TikTok at @journalismsalute.
Link from the show:* Connect with Matthew on Twitter* Connect with Ryan on Twitter* Subscribe to the newsletterAbout my guest:Dr. Matthew W. Johnson, Ph.D., is Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Johns Hopkins. He is one of the world's most published scientists on the human effects of psychedelics, and has conducted seminal research in the behavioral economics of drug use, addiction, and risk behavior. Dr. Johnson earned his Ph.D. in experimental psychology at the University of Vermont in 2004.Working with psychedelics for 16 years, Dr. Johnson published psychedelic safety guidelines in 2008, helping to resurrect psychedelic research. As Principle Investigator he developed and published the first research on psychedelic treatment of tobacco addiction in 2014. Dr. Johnson and colleagues published the largest study of psilocybin in treating cancer distress in 2016. His 2018 psilocybin abuse liability review recommended placement in Schedule-IV upon potential medical approval. He is Principle Investigator on funded studies investigating psilocybin in the treatment of opioid dependence and PTSD. Beyond psilocybin, in 2011 Dr. Johnson published the first-ever blinded human research showing psychoactive effects of salvinorin A, the active constituent in Salvia divinorum. He also published in 2017 the first data indicating that MDMA pill testing services may reduce harm, specifically by reducing drug consumption of unknown or undesired adulterants.Dr. Johnson is recognized for his research in behavioral economics, behavioral pharmacology, and behavior analysis. He has conducted seminal and widely cited research applying behavioral economic principles such as delay discounting and demand analysis to decision making within addiction, drug consumption, and risk behavior. This includes research determining delay discounting to be a fundamental behavioral process underlying addiction across drug classes, using economic demand analysis to determine the roles of nicotine and nonpharmacological factors in the abuse liability tobacco and other nicotine products, and using delay discounting, probability discounting, and demand analysis to understand sexual risk including condom non-use in casual sex situations. He conducted the first research administering cocaine to humans in determining that cocaine increases sexual desire and affects sexual decision making. He has conducted similar research administering methamphetamine and alcohol, examining effects on sexual decision making. He has published studies on drugs across nearly all psychoactive classes, including studies of cocaine, methamphetamine, tobacco/nicotine, alcohol, opioids, cannabis, benzodiazepines, psilocybin, dextromethorphan, salvinorin A, GHB, caffeine, and cathinone analogs compounds (so-called “bath salts”).Dr. Johnson was 2019 President of the Psychopharmacology and Substance Abuse Division of the American Psychological Association, and is current President of the International Society for Research on Psychedelics, an organization he founded with colleagues. He has received continuous NIH funding as Principal Investigator since 2009. He has reviewed for >75 journals and has served as guest editor on two special issues on psychedelics. Dr. Johnson has reviewed grants for NIH, NSF, the US Military, and multiple governments outside of the US. He is a standing member of the Addictions Risks and Mechanisms (ARM) NIH study section. He has provided invited presentations in 13 nations.Dr. Johnson has been interviewed widely by media about psychedelics and other drugs. These have included interviews by the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Wall Street Journal, the Globe and Mail, the Daily Mail, USA Today, the Chicago Tribune, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Denver Post, the Baltimore Sun, CNN, CBS News, NBC News, the Atlantic, Newsweek, Vanity Fair, Marie Claire, Vogue, Whole Living, the Washingtonian, Scientific American, Nature, Vice, Insider, Inverse, Healthline, and Psychology Today. Dr. Johnson has appeared for interviews on numerous television and radio shows including 60 Minutes, CNN's Wolf Blitzer Situation Room, Fox Business News' Kennedy, the Dr. Oz Show, PBS' Retro Report, Labyrint (television show in the Netherlands), Spectrum News NY1, the BBC World Service, NPR's Morning Edition, NPR's Kojo Nnamdi Show, New Zealand Radio, and Newstalk Radio Ireland. Dr. Johnson's panel discussion with Tim Ferriss at the Milken Institute Global Conference was broadcast on the Tim Ferriss Podcast. Dr. Johnson and his research were featured in an episode of Breakthrough on the National Geographic Channel, produced by Ron Howard, and in Michael Pollan's best-selling book, How to Change Your Mind: What the New Science of Psychedelics Teaches Us About Consciousness, Dying, Addiction, Depression, and Transcendence. Get full access to Dispatches from the War Room at dispatchesfromthewarroom.substack.com/subscribe
Join Sphere Education Initiatives in advance of the election for a professional development webinar on Election Reform and the Midterm Election. Held via Zoom on November 1st from 7:30 – 9:00 pm eastern, we'll hear from a panel of experts on the Electoral Count Act, a major legislative initiative in Congress that aims to modernize federal law around presidential elections, particularly in response to the events of January 6th.Joining Sphere will be Andy Craig, staff writer for the Cato Institute, Kevin Kosar, senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, and Genevieve Nadeau, counsel for Protect Democracy. These experts will consider some of the events of January 6th and the need for Congressional action, the proposed legislation, and some of the broader issues around election reform. In addition to our panel conversation, David Olson of Retro Report will offer a professional development workshop on their Midterm Elections Collection, a suite of videos and classroom resources for teaching about Midterm Elections in your classroom. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
As COVID-19 swept the country in 2020, millions of people in the U.S. were out of work and at risk of being evicted. An unprecedented federal ban on evictions and billions of dollars in rental assistance helped keep people in their homes — but some people were still evicted. In FRONTLINE and Retro Report's documentary “Facing Eviction,” director Bonnie Bertram and a team of filmmakers from across the country examined why — finding that the effectiveness of pandemic housing protections depended almost entirely on how local officials enforced them. Bertram joined FRONTLINE editor-in-chief and executive producer Raney Aronson-Rath for a conversation about where tenant protections stand now, the process of making “Facing Eviction” and filming with people on the brink of losing their housing. “We started to chronicle these people's lives and, as the months unfolded, saw the desperation and just the precariousness of their situation and this dreaded knock on the door that impacts all parts of their life,” Bertram told Aronson-Rath. Facing Eviction is now streaming on FRONTLINE's website, the PBS Video App, and FRONTLINE's Youtube channel.
Millions have fled Ukraine in the six months since Russia's invasion started. Among them, hundreds of elderly Holocaust survivors who are refugees once again in their lives. As Nick Schifrin discovered, some are finding refuge in a most unlikely place. This story is in partnership with Retro Report and the Pulitzer Center. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
Millions have fled Ukraine in the six months since Russia's invasion started. Among them, hundreds of elderly Holocaust survivors who are refugees once again in their lives. As Nick Schifrin discovered, some are finding refuge in a most unlikely place. This story is in partnership with Retro Report and the Pulitzer Center. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
In this episode, Celeste provides practical advice and insight on how to address uncomfortable topics such as race to facilitate better conversations. She also shares her tips to avoid burnout so we can take better care of our wellbeing. BACKGROUND: Celeste Headlee is an American radio journalist, author, public speaker, and co-host of the weekly series Retro Report on PBS. In her 20-year career in Public Radio, Celeste has served as the host of the Georgia Public Broadcasting program "On Second Thought", and co-host of the national morning news show The Takeaway. Before 2009, she was the Midwest Correspondent for NPR's Day to Day and the host of a weekly show on Detroit Public Radio. IN THIS EPISODE, WE TALK ABOUT: How to have the most difficult conversations The Best Ways To Set Boundaries and Avoid Burnout Tips For Youth Starting Their Professional Journey The Motivation behind Celeste's Book "Do Nothing: How To Break Away From Overworking” RESOURCES: Show Notes: bit.ly/CelesteHeadlee1 Connect with Celeste on Twitter: twitter.com/CelesteHeadlee Connect with Celeste on IG: instagram.com/celesteheadlee Connect with Cielo on IG: instagram.com/cielojsolis Check out Cielo's website: maricielosolis.com SERVICES: Are you an entrepreneur ready to take your brand to the next level? Want to increase your digital presence online so you can skyrocket your number of clients & sales? We can help YOU! Visit BLENDtw Media to learn more about our digital marketing services and send us an email to team@blendtw.com to BOOK a F-R-E-E consultation TODAY. For more resources to help you live your BEST life, join our community on: Facebook Instagram Find more inspiring stories & higher wisdom at myvoiceourstory.com
Millions of renters could face evictions now that rental relief programs and bans on evictions have expired, or will soon. Those government programs targeted people who lost income during the pandemic, but many Californians have yet to recover financially and owe thousands in back rent. Even under existing programs, more than 135,000 households in California, nearly a third of the total, had their rent relief applications rejected, according to CalMatters. All of that along with rents creeping back up to pre-pandemic levels, could make way for a wave of new evictions. We'll talk about vulnerable tenants and what local, state and federal agencies could do to help. Guests: Erin Baldassari, housing affordability reporter, KQED; co-host, "SOLD OUT: Rethinking Housing in America" podcast Manuela Tobias, housing reporter, CalMatters Bonnie Bertram, producer and writer, Retro Report; partnered with Frontline, documentary "Facing Eviction" debuts on July 26.
A Retro Report and FRONTLINE investigation looks at the eviction crisis in America. We talk with documentary filmmaker Bonnie Bertram about FACING EVICTION.
A new "Frontline" documentary taking a look at the affordable housing crisis accentuated by the pandemic premieres tonight. Retro Report's writer/producer Bonnie Bertram tells the Morning Show with Nikki Medoro how it changed the landlord-tenant relationship, and how the government programs were effective in helping those in need.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A new "Frontline" documentary taking a look at the affordable housing crisis accentuated by the pandemic premieres tonight. Retro Report's writer/producer Bonnie Bertram tells the Morning Show with Nikki Medoro how it changed the landlord-tenant relationship, and how the government programs were effective in helping those in need.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Who killed Wharlest Jackson Sr.? In investigating the unsolved 1967 murder of a local NAACP leader, "American Reckoning" reveals an untold story of the civil rights movement and Black resistance. The feature-length documentary from FRONTLINE and Retro Report, with support from Chasing the Dream, draws on rarely seen footage filmed by Ed Pincus and David Neuman more than 50 years ago in Natchez, Mississippi, and made available through the Amistad Research Center. In following the Jackson family's search for answers, "American Reckoning" also taps into the groundbreaking reporting of journalist Stanley Nelson, who investigated allegations of the involvement of a Ku Klux Klan offshoot, known as the Silver Dollar Group. From acclaimed directors, producers and journalists Brad Lichtenstein ("When Claude Got Shot," "As Goes Janesville") and Yoruba Richen ("The Killing of Breonna Taylor," "The Sit In: Harry Belafonte Hosts the Tonight Show"), "American Reckoning" is the latest component of FRONTLINE's multiplatform initiative "Un(re)solved," telling the stories of more than 150 victims of civil rights era killings for whom there has been no justice.
As human beings, communication is our superpower. Having a conversation can lead to stress relief, the absorption of new information, and personal connection. Celeste Headlee, author, radio journalist, public speaker, and co-host of the weekly series Retro Report on PBS, joins this episode to share how to stop hiding behind emails, text messages, data, and statistics and start having more impactful conversations with one another. Celeste explains how your brain cannot do two impactful things at once, the two ways conversations can be negative and why we should stop pontification during our interactions. She also shares how living your best life is the most powerful way to influence someone else, why follow-up questions are powerful and an important communication tactic. Later in the episode, Celeste reveals why one of the worst things you can say is “I know how you feel,” and how you can work on improving your listening skills. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
American Reckoning, a feature-length documentary from FRONTLINE and Retro Report, traces the life and death of Wharlest Jackson Sr., a 'foot soldier' of the civil rights movement in the 1960s. The film explores the history of Black resistance in his hometown, Natchez, Mississippi, as well as his family's decades-long struggle for justice. Host Raney Aronson-Rath sits down with Dawn Porter, her fellow executive producer on both the American Reckoning documentary and FRONTLINE's Un(re)solved initiative, as well as American Reckoning directors Brad Lichtenstein and Yoruba Richen. Un(re)solved is a multiplatform investigation that tells the stories of lives cut short and examines a federal effort to grapple with America's legacy of racist killings through the Emmett Till Unsolved Civil Rights Crime Act. Along with the documentary American Reckoning, Un(re)solved comprises a web-based interactive experience, a serialized podcast and an augmented-reality installation. You can watch American Reckoning and experience the rest of Un(re)solved here: https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/unresolved/ Want to be notified every time a new podcast episode drops? Sign up for The FRONTLINE Dispatch newsletter: https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/dispatch-newsletter-subscription/
What makes current events so important? Where does news intersect with history? How do we find resources to support important civic conversations? What should parents understand about the importance of social studies and civic education, current events, or media literacy? In this episode, we sat down with David Olson, the Director of Education at Retro Report, a non-profit media company dedicated to connecting history to today's news. Learn more about this wonderful resource and what David has to say about social studies, current events, and media literacy!“What's On Your Mind?” Are you saddled with a troubling situation? Curious to hear what we think about a certain issue? Send us your questions! Your query may end up on the Let's K12 Better podcast in our community letters section. Send your celebrations and questions to this form or email us: LetsK12Better@gmail.com! We mentioned the following resources:Frontline PBS Film - American Reckoning Classroom materials via Retro Report Education pageSign up for the free webinar “Tools for Teaching Immigration and Migration” scheduled for Wednesday, April 13th from 7 - 8 PM ET. Register here: bit.ly/TeachingImmigrationConnect on Social Media:David Olson on Twitter (@davidjohnolson)Retro Report on Twitter (@RetroReport)Subscribe to our monthly newsletter: https://bit.ly/LetsK12BetterMail!*Love our podcast? Rate. Review. Share!Music written and produced by Garvey Mortley.The Let's K12Better podcast is written and produced by Amber Coleman-Mortley, Garvey Mortley, Naima Mortley, and Sofia Mortley.Support the show (https://cash.app/$Fossilizedresin)
Season 3, Episode 2 of the Race To Speak Up Podcast with Masud Ashley Olufani is an Atlanta based actor, mixed media artist, and writer. He was the co-host of the PBS investigative journalism show Retro Report, and currently is the co-host of the podcast series called Undaunted. We talked about his activism through art and using it as a means of educating others about past historical events, cross cultural conversations about racism, and also talked about the oneness of the human family through the Bahai Faith. _ Don't forget to subscribe to the podcasts' Youtube Channel and follow on social media so that you won't miss episodes and updates. https://youtu.be/uALRf2ddEvM The Race To Speak Up Podcast Series is also available on Spotify and all of the other podcast platforms are linked below. And make sure to share with others! _ Masud Olufani Website! https://www.masud-olufani.com/ _ Follow the Race To Speak Up Podcast Series Social Medias! Website: https://www.racetospeakup.com/ Youtube Channel: @The Race To Speak Up Podcast (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMs7b_gwc6ghUkn-gbHLGTQ) Instagram: @racetospeakup (https://www.instagram.com/racetospeakup/) Twitter: @racetospeakup (https://twitter.com/racetospeakup) Facebook: @racetospeakup (https://www.facebook.com/race.to.speak.up.1) Facebook Group: Humanity Rising's Race To Speak Up Podcast (https://www.facebook.com/groups/402275578130780/about) Spotify: @ The Race To Speak Up Podcast (https://open.spotify.com/show/66Az1PJY9GZeGxrfDJl0tZ) Anchor: @The Race To Speak Up Podcast (https://anchor.fm/racetospeakuppodcast) Linktree: https://linktr.ee/RaceToSpeakUp www.humanityrising.org _ Hi, I'm Devin and welcome to Humanity Rising's Race To Speak Up Podcast Series! It's where we have open and engaging conversations about bullying prevention, how to be upstanders, and how we are making a positive difference in our communities. For me, how I “Race To Speak Up” is by educating others about bullying prevention through my anti-bullying organization, #RaceToSpeakUp. Join me on this journey as we spread our positive messages and how we are working towards a more empathetic world! The only question for you now is, How Do You Race To Speak Up? The views expressed in this podcast are representative of the personal opinions/views of the guest and host. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/racetospeakuppodcast/message
Sunni and Lisa are joined by Celeste Headlee who talks about her latest book, Speaking of Race: Why Everybody Needs to Talk About Racism - and How to Do It. Celeste Headlee is an award-winning journalist who has appeared on NPR, PBS World, PRI, CNN, BBC and other international networks. She was formerly a host at National Public Radio, anchoring shows including Tell Me More, Talk of the Nation, All Things Considered and Weekend Edition. For many years, Celeste has been a mentor and managing editor for NPR's Next Generation Radio Project, training young reporters and editors in broadcasting.Celeste is co-host to the Scene on Radio podcast—MEN with the podcast's producer, Duke University's CDS audio director, John Biewen. John describes the season: “Co-host Celeste Headlee and I will take a similar approach to the Seeing White series, which explored the history and meaning of whiteness. With MEN, we'll be asking questions like, What's up with this male-dominated world? Is male supremacy inevitable? How did we get sexism/patriarchy/misogyny, and what can we do about it?”Celeste will co-host new episodes of The Retro Report with Masud Olufani. Retro Report is a non-profit news organization that produces mini documentaries looking at today's news stories through the lens of history and context.Until February, 2017 Celeste was the Executive Producer and host of the daily talk show called “On Second Thought” for Georgia Public Broadcasting in Atlanta. You can listen live to On Second Thought, weekdays from 9 – 10 a.m. EST on the GPB News website. Click here for archives from past shows.In 2014, Celeste narrated the documentary “Packard: The Last Shift” for the Detroit Free Press. She has won numerous awards for reporting from the Associated Press and SPJ. She was selected twice to be a Getty/Annenberg Journalism Fellow and was selected as a fellow with the Institute for Journalism and Natural Resources. She was also among the first fellows in Reporting on Native Stories for National Native News.Until September of 2012, Celeste was the co-host of the national morning news show, The Takeaway, from PRI and WNYC and anchored presidential coverage in 2012 for PBS World Channel.BOOK DESCRIPTION - Speaking of Race: Why Everybody Needs to Talk About Racism - and How to Do It. In this urgently needed guide, the PBS host, award-winning journalist, and author of We Need to Talk teaches us how to have productive conversations about race, offering insights, advice, and support.A self-described “light-skinned Black Jew”, Celeste Headlee has been forced to speak about race - including having to defend or define her own - since childhood. In her career as a journalist for public media, she's made it a priority to talk about race proactively. She's discovered, however, that those exchanges have rarely been productive. While many people say they want to talk about race, the reality is, they want to talk about race with people who agree with them. The subject makes us uncomfortable; it's often not considered polite or appropriate. To avoid these painful discussions, we stay in our bubbles, reinforcing our own sense of righteousness as well as our division.Yet we gain nothing by not engaging with those we disagree with; empathy does not develop in a vacuum and racism won't just fade away. If we are to effect meaningful change as a society, Headlee argues, we have to be able to talk about wha
Join VCSS Vice President and host, Sam Futrell, as she interviews David Olson, the Director of Education for Retro Report. Prior to joining Retro Report, David was an award-winning teacher of U.S. History, A.P. U.S. Government and Politics and Criminal Justice at a public high school in Madison, Wisc. His expertise and passion for teaching social studies shine through on this episode as he shares what Retro Report does and how to incorporate this fantastic resource into your social studies classroom. David and Sam also discuss how to reinforce the relevance of historical content with current events along with strategies for how to get students interested in learning about things happening in their world right now. Retro Report Gerrymandering Film & Lesson Plans 9/11 Film & Lesson Plans Apply to Join the Teacher Advisory Teams! New American History Electing the House Interactive Map VCSS Follow Sam & David on Twitter: @davidjohnolson @sam_futrell1
Should we tell the truth? Everybody hates to be lied to. When that happens, we feel anger and dissapointment. There is a sense of betrayal, a loss of trust, and enemies are created. But, there is another kind of hate we feel when somebody tells us the truth, especially when it is a truth that we don't want to hear. It's that feeling we get when a teacher calls us out for not trying our best, or when a parent catches us breaking the rules. In those cases, we don't want to hear the truth and we take our anger out on the messenger. Join Steve and Dan Fouts for a conversation with David Olson, Director of Education at Retro Report, about honesty using the Teach Different 3-Step conversation method. Make sure you go to teachdifferent.com to learn more, and check out our library of conversation plans, where we've compiled dozens of quotes, each with their own claim, counterclaim, and essential question. Image source: Look and Learn | Rijksmuseum
Celeste Headlee is a journalist, speaker, and co-host of Retro Report, a weekly series on PBS. She's also the author of several books including We Need to Talk and Do Nothing. Her TED Talk, "10 ways to have a better conversation," is one of the most viewed talks of all time. She's a well-respected expert in communication and how to hold uncomfortable conversations.Some of the things she talks about in this episode are how to hold difficult conversations with people, how to become better at making conversation, and how to deliver bad news effectively.
Dick Tofel, was the founding general manager (and first employee) of ProPublica from 2007-2012, and has been its president since 2013. He has responsibility for all of ProPublica's non-journalism operations, including communications, legal, development, finance and budgeting, and human resources. During the period of Tofel's business leadership, ProPublica has won six Pulitzer Prizes, seven National Magazine Awards, five Peabody Awards, three Emmy Awards and nine George Polk Awards, among other honors. Also during this time, ProPublica has grown from an initial staff of just over 20 to more than 160, and raised more than $220 million from other than its founding funders. Tofel was formerly the assistant publisher of The Wall Street Journal, with responsibility for its international editions and U.S. special editions, and, earlier, an assistant managing editor of the paper, vice president, corporate communications for Dow Jones & Company, and an assistant general counsel of Dow Jones. Just prior to ProPublica, he served as vice president, general counsel and secretary of the Rockefeller Foundation, and earlier as president and chief operating officer of the International Freedom Center, a museum and cultural center that was planned for the World Trade Center site. He serves on the board/advisory board of CalMatters, The City, the Center for Media Engagement at the University of Texas, Austin, Outlier Media, Retro Report, the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School and the Center for Media and Democracy in Israel. He is the author of “Not Shutting Up: A Year of Reflections on Journalism” (2020); “‘A Federal Offense of the Highest Order': The True Story of How the Joint Chiefs Spied on Nixon, And How He Covered It Up” (2019); “Speaking Truth in Power: Lessons for Our Sorry Politics from Our Inspiring History” (2018); “Home Run Revolution: Babe Ruth in His Time, 1919-1920” (2015); “Non-Profit Journalism: Issues Around Impact” (2013); “Why American Newspapers Gave Away the Future” (2012); “Eight Weeks in Washington, 1861: Abraham Lincoln and the Hazards of Transition” (2011); “Restless Genius: Barney Kilgore, The Wall Street Journal, and the Invention of Modern Journalism” (2009); “Sounding the Trumpet: The Making of John F. Kennedy's Inaugural Address” (2005); “Vanishing Point: The Disappearance of Judge Crater, and the New York He Left Behind” (2004); and “A Legend in the Making: The New York Yankees in 1939” (2002). Tofel is a graduate of Harvard College, Harvard Law School and the Harvard Kennedy School (masters in public policy). Don't forget to check out my book that inspired this podcast series, The Caring Economy: How to Win With Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/toby-usnik/support
On the Season 6 Premier of Heat Check LIVE, a new season of Superstar Smackdown begins when The Rock battles Good Ole' Stone Cold Steve Austin! Plus, Retro Report looks at Wrestlemania X-Seven and the boys discuss the Twitter feud between Soulja Boy and Randy Orton! All of this and more on a jam packed episode of the Heat Check!
The federal ban on evictions, extended by President Biden through March, is a much-needed, yet only temporary pause on a looming crisis impacting hundreds of thousands of American families. Retro Report, a non-profit news organization, reports from Richmond, VA, which has one of the highest eviction rates in the nation, on how Confederate history and race are the biggest factors in determining which residents are at a higher risk of being evicted. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
Stand Up is a daily podcast. I book,host,edit, post and promote new episodes with brilliant guests every day. I have one sponsor which is an awesome nonprofit GiveWell.org/StandUp Please subscribe now for as little as 5$ and gain access to a community of over 820 awesome, curious, kind, funny, brilliant, generous soul Jeff Jarvis is the author of What Would Google Do? and Public Parts: How Sharing in the Digital Age Improves the Way we Work and Live. He has blogged at Buzzmachine.com about media, technology, and life's irritations since 2001. Jarvis directs the Tow-Knight Center for Entrepreneurial Journalism at the City University of New York Graduate School of Journalism. He writes occasionally for the Guardian and HuffingtonPost. In prior lives, Jarvis was creator and founding editor of Entertainment Weekly; president and creative director of Advance.net (online arm of Advance Publications); Sunday editor and associate publisher of the New York Daily News; a columnist on the San Francisco Examiner. Jeff's list experts https://twitter.com/i/lists/1237834151694303234 https://buzzmachine.com/ Celeste Headlee is an award-winning journalist, professional speaker and best-selling author of We Need To Talk: How To Have Conversations That Matter. She is co-host of the new weekly series Retro Report on PBS and season three of the Scene on Radio podcast – MEN. Celeste serves as an advisory board member for Procon.org and The Listen First Project. Her TEDx Talk sharing 10 ways to have a better conversation has over 30 million total views to date. Her most recent book, Do Nothing: How To Break Away From Overworking, Overdoing, and Underliving (March 10, 2020), helps us break free of our unhealthy devotion to efficiency, and shows us how to reclaim our time and humanity with a little more leisure. In her 20-year career in public radio, Celeste has been the Executive Producer of On Second Thought at Georgia Public Radio, and anchored programs including Tell Me More, Talk of the Nation, All Things Considered, and Weekend Edition. She also served as co-host of the national morning news show, The Takeaway, from PRI and WNYC, and anchored presidential coverage in 2012 for PBS World Channel. Celeste’s work and insights have been featured on TODAY, Psychology Today, Inc., NPR, Time, Essence, Elle, BuzzFeed, Salon, Parade, and many more. She has presented to over 100 companies, conferences and universities including Apple, Google, United Airlines, Duke University, Chobani and ESPN, and received the 2019 Media Changemaker Award. Celeste lives in Washington, D.C. Please consider a paid subscription to this daily podcast. Everyday I will interview expert guests,usually 2 or more on a wide range of issues. I will continue to be transparent about my life, issues and vulnerabilities in hopes we can relate, connect and grow together. If you want to add something to the show email me StandUpwithPete@gmail.com Join the Stand Up Community Stand Up is also brought to you this month by GiveWell.org GiveWell is a nonprofit dedicated to finding outstanding giving opportunities and publishing the full details of our analysis to help donors decide where to give. GiveWell.org/Standup Pete on Twitter Pete On Instagram Pete Personal FB page Stand Up with Pete FB page
The nonprofit news organization Retro Report is working on a documentary project looking at the high eviction rates of three cities in the U.S., including Fresno. According to Retro Report Field Producer Daniel Casarez, the roots of Fresno’s eviction rates go all the way back to the Spanish Flu pandemic of 1918 and the discriminatory practice of redlining. That’s when people of color are denied access to housing and loans within specific neighborhoods. Valley Edition Host Kathleen Schock spoke with Casarez about the project.
For episode homepage, resources, free download and links, visit: https://kristenmanieri.com/episode97/ Description We are a culture of workers, often preferring to work longer hours, work in off-hours, waive vacation time and bring work home instead of leaning into leisure. How did we become so uncomfortable with idleness and so obsessed with productivity? Celeste Headlee, author of Do Nothing: How to Break Away from Overworking, Overdoing, and Underliving, explains in her book that we no longer simply like or love our work; we are fixated with it. Through her research and reexamining of long-held assumptions, Headlee shares that overwork is just a bad habit, and one that can be reversed and rewired so that we can return to a way of life that allows us to thrive. Guest Bio Award-winning journalist, professional speaker and author of We Need To Talk: How To Have Conversations That Matter, Celeste Headlee released her latest book, Do Nothing: How to Break Away from Overworking, Overdoing, and Underliving, in March 2020. A timely, actionable and illuminating manifesto, Do Nothing, reveals that despite our constant search for new ways to “hack” our bodies and minds for peak performance, human being are working more - not less, living harder - not smarter, and becoming more lonely and anxious. Celeste is a regular guest host on NRP and American Public Media, and co-host of the new series Retro Report on PBS. Celeste’s TEDx Talk sharing 10 ways to have a better conversation has over 23 million total views to date and she serves as an advisory board member for ProCon.org and The Listen First Project. Mentioned in this Episode Guest’s website: https://celesteheadlee.com/ Do Nothing: How to Break Away from Overworking, Overdoing, and Underliving: https://www.amazon.com/Do-Nothing-Overworking-Overdoing-Underliving/dp/1984824732 Connect with the 60 Mindful Minutes podcast Web: https://kristenmanieri.com Email: Kristen@kristenmanieri.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/60MindfulMinutes Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kristenmanieri_/ Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/kristenmanieri/
Award-winning journalist, professional speaker and author of We Need To Talk: How To Have Conversations That Matter, Celeste Headlee, released her latest book, Do Nothing: How to Break Away from Overworking, Overdoing, and Underliving, in March 2020. A timely, actionable and illuminating manifesto, Do Nothing, reveals that despite our constant search for new ways to “hack” our bodies and minds for peak performance, human being are working more - not less, living harder - not smarter, and becoming more lonely and anxious. Celeste shines a light on a new path ahead with a call to institute a global shift in our thinking so we can stop sabotaging our well-being, put work aside and starting living instead of doing. She shares the keys to embracing what makes us human: our creativity, our social connections (Instagram DOESN’T count), our ability for reflective though, and our capacity for joy, and unveils strategies that allow us to regain control over our lives and break our addiction to false efficiency. Celeste is a globally-recognized journalist and expert in conversation and communication. She’s a regular guest host on NRP and American Public Media, and co-host of the new series Retro Report on PBS. Celeste’s TEDx Talk sharing 10 ways to have a better conversation has over 23 million total views to date and she serves as an advisory board member for ProCon.org and The Listen First Project. She received the 2019 Media Changemaker Award. WE NEED TO TALK. They are, perhaps, the most dreaded four words in the English language. But in her timely and practical book, WE NEED TO TALK: How to Have Conversations That Matter (Harperwave), journalist and public radio host Celeste Headlee makes the case that they are urgently needed. Today most of us communicate from behind electronic screens, and studies show that Americans feel less connected and more divided than ever before. The blame for some of this disconnect can be attributed to our political landscape, but the erosion of our conversational skills as a society lies with us as individuals. And the only way forward, says Headlee, is to start talking to each other. In We Need to Talk, she outlines the strategies that have made her a better conversationalist and offers actionable steps anyone can take to improve their communication skills.
In this podcast Amadon DellErba interviews Masud Olufani, a multidisciplinary artist, activist, & writer, based in Atlanta, Georgia. He is a follower of the Bahá'í faith; the host of “America's Most Challenging Issue” a podcast about racism in America; and the co-host of “Retro Report” a PBS prime time investigative news show that looks at news events through the lens of history. Together Amadon and Masud explore art, religion, spirituality, and the parallels between the Baha'i faith and Divine Administration. They discuss the blight of slavery and racism in American, and how it differs subtly in the lives of indigenous and First Nations peoples. A refreshing conversation between two truth seekers who have found a kindred spirit in each other. (GRDT 23) You can learn more about Masud Olufani at his website: https://www.masud-olufani.com/ Listen to “America's Most Challenging Issue” podcast here: https://bahaiteachings.org/podcasts/americas-most-challenging-issue/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/getrealordietrying/message
It’s crazy to me how many people haven’t heard of the Tylenol Murders! It changed the way we package our everyday household items! Call/text my google voice number call/text 805-664-1828 and hear yourself on a podcast episode! RETRO REPORT https://youtu.be/l1R0EnzGB3I NEWS ACTIVE 3 https://youtu.be/zjIyvB-2sHc ************************** Twitter/IG: @itsprosilly Email me: itsprofessionallysilly@gmail.com Be sure to SUBSCRIBE/FAVORITE/REVIEW❤️❤️❤️ CALL ME 805-664-1828 SEND ME FAN MAIL Amber "Smiles" Jones PO Box 29892 Los Angeles, CA 90029 ~GET A PERSONALIZED SHOUTOUT TODAY ON CAMEO
HOW DID I MISS THIS?: "Fantastic corns and mythical cheeses." (1982). In celebration of his recently regenerated hit points, Bob and Tim are watching one of Tom Hanks’s earliest roles. But what should be an adventure film just like Willow winds up a Regan-era damnation of fantasy world role-playing. Best to Charisma check yourself before you Charisma wreck yourself as they drag into the dungeon of 80s television programming. 00:00:00 PRE-SHOW PRATTLE - segue of artifice00:01:00 THE MECHANICS OF OPENING - and exactly what an opposite is00:07:45 CAMPAIGN SEASONING - and a Bob’s tale of old00:12:35 DECEMBER 28TH, 1982 - fellowship of the ding-a-lings00:22:15 T-S-ARRGH - is this how college, kids and role-playing games work?00:28:52 I BEG YOUR PARDUE - Tom Hanks is loosing it00:36:22 PANIC! AT THE DUNGEON - (Part Of) The Strange Tale Of James Dallas Egbert III00:41:58 HALL AND ELEVATORS - and Bob comes full circle00:49:42 DENOUNCEMENT AND DRAGONS - (The Rest Of) The Strange Tale Of James Dallas Egbert III00:59:32 CLOSINGS - contacts, plugs and no catch phrase01:02:49 BONUS BEHIND THE SCENES AUDIO - mic distance Campaign hither, come feast of Sol, tis thy bard’s melodic tongue which spouts forth thee verily majestic PROMO FOR MAZES AND MONSTERS. Kneel before the graven image of J.J.s too many hats as it accompanies RETRO JUNKIE’S REVIEW OF MAZES AND MONSTERS.Delve a little further into the unfortunate reality that was twisted into this film’s misguided intent with SUMMER OF SLEAZE: THE EXPLOITATION OF JAMES DALLAS EGBERT III BY GRADY HENDRIX first posted on TOR.com. Hear some varying opinions on the DUNGEONS AND DRAGON’S SATANIC PANIC in this 2016 RETRO REPORT from the NEWY YOK TIMES. And finally, parry your mother’s T-Square and strap on that fanny-pack of holding, you’re about to descend into the feature length , TV movie campaign of MAZES & MONSTERS STREAMING FREE ON YOUTUBE. The use of audio and video clips linked from YOUTUBE are for educational purposes and without the expressed permission of their legal holding companies. All rights remain with with their original distributor. This episode of 20TH CENTURY POP! was recorded by CAST, an online audio platform that lets you create and record a multi-guest podcast straight from your web-browser. It was then mastered by AUPHONIC, a web-based post-production service that makes it sound like Bob and Tim are worth listening to. Check out both sights for trial and subscription information.MUSIC FEATURED IN TODAY’S EPISODE:“Super Poupi” (opening theme) and "Poupi Great Adventures: The Arcade Game" (closing theme) performed by Komiku from the 2018 album POUPI'S INCREDIBLE ADVENTURES available at Freemusicarchives.org. Cleared for public domain use through Creative Commons under a CCO 1.0 Universal License.. Subscribe to 20TH CENTURY POP! on APPLE PODCASTS, STITCHER and ANDROID or stream it at www.20popcast.com.Like, share and reminisce with 20TH CENTURY POP! on FACEBOOKFollow whats not 20th Century Fox with 20TH CENTURY POP! @20popcast on TWITTER.And crop a square snapshot with 20TH CENTURY POP @20popcast on INSTAGRAM.Contact the show with any questions, suggestions or possible topics at 20popcast@gmail.com or with #20popcast on Twitter.Follow ROBERT CANNING @rhcanning on TWITTER. Read his web-comic BOB HAS ISSUES on Twitter @Bobissues. Follow TIM BLEVINS @subcultist on TWITTER and as @subcultist on INSTAGRAM. 20TH CENTURY POP! will return next week to hopefully shed some light on what happened to the new podcast that, last week, Tim said would be debuting this week (which will be last week by next week’s standards).This podcast is powered by Pinecast.
Do Nothing! In this interview, I speak with Celeste Headlee about efficiency including topics taken from her most recent book Do Nothing: How to Break Away from Overworking, Overdoing, and Underliving. In efforts to scratch her own itch, Celeste began to wonder why despite lots of hard work in efforts to create more happiness was it actually doing the reverse - making us more miserable. Do Nothing isn't' just about doing nothing but rather doing more of what matters. Taking our time back to start living a little more, a little better. This is a very cool and timely conversation and I was left inspired. Guest bio. Celeste Headlee is an award-winning journalist, professional speaker and best-selling author of We Need To Talk: How To Have Conversations That Matter. She is co-host of the new weekly series Retro Report on PBS and season three of the Scene on Radio podcast – MEN. Celeste serves as an advisory board member for Procon.org and The Listen First Project. Her TEDx Talk sharing 10 ways to have a better conversation has over 30 million total views to date. Her most recent book, Do Nothing: How To Break Away From Overworking, Overdoing, and Underliving (March 10, 2020), helps us break free of our unhealthy devotion to efficiency, and shows us how to reclaim our time and humanity with a little more leisure.
We work feverishly to make ourselves happy. So why are we so miserable? Award-winning journalist Celeste Headlee illuminates a new path ahead, seeking to institute a global shift in our thinking so we can stop sabotaging our well-being, put work aside, and start living instead of doing. Celeste Headlee is an award-winning journalist, professional speaker and author of Heard Mentality and We Need to Talk: How to Have Conversations That Matter. In her 20-year career in public radio, she has been the Executive Producer of On Second Thought at Georgia Public Radio and anchored programs including Tell Me More, Talk of the Nation, All Things Considered, and Weekend Edition. In addition, Celeste serves as an advisory board member for Procon.org and The Listen First Project and is the co-host for season three of the Scene on Radio podcast MEN and the upcoming series Retro Report on PBS. Celeste is the recipient of the 2019 Media Changemaker Award and her newest book, Do Nothing: How to Break Away from Overworking, Overdoing, and Underliving, released in March 2020. Visit www.celesteheadlee.com. Get the new Your Inner World – Guided Meditations by Sister Jenna. Visit www.americameditating.org. Download our free Pause for Peace App for Apple or Android.
S10E3: Dixmoor 5 So their theory is that a wandering necrophiliac comes across the body and defiles it? Laura Nirider and Steve Drizin tell the story of how five Chicago teens were wrongly convicted of the rape and murder of their classmate - and how prosecutors tried to explain away the DNA that proved them innocent. This case happened during the early 1990s, when the media was saturated with misleading stories about youth of color committing violent crimes in groups. This "superpredator" narrative drove the wrongful prosecution of the so-called Central Park Five “wolfpack” -- but it didn’t stop there. A portion of this podcast series’ proceeds will be donated to the Center on Wrongful Convictions, which has exonerated more than forty innocent people. To donate, learn more, or get involved, go to https://www.centeronwrongfulconvictions.org/ Wrongful Conviction: False Confessions is a production of Lava for Good™ Podcasts in association with Signal Co No1 and PRX. Learn more and get involved at https://www.wrongfulconvictionpodcast.com This episode includes story line about and clips from Retro Report, The Superpredator Scare.
Masud Olufani, Atlanta based multi-disciplinary actor and artist, joins co-hosts Carol Morgan and Todd Schnick on this Around Atlanta segment of Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio to discuss his career and his new exhibition at Hammonds House. Visual arts was something Olufani has been engaged with since he was four years old and has been developing ever since. When Olufani got to high school, he mainly acted for fun and as a way to pass the time. This hobby eventually turned into a career and a passion. During his time in grad school at the Savannah College of Art and Design, Olufani accepted modeling jobs on the side to earn extra money. He also acted in local plays. One of his first was an Atlanta play called “The Meeting.” This local production was about a fictitious meeting between Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X. The play received good reviews, and from there, Masud Olufani obtained an agent. He then stumbled through various auditions before landing his first role in Devious Maids. Things took off from there for this Atlanta artist. “Stage is my first love,” commented Olufani when asked about his favorite form of art. “It's the immediate response you get from the audience. When you can look in somebody's eyes and tell when you got them and that they will go on the journey with you. That's really gratifying.” While still performing on stage, Olufani has also acted on television over the years. His most recent project is a news and talk show called Retro Report. Olufani is the co-host of this PBS program, along with Atlanta Journalist Celeste Headlee. The show takes a look at historical news stories through a contemporary lens. One example is a story on Colin Kaepernick. The two co-hosts tied the report back to black athletes kneeling during the 1960 Olympic Games. This shows that he was not an anomaly. Retro Report wrapped up its inaugural season and Olufani has shifted his attention to his art exhibition at Hammonds House in Atlanta. Hammonds House is an art museum located in historic West End with the goal of preserving, exhibiting, interpreting and increasing public awareness of the contributions of visual artists of African descent. Olufani's exhibit, titled Translocation and Transfiguration, will be at Hammonds House for display. “Translocation being the movement of a person or people from one place to another. Transfiguration being this kind of notion of transcending or transforming based on your interaction in this new place and this new experience,” said Olufani when asked about his exhibit. “This exhibition is really about exploring those two themes visually through the cultural lens of the African American experience.” Olufani spent his undergrad at Morehouse College, where Hammonds House was the most accessible art space to attend. He spent a lot of time walking the corridors of Hammonds House and became aware of the foothold in the cultural landscape of Atlanta. After being inspired at a young age at Hammonds House, Olufani finds it to be an honor and a privilege to be able to share his art work with the community through this medium. “Everyone has a story to tell. I think one of the greatest gifts we can give to one another is to bear witness to each other's stories,” said Olufani. “And to realize that ultimately, any one's story is part of the larger story of humanity.” For more information on Hammonds House and their current exhibits, visit www.HammondsHouse.org. You can also read more on Masud Olifani and see examples of his past work at www.masud-olufani.com. To hear the full interview, listen to the podcast above. A special thank you to Jackson EMC for sponsoring Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio. Jackson EMC offers homebuyers peace of mind and lower bills with its certified Right Choice™ new home program. These homes are built to be energy efficient and sustainable with improved indoor air quality, convenience and comfort. For more information on Right Choice new homes...
Vegas Film Critic (Jeffrey K. Howard) speaks with the producers of the new PBS News program, Retro Report.
Hello! On todays episode we talk about how antidepressants work, the different types, and the neurotransmitters they effect. Retro Report: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qgCFQ5no2jg --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mentalmagic/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mentalmagic/support
In this age of divisive politics and news, a new PBS series from GPB questions the premise that this is the worst it's ever been in American history. Retro Report on PBS aims to widen the conversation, exploring the origins of issues and ideas that continue to replay in our headlines and culture. The hosts of Retro Report , Masud Olufani and former OST host Celeste Headlee, joined On Second Thought to share what's in store for viewers.
Premiering tonight, Retro Report on PBS questions the premise that the modern American political divide is a new one. The series explores the historical origins of issues and ideas that continue to replay in our headlines and culture today. On Second Thought got a preview of the series with the hosts, Masud Olafani and former OST host Celeste Headlee. Retro Report premieres tonight at 9 p.m. on Georgia Public Broadcasting Television.
As the sun set over Uluru on August 17th, 1980, Lindy and Michael Chamberlain put their two month old baby Azaria to bed. What happened next is burnt into the collective consciousness of not just Australia but the world. This won’t be like most episodes of True Crime Conversations, mostly, because in this case there was no crime. Instead, it was one of the most significant and devastating miscarriages of justice Australia has ever seen. So impactful was the handling of this case that forensic science in Australia was completely overhauled and as a result we’re now one of the leading countries in the field. Host Jessie Stephens speaks to legal scholar, criminologist and historian Katherine Biber about the case of Lindy Chamberlain and the death of her daughter Azaria. Katherine co-authored the book The Lindy Chamberlain Case: Nation, Law, Memory. CREDITS GUEST: Katherine Biber HOST: Jessie Stephens PRODUCER: Elise Cooper Research Staines, D., Arrow, M., & Biber, K. (Eds.) (2009). The Chamberlain case: nation, law, memory. Melbourne, Vic.: Australian Scholarly Publishing. Dingo’s Got My Baby: Trial By Media, Retro Report; The New York Times Confronting Lindy Chamberlain: A Dingo Stole My Baby; 60 Minutes Australia Nine Network The Azaria Chamberlain Story, This Fabulous Century, Prime Network Azaria Chamberlain 4th Inquest Findings Live Broadcast ABC News 24, ABC TV 4th Coronial Inquest into the death of Azaria Chamberlain Alternative Law Journal (2012) 37(3) AltLJ 207 GET IN TOUCH: Call the PodPhone on 02 8999 9386. Email the show at truecrime@mamamia.com.au True Crime Conversations is a podcast by Mamamia. Find more shows here https://www.mamamia.com.au/podcasts
Most of my guests on this podcast are in local news, because most of my audience are reporters, photojournalists, and solo video journalists in local news. But I was reminded again watching the winners of this year's National Edward R. Murrow awards about the fascinating, compelling work on the digital front. How does that work come about? Perhaps it comes from a side of the industry that had to re-examine its definitions of storytelling. It's so important to see how the standards have evolved for audiences who don't distinguish between the types of content they receive. Solana Pyne is setting those standards. Her work with the Quartz video team employs many of the tactics that traditional storytellers embrace, but she doesn't stop there. Her team produces work that bends boundaries but brings journalistic chops. Last month, their joint production with Retro Report about the future of gaming - received a National Murrow award. Pyne is my guest on Episode #73 of the Telling the Story podcast. "It's easy to presume your audience will be with you," said Pyne, among other great words of advice, "so being forced to figure out how to capture people's attentions really quickly is a good thing." → The post PODCAST EPISODE #73: Solana Pyne, executive producer, Quartz appeared first on Telling The Story.
He said it under oath. James Comey, the head of the F.B.I., confirms at a House hearing that his agency is investigating the Trump campaign’s ties to Russia, and says it will pursue it “no matter how long that takes.” And why the president’s Supreme Court nominee is likely to say almost nothing of substance at his confirmation hearings this week. Guests: Matt Apuzzo, who covers the F.B.I. for The Times; Barbara Dury, a producer at Retro Report. For more information on today’s episode, visit http://nyti.ms/2n5WeGA.
The sanctuary city movement can be traced to a single Presbyterian minister in 1980s Arizona. We tell the story. Guests: Scott Michels, a producer at Retro Report. For more information on today’s episode, visit http://nyti.ms/2mqkDX9.
FRONTLINE and Retro Report explore the untold history of the Guantanamo Bay prison.
In 2003 the space shuttle Columbia was returning from two weeks in orbit. It was a routine mission. So routine that most of America barely paid attention. Until something went terribly wrong. Many of us watched shuttle break apart over Texas on television. All seven of the crew members were lost. Jon Clark’s wife, Laurel, was one of them, and her death that day inspired his life’s work: helping get more people to space. Undone is hosted and produced by Pat Walters, with Julia DeWitt and Emanuele Berry. Our senior producer is Larissa Anderson. We are edited by Alan Burdick and Caitlin Kenney. Production assistance by Isabella Kulkarni. Undone is mixed and scored by Bobby Lord. Our fact-checker is Michelle Harris. Special thanks to Janna Levin. Undone was conceived in collaboration with our friends at Retro Report, the documentary film series that connects iconic news events of the past to today. You can find them here. If you want to get in touch, you can find us on Twitter @undoneshow or e-mail us at undone at gimletmedia dot com. Our Sponsors Blue Apron – Get your first three Blue Apron meals delivered for free by going to blueapron.com/undone Squarespace - Go to squarespace.com and use the offer code UNDONE at checkout to get 10% off your first purchase
In 1975 a group of activists set off into the Pacific Ocean to confront a fleet Soviet whalers. This episode is about that moment, when this tight-knit group of activists came together to set off a movement … and how today, 40 years later, some of them can’t even talk to one another. Undone is hosted by Pat Walters. This episode was produced by Julia DeWitt and Emanuele Berry. Our senior producer is Larissa Anderson. Editing by Alan Burdick and Caitlin Kenney. Production assistance by Isabella Kulkarni. Undone is mixed and scored by Bobby Lord, with additional music by Nate Sandberg of Plied Sound and Sean Jacobi. Our fact-checker is Michelle Harris. Special thanks to Jerry Rothwell, Ron Precious, Emily Hunter, Carlie Trueman and Bunny McDiarmid. Undone was conceived in collaboration with our friends at Retro Report, the documentary film series that connects iconic news events of the past to today. You can find them here. === Original video: https://soundcloud.com/undoneshow/mindbomb Downloaded by http://huffduff-video.snarfed.org/ on Wed, 04 Jan 2017 19:57:37 GMT Available for 30 days after download
In 1975 a group of activists set off into the Pacific Ocean to confront some Soviet whalers. They ended up starting a movement. But then things changed, and today some of them don’t even talk to each other. Undone is hosted by Pat Walters. This episode was produced by Julia DeWitt and Emanuele Berry. Our senior producer is Larissa Anderson. Editing by Alan Burdick and Caitlin Kenney. Production assistance by Isabella Kulkarni. Undone is mixed and scored by Bobby Lord, with additional music by Nate Sandberg of Plied Sound and Sean Jacobi. Our fact-checker is Michelle Harris. Special thanks to Jerry Rothwell, Ron Precious and Emily Hunter, Carlie Trueman, and Bunny McDiarmid. Undone was conceived in collaboration with our friends at Retro Report, the documentary film series that connects iconic news events of the past to today. You can find them here. Our Sponsors Autotrader – To start searching for your new car go to autotrader.com/undone Blue Apron – Get your first three Blue Apron meals delivered for free by going to blueapron.com/undone
Ibrahim Parlak came to the U.S. in 1991 as Kurdish refugee; his friends and neighbors see him as the ideal American immigrant. But the U.S. government considers him "the complete terrorist package" and has been trying to deport him for over a decade. We try to figure out why the two see him so differently. Credits Undone is hosted and produced by Pat Walters. This episode was reported by Alex Kotlowitz, and produced by Julia DeWitt and Emanuele Berry. Our senior producer is Larissa Anderson. Editing by Alan Burdick and Catlin Kenney. Production assistance by Isabella Kulkarni. Undone is mixed and scored by Bobby Lord. Our fact-checker is Michelle Harris. Special thanks to Robert Carpenter and Dan Collison and Elizabeth Meister of Long Haul Productions, who provided tape we used in this episode. You can check out their other work here. Undone was conceived in collaboration with our friends at Retro Report, the documentary film series that connects iconic news events of the past to today. You can find them here.
Before Tinder, before eHarmony, before the internet, there was Operation Match. This is the story of the roots of online dating, when, in 1965, a computer the size of a van helped people find their perfect dates. Credits: Undone is hosted by Pat Walters. This episode was produced by Julia DeWitt and Emanuele Berry. Our senior producer is Larissa Anderson. Editing by Alan Burdick and Catlin Kenney. Our intern is Isabella Kulkarni. Undone is mixed and scored by Bobby Lord. Our fact-checker is Michelle Harris. Special thanks to Marden and Joan Paru, Robert and Beth Smith, Paul Eastwick, Eve Peters, Vaughan Morrill and David Crump. Undone was conceived in collaboration with our friends at Retro Report, the documentary film series that connects iconic news events of the past ... to today. You can find them at retroreport.org.
This is a story about a forgotten part of civil-rights history that is still very much alive. In 1965, a group of black men in Louisiana called the Deacons for Defense and Justice took up arms against the Klan. Now a daughter of the Deacons wants to start a museum in their honor, but not everyone in town wants their story told. Go to GimletMedia.com/FallSeason to subscribe to Undone and Gimlet’s other new podcasts. Credits Undone is hosted by Pat Walters. This episode was reported and produced by Eric Eddings, along with Julia DeWitt and Emanuele Berry. Our senior producer is Larissa Anderson. We are edited by Alan Burdick and Caitlin Kenney. Isabella Kulkarni is our intern. The show is mixed and scored by Bobby Lord. Additional music by Nate Sandberg of Plied Sound. Our fact-checker is Michelle Harris. Special thanks to Maude Eddings and Ward Colin. Undone was conceived in collaboration with our friends at Retro Report, the documentary film series that connects iconic news events of the past to today. You can find them here. Selected References http://content.wisconsinhistory.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/p15932coll2/id/53842/rec/12 https://searchworks.stanford.edu/view/4085340 https://roberthicksfoundation.squarespace.com/ === Original video: https://soundcloud.com/undoneshow/the-deacons
Hey Surprisingly Awesome listeners - we think you'll love Undone, a new show from Gimlet Media. It's about how the big stories we thought were over, were actually the beginning of something else. Hosted by Pat Walters and developed with help from the documentary series Retro Report, Undone challenges what you thought you knew about history. Want to hear the rest of the episode? Subscribe at gimletmedia.com/fallseason
This is a story about a forgotten part of civil-rights history that is still very much alive. In 1965, a group of black men in Louisiana called the Deacons for Defense and Justice took up arms against the Klan. Now a daughter of the Deacons wants to start a museum in their honor, but not everyone in town wants their story told. Go to GimletMedia.com/FallSeason to subscribe to Undone and Gimlet’s other new podcasts. Credits Undone is hosted by Pat Walters. This episode was reported and produced by Eric Eddings, along with Julia DeWitt and Emanuele Berry. Our senior producer is Larissa Anderson. We are edited by Alan Burdick and Caitlin Kenney. Isabella Kulkarni is our intern. The show is mixed and scored by Bobby Lord. Additional music by Nate Sandberg of Plied Sound. Our fact-checker is Michelle Harris. Special thanks to Maude Eddings and Ward Colin. Undone was conceived in collaboration with our friends at Retro Report, the documentary film series that connects iconic news events of the past to today. You can find them here. Selected References http://content.wisconsinhistory.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/p15932coll2/id/53842/rec/12 https://searchworks.stanford.edu/view/4085340 https://roberthicksfoundation.squarespace.com/ Our Sponsors Blue Apron - Get your first three Blue Apron meals delivered for free by going to blueapron.com/undone Autotrader – To start searching for your new car go to autotrader.com/undone
In 1996, two teenagers stumbled across some very old human remains. The struggle to identify them and determine who owns them kicked off a fight that has lasted 20 years -- and is finally about to be resolved. Our Sponsors Blue Apron - Get your first three Blue Apron meals delivered for free by going to blueapron.com/undone Squarespace - Go to squarespace.com and use the offer code UNDONE at checkout to get 10% off your first purchase Credits Undone is hosted by Pat Walters. This episode was produced by Julia DeWitt and Emanuele Berry. Our senior producer is Larissa Anderson. Editing by Alan Burdick and Catlin Kenney. Fact checking by Michelle Harris. This episode of Undone was mixed and scored by Bobby Lord. With additional scoring by Nate Sandberg of Plied Sound, and Kevin Sparks Special thanks to … Jack Hitt, Rosita Worl, Michael Coffey, and Carl Zimmer. Undone was conceived in collaboration with our friends at Retro Report, the documentary film series that connects iconic news events of the past ... to today. You can find them here.
One summer night in 1979, 50,000 people got together at a baseball stadium to kill disco. And it worked. Kind of. In this first episode of "Undone" we meet someone who worked as an usher at Disco Demolition Night and played a vital role in keeping the spirit of disco alive today. Our Sponsors Autotrader – To start searching for your new car go to autotrader.com/undone Squarespace - Go to squarespace.com and use the offer code UNDONE at checkout to get 10% off your first purchase Credits Undone is hosted by Pat Walters. This episode was produced by Julia DeWitt and Emanuele Berry. Our senior producer is Larissa Anderson. Editing by Alan Burdick and Catlin Kenney. Fact checking by Michelle Harris. This episode of Undone was mixed and scored by Bobby Lord. With additional music by Matt Boll. Special thanks to … Alice Echols, Sasha Frere-Jones, AJ Cervantes, Giorgio Moroder, Bob Esty, and Jesse Rudoy for putting us onto this story. Thanks also to Renee Graham and Vince Lawrence … who made a Spotify playlist to go along with this episode. We also have a playlist with disco songs and disco inspired tunes that were used in this episode. Undone was conceived in collaboration with our friends at Retro Report, the documentary film series that connects iconic news events of the past ... to today. You can find them here.