";s:4:"text";s:4976:" The United States of Anxiety, Episode 4: The Media That Created Trump A look inside the right-wing media echo chamber that has fed Trump’s rise. From the homeless in San Francisco to immigration detention centers, here's how the response to Covid-19 is undermined by choices that have little to do with healthcare. And it’s transforming everything— from what we tolerate politically to how we mourn those we’ve lost.
People all over the country are stepping up to make change. Kai Wright is host and managing editor of The United States of Anxiety, a podcast about the unfinished business of our history and its grip on our future, produced by WNYC Studios.. The United States of Anxiety, Episode 7: Does Our Response to Stress Determine How Conservative We Are?
The pandemic has hit black communities uniquely hard. Zoned for Resistance. In episode one, we investigate o ne of the longest-running public health epidemics in American history and the ongoing fight for accountability. Jul 10, 2020. But as they do, they face challenges that go beyond Covid-19 and police violence. In this bonus episode, Kai Wright teams up with Anna Sale to take listener calls, and to talk about people are coping. From host Kai Wright and the team that brought you The United States of Anxiety, a new show about what's not working about our society, how we can do better and why we have to. In the aftermath of Ahmaud Arbery’s killing, Kai calls up "Friday Black" author Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah to reflect on love, loss... and American zombies.
In addition, Wright was the host of WNYC Studios’ other limited edition podcasts Wright’s journalism has focused on social, racial, and economic justice throughout his career. Chicago’s Little Village has been hit hard by COVID-19, but after … Something has been pushed to the surface that can no longer be repressed.
Rage, Grief, Joy.
Kai Wright WNYC Studios. As the nation grapples with a reckoning, we pause to celebrate Juneteenth. Here's the story of investigative journalist and activist Ida B. How the burgeoning field of biopolitics can explain how you’ll vote. There are roughly 2.3 million people in jails and prisons. Salah Hasan Nusaif al-Ejaili knows the atrocities that can be committed during a time of crisis. Seventeen years after the American invasion of Iraq, he's still trying to get justice. Here's why his words resonate today.
WNYC Studios is a listener-supported producer of other great podcasts including Radiolab, Death, Sex & Money, and On the Media. Afro-Italians like Bellamy Ogak are not born citizens by law.
Many of the political and social arguments we're having now started in the aftermath of the Civil War, when Americans set out to do something no one had tried before: build the world's first multiracial democracy. Formerly, he was an editor at Kai Wright June 18, 2020 • After months of fear and mourning amid a global pandemic, we're … They can barely wash their hands. The coronavirus has turned our thoughts back to anxiety. Here’s how black women in Chicago used lace and jewels to turn their mandatory face masks into works of art, more than 100 years ago. So reporter Jenny Casas turned to Benji Hart’s poem as a tool for connecting with one another.
Chicago’s Little Village has been hit hard by COVID-19, but after a botched demolition left it coated in dust, one lifelong activist and her community are standing together while apart.
Our holiday special, for Black liberation and the ongoing birth of the United States. Kai Wright is host and managing editor of The United States of Anxiety. As Covid-19 has hits black communities uniquely hard, here's how one essential worker is coping during the pandemic.
To understand why, we explore how racism shows up in black bodies — all the way down to the cellular level. We return to Caught as the nation continues to grapple with long-standing systemic racism in our policing and justice systems.
Many of us are bracing for the changes Covid-19 will bring, including to our relationships. Many of the political and social arguments we’re having now started in the aftermath of the Civil War, when Americans set out to do something no one had tried before: build the world’s first multiracial democracy. The podcast gives voters the context to understand what's at stake in this election. So now what? Many of the political and social arguments we’re having now started in the aftermath of the Civil War, when Americans set out to do something no one had tried before: build the world’s first multiracial democracy. Wells, who's courageous anti-lynching work just received a Pulitzer Prize. Research shows that racism and other prejudices are most acute when the stakes are high, so Kai talks with Dr. Gail Christopher about how to control for that reality, during a pandemic. ";s:7:"keyword";s:35:"united states of anxiety kai wright";s:5:"links";s:541:"Bradford White Brute Ft Review,
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