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Showing episodes and shows of
Marion Cotillard Morrison
Shows
How An Elephant Forgets
The End of the Shift
Every job’s got a quitting time. But some endings ain't just about punchin’ the clock — they’re about what we carry home. In this season finale, we look back at the stories we’ve told and the voices we’ve lifted. We trace the arc from picket lines to pulpits, from broken pens to busted backs, and ask what it means to remember — and what it costs to forget. Because history doesn’t retire. It just waits for the next shift to begin.Further Reading:Howard Zinn, A People’s History of the United StatesA sweeping account...
2025-05-22
08 min
How An Elephant Forgets
The People Remember
You can knock the dust off an old slogan, print it on a fresh sign, and still mean every word. In this episode, we follow the echoes — from Birmingham to Bessemer, from factory gates to warehouse docks — where a new generation of workers is relearning the language of resistance. Some folks say unions are a thing of the past. But if you listen close, you’ll hear the people remember.Further Reading :Kim Kelly, Fight Like Hell: The Untold History of American LaborA vivid look at the forgotten fighters of the labor movement — and the ones pic...
2025-05-20
10 min
How An Elephant Forgets
What We Stand To Lose
It’s easy to forget just how bad things used to be — and how quickly they can return. In this episode, we take a closer look at what labor protections were built to prevent: the heat, the blades, the blood. From children on kill floors to men collapsing in the sun, this isn’t distant history — it’s a warning. Because while the language has changed, the rollback is already underway. And when memory is lost, so is leverage.Further Reading :National Employment Law Project, Tracking Deregulation in the Trump and Post-Trump EraA detailed r...
2025-05-15
11 min
How An Elephant Forgets
SuperEverything Stores
Once upon a checkout lane, convenience became king. In this episode, we trace the rise of the “everything store” — from five-and-dimes to fluorescent mega-aisles — and how a handful of retail giants reshaped America’s working class. We’ll look at the promises that were made (lower prices, more jobs, endless choice) and the quieter costs that came due (union busting, shuttered main streets, supply chains stretched thin across oceans). Somewhere between the smiley-face stickers and falling prices, a whole way of life got rolled back.Further Reading :Nelson Lichtenstein, The Retail Revolution: How Wal-Mart Created a Brave New...
2025-05-13
09 min
How An Elephant Forgets
Fox & Friends With Benefits
Back in the day, folks got their news from the same three networks, delivered with a straight face and a necktie. These days? Turn on the TV and you’ll get a sermon in the morning, a scare tactic by lunch, and a culture war bedtime story by sundown.In this episode, we trace how the right-wing media machine came to be—not just Fox News, but the web of AM radio barkers, think tank talking points, and political operatives who figured out that facts don't sell like fear. From Roger Ailes' roots in Nixon's shadow cabinet to F...
2025-05-08
11 min
How An Elephant Forgets
God's Property
Faith can be a powerful force for good. But somewhere along the line, a lotta folks got sold a version of the gospel where God always votes corporate—and poverty’s just a sign you ain’t prayin’ hard enough.In this episode, we dig into how religious language and market ideology got braided together to bless deregulation, bust unions, and make the working poor feel like they were just spiritually underperforming. We talk about the rise of “Christian free enterprise,” the political sermons bankrolled by business lobbies, and how the phrase “God’s property” started meanin’ a little more about...
2025-05-06
11 min
How An Elephant Forgets
Saint Ronnie and the Gospel of Deregulation
They say if you can’t say nothin’ nice, don’t say nothin’ at all—but I reckon if you say somethin’ nice enough times with enough flags behind you, folks’ll start thinkin’ it’s gospel. In this episode, we ride into the Reagan years—where the cowboy president smiled, waved, and gutted half a century’s worth of labor protections in the name of “freedom.”We break down how Reagan’s folksy charm helped repackage corporate power as common sense, and how a Hollywood union man turned politician came to declare that the most terrifying words in the English languag...
2025-05-01
10 min
How An Elephant Forgets
The Textbook Chainsaw Massacre
Now I don’t know about you, but back when I was sittin’ in a plastic chair with gum stuck to the underside and a worn-out copy of America: Land of the Free on my desk, I don’t recall readin’ a single line about labor strikes, child miners, or the bloody business of company towns.That’s no accident.In this episode, we fire up the saw and cut into the clean-cut myth of the American history textbook. From Texas school boards to right-wing think tanks, we trace how the stories of struggle...
2025-04-29
10 min
How An Elephant Forgets
Holy Smoke
In the years after World War II, a new kind of gospel swept across America—one wrapped in stars, stripes, and suspicion. In this episode, we trace how conservative organizers and business-backed ministries fused anti-unionism with evangelical revivalism. From tent revivals to Sunday radio, we follow how scripture was reinterpreted to sanctify free enterprise and demonize collective bargaining. Labor was cast as a sinful rebellion against “God’s order,” and union men were painted not as brothers—but as threats to Christian liberty. It wasn’t just a culture war—it was a calculated one, and it changed the way millions o...
2025-04-24
11 min
How An Elephant Forgets
Choked Songs & Broken Pens
The history of working-class America wasn’t just built with hammers and handshakes—it was written in novels, strummed in folk songs, and whispered in poetry. But many of the artists who spoke up for labor, poverty, and justice were silenced, smeared, or simply left out of the canon. In this episode, we trace the lives and legacies of writers like John Steinbeck, Upton Sinclair, Jack London, and others who dared to tell the truth about exploitation—and paid the price in bans, blacklists, and burnings. We also examine how the voices of women, immigrants, and people of color were s...
2025-04-22
10 min
How An Elephant Forgets
The Tangled Branches of John Birch
It started with a martyr, a candy magnate, and a fear of fluoride—and spiraled into a network of conspiracies that still echo in today’s headlines. In this episode, we dig into the roots of the John Birch Society: how it built a sprawling tree of paranoia that reached into church pulpits, AM radios, school boards, and eventually prime-time news. Along the way, we meet the real John Birch, examine how Robert Welch rebranded extremist rhetoric as patriotism, and trace how the Society’s fingerprints helped shape the modern right-wing media machine. It’s not just history—...
2025-04-17
12 min
How An Elephant Forgets
Red-Baiting The Blue Collar
When organizing for better wages became “communist.”When striking for safety meant you were un-American.This episode traces how the Red Scare wasn’t just about spies or politicians—it was a full-blown campaign to brand working people as enemies of the state. From the FBI surveillance of union organizers to the blacklistings of teachers, steelworkers, and screenwriters, we follow how Cold War paranoia was weaponized to silence labor. The hammer and sickle weren’t just painted on enemies abroad—they were stamped on the backs of workers at home.Further Reading:Schreck...
2025-04-15
11 min
How An Elephant Forgets
Before The Safety Net (Part 2)
In the second half of our descent into the era before worker protections, we shift from the coal dust and sewing floors of Part 1 into deeper tragedies—events so catastrophic they finally forced the public and politicians to act. We revisit disasters like the Monongah Mine explosion and the New London school blast, and we trace how slow, reluctant change emerged not from compassion—but from catastrophe. These are the stories of lives lost and the protections born from their memory.Selected Bibliography & Further Reading:Derickson, Alan. Black Lung: Anatomy of a Publ...
2025-04-10
09 min
How An Elephant Forgets
Before The Safety Net (Part 1)
Before OSHA. Before workers' comp. Before anyone even pretended to care about child labor—America’s workforce bled in the shadows of smokestacks and mine shafts. In this episode, we walk through some of the darkest chapters in U.S. labor history: the factory fires, crushed limbs, child coffins, and lives shattered in the name of profit. These aren’t cautionary tales—they’re the reason regulations exist. Part 1 focuses on the human toll of a system that valued production over people.Further Reading:Zinn, Howard. A People’s History of the Unite...
2025-04-08
09 min
How An Elephant Forgets
What Labor Built
You ever flip a light switch, take a weekend, or clock out after eight hours and think, “Huh, sure is nice livin’ in a civilized society”? Well, buckle up. None of that was handed down from on high—it was won, strike by strike, march by march, over the broken backs and blistered hands of folks who stood up and said, “Enough.” This episode walks you through what labor really built—and how easy it is to lose it if we forget where it came from.Further Reading :Books & Academic Sources:Dray, Philip. There Is Power in a Uni...
2025-04-03
10 min
How An Elephant Forgets
Cowboys & Class War
We kick off the season by drawing a bead on America’s favorite myth: the cowboy. While Hollywood filled our heads with wide-open plains and lone gunmen, real working folks were dodging bullets on factory floors and coalfields—just for askin’ for a weekend off. This episode unpacks how that myth helped bury the true history of labor struggle, and who stood to gain from the forgetting.Further Reading:Books & Academic Sources:Foner, Philip S. History of the Labor Movement in the United States. International Publishers, multiple volumes.Zinn, Howard. A People...
2025-04-02
10 min
Have You Ever?
2: Mary Queen of Scots & Virtual Reality Gaming
Well done for making it this far to Episode 2 of 'Have You Ever?' the podcast where two friends Rowan (woman) and Svein (man) recommend things for the other to do, see, read, watch or listen. It's that simple. And funny. Episode 2 sees Rowan and Svein report back on the recommendations made in Episode 1. These were Project Runway and the BBC Sherlock Holmes radio plays. Episode 2 Recommendations Rowan: Mary Queen of Scots (Anamorphosis) Svein: Virtual Reality Gaming In Episode 2 we also chat about: Superhero abilities Geocaching The Haunting of Hill House The Woman in Black Marion Cotillard falling down a...
2018-12-22
00 min