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Speaking of RaceSpeaking of Race22 Interview With Gene Demby Of NPR’s Code SwitchWe got to interview Gene Demby, co-host of NPR’s podcast Code Switch! Gene talks about what it’s like to be a leader in national conversations about race and identity, why higher education is so unwelcoming to people of color, and how scientific racism continues to be so powerful. Oh, and also, why Archibald’s ribs are the most delicious food in America🙌 Click here for podcast Here are some links to go with the interview: Code Switch podcast and blog: https://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/ Gene’s other project, PostBourgie: http://www.postbourgie.com ​Archibald’s! Go there!: https...2019-02-1446 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#41: New World Water.We wanted to get to some of the larger questions raised by the story of the ongoing water crisis in Flint. So we got some context from some people who follow this stuff for a living: Brentin Mock of CityLab and Talia Buford of the Center for Public Integrity.  See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.2016-04-0300 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#40: Dating While Black Excellent.Our second annual Valentine's Day episode! Ko and Gene hear stories of a woman who survives a disastrous Tinder date with a superstar athlete, a young man whose shoe fails him at inopportune time, and woman who finds exactly the man of her dreams, thanks to a fortune teller. (Sorta.) Some salty language. Thanks to Morgan Jerkins, Decker Ngongang and Bee Quammie for telling us about their dating stories. Shouts to the people who agreed to read their tweets about their bad dates: Danielle Lavore Evans, Twila Ann, Christina Hernandez Brown, Jordan Pelavin, Caroline Edgar, Victoria Walker, and Lenore. [Our...2016-02-0900 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#39: Angela Flournoy's Big-Ass Year.When Angela's sprawling, keenly observed debut novel, "The Turner House," dropped last spring, it won rave reviews in big, important outlets like The New York Times. The novel picks up in 2008, with the housing market in full swoon. The many siblings of the huge Turner family in Detroit are fighting over what to do with the home in which they grew up: their matriarch is elderly and fading; the house is practically worthless. The novel hopscotches across the decades, telling the story of the Turners and the big, messy city they call home. Six months after it dropped, "The Turner...2015-11-1400 minPostBourgiePostBourgieLoosie #1: Trina, Spike Lee, and the Power of the Pussy.Spike Lee's forthcoming flick, "Chi-Raq." is a satire about a woman who rallies the other women in her neighborhood to stop having sex with their male lovers in order to use it as leverage and get them to Stop The Violence™ . Oddly enough, that happens to the very same plot of a low-budget 2003 movie called "A Miami Tail" starring Trina. (Actual tagline: "Until they lay down their guns, this gang ain't banging!") In this mini-episode, G.D. sat down to watch and discuss "Tail" with Akoto Ofori-Atta of The Trace and Soraya Nadia McDonald of the Washington Post so yo...2015-11-1200 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#38: Race Is Always The Issue. (November 1, 2015)#38: Race Is Always The Issue. (November 1, 2015) by PostBourgie  See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.2015-10-2900 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#37: "This is the Last Thing I'm Going to Say About Jason Whitlock." (October 18 2015)We were originally planning to have Deadspin’s Greg Howard on the podcast to talk about race and sports journalism — with our peg being the series of articles he wrote about the woes of The Undefeated, the troubled, much-delayed race, culture and sports site from ESPN helmed by Jason Whitlock. Whitlock had been one of the most famous and controversial sportswriters in America, having built his polarizing career on his essays connecting sports to the evils of black pathology. He could be petty and ugly, like when he wrote that Serena Williams would never be an all-time great because she was...2015-10-1900 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#36: What It Means To Lose A School. (September 20 2015)G.D. and Terryn talk to Jelani Cobb of the New Yorker, who went back to his former high school in Queens, which was recently closed down. Jelani was trying to figure out how the diverse, highly regarded school quickly deteriorated quickly after he graduated in the 1980s and soon became, to many, an example of why big, neighborhood schools can't work. (Hint: HOUSING SEGREGATION.) And Eve Ewing of Seven Scribes talks to G.D. about the fight to save Walter Dyett High School, the last public school open to everyone in Bronzeville, a historic black neighborhood on Chicago's South...2015-09-2000 minPostBourgiePostBourgieDigging In The Crates: #20: Losing Football And A Language. (May 28 2012)It's the beginning of football season, so we decided to re-up a favorite old episode of ours where we spoke to Ta-Nehisi Coates of The Atlantic about his decision to stop watching the NFL after the evidence of the effects of football-related brain injuries became too hard to ignore.  See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.2015-09-1200 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#35: 'Straight Outta Compton' And the Unkillable Biopic Genre. (August 23 2015)The N.W.A. movie "Straight Outta Compton" is the latest entrant into the anemic hip-hop biopic genre. It's crushing at the box office even as controversies around who was cast in it and which details were left out of it. (Namely: all of the women, ever.) Jalen Coats (@jvcoats), a writer and DJ from LA, joins GD to figure out what it all means, and argue over which great female MCs should get a biopic of their own, and also why biopics should never exist.  See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.2015-08-2400 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#34: 'How The $%*!& Is That Good Enough?' (August 15 2015)On a recent two-part story on This American Life, Nikole Hannah-Jones of The New York Times Magazine went to Normandy High School — the struggling St. Louis County school from which Michael Brown graduated just weeks before he was killed last year in Ferguson. Normandy is the lowest-ranked high school in Missouri and nearly entirely black, and when a series of events opened the door for hundreds of Normandy kids to be bussed to Francis Howell High School, a high-performing, mostly-white high school a few towns over, the Normandy kids were greeted with massive opposition from white parents. Nikole and G.D...2015-08-1500 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#33: Detroit vs. Everybody. (July 26 2015)Terryn is packing up and moving to the D for a new gig! To help get her ready, we convened some folks who have Big Thoughts about the state of the Motor City. Angela Flournoy, the author of the critically acclaimed new novel, "The Turner House," set her book there, the city where her father grew up. And Siwatu Moore, a writer in Brooklyn, is a Detroit native. Will Detroit have to morph into something unrecognizable in order to survive? And does Detroit have more cat daddies per capita than any city in the world?  See acast...2015-07-2600 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#32: #GrowingUpSouthern. (July 15 2015)Gene and Terryn discuss Gene's recent reporting for NPR on those Southerners, black and white, for whom the Confederate flag is a genuine signifier of identity. Terryn breaks down what well-meaning Northerners don't get about the South; she also references Walker, Texas Ranger at least once.  See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.2015-07-1500 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#31: Attica Locke, from this little show 'Empire.' (May 11 2015)The novelist and screenwriter Attica Locke joins Gene and Terryn to explain why she left Hollywood to write novels — her third, "Pleasantville," is out now — and how she got bit by the showbiz bug again to become a writer and producer for Fox's mega-hit "Empire." Drip drippety drop.  See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.2015-05-1100 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#30: Dyson Vs. West. (May 8 2015)Jamil Smith, senior editor at the New Republic, joins Gene, Terryn and Jamelle to discuss That Michael Eric Dyson Article About Cornel West. As the article's editor (!), he dishes some inside dirt on the politics behind the politics, on wrangling Dyson down to 10,000 words, and on taking over at a publication best known for its defenses of racism.  See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.2015-05-0900 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#29: Ben Carson At The Barbershop. (March 20 2015)Joel Anderson (BuzzFeed) and Jenée Desmond-Harris (Vox) join Gene and Terryn to discuss their recent reporting on Dr. Ben Carson, professional inspirational figure-turned-Republican presidential hopeful. Related reads: "How Ben Carson went from black hero to Tea Party darling without changing one bit," by Jenée Desmond-Harris (http://www.vox.com/2015/2/20/8069151/ben-carson-dr) "Could Running For President Destroy Ben Carson’s Legacy?," by Joel Anderson http://www.buzzfeed.com/joelanderson/ben-carson-politics-legacy  See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.2015-03-2100 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#28: Little Known Black History Facts. (February 28 2015)On the last day of Black History Month™, we talk to Tracy Clayton (aka Brokey McPoverty), a staff writer at BuzzFeed and the creator of all those viral, satirical Little Known Black History Facts. She joins Jamelle, Terryn and G.D. to talk about #LKBHF the reaction to it, and the touchiness around Black History Month writ large.  See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.2015-02-2800 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#27: Bad Romance. (February 14 2015)It’s everyone’s least-favorite Hallmark holiday, so Terryn and Gene called up some folks who tweeted us their worst date stories. (Big thanks to Genie, Tamara, Ko and Tracy for baring their souls.)  See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.2015-02-1400 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#26: Selma. (January 24 2015)NPR's Bilal Qureshi and the writer Joshunda Sanders join G.D. to chop it up about "Selma," the much-discussed historical drama by the director Ava Duvernay. (Alas, we recorded this a week before the Academy Award nominations were announced, so we don't get into the film's perceived Oscar snubbing here.) Also, Bilal stumps hard for "Beyond The Lights," a movie that like "Selma," boasted a black woman at the helm. "Lights" tanked at the box office despite strong reviews, and Bilal said that it's in part because no one knew how to market it.  See acast.com...2015-01-2400 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#25: The Two Michael Sams. (December 11 2014)Michael Sam made history this year when he became the first openly gay player drafted into the NFL — or any of America's major pro sports, for that matter. In the sports media, his estrangement from his family was characterized as simple homophobia. But when Joel went down to Texas to track down the Sam family for BuzzFeed, he found out that the picture was much more complicated.  See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.2014-12-0500 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#24: #Ferguson. (September 17 2014)Joel, Jamelle and Gene were all in Ferguson covering the aftermath of the Michael Brown shooting for their respective jobs. In this episode, they compare notes on what they saw and heard and what, if anything, happens next.  See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.2014-09-1700 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#23C: Bless Your Heart! Of Brazilians and Bar Fights. (February 5 2014)A day of adventure for Nichole and Tracy begins with bikini waxes and ends with one of them almost getting into an altercation with a stranger. Some salty language.  See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.2014-02-0100 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#23B: Bless Your Heart! The Stars and Bars and #TeamJake. (December 14 2013)On the second episode of the "Bless Your Heart" podcast, Nichole and Tracy discuss what Northerners don't get about Southerners — like the Confederate flag. Plus: observations on how cute Jake from 'Scandal' is, 'The Best Man Holiday' and the holiday season. Some salty language.  See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.2013-12-1400 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#23A: Bless Your Heart! Pics Of Dicks & Porn For Chicks. (November 3 2013)It's been a long time, we know. But here's something new and fun and different — the inaugural episode of the Bless Your Heart podcast! Our own Tracy "Brokey McPoverty" Clayton and Nichole Perkins talk about the tyranny of the dick pic, women-centered porn and "Martin." (Some salty language, obviously.)  See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.2013-11-0400 minStrange FruitStrange FruitStrange Fruit #43: Linguistic Reclamation, Weaves in Church, and Louisville Humorist Tracy ClaytonLately, many mainstream (read: white) media outlets have taken notice of Black Twitter. Often their approach seems almost anthropological. "How did this amazing phenomenon come about? Who are these people and what is their motivation?" But as Dr. Story says on this week's show, "Black people talk about political issues amongst themselves, and they have been for centuries. And they sometimes write about it too." To dissect Black Twitter and the media's response to it, we're joined this week by Tracy Clayton, aka @BrokeyMcPoverty, who writes The Root's Grapevine blog and can also be found at PostBourgie. Tracy is...2013-08-2440 minPostBourgiePostBourgie#22: Django Unpacked. (January 8 2013)On this week's ep, Joel, Jamelle and G.D. are joined by Slate's Aisha Harris and Prof. Sarah Jackson of Northeastern University to discuss Quentin Tarantino's messy, subversive, confounding slavery revenge flick, "Django Unchained."  See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.2013-01-0800 min