Code Switch

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 291:30:26
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Sinopsis

Ever find yourself in a conversation about race and identity where you just get...stuck? Code Switch can help. We're all journalists of color, and this isn't just the work we do. It's the lives we lead. Sometimes, we'll make you laugh. Other times, you'll get uncomfortable. But we'll always be unflinchingly honest and empathetic. Come mix it up with us.

Episodios

  • Live From Chicago...It's Code Switch!

    15/11/2017 Duración: 45min

    Hosts Shereen and Gene take on Chi-City with help from Chicago-natives Eve Ewing and Natalie Y. Moore, plus Code Switch's play cousin, Hari Kondabolu. Ewing opens the show with a poem from her new collection, Electric Arches. Kondabolu talks about his upcoming documentary, "The Problem with Apu." And Moore brings her Chicago-expertise to some tough questions from our listeners.

  • Reflections On A Year At Ron Brown High

    08/11/2017 Duración: 28min

    We spent the past three episodes looking at the first year of a high school for black boys in Washington, D.C. Now, we're taking a look back on our reporting. What does it mean for a school like Ron Brown to exist — and what does that say about our society?

  • To Fail Or Not To Fail: The Fierce Debate Over High Standards

    01/11/2017 Duración: 49min

    With 40 percent of its students at risk of failing, one radical new high school in Washington, D.C. wrestles with whether to lower its own high expectations.

  • 'They Can't Just Be Average,' Lifting Students Up Without Lowering The Bar

    25/10/2017 Duración: 46min

    In a radical new high school in Washington, D.C., the push for academic success sometimes clashes with providing young men the love and support they need to thrive.

  • A Year Of Love And Struggle In A New High School

    18/10/2017 Duración: 43min

    Too many young, black men struggle in America's education system. Washington D.C. is trying to do something about it with a new, boys-only high school. NPR's Cory Turner and Education Week's Kavitha Cardoza spent hundreds of hours there, reporting on the birth of a school built on one word: Love.

  • The Passing Of A "Failing" School

    11/10/2017 Duración: 38min

    When a school shuts down, students lose more than a place of learning; they lose friends, mentors and a community. This is an experience that disproportionately affects black students in the U.S. Shereen Marisol Meraji looks at what it's like when a predominantly black suburb outside Pittsburgh loses its only public high school.

  • Puerto Rico, My Heart's Devotion

    04/10/2017 Duración: 22min

    The haphazard response to Hurricane Maria has underscored the tricky, in-between space that Puerto Ricans occupy. They're U.S. citizens — although nearly half of the country doesn't know that. But those who live in Puerto Rico don't enjoy many of the same privileges as citizens on the mainland. In this week's episode, Shereen travels to one of the most Puerto Rican enclaves in the country to explore the fraught relationship Puerto Ricans have with their American-ness.

  • Befuddled By Babies, Love And Ice Pops? Ask Code Switch

    27/09/2017 Duración: 27min

    When social interactions become racially charged, sometimes even the most woke among us are prone to faux pas. So this week, we're taking on our listeners' most burning questions about race. We'll talk weddings. We'll talk kiddos. And most of all, we'll talk paletas.

  • A Weed Boom, But For Whom?

    18/09/2017 Duración: 27min

    The history of cannabis in the U.S. ― and its criminalization ― is deeply interwoven with race. As the legal cannabis market gains traction, people of color who were targeted by the drug war could be left out of the green rush.

  • It's Getting (Dangerously) Hot in Herre

    13/09/2017 Duración: 29min

    On this week's episode we talk about why certain communities are more vulnerable to catastrophic weather events like hurricanes and heat waves. Saying "mother nature doesn't discriminate," ignores the fact that discrimination exacerbates her wrath.

  • An Advertising Revolution: "Black People Are Not Dark-Skinned White People"

    06/09/2017 Duración: 28min

    How do you get black people to buy cigarettes made for cowboys and antebellum-style beer? Turns out, you don't. On this episode: Tom Burrell, who transformed the ad industry with a simple motto, "Black people are not dark-skinned white people."

  • 'I'm Not A Racist, I'm Argentine!'

    30/08/2017 Duración: 20min

    On this week's episode, a viral video gives us the opportunity to talk about racism towards and within the Latino community. When a Latino flipped over a street vendor's cart in Los Angeles, many were surprised it was a Latino-on-Latino incident. We'll talk about why the video is surprising and why it isn't.

  • The Unfinished Battle In the Capital Of The Confederacy

    23/08/2017 Duración: 31min

    As calls to remove Confederate memorials grow louder, we head to Richmond, Va., where the veneration of Confederate leaders has been a source of local pride — and revulsion — for more than a century.

  • Charlottesville

    16/08/2017 Duración: 32min

    After a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville spiraled into deadly violence, residents of the Virginia town do some soul-searching. Plus: a scholar on the politics of white resentment, and a GOP operative worries about the party's long-term future.

  • Who's Your Great-Great-Great-Great Granddaddy?

    09/08/2017 Duración: 27min

    Spit into a tube and get in touch with your ancestors! Or not. On this episode we interview the founder of a project that uses DNA tests to talk about race in America. And Kim TallBear, a Native American anthropologist, says why she thinks DNA tests don't really tell you much about yourself.

  • The U.S. Census and Our Sense of Us

    02/08/2017 Duración: 25min

    The Census is so much more than cold, hard data. It's about what we call ourselves, the ways we see ourselves and how we're represented. On this episode we ask the former head of the Census bureau why he quit. We talk about how the Census helped create 'Hispanic' identity. And we talk through some of the proposed race and ethnicity categories that may show up on the 2020 questionnaire.

  • What's Good? Talking Hip-Hop and Race With Stretch & Bobbito

    26/07/2017 Duración: 23min

    Shereen and Gene mix it up with the pioneering hip-hop radio hosts Stretch and Bobbito. These impresarios ran a legendary show in New York City during most of the 1990s. Now they're hosting an interview podcast featuring guests like Stevie Wonder, Dave Chappelle and Mahershala Ali.

  • What's So Wrong With African Americans Wearing African Clothes?

    19/07/2017 Duración: 24min

    Leila Day and Hana Baba are hosts of a new podcast called The Stoop. It features conversations black people have amongst themselves — but rarely in public. The pair swing by to talk with Shereen and Gene about their show, and share an episode about a very thorny question: Can African-Americans wear clothing and accessories that originated with African cultures they're not familiar with?

  • A Police Video From Charlotte

    12/07/2017 Duración: 44min

    This encore presentation goes deep on a case involving a white police officer and an unarmed black man in Charlotte, NC. Videos in police-involved shootings can add detail to these cases, but as our colleague Kelly McEvers of the Embedded podcast reports, what you see depends on who you are.

  • The Supreme Court Decides In Favor Of A Racial Slur...Now What?

    05/07/2017 Duración: 19min

    The U.S. Supreme Court recently decided in favor of Simon Tam, front man of the band The Slants. The group has been fighting the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office for nearly a decade, for the right to use the slur.

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